Outdoor Resorts at Gatlinburg, Inc. v. Utility Management Review Board

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 13, 2012
DocketE2011-01449-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Outdoor Resorts at Gatlinburg, Inc. v. Utility Management Review Board (Outdoor Resorts at Gatlinburg, Inc. v. Utility Management Review Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Outdoor Resorts at Gatlinburg, Inc. v. Utility Management Review Board, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE March 6, 2012 Session

OUTDOOR RESORTS AT GATLINBURG, INC. v. UTILITY MANAGEMENT REVIEW BOARD ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Sevier County No. 09-11-501 Telford E. Forgety, Jr., Chancellor

No. E2011-01449-COA-R3-CV-FILED-APRIL 13, 2012

Webb Creek Utility District (“WCUD”) is a public utility district that, for the most part, furnishes potable water to its customers and processes their sewage. One of its customers is the plaintiff, Outdoor Resorts at Gatlinburg, Inc., the operator of a large campground for campers and recreational vehicles (“RVs”). Outdoor is somewhat unique in that it has its own water supply. It is a “sewer only” customer. From 1985 until 2008, the rate WCUD charged Outdoor was set by contract, which either party could terminate with sufficient notice. In 2008, WCUD terminated the contract and notified Outdoor that it would be charged based upon the number of campsites multiplied by a standard minimum rate per campsite. Outdoor objected to the rate. WCUD held a hearing and adopted the proposed rate over Outdoor’s objection. Outdoor asked for a hearing before the Utility Management Review Board (“the UMRB”). While the matter was pending before the UMRB, WCUD conducted a rate study, following which it proposed still another rate for Outdoor that was less than the objected-to rate, but more than the rate Outdoor had been paying under the terminated contract. The UMRB approved the new rate. Outdoor demanded a refund of overpayments made by it under the higher rate; the UMRB denied Outdoor’s request, stating that it lacked authority to order a refund. Outdoor also asked the UMRB to compel the individual who prepared the rate study to appear for a deposition. The UMRB denied the discovery request upon concluding that it did not have the authority to order such a deposition. Outdoor sought review in the trial court by way of a common law writ of certiorari on several grounds, including lack of material evidence to support the new rate, denial of due process in not compelling a deposition, and its characterization of UMRB’s action as illegal and arbitrary. The trial court allowed Outdoor to take the deposition of the author of the rate study; the court later admitted the deposition testimony into evidence. Nevertheless, the court concluded that the UMRB’s decision was supported by material evidence and dismissed Outdoor’s complaint. Outdoor appeals. We hold that Outdoor was not denied due process, but we vacate the trial court’s judgment because we hold that neither the first post-contract rate established by WCUD nor the newly adopted rate approved by the UMRB is supported by material evidence. Further, we conclude that the UMRB had authority to order a refund of the overpayments.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Vacated; Case Remanded with Instructions

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., joined.

L. Marshall Albritton and Jessica Van Dyke, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Outdoor Resorts at Gatlinburg, Inc.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; William E. Young, Solicitor General; Ann Louise Vix, Senior Counsel; and Joe Shirley, Senior Counsel, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Utility Management Review Board.

James L. Gass and Matthew L. Fink, Sevierville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Webb Creek Utility District.

OPINION

I.

Outdoor operates a vacation campground in Gatlinburg. There are 376 campsites in the campground. Each campsite has sewer access. In addition to the campsites, Outdoor has an estimated eight additional sewer feeds from the office and amenities for a total of 384. Until 1985, Outdoor processed its own sewage. In 1985, Outdoor entered into a customer contract with WCUD. To achieve the connection, WCUD installed a manhole close to the boundary of the campground, and Outdoor ran a trunk-line from its existing system to the manhole. Outdoor is responsible for all maintenance on the system up to the point of connection to WCUD. There is no meter for the individual campsites, and there was no meter at the manhole until about the time this dispute began. Under the 1985 contract, Outdoor was billed for 400 campsites at a set rate per campsite. As of February 2008, the rate per site was $21.86 (“the Contract Rate”). Outdoor’s monthly bill was $8,744.

In February of 2008, WCUD gave Outdoor notice that it was terminating the 1985 contract. It is undisputed that WCUD had the right to do so. This dispute involves, rather, the legality of billing rates instituted by WCUD upon termination of the contract. WCUD began billing Outdoor at a rate of $45.54 per campsite, multiplied by 384 sites. The new rate was based on the minimum monthly rate charged to individual customers, such as residential

-2- customers, for a single sewer service. The effect was to increase Outdoor’s monthly bill from $8,744 to $17,487.36, just 64 cents short of doubling the bill.

Outdoor objected to the new billing rate of $45.54 and asked for a hearing pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 7-82-402(a)(1)(2011).1 At Outdoor’s request, WCUD’s board of commissioners held a hearing on Outdoor’s challenge. The proof at that hearing established that, at the time of the hearing, no “cost-of-service” or “rate study” had been performed for WCUD as a basis for its charges to customers. The rates had been adjusted in 2004 based on what was necessary to service WCUD’s debt on its combined water and sewer operations. WCUD experienced losses in 2005 as a result of losing several large customers, partially as a result of the impact of a slowed economy on the local tourism industry. In that same time frame, WCUD was declared a “financially distressed” utility and instituted a new schedule of rates as part of a financial recovery plan.2 Up until approximately six months before the hearing, there had been no measurements made of the flow into WCUD’s sewer system from Outdoor’s trunk-line. Because, Outdoor is a “sewer-only” customer, there is no way to determine its usage without measuring the flow into WCUD’s system at the connection point. WCUD’s consulting engineer admitted that the new rate was not based on usage. It was

1 The statute as codified in 2011 remains unchanged from 2008. It provides:

Within thirty (30) days of the date on which the statement [of the water rates being charged] provided for in § 7-82-401 is published, any water user of the district may file with the commissioners of the district a protest, giving reasons why, in the opinion of the water user, the rates so published are too high or too low. Within a period of fifteen (15) days after the end of this thirty-day period during which such protest may be filed, the commissioners shall notify each such protestant of a hearing to be held by the commissioners on such protests as may have been filed within the thirty-day period prescribed. Upon the hearing date so fixed, which shall be some date within a period of sixty (60) days after giving such notices to the protestants, all such protests shall be heard together by the commissioners. After hearing and examining statements, exhibits and arguments of the protestants or their counsel, the commissioners shall make and spread upon the minutes of the commission their finding as to the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the published rates, and, at the same time, the commission may increase or decrease such rates upon a finding that they are too low or too high, as the case may be.

2 WCUD’s consultant testified that upon becoming financially distressed, WCUD was legally required to formulate a recovery plan. See Tenn.

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Bluebook (online)
Outdoor Resorts at Gatlinburg, Inc. v. Utility Management Review Board, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/outdoor-resorts-at-gatlinburg-inc-v-utility-manage-tennctapp-2012.