Ramer v. City of Hoover

437 So. 2d 455, 1983 Ala. LEXIS 4658
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 22, 1983
Docket81-820
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 437 So. 2d 455 (Ramer v. City of Hoover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramer v. City of Hoover, 437 So. 2d 455, 1983 Ala. LEXIS 4658 (Ala. 1983).

Opinion

This case arises out of the annexation of the Riverchase development into the City of Hoover, and the primary issue is whether a landowner had a right to tie-in to a trunk sewer line which ran through his property. The appellant, Richard Ramer, owner of a tract of land through which the sewer passed, contends that the trial court committed numerous errors in this case, but he asks this Court to consider only the most "glaring errors." Those errors are stated thusly:

1. Does a sewer right-of-way deed, prepared by the grantee, which recites that the real property through which the right-of-way passes is benefited, create a right in the property of access to the sewer line, or, in the alternative, does a subsequent denial by the grantee of sewer access amount to a taking requiring the payment of just compensation?

2. Should the annexation election incorporating Riverchase within the City of Hoover be annulled?

3. Were the annexation agreements between the City of Hoover and Harbert-Equitable Joint Venture valid?

4. Under the totality of circumstances in this case, has Ramer received due process and/or equal protection as required by the Fourteenth Amendment?

Ramer's 58-acre tract of property is located in Jefferson County. Ramer resides in the county, but he neither resides in nor votes as an elector in Hoover. He sued the City of Hoover, the Harbert-Equitable Joint Venture (HEJV), and the County Commissioners of Jefferson County, claiming that by their combined actions, they had blocked the development of his property. The trial court made extensive findings of fact. We incorporate pertinent portions, which we find are sustained by the evidence:

"The Plaintiff, Ramer, is the owner of 58 undeveloped acres in the City of Hoover through which a County trunk line sewer runs within a right of way conveyed in 1958 by Ramer's predecessor in title. The sewer line now in use runs to the Cahaba River Treatment Plant of the County. The right of way deed contains language in the words of a release that the parties to the deed acknowledge that the sewer when constructed will be of benefit to the property of the grantor.

"At the time Ramer acquired the property in January 1977, it was unimproved, undeveloped and not subdivided. It was zoned agricultural. All of the property was not in the City at the time of purchase and a portion of it was in the unincorporated area of the County.

"Prior to the time Ramer became the owner of the property, the drainage area where the property is located, as is most if not all of southern Jefferson County, [was] subject to a sewer connection moratorium adopted by the Jefferson County Commission in February 1976. Suffice it to state here that the moratorium was imposed as a result of increased sewage demands and the inability of the existing treatment facilities to meet permit authorization of the Environmental Protection Agency of the Federal Government. See Peterson v. Jefferson County, 372 So.2d 839 (Ala.Sup.Ct. 1979). Ramer had notice of the moratorium, but was aware of the possibility of a partial lifting of it by Jefferson County at a subsequent date.

"Within a day or so of his purchase of the property, Ramer inquired of obtaining a change of zoning to permit use of land for apartments from the City of Hoover but did not apply for a change of zoning nor meet the requirements of the City for rezoning until October 9, 1978, he having previously filed his annexation petition on July 3, 1978. The delay was occasioned by the necessity that Ramer seek and obtain the annexation to Hoover of the unincorporated portion of his property and completion of his development plans. Ramer's property was thereafter annexed by ordinance to Hoover and rezoned *Page 458 by the Hoover City Council on November 6, 1978.

"On March 22, 1977, the Jefferson County Commission adopted a so-called `lifting resolution' permitting limited additional sewer connections to the extent of approximately 800,000 gallons per day. This resolution authorized applications for sewer connection permits and provided that

"`. . . all property to be served by the requested sewer connection must be properly zoned. . .'

"Applications were authorized to be received until 5:00 P.M. on April 29, 1977.

"At the time for applications under the lifting resolution, Ramer had owned the property for three months, had no development plans and had not sought to have Hoover annex his unincorporated land, nor met Hoover requirements for rezoning. The land was then zoned for agricultural use. It is uncertain whether Ramer had available approximately $80,000 required for obtaining sewer connection permits.

"The Moratorium Committee established by the County Commission received 42 applications for sewer allocations under the lifting resolution, one of which was on behalf of the Harbert-Equitable Joint Venture (H-E Joint Venture). The total requests for allocations far exceeded the 800,000 gallon addition available and the Moratorium Committee apportioned the allocations among the applicants based upon their stated needs. The Riverchase development of Harbert-Equitable Joint Venture was allocated 300,000 gallons of sewer use. This allocation was in addition to a 100,000 gallon allocation previously granted Riverchase under the original moratorium in 1976.

"In January 1979, Ramer sought from Jefferson County and the Moratorium Committee a sewer allocation. He made no formal application but appeared before the Committee. His request was denied as not being within one of the authorized exceptions and not having a prior allocation."

In 1974 HEJV started the Riverchase development. The planned community covers some 3,000 acres of land in Jefferson and Shelby Counties. The development includes commercial and residential construction. HEJV maintains that the scale of the project demands access to a large volume of water for sewage treatment capacity. HEJV asserts that the Jefferson County Commission in letters of commitment promised to provide adequate treatment capacity for Riverchase from the then existing Cahaba River Treatment Plant.

In 1979, HEJV began negotiations with the City of Hoover for the annexation of Riverchase into Hoover. An annexation agreement between HEJV and Hoover included the following provisions: (1) residents of Riverchase would be exempt from any increase in ad valorem taxes for 15 years; (2) workers in Riverchase would be exempt from any increase in occupational taxes for 15 years; (3) Hoover would purchase the Riverchase Plant from HEJV; and (4) Riverchase would have exclusive use of the Riverchase Plant. The administration of the City of Hoover ratified the agreement.

A proposed bill was introduced in the Alabama Legislature to annex Riverchase to Hoover. In its Opinion of the Justices,381 So.2d 632 (Ala. 1980), this Court questioned the adequacy of the legal notice given for the proposed legislation regarding the annexation and raised doubts about portions of the annexation agreement, specifically the tax exemption provisions. Another proposed bill was enacted into law (1980 Ala. Acts 590).

On September 9, 1980, Hoover conducted the Riverchase annexation election. A majority of the electors who voted did vote for annexation. Ramer argues that because: (1) the electors of Hoover did not vote in the election; (2) the Boards of Registrars for Jefferson and Shelby Counties allegedly failed to provide a list of qualified voters for the election; and (3) portions of the annexation agreement are invalid, that this Court must nullify the election. Ramer also questions the propriety of Hoover's *Page 459

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Bluebook (online)
437 So. 2d 455, 1983 Ala. LEXIS 4658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramer-v-city-of-hoover-ala-1983.