Robert Treat Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Sewer Commissioners

595 A.2d 858, 220 Conn. 18, 1991 Conn. LEXIS 382
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 6, 1991
Docket14138; 14139; 14140
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 595 A.2d 858 (Robert Treat Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Sewer Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Treat Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Sewer Commissioners, 595 A.2d 858, 220 Conn. 18, 1991 Conn. LEXIS 382 (Colo. 1991).

Opinion

Borden, J.

The dispositive issue in these consolidated appeals is whether the defendant, the board of sewer commissioners of the city of Milford, properly levied assessments of sewer user charges against certain properties owned by the plaintiffs, Robert Treat Associates Limited Partnership, Newport Associates and Milford Beach Associates. The plaintiffs appealed to the Superior Court challenging assessments of sewer user charges levied by the defendant, claiming that: (1) the method of calculating sewer user charges employed by the defendant is not authorized by § 23-83 of the Milford Code of Ordinances1 or by General Statutes § 7-255 (a);2 and (2) even if the method of calculation [20]*20is authorized by § 23-83, the ordinance is invalid. The trial court rejected the plaintiffs’ claims and dismissed the appeals. Each of the plaintiffs appealed to the Appellate Court, which, suo motu, ordered consolidation of the appeals. We transferred the appeals to this court pursuant to Practice Book § 4023, and now affirm the judgments.

[21]*21The plaintiffs claim that the method of calculating sewer user charges employed by the defendant is not authorized by § 23-83 and § 7-255 (a) and that, therefore, the trial court improperly dismissed their appeals from the assessments of such charges.3 We disagree.

The following facts are either stipulated or undisputed. Each of the plaintiffs is the owner of certain real property located in the city of Milford that has been improved by an apartment complex, which is serviced by Milford’s municipal sewer system. The defendant is the water pollution control authority for the city of Milford. See General Statutes § 7-246. For each of the 1989-90 and 1990-91 fiscal years, the defendant levied an assessment of sewer user charges against the plaintiffs’ properties. With respect to each of the assessments, the defendant calculated sewer user charges by multiplying a prescribed dollar amount by the number of modified equivalent units4 ascribed to each of the plaintiffs’ properties. The defendant had earlier established that one modified equivalent unit applied to a single apartment.5 The defendant therefore calculated [22]*22the plaintiffs’ sewer user charges by multiplying the prescribed dollar amount by the number of apartments located on each of their properties.

I

We first address the plaintiffs’ claim that the trial court should have concluded that the defendant’s method of calculating the plaintiffs’ sewer user charges is not authorized by § 23-83 of the Milford Code of Ordinances. We reject this claim.

A

The plaintiffs maintain that the defendant’s failure to calculate the plaintiffs’ sewer user charges on the basis of their actual water usage is contrary to § 23-83 (a) and the first sentence of § 23-83 (b). Relying on the second sentence of § 23-83 (b), the defendant counters that because the plaintiffs’ properties are composed of residential users6 who have a consumptive use of water,7 the plaintiffs’ properties are excluded from the [23]*23method of calculation based on actual water usage. We agree with the defendant.

Section 23-83 of the Milford Code of Ordinances provides in pertinent part: “(a) Each user shall pay for the [sewer] services provided by the city based on his use of the treatment works as determined by its equivalent units.

“(b) For residential, industrial, institutional and commercial users, user charges will be based on actual water usage. If a residential, commercial, institutional or industrial user has a consumptive use of water or, in some other manner, uses water which is not discharged into the wastewater collection system, the user charge for that contributor shall be based on modified equivalent units.” Section 23-81 (p) of the Milford Code of Ordinances provides: “ ‘Equivalent units’ shall mean the annual water consumption in units of one hundred (100) cubic feet divided by thirteen thousand three hundred (13,300) cubic feet rounded up to the nearest whole number.” Section 23-81 (q) provides: “ ‘Modified equivalent units’ shall be used when equivalent units are not applicable and shall be defined as discharge to municipal sewer in gallons per day divided by two hundred thirty-two (232) gallons per day, rounded up to the nearest whole number.”

It is undisputed that the plaintiffs’ properties involve residential use and, moreover, that every apartment has a consumptive use of water within the meaning of the ordinance. The second sentence of § 23-83 (b) therefore authorizes the defendant to calculate sewer user charges for the plaintiffs’ properties on the basis of modified equivalent units. Consequently, the method of calculation based on equivalent units, namely, actual water usage, does not apply to the plaintiffs’ properties.

The plaintiffs argue that such an interpretation renders superfluous § 23-83 (a) and the first sentence [24]*24of § 23-83 (b). Although we recognize that, in light of the undisputed evidence that all residential users have some consumptive use of water, § 23-83 (a) and the first sentence of subsection (b) are superfluous with respect to residential users, we cannot conclude that the provisions are entirely superfluous because the record fails to indicate the method by which sewer user charges are calculated for industrial, commercial and institutional users. Put another way, the purported superfluity of these provisions in the context of residential users does not, ipso facto, mean that they must be regarded as superfluous for purposes of the proper construction of § 23-83, because they may well have effect in the context of industrial, commercial and institutional users. The failure of the plaintiffs to present a proper record in this regard, therefore, undercuts their claim that, if the defendant’s interpretation were to prevail, these provisions would be superfluous.

B

The plaintiffs next argue that the defendant’s failure to calculate the plaintiffs’ sewer user charges on the basis of their actual sewer discharge violates § 23-83 (b). We disagree.

Our analysis of the plaintiffs’ second argument consists of three parts: first, we clarify an implicit assertion that underlies this argument of the plaintiffs; next, we address the validity of that assertion; finally, we consider the merits of the argument.

The trial court acknowledged, but did not directly address, the plaintiffs’ challenge to the defendant’s treatment of each apartment on the plaintiffs’ properties as one residential user unit. We agree with the trial court that this contention implicitly underlies the plaintiffs’ appeals of the assessments.

[25]*25The number of modified equivalent units attributable to a residential user of the sewer system is determined by dividing the number of gallons that the user discharges into the system each day by 232 and rounding the resultant figure up to the nearest whole number. Milford Code of Ordinances § 23-81 (q). Thus, because it is undisputed that every connection to the sewer system causes some discharge into the system, the sewer user charge for every residential user will be based on a minimum of one modified equivalent unit.

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Bluebook (online)
595 A.2d 858, 220 Conn. 18, 1991 Conn. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-treat-associates-ltd-partnership-v-board-of-sewer-commissioners-conn-1991.