Seal Rock Water District v. City of Toledo

712 P.2d 174, 77 Or. App. 251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 8, 1986
Docket44305; CA A33786
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 712 P.2d 174 (Seal Rock Water District v. City of Toledo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seal Rock Water District v. City of Toledo, 712 P.2d 174, 77 Or. App. 251 (Or. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

YOUNG, J.

Defendant appeals from a declaratory judgment construing provisions of a contract dealing with a water rate to be paid by plaintiff to defendant. Under the contract, defendant agreed to treat and deliver water to plaintiff. The trial court declared that defendant had overcharged plaintiff, beginning January 5, 1981, established a method for determining the water rate and ordered defendant to repay the overcharges. We reverse and remand.

Plaintiff is a domestic water supply district organized under ORS Chapter 264. Defendant is a municipal corporation. In the early 1970’s problems surfaced with respect to the respective water systems. In order to meet state standards, major improvements and expenditures were required. A preliminary engineering study showed that the state standards could be met and substantial savings could be achieved if the water systems were combined as recommended by the study. The parties agreed to do that and, in October 1973, they signed a statement of intent memorializing their agreement. In essence, defendant would build a new water treatment facility and a Siletz River intake and pumping station, with plaintiff paying part of the cost. Plaintiff would build a pipeline to a point where it would connect with defendant’s system, and plaintiff would pay part of the cost of the line that defendant would have to build to join with plaintiffs. Plaintiff would also pay a portion of the annual operation and maintenance costs.

The parties succeeded in raising the necessary funds and proceeded to build the facilities. During that period, plaintiff acquired its own water right on the Siletz River. On August 30, 1976, the parties signed a contract to implement the statement of intent. Defendant agreed to treat and deliver to plaintiff up to one million gallons of water a day. The water rate provision which precipitated this action provides:

“[Plaintiff] agrees to pay to [defendant] for the treatment and delivery of such water the rates as shown on Exhibit ‘A’ to this agreement which is by this reference incorporated herein. Provided however, that said per gallon rate to be charged to [plaintiff] shall be reviewed annually and adjusted in accordance with [defendant’s] actual experience in its cost to produce treated water exclusive of amortization of capital improvements.”

[254]*254Plaintiffs share of the costs, which the contract calls “capital improvements,” was roughly one-fourth of the total cost. Plaintiffs share was to be paid partly by a cash payment and partly by 20 annual payments. Despite its payments, plaintiff would acquire no interest in defendant’s water system. The term of the contract is 20 years, renewable by mutual agreement.

Although plaintiffs actual consumption of water has increased since 1976, it has never approached one million gallons a day; in 1982, the last year for which there is evidence in the record, it averaged below 400,000 gallons a day in the month of greatest use. Plaintiff originally paid 18 cents per thousand gallons; by the end of 1980 it was paying 28 cents per thousand.1 In that year defendant commissioned an outside study of its water charges. The consultant recommended that defendant adopt the utility enterprise system of pricing. That system was developed only recently, but it has been widely accepted in the last few years. Under it, the actual cost of treating water includes both operating costs and facility costs. Facility costs include a reserve for replacing existing physical assets, including the treatment plant and pipelines.

The consultant determined the amount plaintiff should pay for water under the utility enterprise system. He identified the facility and operating costs for which he believed plaintiff should be charged, credited it for its capital contributions, estimated its consumption for the next year and recommended a price per thousand gallons which would produce an amount approximately equal to what he believed to be plaintiffs proper share of defendant’s costs. Because he construed “amortization” narrowly to mean payments to a sinking fund to retire bonded indebtedness, he did not believe that the contract between plaintiff and defendant limited the facility costs which defendant could include in its charges. Defendant accepted the consultant’s approach and increased its charge to plaintiff to 58 cents per thousand gallons effective January 5, 1981, and to 80 cents per thousand gallons [255]*255effective February 1, 1982.2 Plaintiff paid the increased amounts under protest and brought this action.

The trial court rejected the application of the utility enterprise system method of setting rates under the contract and instead required that the rate be determined each year by projecting forward one year the average of defendant’s previous five years’ actual experience. It identified certain portions of defendant’s annual budget for inclusion in the five-year base; it excluded items of no benefit to plaintiff, along with any consideration of loss of profit, return on investment, depreciation and reserves for replacement of facilities.3 The court set the rate beginning February 1,1982, at 29.2 cents per thousand gallons and ordered a ministerial determination of the proper rate for the period January 5, 1981, to February 1, 1982. It gave judgment for plaintiff for what it had paid in excess of those rates, together with statutory interest, and enjoined defendant from setting the rates in any other fashion.

The first issue is whether we review the court’s factual findings de novo or only to determine if there is evidence to support them. Whether a declaratory judgment is legal or equitable depends on its underlying nature, including the relief requested. North Pac. Ins. Co. v. Forest Indus. Ins. Exch., 280 Or 313, 317, 571 P2d 138 (1977). Although plaintiff requested both equitable relief and money damages, its basic demand is that the court construe the contract between it and defendant. Construction of a contract is usually a legal matter. See C & B Livestock v. Johns, 273 Or 6, 10, 539 P2d 645 (1975). That is the underlying nature of this case, and so our review is. as of an action at law. See Salem Resources v. U.S. Consultants, 75 Or App 249, 251-52, 706 P2d 920 (1985). Accordingly, our review is limited to determining whether the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by any substantial evidence and whether such findings are sufficient to support the judgment. Hawkins v. Teeples and Thatcher, 267 Or 151, 160, 515 P2d 927 (1973).

[256]*256Because the construction of the contract is a legal determination, the only factual issues in this case relate to the circumstances which led to the making of the contract and to the intent of the parties.. ORS 41.740; ORS 42.220. The crucial contract language is “exclusive of amortization of capital improvements.” Defendant argues that “amortization” has a precise meaning — payments to a sinking fund to reduce bonded indebtedness — and that that meaning does not cover economic depreciation or reserves to replace physical facilities. Plaintiff argues that “amortization” has a broader meaning in the water utility context and that the parties intended the broader meaning when they entered into this contract.

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Related

Seal Rock Water District v. City of Toledo
754 P.2d 8 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1988)
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735 P.2d 620 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
712 P.2d 174, 77 Or. App. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seal-rock-water-district-v-city-of-toledo-orctapp-1986.