SOSS COMMITTEE, INC. v. Sarasota County
This text of 957 So. 2d 671 (SOSS COMMITTEE, INC. v. Sarasota County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
SAVE OUR SEPTIC SYSTEMS COMMITTEE, INC., William B. Bishop, Katherine L. Bishop, Daniel W. Bush, Janet S. Bush, Jordan L. Gay, Erma C. Gay, William King, Kathryn H. King, and Richard Moyer, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Appellants,
v.
SARASOTA COUNTY, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*672 Donald E. Hemke of Carlton Fields, P.A., Tampa, for Appellants.
Stephen E. DeMarsh, County Attorney, and Gary K. Oldehoff and Scott T. Bossard, Assistant County Attorneys, Sarasota, for Appellee.
ALTENBERND, Judge.
Save Our Septic Systems Committee, Inc., and several residents of Sarasota County (collectively "SOSS"), appeal a summary final judgment dismissing their complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief against Sarasota County. Although the complaint contained four counts, SOSS challenges only the dismissal of counts II and III, which were resolved on the County's motion to dismiss or for partial summary judgment. These counts challenged the County's imposition of a "capacity fee" or impact fee and a surcharge in connection with the County's demand that these residents abandon the use of individual septic systems and instead hook up to the County's central sewage system. The order granting summary judgment and dismissal on these counts merely granted the motion without any explanation of the trial court's reasoning. We conclude that the County failed to prove the absence of any genuine issue of material fact, or that its capacity fee and surcharge are appropriate as a matter of law. Accordingly, as to counts II and III we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
This dispute began as a disagreement between the County and residents in the Phillippi Creek Water Basin. The County wished to discontinue the use of septic systems in this area, allegedly for environmental reasons, and to compel the residents to hook up to the County's central sewer system. In order to hook up to the central sewer system, the existing users of septic systems would be required to pay a "capacity fee" or impact fee. There was also the possibility that they would be required to pay an additional surcharge. The local residents did not want to give up their septic systems or pay the additional charges, so they created SOSS and filed a lawsuit against the County.
The initial lawsuit was filed in April 2002. It was amended only once, in July 2002. The lawsuit contained allegations to permit a class action, but that status was never achieved. The amended complaint contained four counts. In count I, SOSS argued that the County lacked the power to compel the residents to connect to the central sewer system. Count II argued that the County was imposing a capacity fee of $1642 on each "equivalent dwelling unit" as an impact fee, but was in fact intending to divert at least $10,000,000 of the revenue from this capacity fee to repay existing indebtedness. This count argued that the County thus intended to use the proceeds of the impact fee to improperly benefit existing customers, rather than to absorb the impact of new hookups. In count III, SOSS explained that the County planned to impose an additional surcharge fee that could be as little as zero dollars or as much as $17.50 per month per resident. It asked that the court declare that the County could not legally impose this surcharge fee exclusively against the new users because the County intended to fund *673 a sewer system capital improvement program for the whole county. Finally, in count IV, SOSS challenged the financing and implementation of a program that helped some residents obtain reimbursement for their mandated connections to the central sewer system.
The County immediately responded to this amended complaint by filing a combined motion to dismiss and motion for partial summary judgment. As SOSS's name would suggest, the primary emphasis of the legal arguments by both sides focused on count I and the County's power to require the residents to join the central sewer system. SOSS lost that argument and has elected not to challenge that ruling on appeal. Likewise, it has abandoned its efforts to challenge the reimbursement program. Thus only counts II and III remain at issue.
The crux of the dispute in this case involves the proper imposition of impact fees as a means to finance capital improvements to a local government's infrastructure. Impact fees have been defined as "scheduled charges applied to new development to generate revenue for the construction or expansion of capital facilities located outside the boundaries of the new development (off-site) that benefit the contributing development." Ronald H. Rosenberg, The Changing Culture Of American Land Use Regulation: Paying For Growth With Impact Fees, 59 S.M.U. L.Rev. 177, 206 (Winter 2006) (citing James C. Nicholas, Arthur C. Nelson & Julian C. Juergensmeyer, A Practitioner's Guide to Development Impact Fees 1-2 (1991)).
In determining whether the imposition of an impact fee is constitutionally permissible, the Florida Supreme Court has adopted the "dual rational nexus test," which requires the local government to demonstrate "a reasonable connection, or rational nexus, between the need for additional capital facilities and the growth in population generated by the subdivision" and "a reasonable connection, or rational nexus, between the expenditures of the funds collected and the benefits accruing to the subdivision." St. Johns County v. N.E. Fla. Builders Ass'n, 583 So.2d 635, 637 (Fla.1991) (citing Hollywood, Inc. v. Broward County, 431 So.2d 606, 611-12 (Fla. 4th DCA 1983)).
In Contractors & Builders Ass'n v. City of Dunedin, 329 So.2d 314 (Fla.1976), the supreme court observed, "In principle . . . we see nothing wrong with transferring to the new user of a municipally owned water or sewer system a fair share of the costs new use of the system involves." Id. at 317. The supreme court thus approved a local government's use of an impact fee to raise "expansion capital" for a sewer system "by setting connection charges, which do not exceed a pro rata share of reasonably anticipated costs of expansion" when expansion is "reasonably required" and "the money collected is limited to meeting the costs of expansion." Id. at 320.
When the supreme court issued its opinion in Contractors & Builders Ass'n, 329 So.2d 314, the Florida Statutes encouraged and empowered local governments to adopt comprehensive plans for development, but did not mandate the same. See §§ 163.160-.315, Fla. Stat. (1969). In 1985, however, many of the permissive provisions of this chapter were repealed and were replaced with sections mandating the adoption of comprehensive plans and development in accordance with those plans. See ch. 85-55, §§ 6, 19, 20, Laws of Fla. In 1986, the legislature adopted what is currently section 163.3177(10)(h), Florida Statutes (2005), establishing the legislative intent that "public facilities and services needed to support development shall be available concurrent with the impacts of *674 such development." See ch. 86-191, § 7, Laws of Fla. The current version of this statute now explicitly refers to section 163.3180, which is entitled "Concurrency," and specifically provides that sanitary sewer systems are "subject to [this] concurrency requirement on a statewide basis" and that "sanitary sewer . . .
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957 So. 2d 671, 2007 WL 1223845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soss-committee-inc-v-sarasota-county-fladistctapp-2007.