State Ex Rel. Town of Norway Sanitary District 1 v. Racine County Drainage Board of Commissioners

583 N.W.2d 437, 220 Wis. 2d 595, 1998 Wisc. App. LEXIS 696
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJune 17, 1998
Docket97-2861
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 583 N.W.2d 437 (State Ex Rel. Town of Norway Sanitary District 1 v. Racine County Drainage Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Town of Norway Sanitary District 1 v. Racine County Drainage Board of Commissioners, 583 N.W.2d 437, 220 Wis. 2d 595, 1998 Wisc. App. LEXIS 696 (Wis. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

The Town of Norway Sanitary District #1 (Sanitary District) contends that the Racine County Drainage Board of Commissioners (Board) does not have the authority to levy an assessment against it even though its sanitation plant is located in a drainage district under the Board's jurisdiction and the plant discharges over 330 million gallons of treated wastewater into the drainage way each year. It contends that it is a municipality, and, therefore, it enjoys *598 immunity from assessment because § 88.48, Stats., only gives the Board the power to assess municipal lands owned by towns, villages and cities, not town sanitary districts. Also, the Sanitary District claims that even if the Board has the authority to levy an assessment against it, the amount assessed is unreasonable and therefore invalid. We conclude that because a town sanitary district is not a municipality under the statute, its land is not "municipal land." Section 88.48, which only addresses the Board's power to assess county or municipal land, therefore confers no immunity from assessment upon the Sanitary District. We further hold that the Board's assessment is reasonable and equitable and is supported by evidence in the record. We affirm.

The Sanitary District owns about twenty-four acres of land within the Norway-Dover drainage district upon which it operates its sanitation plant. The plant provides services (the collection of wastewater) to approximately 2000 residences, the vast majority of which are located within the Norway-Dover drainage district. As part of its normal operations, the sanitation plant discharges approximately 330 million gallons of treated wastewater per year into a drainage channel maintained by the Norway-Dover drainage district. Since 1993, the Norway-Dover drainage district has been under the Board's jurisdiction.

In June 1984, a report was prepared to determine the benefits, damages and allowances for each parcel of land in the Norway-Dover drainage district. The amount of benefits assessed to the Sanitary District ($250) was calculated based upon the surface water drainage from its twenty-four acres of land. Its waste-water discharges into the drainage channel were not included in the assessment. However, the Sanitary *599 District apparently did not pay an assessment to the drainage district based strictly upon the benefits calculated in this report. Instead, prior to the report being issued, it entered into a contract with the Norway-Dover drainage district in which it agreed to pay the drainage district $1000 per year for ten years in lieu of any further assessments. The contract ended on December 31,1993.

In 1990, the Board approved a project to restore the channels in the drainage district. Although the project was approved as a single plan, it was subsequently broken down into three phases. Phase one and two were apparently completed before the end of 1993, although the record is unclear as to an exact date. However, the Board has yet to commence work on phase three. This is because the original plan for phase three ran into problems when the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) demanded that the plan for restoring the channel system be changed for environmental reasons. As a result of these changes, when the drainage district placed phase three of the project for bids in 1992, the cleanup costs increased from the original estimate of approximately six hundred thousand dollars to one and one-half to two million dollars. This amount exceeded the Board's budget for the project and it was withdrawn until funding could be arranged.

In 1996, the Board discovered that its 1984 benefit calculation for the Sanitation District was incorrect because it omitted the substantial wastewater discharges by the Sanitary District into the drainage system each year. The Board recalculated the benefits for the Sanitary District to include the wastewater discharges, and in July 1996, the Board levied an assessment on the Sanitary District "equal to $ 10.00 *600 per household [per year], or such other entity that discharges their sewage to the Norway Dover drainway through the [Sanitary District's] sewage treatment plant." 1 The assessment levied was to apply for ten years and because the Sanitary District served approximately 2000 households, the assessment was estimated to be $20,000 per year or $200,000 over the ten-year period. As part of the assessment, the Board stated that no other assessments would be levied against the Sanitary District during the ten-year period. The assessment was based on the new determination of benefits, which amount included past omitted assessments, as well as the Sanitary District's proportional share of the cost for ongoing maintenance and repair, operational expenses and the cost of the planned phase three restoration project.

The Sanitary District contested the assessment before the Board, and following a hearing in which the Board upheld its assessment, it petitioned the trial court for a writ of certiorari to review the Board's action. The Sanitary District's arguments were connected to its core complaints that the Board had no authority to levy an assessment upon it and that the amount assessed was unreasonable and inequitable. It also raised a due process argument that the Board's proceedings were unfair because the parliamentarian for the hearings was an associate in the opposing counsel's law firm.

The trial court held that both the statute and administrative code clearly granted the Board the authority to assess lands owned by the Sanitary District. It also held that the collection of any past omitted *601 assessments was barred by the 1984 contract between the Sanitary District and the Norway-Dover drainage district. But the court found that barring the collection of any past omitted assessments did not make the assessment of $10 per year per household inequitable. It found that an assessment of almost $200,000 over a ten-year period was reasonable and equitable given the benefits enjoyed by the Sanitary District and the two million dollar projected cost for future maintenance and repair of the drainage system. Finally, the court rejected the due process claim because the Sanitary District failed to show it was prejudiced in any way by the procedures used for the hearings. The Sanitary District has abandoned on appeal its argument that the Board's proceedings violated due process. Similarly, the Board does not appeal the trial court's ruling that it cannot collect any past omitted assessments. Thus, the only issues before us are whether the Sanitary District enjoys immunity from being assessed and, if not, whether the assessment was unreasonable or arbitrary.

We first address the Sanitary District's argument that the Board was without authority to levy an assessment against it. The parties initially dispute our standard of review regarding this issue. The Sanitary District maintains that whether the Board has the authority to levy an assessment upon a town sanitary district is a question of statutory interpretation. Statutory interpretation is a question of law which we may review de novo. See DILHR v. LIRC, 161 Wis. 2d 231, 245-46, 467 N.W.2d 545, 550 (1991).

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583 N.W.2d 437, 220 Wis. 2d 595, 1998 Wisc. App. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-town-of-norway-sanitary-district-1-v-racine-county-drainage-wisctapp-1998.