Town of Middleton, Tennessee v. City of Bolivar, Tennessee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 13, 2012
DocketW2011-01592-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Town of Middleton, Tennessee v. City of Bolivar, Tennessee (Town of Middleton, Tennessee v. City of Bolivar, Tennessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Middleton, Tennessee v. City of Bolivar, Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON May 24, 2012 Session

TOWN OF MIDDLETON, TENNESSEE, ET AL. v. CITY OF BOLIVAR, TENNESSEE, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hardeman County No. 16308 Martha Brasfield, Chancellor

No. W2011-01592-COA-R3-CV- Filed July 13, 2012

In this case, we are asked to address the question of whether the Municipal Gas System Tax Equivalent Law of 1987, Tennessee Code Annotated Section 7-39-401 through 406, or the Revenue Bond Law, Tennessee Code Annotated Section 7-34-101, et seq., negate the provisions of ordinances passed by Appellees, the Town of Middleton, Tennessee and the Town of Whiteville, Tennessee, which granted Appellant, the City of Bolivar and its municipal utility, the right to franchise in the Appellee towns. We conclude that: (1) Appellants may be liable for both franchise fees under the ordinances, and for payments in lieu of taxes under the Municipal Gas System Tax Equivalent Law because franchise fees are not in the nature of taxes on the valuation of property and are “operating expenses” for the privilege of doing business; (2) although the ordinances initially granted Bolivar’s utility exemption from payments in lieu of taxes to Appellees, by resolution, Bolivar waived its exemption and is now obligated to make payments in lieu of taxes to Appellees under the Municipal Gas System Tax Equivalent Law; (3) to the extent that the Whiteville ordinance conflicts with Bolivar’s statutory right to charge consumers for the actual costs of its services (which would include the franchise fee expenses), it is void; (4) the trial court’s award of pendente lite payments to Appellees was not reversible error in light of our holding that Appellees were (and are) entitled to the franchise fees. Reversed in part, affirmed in part, and remanded.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3. Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed in Part; Affirmed in Part and Remanded

J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., and D AVID R. F ARMER, J., joined.

William B. Hubbard and Cynthia Hubbard Wiel, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, City of Bolivar and Bolivar Gas Department. James Andrew Farmer and Charles H. Farmer, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellees, City of Middleton, Tennessee and City of Whiteville, Tennessee.

OPINION

Factual History

In 1953 and 1954 respectively, the Town of Middleton, Tennessee (“Middleton”) and the Town of Whiteville, Tennessee (“Whiteville,” and together with Middleton, “Plaintiffs,” or “Appellees”) passed ordinances based upon an agreement reached between Whiteville and Middleton and the City of Bolivar, Tennessee (“Bolivar”). Under these ordinances, the Bolivar Gas Company (“BGC,” and together with Bolivar, “Defendants,” or “Appellants”)1 was granted the right to occupy property within Middleton and Whiteville’s corporate limits for purposes of providing gas to the residential and commercial consumers located in Whiteville and Middleton.

The 1954 Whiteville Ordinance

Whiteville adopted its ordinance on April 14, 1954 (the “Whiteville Ordinance”). The Whiteville Ordinance granted Bolivar (doing business as BGC f/k/a Bolivar Natural Gas System) the right to:

use and occupy [Whiteville’s], streets, avenues, roads, alleys, lanes, parks and other public places and ways for the purpose of. . . laying, constructing, extending, maintaining, renewing, replacing and/or repairing mains and pipes and all appurtenances and appendages thereto used and/or useful for the manufacture, transmission, distribution and/or sale of gas within and/or through the present or future territorial limits of [Whiteville].

The Whiteville Ordinance refers to this grant as a “franchise.” In exchange for the right to “franchise” its services to Whiteville, the ordinance provides that Bolivar will make monthly payments to Whiteville in the amount of two percent (2%) of BGC’s monthly revenues generated from rates charged to Whiteville customers, and that this 2% gross receipts payment would be made in lieu of taxes and assessments:

1 BGC is a government subdivision of the City of Bolivar. Therefore, for purposes of this opinion, we may refer to the Appellants together as “Bolivar.”

-2- SECTION II. The Grantee [i.e. Bolivar] shall be entitled to charge, for gas furnished by it, a rate which may not exceed the rates applicable to the consumers inside the City of Bolivar, Tennessee; providing that the Town of Whiteville, Tennessee, herein grants to the Grantee, for the duration of this franchise, an exemption from all taxes and assessments; further providing that in consideration for these benefits and gas franchise, the Town of Bolivar, Tennessee shall pay to the Town of Whiteville, 2% of the Domestic and Commercial Gross Receipts collected from the gas system in Whiteville . . . .

The Whiteville Ordinance provides for an initial term of thirty (30) years: “such right to continue for thirty (30) years after date of approval of this Ordinance by the Mayor and Council of the Town of Whiteville.” The Whiteville Ordinance is signed by the Mayor and the Board of Aldermen.

The 1953 Middleton Ordinance

On April 24, 1953, Middleton also adopted a thirty-year ordinance, which granted Bolivar (doing business as BGC) a franchise to provide gas service for the residents of Middleton (the “Middleton Ordinance”). Like the Whiteville Ordinance, the Middleton Ordinance imposed a 2% gross receipts charge to Bolivar in lieu of taxes and assessments in exchange for the right to franchise. The quoted language set out above from the Whiteville Ordinance is identical to the language used in the Middleton Ordinance, except for the language addressing rates charged to consumers. As set out in Section II above, the Whiteville Ordinance states that the rates charged by Bolivar to Whiteville consumers “may not exceed the rates applicable to the consumers inside the City of Bolivar.” The Middleton Ordinance, however, entitles Bolivar “to charge for gas furnished by it, a rate which may not exceed by 2% the rates applicable to the [Bolivar] consumers.” This is the only difference between the two ordinances. The Middleton Ordinance is signed by the Mayor of Middleton.

Payments Made by Bolivar under the Ordinances

The record indicates that Bolivar paid the 2% of gross receipts to Whiteville as contemplated under the ordinance. However, as to the payments allegedly owed to Middleton, the record contains a letter dated October 31, 1962 from Bolivar’s lawyer to Middleton’s lawyer. This letter is in response to a claim by Middleton against Bolivar for the 2% payments, which Bolivar had allegedly failed to pay since the passage of the Middleton Ordinance. The letter indicates that the Middleton Ordinance “was never formally accepted by the officials of the Town of Bolivar, but it was accepted by the Mayor of

-3- Middleton rather than the Mayor of Bolivar.” The letter mentions nothing further concerning the validity of the Middleton Ordinance. Concerning the payment of 2% of gross receipts contemplated under the ordinance, the letter states:

It is the understanding of the present Mayor and City Council that at the time [the Middleton ordinance was passed] there was a mutual understanding between the officials of the town of Bolivar and the officials of the town of Middleton that the gas consumers of Middleton would be charged the same rate as the consumers in Bolivar and that the town of Middleton would no[t] require Bolivar to pay 2% of the gross receipts as provided in the contract [i.e., ordinance]. On the 13 th day of March, 1962, the Mayor and Aldermen of Middleton met with the City Council of Bolivar and requested that Bolivar pay to Middleton 2% of the gross receipts from the time the system began operating. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Town of Middleton, Tennessee v. City of Bolivar, Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-middleton-tennessee-v-city-of-bolivar-tenn-tennctapp-2012.