Town of Watertown v. Watertown Fire District

265 A.2d 496, 28 Conn. Super. Ct. 413, 28 Conn. Supp. 413, 1968 Conn. Super. LEXIS 158
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1968
DocketFile 18688
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 265 A.2d 496 (Town of Watertown v. Watertown Fire District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Watertown v. Watertown Fire District, 265 A.2d 496, 28 Conn. Super. Ct. 413, 28 Conn. Supp. 413, 1968 Conn. Super. LEXIS 158 (Colo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Speziale, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment determining the extent to which the powers conferred on the defendants Watertown Fire District and Oakville Fire District by special acts have survived since the adoption by the plaintiff, the town of Watertown, of its charter under the Home *415 Rule Act, and, concerning the defendant Water-town Fire District, the extent to which its zoning powers as conferred by special act have survived the implementation of zoning by the plaintiff. The defendant Oakville Fire District in its cross complaint seeks a declaratory judgment determining that it is the duty and obligation of the plaintiff to pay the Oakville Fire District for the furnishing of sewers, lighting, and water for fire protection.

It was ordered by this court that notice of the institution and pendency of the action be given to the residents, landowners, and taxpayers of the plaintiff and the defendants by publication in a newspaper and that return be made to the court that such notice had been given. The return of the notice was brought to the court’s attention, and on July 18, 1968, the court ordered that the return be accepted and also determined the notice to be reasonable and sufficient.

Under the pleadings and by stipulation the facts are admitted by the parties. The plaintiff, the town of Watertown, is a municipal corporation, and it formerly exercised the powers conferred on towns and municipalities by the various provisions of the General Statutes, but, effective July 6, 1961, it adopted its own charter under the Home Rule Act (General Statutes, c. 99) and has exercised the powers provided therein.

The defendants are both quasi-municipal corporations deriving their existence and broad powers from a series of special acts of the General Assembly. These powers are enumerated in the plaintiff’s complaint. Both defendants are located within the town of Watertown, and by special act they were authorized to enlarge their geographical area by the admission of contiguous territory and to extend pipes and sewers outside of the district limits.

*416 By special act in 1941 (23 Spec. Laws 843, No. 218, §18), the defendant Watertown Fire District was granted the same rights, powers and obligations with respect to zoning as were conferred on cities, towns and boroughs by the General Statutes, and effective September 15, 1947, the district adopted a zoning ordinance in accordance therewith; since then it has exercised and enforced its zoning authority within the district.

On April 1, 1955, the plaintiff adopted its own building zone ordinances in accordance with the General Statutes, and since then it has exercised and enforced its zoning authority within the town of Watertown outside the territorial limits of the Watertown Fire District, but including areas subsequently annexed by that district.

On July 6, 1961, the plaintiff duly adopted a municipal charter pursuant to General Statutes §§ 7-188 to 7-194, which constitute a part of the Home Rule Act. A true copy of the charter has become part of the file in this case by stipulation of the parties. The charter, by reference, invested the plaintiff with all of the powers and privileges conferred on towns under the general laws of the state and under the terms of § 7-194 of the General Statutes.

For many years, since before the adoption of its charter, the plaintiff has provided fire fighting services and police protection in the town of Water-town, including the areas within the Watertown Fire District and the Oakville Fire District. The defendants have never provided such services. Since the adoption of its charter, the plaintiff, which presently has no source of water supply or means of sewage disposal of its own, has installed water piping and sanitary sewers, serviced by the facilities of the Oakville Fire District, within an area of the *417 town of Watertown outside the Watertown Fire District and the Oakville Fire District.

The charter of the town of Watertown contains no specific provisions restricting the exercise of any of the powers and privileges conferred therein on the plaintiff to the area of the town outside the Watertown Fire District and the Oakville Fire District ; in fact, to the contrary, § 101 of the charter reads in part: “All the inhabitants dwelling within the territorial limits of the Town of Watertown . . . may hold and exercise all powers and privileges heretofore exercised by said Town and not inconsistent with the provisions of this Charter, the additional powers and privileges herein conferred and all powers and privileges conferred upon Town under the general laws of the State and under the terms of Section 7-194 of the General Statutes.” This point is further emphasized by the second sentence of § 906 of the charter, which states: “All special acts or parts of special acts relating to the Town of Watertown, inconsistent with the provisions of this Charter, are repealed.”

The parties concur that because of the overlapping and duplication of the powers claimed by the plaintiff under its charter and the provisions of the General Statutes, on the one hand, and the powers claimed by the defendants under the provisions of the various special acts previously referred to, on the other hand, there is a substantial uncertainty of legal relations between the plaintiff and the defendants.

The plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment determining the answer to seven questions which are set forth in the plaintiff’s complaint. The questions propounded and the court’s answers thereto follow.

The first question is whether, since the enactment of Public Act No. 465 of the 1957 session of the Gen *418 eral Assembly (the Home Rule Act; as amended, General Statutes c. 99) the Watertown Fire District has had the authority to extend its geographical limits by virtue of the provisions of a prior special act. The plaintiff contends that § 18 of Public Act No. 465 repealed the provisions in the General Statutes which provided for a change in boundaries of fire or other districts. The defendant Watertown Fire District correctly maintains that the statute which was repealed was § 770 of chapter 35 of the 1949 Revision of the General Statutes, that § 770 had to do only with districts organized under that chapter, and that its repeal does not affect the special act in question. The plaintiff further contends that § 7-192 of the General Statutes requires that any amendment of a district charter must be in accordance with the Home Rule Act. The plaintiff is in error, because § 7-192 refers only to “any town, city or borough,” and not to any district. The first question is answered in the affirmative.

The second question is whether the Watertown Fire District now has the power to enlarge its territorial limits within the town of Watertown by means of a home rule charter amendment or by virtue of other statutory authority. This question has been answered under the first question. The Watertown Fire District still has authority and power to admit contiguous territory under the special act. The plaintiff’s claim that the Watertown Fire District lost its power to enlarge its territorial limits as a result of the adoption of the charter by the plaintiff will be answered under the fourth question.

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Bluebook (online)
265 A.2d 496, 28 Conn. Super. Ct. 413, 28 Conn. Supp. 413, 1968 Conn. Super. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-watertown-v-watertown-fire-district-connsuperct-1968.