Wash. Sub. San. Com'n v. Donacam Assoc.
This text of 471 A.2d 1097 (Wash. Sub. San. Com'n v. Donacam Assoc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WASHINGTON SUBURBAN SANITARY COMMISSION
v.
DONACAM ASSOCIATES, ET AL.
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland.
Harry L. Durity, Upper Marlboro, for appellant.
Joseph P. Blocher, Silver Spring, with whom were Susan M. Reutershan and Linowes & Blocher, Silver Spring, on the brief, for appellees.
Argued before WEANT, ADKINS and GETTY, JJ.
ADKINS, Judge.
The principal question presented in this case is whether a determination by appellant WSSC to levy special benefit assessments against appellees Donacam Associates, Inc., et al. (hereinafter Donacam) involved a "contested case" as defined by Code, Art. 41, § 244(d) and was, therefore, appealable by Donacam to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County under § 255. The parties have also argued, as they did below, the legality of the special assessments in question. We do not reach that issue since we conclude that the proceeding before the WSSC was not a "contested case." Therefore, the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to consider the merits of the case Donacam attempted to present by way of a purported appeal from the WSSC decision.
Facts
Donacam is the owner of parcels 2, 5, 7, and 8 in Rock Spring Park, Montgomery County. At its own cost, Donacam constructed a private water and sewer system on portions of this property. In order to provide water and sewer service to parcel 9, owned by Spaulding and Slye, WSSC determined that it was necessary to hook this private system onto a WSSC public sewer line to be constructed across parcel 8 and connected to parcel 9. In furtherance of this project, Donacam and WSSC in 1980 executed an "Agreement to Grant" and a "Deed of Abandonment and Quitclaim" by the terms of which Donacam transferred to WSSC the private water and sewer system and granted WSSC a sewer easement across parcel 8. In due course, WSSC constructed a sanitary sewer across parcel 8, connecting the former private system to parcel 9. Parcel 9 received public water from a line constructed by WSSC, which line joined the line on site at parcel 8.
In February, 1982, Donacam was shocked by a notice from WSSC advising that a sewer front-foot benefit charge was being assessed against parcel 8. The assessment was $3,034.84 annually for thirty-three years. Donacam's distress was the result of its view that parcel 8 had not been benefitted by the construction of the sewer line, and by its reading of the "Agreement to Grant" and the "Deed of Abandonment and Quitclaim" which, it thought, precluded WSSC from charging it for any portion of the costs of that construction. Donacam protested both upon receipt of the assessment and at a subsequent WSSC hearing, but in May, 1982, WSSC determined to retain the assessment against parcel 8.
That same month, WSSC imposed water and sewer front-foot benefit charges against parcels 5 and 7 ($2,211.95 annually for thirty-five years and $1,950.73 annually for thirty-three years respectively) and a water front-foot benefit charge against parcel 8 ($733.50 annually for sixteen years). Once again, Donacam's protests were unavailing. After a hearing, WSSC confirmed these assessments as well.
Donacam appealed all the assessments to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The appeal was met with WSSC's Motion Raising Preliminary Objection which asserted the court lacked jurisdiction because there was no statutory provision for appeal. The court, concluding that the matter involved a contested case, held that a right to appeal was granted by Art. 41, § 255. It denied the motion and then voided all the assessments on the ground that they were arbitrary and capricious because Donacam's property had received no benefit and because the assessments violated the agreement between Donacam and WSSC, as contained in the "Agreement to Grant" and the "Deed of Abandonment and Quitclaim."
It is from that judgment that WSSC has appealed.
The Trial Court's Jurisdiction A Contested Case or Not?
The threshold issue in this case, indeed, as we see it, the dispositive one, is whether the circuit court had jurisdiction to decide Donacam's appeal from the WSSC. Since the right to appeal from the decision of an administrative agency is statutory in nature, Criminal Injuries Compensation Board v. Gould, 273 Md. 486, 500, 331 A.2d 55 (1975), we search first for some statutory basis for the appeal to the circuit court.
The law pertaining to the WSSC is codified in Art. 29 of the Code (1983 Repl.Vol.).[1] Title 5 of that article deals with "Front Foot Benefit Charges." Neither in that title nor elsewhere in Art. 29 is there any provision for an appeal to a court from an assessment of front-foot benefit charges by WSSC.[2] If a statutory right of appeal exists it must be found in Art. 41, § 255(a) (part of the Administrative Procedure Act) which provides: "Any party aggrieved by a final decision in a contested case ... is entitled to judicial review thereof under this subtitle." [emphasis supplied].
WSSC is a state agency subject to the APA. Prince George's County v. Blumberg, 288 Md. 275, 418 A.2d 1155 (1980), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1083, 101 S.Ct. 869, 66 L.Ed.2d 808 (1981). That Donacam was aggrieved by the WSSC decision as to the assessments is unquestioned, and it seems plain enough that this decision was the final agency decision. The question, then, is whether the proceeding before the WSSC was a "contested case."
WSSC says it was not because taxation is a legislative matter. There is no doubt that the "power to tax belongs exclusively to the legislative branch of government," Spencer v. Merchant, 125 U.S. 345, 355, 8 S.Ct. 921, 926, 31 L.Ed. 763 (1888), and that a front-foot special benefit charge is a species of tax. Baltimore v. Cahill, 126 Md. 596, 95 A. 473 (1915); 14 McQuillen, Municipal Corporations (Third Ed. 1920 Rev. Vol.) § 38.01. Nor is there doubt that legislative proceedings are not "contested cases." Bernstein v. Board of Education of Prince George's County, 245 Md. 464, 472-73, 226 A.2d 243 (1967); Eliason v. State Roads Commission, 231 Md. 257, 189 A.2d 649, cert. denied, 375 U.S. 914, 84 S.Ct. 211, 11 L.Ed.2d 152 (1963); see R. Oppenheimer, Administrative Law in Maryland, 2 Md.L.Rev. 185, 204 (1938) and The Supreme Court and Administrative Law 1936-40, 5 Md.L.Rev. 231, 246, 248 (1941).
As we see it, however, it is not the underlying function involved, but rather the particular nature of the hearing required that determines whether a matter is a "contested case." See 73 C.J.S. "Public Administrative Bodies and Procedure" § 130. We shall return to this notion shortly.
Art. 41, § 244(d) defines a "contested case" as "a proceeding before an agency in which the legal rights, duties, statutory entitlements, or privileges of specific parties are required by law or constitutional right to be determined after an agency hearing." The trial court concluded that because Donacam was entitled to a hearing under the WSSC law, this was a contested case.
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