Weber v. Kenai Peninsula Borough

990 P.2d 611, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 138, 1999 WL 820720
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1999
DocketS-8404
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 990 P.2d 611 (Weber v. Kenai Peninsula Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weber v. Kenai Peninsula Borough, 990 P.2d 611, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 138, 1999 WL 820720 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Robert Weber appeals from a superior court order upholding the Kenai Peninsula Borough’s decision to finance a privately owned gas-line extension by creating a utility special assessment district. Weber raises constitutional challenges to the assessment district’s creation and to his property’s mandatory inclusion in it. Because the borough created the assessment district for the purpose of financing a gas line that provides public benefits and because the construction specially benefitted Weber’s property, we hold that the borough acted constitutionally. Accordingly, we affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In May 1993 property owners in the East Scout Lake Loop area of the Kenai Peninsula Borough (the borough) petitioned to form a utility special assessment district to finance a gas line extension. After a public hearing on the petition the borough assembly established the East Scout Lake Loop Utility Special Assessment District (assessment district) to finance the gas line. At another public hearing, the borough appropriated $220,000 to fund the project. The borough hired Ens-tar, a public utility that is a privately-owned, for-profit corporation, to construct the gas line. The borough’s agreement with Enstar provided. that Enstar would-assume ownership of the gas line. The borough then authorized Enstar to proceed with construction. Upon completion of the gas line in 1993, the borough confirmed the assessment roll, established the funding mechanism for the assessment district, and set $1,330 as the amount to be paid by each property owner within the district.

*613 The approved assessment roll included Weber’s property, which was then owned by Weber’s predecessor in interest, Karen Mills. Mills appealed the borough’s decision to the superior court, which affirmed the assessment. In the interim, Weber had replaced Mills as the property’s owner.

Weber appeals the superior court’s decision.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

Because the superior court acted as an intermediate court of appeal, we independently review the borough’s decision. 1 We apply our independent judgment to constitutional issues. 2 But when a question of law involves the borough’s expertise, we review the decision under the rational basis standard. 3 Likewise, we apply the rational basis standard when the borough’s application of the law to the facts implicates administrative expertise or involves fundamental policy determinations. 4 Under this standard, we defer to the borough’s determination as long as it is supported by the facts and has a reasonable basis in law. 5

B. The Borough’s Creation of a Special Assessment District to Finance the Construction of a Gas Line Was for a “Public Purpose” as Required by Article IX, Section 6 of the Alaska Constitution.

Article IX, section 6 of the Alaska Constitution provides, “No tax shall be levied, or appropriation of public money made, or pub-lie property transferred, nor shall the public credit be used, except for a public purpose.” In the superior court, Weber argued that the borough’s creation of the special assessment district violated this provision because it ben-efitted only Enstar and served no public purpose. Relying primarily on our decision in Súber v. Alaska State Bond Committee, 6 the superior court ruled that the creation of the assessment district was valid because the gas line served a legitimate public purpose. Weber contends that the superior court misinterpreted Súber.

In Súber we considered the constitutionality of a mortgage adjustment plan intended to aid mortgagors and mortgagees of one- to four-family dwellings that had been damaged by the March 27, 1964, earthquake. 7 There we upheld the state’s program on the basis that the “paramount purpose of the Program is the relief of those saddled with economic hardship. Any private advantage, such as to those holding mortgages on the damaged or destroyed homes, is incidental and subordinate.” 8

Weber argues that Súber is inapplicable to this case because the private benefit to Enstar was “the sole benefit” — and not merely an incident — of the utility assessment. 9 He relies exclusively on the fact that Enstar not only received all assessment proceeds, but owns and operates the gas line. Weber emphasizes that the borough created the assessment district specifically to pay Enstar for its costs in building the gas line. But these assertions do not compel the conclusion that the gas line was constructed for *614 a purely private purpose or that Enstar alone benefitted from the special assessment.

We presume that a municipal legislative assessment decision is valid. 10 We thus assume that the creation of the assessment district is constitutional unless Weber proves otherwise. As we held in City of Wasilla v. Wilsonoff, 11 we will reverse a special assessment decision only upon proof of “ fraud or conduct so arbitrary as to be the equivalent of fraud, or [where a decision is] so manifestly arbitrary and unreasonable as to be palpably unjust and oppressive.” 12

Weber has presented no evidence that the borough’s decision to construct the gas line was motivated by considerations other than the public interest. In fact, the borough did not initiate the formation of the assessment district; rather, the landowners — by over a seventy-percent vote — petitioned the borough to create the assessment district. Weber has not shown that the borough created the assessment district to assist Enstar. To the contrary, the record shows that the borough based its decision on the public’s stated need for a new gas line.

The fact that Enstar is a private company is irrelevant to whether the gas line serves a public purpose. In Milheim v. Moffat Tunnel Improvement District, 13 the United States Supreme Court held that “the test of the public character of an improvement is the use to which it is to be put, not the person by whom it is to be operated.” 14 And we similarly held in Lien v. City of Ketchikan 15

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
990 P.2d 611, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 138, 1999 WL 820720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weber-v-kenai-peninsula-borough-alaska-1999.