FMRR Development v. Birdsboro Municipal Authority F.X. McLaughlin v. Birdsboro Water Authority ~ Appeal of Birdsboro Municipal Authority and Birdsboro Water Authority
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
FMRR Development :
:
v. :
:
Birdsboro Municipal Authority :
:
Francis X. McLaughlin :
:
v. :
:
Birdsboro Water Authority :
:
Appeal of: Birdsboro Municipal :
Authority and Birdsboro Water : No. 1925 C.D. 2014
Authority : Submitted: September 17, 2015
BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
JUDGE COVEY FILED: October 7, 2015
Birdsboro Municipal Authority (Authority) appeals from the Berks
County Common Pleas Court’s (trial court) October 7, 2014 order finding in favor of
Francis X. McLaughlin (McLaughlin) and FMRR Development (FMRR)
(collectively, Owners) and against the Authority. The Authority presents one issue
for this Court’s review: whether a water and sewer rate structure which subjects a
class of customers to a tiered rate with increases based on usage is unreasonable and
discriminatory. After review, we affirm.
Owners own real property within the Authority’s service area, and each
property is improved with multi-unit residential apartment buildings or multi-family
dwellings. On September 24, 2010, FMRR acquired title to the residential apartment
building commonly known as the Chestnut Arms Apartments (Chestnut Arms)
located at 700 East 1st Street in Birdsboro Borough, Berks County, Pennsylvania.
Chestnut Arms consists of 21 residential apartment units which are connected to the
Authority’s water supply and sanitary sewer system. Upon FMRR’s acquisition,
Chestnut Arms was enrolled as the Authority’s customer and at all times had 20
Equivalent Dwelling Units (EDU) assigned to it by the Authority.
In September 2008, McLaughlin acquired title to the residential
apartment building commonly known as the Maple Springs Apartments (Maple
Springs) located at 700 and 800 Union Street in Birdsboro Borough, Berks County,
Pennsylvania. Maple Springs consists of 20 residential apartment units which are
connected to the Authority’s water supply and sanitary sewer system. Upon
McLaughlin’s acquisition, Maple Springs was enrolled as the Authority’s customer
and at all times had 20 EDUs assigned to it by the Authority.
Each property had a single water meter installed therein which the
Authority or its predecessor, Birdsboro Borough, maintained. The Authority’s July 1,
2008 Rate Resolution (Rate Resolution) established four classifications of users for
both water and sewer services: domestic, commercial, industrial and public. There
were no subcategories in any classification, and the classifications were not further
defined. The Authority’s metered rate schedule provides that rents and charges shall
be based upon and shall be computed in accordance with three separate components:
a ready-to-serve charge, EDU charges and a consumption charge. The ready-to-serve
charge is a flat charge of $15.68 per consumer unit per quarter. The EDU charge is a
flat fee per quarter dependent only upon the classification of the user which, in the
instant case, are domestic establishments and therefore $3.50 per unit per quarter.
The consumption charges are tiered charges that are directly dependent upon water
usage that increase progressively with increased volume/consumption. Specifically,
2
the base charge for water consumption by a single EDU up to a quarterly average of
15,000 gallons is $4.992 per 1,000 gallons. The base charge for sewer service is
likewise based on water consumption and the charge per consumer unit is $7.215 per
1,000 gallons.
McLaughlin installed individual private water meters at Maple Springs
and, as a result of comparing usage data from the meters with invoices received from
the Authority, McLaughlin determined that the consumption charges were
significantly higher than those calculated from the clear words of the Rate
Resolution. Chestnut Arms’ consumption charges were also significantly higher than
those calculated from the Rate Resolution’s patent language. Owners made
numerous attempts to address the alleged overcharges with the Authority, including
the filing of numerous written complaints on forms prescribed by the Authority, but
the Authority never provided Owners with an explanation or a response beyond a
statement that the rates were reasonable and uniform.
Owners commenced two separate civil actions in magisterial court. The
Authority appealed from both decisions to the trial court. The trial court held three
hearings and, by July 14, 2014 verdict, initially found in the Authority’s favor on the
basis that the issue was identical to that presented in Chicora Commons Limited
Partnership, LLP v. Chicora Borough Sewer Authority, 922 A.2d 986 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2007). Thereafter, Owners filed a Motion for Post-Trial Relief.1 On October 7, 2014,
the trial court issued an amended verdict in Owners’ favor and against the Authority
with accompanying opinions dated September 30, 2014 and October 3, 2014,
respectively. The trial court directed the parties to submit a proposed order within 30
1
The Motion for Post-Trial relief was filed on July 25, 2014. According to the docket
entries, the trial court entered judgment on the verdict on July 30, 2015. Because the prothonotary
can only enter judgment on a verdict upon praecipe of a party if “no timely post-trial motion is
filed[,]” the judgment was improperly docketed and cannot stand. Pa. R.C.P. No. 227.4(1)(a).
3
days covering certain outstanding details. The Authority appealed to this Court prior
to the submission deadline.2
The Authority argues that Pennsylvania law permits classifications under
the rates charged by municipalities and municipal authorities for water and sewer
service, even when said classifications may result in some customers paying more for
water and/or sewer as their usage increases. Specifically, the Authority contends that
its structure is reasonably related to services because as the customer receives the
water billed for, the customer compensates the Authority for the additional services
required for their high consumption. It further asserts that the rate is not
discriminatory as all customers within the class are treated the same as Owners,
depending on their respective usage.
Owners rejoin that the Authority has intentionally disregarded the literal
language of its own Rate Resolution by employing a billing practice that charges
owners of multi-family residential dwellings a premium consumption charge based
upon the specific assignment of a single EDU for each multi-unit apartment complex
while basing all other charges on the number of dwelling units present. Owners
maintain that such practice effectively requires residential apartment owners and
tenants to pay a higher rate for water than owners of single-family residential
dwellings and, therefore, unlawfully discriminates against such owners in violation of
its own Rate Resolution and the legal requirement of uniformity within a
classification.
Initially, according to the Authority’s July 1, 2008 Rate Resolution:
“Water rates, rents and charges for use of the [w]ater [s]ystem by any [i]mproved
[p]roperty shall be based upon and shall be computed in accordance with the
2
“Our review of a trial court decision as to whether an authority’s utility rate is reasonable is
limited to determining whether the findings are supported by substantial evidence and whether the
law was properly applied to the facts.” The Scott Twp. Sewer and Water Auth. v. Ease Simulation,
Inc., 2 A.3d 1288, 1289 n.1 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010).
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following:” (1) “Ready-to-Serve Charge[,]” $15.68 for residents and $23.00 for
nonresidents; (2) “EDU Charges-Water[,]” $3.50 for domestic establishments, $5.431
for commercial establishments, $8.518 for industrial establishments, and $8.518 for
public establishments; and (3) “Consumption Charges. In addition [to] the ready-to-
serve meter charge and the minimum EDU charge, the following consumption
charges are applicable to the excess consumption per meter over that allowable under
the minimum charge[,]” $4.992 per 1,000 gallons for residents, $7.371 for
nonresidents. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 9-10. Section 5607(d) of the
Municipality Authorities Act (MAA) provides in relevant part:
Every authority may exercise all powers necessary or
convenient for the carrying out of the purposes set forth in
this section, including, but without limiting the generality of
the foregoing, the following rights and powers:
....
(9) To fix, alter, charge and collect rates and other
charges in the area served by its facilities at reasonable
and uniform rates to be determined exclusively by it for
the purpose of providing for the payment of the expenses of
the authority, the construction, improvement, repair,
maintenance and operation of its facilities and properties[.]
53 Pa.C.S. § 5607(d) (emphasis added).3 Owners are not arguing that the rates are
unreasonable; rather they assert that their application is unreasonable. We agree.
In the instant case, each Owner’s property has only one meter.4 The
Authority charges them a ready-to-serve charge and an EDU charge per unit, and an
excess consumption charge per meter, notwithstanding the number of units. The
Rate Resolution expressly requires the excess charge “per meter.” R.R. at 9. The
3
Section 5607 of the new MAA replaces Section 4 of the Act of May 2, 1945, P.L. 382,
(formerly MAA of 1945) which was repealed by Section 3 of the Act of June 19, 2001, P.L. 287 and
reenacted by the same Act. Both sections are identical.
4
Although McLaughlin installed individual meters for each unit in Maple Springs, the
Authority only uses Authority-installed curb side meters.
5
rates apply to domestic establishments; however, domestic establishments are not
classified as single-dwelling or multi-dwelling. Consequently, the multi-dwelling
properties are charged an excess rate much sooner than the single-dwelling
properties, resulting in multi-dwelling properties being charged a much higher rate
overall than single-family dwellings.
The Authority argues that Chicora Commons applies to the instant case.
In Chicora Commons, the apartment owner challenged the sewer authority’s
classification or billing of EDUs for its properties on the basis that in actual practice a
residential apartment unit consumed less water and used less sewage service than a
single-residential dwelling. Thus, the apartment owner questioned the actual
assignment of EDUs by the sewer authority and claimed that the adopted and
published rate schedule was unreasonable, discriminatory and arbitrary because it did
not contain different or dedicated rules for multi-unit residential dwellings. The trial
court determined that
the application of this rate structure is not arbitrary or
unreasonably related to the value of services rendered either
as actually consumed, or readily available for use. All
apartment units are treated uniformly and each is billed as
one equivalent dwelling unit. Flat rate structures are
permitted under Pennsylvania law.
Chicora Commons, 922 A.2d at 995 (quoting trial court op. at 10). This Court
affirmed, holding that the apartment owner
failed to prove how it was treated differently. Undoubtedly,
there are residential customers who also use less water than
average, just as certainly as some use more. The line must
be drawn somewhere, and the [apartment owner] failed to
establish that the [sewer a]uthority abused its discretion
when it ‘drew the line’ and established the classification
system.
Id. (footnote omitted).
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Unlike the apartment owner in Chicora Commons, Owners do not
challenge the billing of EDUs for its properties or the Rate Resolution. Rather,
Owners maintain that the Authority unilaterally imposed a method of calculating
consumption charges that is discriminatory and unreasonable.
The Authority’s expert witness Keith Allen Hill (Hill) testified, “as a
professional engineer in the field of rate -- -- establishment and analysis[,]” R.R. at
59, at the January 17, 2014 hearing that “this step [the consumption charge] is a tiered
rate approach [that] takes into account the amount of water being used and the more
you use the slightly higher amount you pay per thousand gallons.” R.R. at 62. The
trial court commented: “It’s somewhat of a penalty.” Id. To which Hill rejoined: “I
don’t know if it’s a penalty or if it’s – . . . designed to promote the conservation of
water.” Id. (emphasis added). The Authority’s manager Aaron J. Durso also
proclaimed at the January 17, 2014 hearing that “[c]onservation is the main reason
behind the rate structure[.]” R.R. at 65 (emphasis added).
However, the Authority’s solicitor Doug Rauch explained at the March
18, 2014 hearing as follows:
Q One of the reasons [] McLaughlin’s here, or FMRR []
is here today, is because they’re saying that the rates are
unfairly applied and unreasonable. What was [Birdsboro
B]orough’s -- or the [Authority’s] decision based on when
they raised the rates and who they applied them to?
A Again, I think the -- the raising of the rates was
across-the-board just to raise revenue. The Board treats all
residential properties, you know, basically the same. There
are 79 properties that are multi-family residential rental
properties in Birdsboro, and they’re all treated the same.
The rates apply the same as to FMRR and [] McLaughlin’s
companies - - -
....
The Board felt that -- the policy decision for the Board was
as we’ve seen. The more water used, the more you end up
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paying for the usage. So what -- the reason behind the
adoption of this study and structure of the rates we have
now is it encourages conservation, and it favors the
single-family homeowner. What I mean by that is, the
Board thought it was fair to charge more to those people
that put a greater burden on the system, require more
treatment, physical stress to the treatment plant. Those
customers who use a large amount of water, they’re paying
more than the single-family homeowner. It’s almost kind of
a breath of fresh air in this day and age of economic
development where you’re finding the bigger companies
getting tax breaks by the government. This structure goes
the other way. The little guy’s actually favored.
R.R. at 126 (emphasis added). By favoring single-family homeowners, the Authority
is in effect discriminating against multi-dwelling property owners. While water
conservation is a reasonable basis for the tiered water rate, it cannot be achieved by a
discriminatory application of the rates against multi-dwelling properties.
As the trial court aptly opined:
In the case sub judice, because there is only one (1) meter
for the total twenty-one (21) units, waste by any one
tenant(s) cannot result in that tenant(s) being penalized
because all the tenants are billed collectively. Thus, anyone
who chooses not to conserve will not, in turn, pay any
penalty. Presently, with only one meter in the entire
apartment building, the landlord, not the tenant, pays the
increased cost. Not one tenant is motivated to conserve
water.
Certainly, if each tenant is responsible (1) for their own
water use, as well as (2) being surcharged for any use of
water that exceeds a reasonable allocation, the conservation
goal will be realized. If anyone wants to use more water
than is reasonable, he or she should pay more. That is the
motivation of an excess water use rate.
To make this work, the monthly average water usage
amount must be reasonable. If the average is not
reasonable, tenants will not pay a penalty for water abuse if
the average is set at an unreasonably high consumption rate
or will be unfairly penalized if the average is set at an
8
unreasonably low consumption rate. In either case, the
goal of conserving a natural resource is not properly
met either because, on the one hand, the tenant can use
almost as much as he wants without being charged an
increased cost or, on the other hand, the tenant is unfairly,
prematurely penalized if the average is set at an
unreasonably low rate.
Trial Ct. Op. at 2-3 (emphasis added). We discern no error in this analysis.
Because, as currently applied, the Rate Resolution makes residential
apartment owners pay a higher water rate than single-family residential dwellings, the
Authority has unlawfully discriminated against such owners in violation of the
MAA’s legal requirement of uniformity within a classification. Accordingly, we hold
that the Authority’s water and sewer consumption charge calculation methods are
contrary to the MAA’s mandate to charge reasonable and uniform rates because it is
unlawfully discriminatory as applied to multi-dwelling properties.
For all of the above reasons, the trial court’s order is affirmed.
___________________________
ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
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IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
FMRR Development :
:
v. :
:
Birdsboro Municipal Authority :
:
Francis X. McLaughlin :
:
v. :
:
Birdboro Water Authority :
:
Appeal of: Birdsboro Municipal :
Authority and Birdsboro Water : No. 1925 C.D. 2014
Authority :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 7th day of October, 2015, the Berks County Common
Pleas Court’s October 7, 2014 order is affirmed.
___________________________
ANNE E. COVEY, Judge