FILED
Jul 22 2020, 8:54 am
CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
Jeremy L. Fetty Barry A. Hall
Aleasha J. Boling Muncie, Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
Mark R. McKinney
Kent M. Frandsen Muncie, Indiana
Lebanon, Indiana
Randall C. Helman
Chief Deputy Consumer Counselor
Indianapolis, Indiana
Karol H. Krohn
Deputy Consumer Counselor
Indianapolis, Indiana
William I. Fine
Indiana Utility Consumer
Counselor
Indianapolis, Indiana
Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Attorney General of Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
Aaron T. Craft
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
Beth E. Heline
General Counsel Indiana Utility
Regulatory Commission
Indianapolis, Indiana
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 1 of 21
Jeremy Comeau
Assistant General Counsel Indiana
Utility Regulatory Commission
Indianapolis, Indiana
Steve Davies
Assistant General Counsel Indiana
Regulatory Commission
Indianapolis, Indiana
Christopher L. Bills
Muncie, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Delaware County Regional July 22, 2020
Wastewater District, Court of Appeals Case No.
Appellant, 19A-EX-2964
Appeal from the
v. Indiana Utility Regulatory
Commission
Muncie Sanitary District, et al., The Honorable James F. Huston,
Chairman
Appellees.
The Honorable David E. Ziegner,
Sarah E. Freeman, Stefanie
Krevda, David Oder,
Commissioners.
The Honorable David E. Veleta,
Senior Administrative Law Judge
Cause No. 45055
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 2 of 21
Altice, Judge.
Case Summary
[1] The Common Council of the City of Muncie (City Council) passed Muncie
City Ordinance 16-2015 (the Ordinance), which, with certain exceptions,
granted the Muncie Sanitary District (MSD) an exclusive license to provide
sewer service to customers in unincorporated areas within four miles of the
city’s municipal corporate boundaries (the Regulated Territory). 1 Pursuant to
Ind. Code § 8-1.5-6-9, MSD filed a petition with the Indiana Utility Regulatory
Commission (the Commission) for approval of the Ordinance. As is relevant to
this appeal, the Delaware County Regional Wastewater District (DCRWD)
intervened and asserted that the Regulated Territory included areas within
DCRWD’s existing sewer service territory. Following a hearing, the
Commission granted MSD’s petition, approving the Ordinance with certain
amendments. DCRWD now appeals, asserting that the Commission lacked the
statutory authority to approve the Ordinance and its order was contrary to law.
[2] We affirm.
Facts & Procedural History
[3] MSD is a municipal department of sanitation created pursuant to an ordinance
adopted under Ind. Code § 36-9-25-1(b) in 1968. MSD provides sewer service
1
In visual terms, the Regulated Territory forms a donut shape around Muncie.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 3 of 21
to over 27,000 residential, institutional, industrial, and commercial customers
within the Muncie corporate boundaries as well as some customers in
unincorporated areas around the city through sewer service agreements.
[4] DCRWD is a regional district created in 1976 by order of the Stream Pollution
Control Board (SPCB), predecessor to Indiana Department of Environmental
Management (IDEM), pursuant to Ind. Code Chapter 19-3-1.1. SPCB’s order
provided that DCRWD’s service territory consisted of:
all the territory in Delaware County except the territory currently
being serviced by the Muncie Sanitary District, the two areas
proposed to be annexed by the Muncie Sanitary District, and the
territory within the corporate limits of the Towns of Eaton,
Yorktown, Albany, Gaston, and the sewer service area of the
Town of Selma, Delaware County, Indiana.
Exhibits Vol. 2 at 120. DCRWD has continuously operated pursuant to the
statutory authority in Ind. Code Chapter 19-3-1.1 and its successor statutes
found in Ind. Code Article 13-26 (the IDEM Statutes). 2 DCRWD serves
approximately 3000 customers in rural areas of Delaware County. DCRWD
owns its own collection system but does not have a wastewater treatment
facility (WWTF), and it contracts for treatment of its collected wastewater with
three entities, including MSD.
2
The IDEM Statutes are found in Title 13 Environment, Article 26 Regional Water, Sewage, and Solid
Waste Districts. Ind. Code § 13-26-1-1 provides that any area may be established as a regional sewer district
to provide for the collection, treatment, and disposal of sewage inside and outside the district.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 4 of 21
[5] I.C. § 36-9-2-18 allows municipalities, including MSD, to “exercise powers” –
in this case, provide sewer service – within four miles of their boundaries.
Pursuant to that authority, the City Council on July 10, 2015 passed the
Ordinance, which provides:
Upon the adoption of this Ordinance, [MSD] shall hold an
exclusive license to furnish sewer service within the Regulated
Territory, and all other utilities are expressly prohibited from
furnishing sewer service within the Regulated Territory, except
for those customers located in the Regulated Territory that are
connected to another sewer utility as of the date this Ordinance is
adopted.
Exhibits Vol. 1 at 32. The Ordinance addressed the possibility of areas of
“disputed” territory:
[T]he General Assembly in enacting Indiana Code § 8-1.5-6 has
recognized that in exercising its future development planning
Indiana municipalities will encounter disputed areas of claimed
service exclusivity and has provided an administrative solution to
said conflicts by a resolution procedure under the jurisdiction of
the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission[.]
Exhibits Vol. 1 at 31. Ind. Code Chapter 8-1.5-6 (the Regulated Territories
Statutes), referred to in the Ordinance, was enacted in 2014 and is found in
Title 8 Utilities and Transportation, Article 1.5 Municipal Utilities, Chapter 6
Utility Service in Regulated Territories. At issue in this appeal is whether the
Commission had the authority under the Regulated Territories Statutes to
approve the Ordinance giving MSD the license to provide sewer service in parts
of DCRWD’s already-existing service territory. This presents us with an issue
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 5 of 21
of first impression, and we discuss the Regulated Territories Statutes more fully
in the Discussion section of this opinion.
[6] The Ordinance provided that it was not effective or enforceable until approval
from the Commission was secured. See also I.C. § 8-1.5-6-9(b) (municipality
may not enforce a regulatory ordinance until the Commission issues an order
approving it). On February 27, 2018, MSD filed a petition with the
Commission seeking approval of the Ordinance. Pursuant to I.C. § 8-1.5-6-
9(b), a petition must include: (1) a description of the service territory established
in the regulatory ordinance; (2) proposed rates and charges for the services to be
provided in the service territory; (3) a list of any administrative or judicial
proceedings involving the regulatory ordinance; and (4) a list of any utilities
actually or potentially affected by the regulatory ordinance. (Emphasis added).
[7] As to utilities actually or potentially affected, MSD’s petition stated in part:
9. [DCRWD] currently operates as a regional district established
under Ind. Code § 13-26 in Delaware County, Indiana.
10. The four mile area outside of Muncie’s corporate boundaries
includes an area of overlap with the territory established as the DCRWD.
The MSD provides sewage treatment services for DCRWD
through contractual agreement.
11. Ordinance 2015-16 does not claim jurisdiction over new or
existing customers with the DCRWD service area. Ordinance
2015-16 does claim exclusive jurisdiction over customers within
four miles outside of Muncie’s corporate boundaries that were
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 6 of 21
not within an existing district or currently already being served
by another utility at the time of the Ordinance’s passing.
12. The MSD currently serves in excess of 27,000 customers
within the corporate boundaries of the City of Muncie and in
excess of 1,700 customers in the unincorporated area around the
City of Muncie through sewer service agreements. To do so, The
MSD has built and maintained its systems such that it is ready
and able to offer service to all customers within the Ordinance
2015-16 regulated territory who may reasonably request service. .
..
Exhibits Vol. 1 at 26 (emphasis added). With regard to rates, the petition stated
that the proposed rates for the Regulated Territory would be the same as the
rates that apply to all MSD customers and those approved by the Board of
Sanitary Commissioners.
[8] On March 26, 2018, DCRWD filed its petition to intervene, asserting that
DCRWD had substantial interests in that cause because MSD was seeking
approval of the Ordinance “authorizing it to provide sewer service in certain
unincorporated areas of Delaware County, which include areas where
DCRWD is already providing service or is in a better position to provide
service.” Appellant’s Appendix Vol. 2 at 35. On April 11, 2018, the Commission
granted DCRWD’S petition to intervene. 3 The Commission adopted an agreed
3
Liberty Regional Waste District (LRWD) and the Town of Yorktown also intervened. MSD treats the
wastewater of LRWD and has since 1978. Any service disputes between those two entities and MSD were
resolved and are not expressly at issue in this appeal. Therefore, we focus the facts on those relevant to the
issues involving DCRWD.
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procedural schedule, with an evidentiary hearing ultimately occurring on
January 17, 2019.
[9] Prior to the hearing, the parties pre-filed evidence with the Commission. The
Office of Utility Consumer Counselor (OUCC) filed the direct testimony and
accompanying exhibits of Carl Seals, Utility Analyst in the OUCC’S
Water/Wastewater Division, voicing the OUCC’s position in favor of the
Ordinance. MSD filed the direct testimony and accompanying exhibits of
Michael R. Cline, P.E., member of MSD’s Board of Sanitary Commissioners.
DCRWD filed the direct testimony of John Brooke, member of DCRWD’s
Board of Trustees. 4 At the January 17, 2019 evidentiary hearing, the
Commission admitted the pre-filed testimony and exhibits from the various
parties and heard live testimony from, among others, Cline, Brooke, and Seals.
[10] In determining whether to approve an ordinance, the Commission is required to
consider public interest factors as set forth in I.C. § 8-1.5-6-8(g), which include:
(1) the ability of another utility to provide service in the regulated territory; (2)
the effect of a Commission order on customer rates and charges for service
provided in the regulated territory; (3) the effect of the Commission’s order on
present and future economic development in the regulated territory; (4) the
history of utility service in the regulated territory, including any contracts for
utility service entered into by the municipality that adopted the regulatory
4
LRWD and the Town of Yorktown also filed direct testimony of witnesses and exhibits.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 8 of 21
ordinance and any other municipalities, municipal utilities, or utilities; and (5)
any other factors the commission considers necessary.
[11] Here, evidence was presented that MSD provides sewage treatment service to
DCRWD. MSD owns 91 miles of combined sewer pipe, 245 miles of separate
storm sewer pipe, and 306 miles of separate sanitary sewer pipe. MSD has one
treatment plant, 26 lift stations, and 4 Army Corps of Engineers Flood Stations.
MSD’s treatment plant is a Class 4 plant, with 24-million gallons per day
capacity and is about 40 acres in size. MSD has approximately 200 employees.
In addition to providing service to the city of Muncie, MSD had been providing
sewer service to some households outside of the city boundaries after being
approached by homeowners whose septic systems failed or were failing. MSD
was also providing service to Cowan Community Schools, as their system was
in disrepair. DCRWD had been offered to provide service to Cowan but
ultimately did not proceed in doing so.
[12] At the time of the hearing, DCRWD was collecting wastewater for around 3000
customers in rural Delaware County. Its collection system consisted of over
187,000 lineal feet of gravity sewer lines, over 114,000 lineal feet of force main,
over 20,000 feet of 8-24” pipe, and over 140 lift stations and grinder pumps.
DCRWD contracts with three providers to treat the collected wastewater:
Chesterfield, Yorktown, and MSD. DCRWD presented evidence that it had
entered into an interlocal agreement with LRWD regarding construction of a
WWTF to serve those two districts and had completed a preliminary
engineering report regarding the proposed project. DCRWD also presented
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evidence that it had a long-term plan to increase customer base and had over $1
million set aside for future projects and had a bond reserve for that purpose.
[13] Cline’s submitted rebuttal testimony characterized DCRWD’s plans to build a
new treatment plant as speculative. MSD provided discovery responses from
DCRWD, which in Cline’s view illustrated that, even if DCRWD built its own
treatment plant, it would be sized to serve existing, not new, customers. In
response to DCRWD’s concerns about not being able to expand, Cline stated
that if a territory dispute would arise over existing or future customers in need
of sewer service in the four-mile area, MSD would be willing to work with
other sewer providers, including DCRWD and LRWD, to discuss the most cost
effective and readily available service to the customer, suggesting that “MSD
would be willing to establish a joint Committee of Board members from
DCRWD, LRWD, and MSD to meet and resolve these disputes in a manner
consistent with the public interest.” Exhibits Vol. 2 at 107.
[14] During the hearing, MSD agreed to amend the Regulated Territory in several
respects: First, it agreed to exclude the territory where LRWD was currently
providing service. Second, MSD entered into a stipulation with Yorktown
specifying that MSD would not seek to serve areas within Yorktown’s
boundaries. Third, MSD agreed to expressly exclude from its Regulated
Territory the area where DCRWD was currently providing wastewater service.
[15] On July 18, 2019, DCRWD filed a petition to reopen the record, requesting that
the Commission allow it to present additional evidence that had come to light
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since the January 2019 evidentiary hearing. The Commission granted the
motion, and conducted an additional evidentiary hearing on October 21, 2019,
during which DCRWD and MSD provided supplemental testimony. DCRWD
presented evidence concerning federal grand jury indictments against a Muncie
employee and a Muncie contractor. MSD responded that the ongoing
investigation is not of Muncie itself, but of certain individuals who may have
acted inappropriately.
[16] The Commission issued its final order on November 27, 2019, approving the
Ordinance with the above-mentioned three amendments to the regulated
territory. The Commission’s final order made findings on the public interest
factors set out in I.C. § 8-1.5-6-8(g). With regard to the ability of another utility
to provide service in the regulated territory, the Commission found that MSD
was able to provide service to the public in the Regulated Territory and
DCRWD was unwilling or unable to provide service to the Regulated Territory.
With regard to rates that would be charged, the Commission found that MSD’s
rate would be less than or comparable to DCWRD’s rate. As to the effect on
present and future economic development, the Commission found that the
Ordinance would promote economic growth by providing certainty of service to
customers and developers, and using MSD as a single provider of service would
eliminate confusion as to what entity was responsible. The Commission
observed that the Delaware County Health Department (DCHD) had contacted
MSD about providing service to some homeowners and
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[p]resently numerous homes in the Burlington area are on pump
and haul orders from the DCHD. Because of this, homeowners
are incurring additional monthly costs, which is an economic
burden. This burden could affect the economic wellbeing and
growth of the [] Regulated Territory … the only other utility
claiming the ability to serve customers in the [] Regulated
Territory, DCRWD, could not do so on a timely basis … delay
in service to customers in need does not provide for the economic
wellbeing of the [] Regulated Territory.
Appellant’s Appendix Vol. 2 at 31. As to the history of utility service in the
Regulated Territory, the Commission found that MSD had invested in
infrastructure, engineering, and construction over the years, including to handle
the Cowan schools, which had been offered to but ultimately not pursued by
DCRWD. The Commission determined that the public interest would be
served by the passing of the Ordinance and approved it. DCRWD now
appeals.
Discussion & Decision
[17] Acting under the Regulated Territories Statutes, specifically I.C. § 8-1.5-6-6, the
Commission approved the Ordinance that, with certain exceptions, granted
MSD an exclusive license to provide sewer service within the Regulated
Territory. DCRWD asserts that the Commission “did not have the authority to
disturb the territory granted to DCRWD by the SPCB pursuant to [the IDEM
Statutes].” Appellant’s Brief at 5. The sole issue DRRWD raises on appeal “is
the Commission’s jurisdiction and authority to issue its order authorizing MSD
to operate in DCRWD’s service territory[.]” Reply Brief at 7.
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[18] This court reviews Commission orders using a multi-tiered standard. 5 N. Ind.
Pub. Serv. Co. v. U.S. Steel Corp., 907 N.E.2d 1012, 1016 (Ind. 2009); Citizens
Action Coal. of Ind., Inc. v. Indianapolis Power & Light Co., 74 N.E.3d 554, 562
(Ind. Ct. App. 2017). First, the court determines whether the Commission’s
findings of basic fact are supported by substantial evidence. U.S. Steel Corp., 907
N.E.2d at 1016. In conducting that review we neither reweigh the evidence nor
assesses the credibility of witnesses and consider only the evidence most
favorable to the Commission’s findings. Id. Second, we determine whether the
Commission’s order contains “specific findings on all the factual
determinations material to its ultimate conclusions” and whether the
Commission’s conclusions of ultimate fact are reasonable. Id. (citation
omitted). The Commission’s orders are also “subject to review as contrary to
law,” and “this constitutionally preserved review is limited to whether the
Commission stayed within its jurisdiction and conformed to the statutory
standards and legal principles involved in producing its decision, ruling, or
order.” Hamilton Se. Utilities, Inc. v. Ind. Util. Regulatory Comm’n, 135 N.E.3d
902, 908 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019), trans. denied. “Any issue regarding [t]he
[IURC]’s jurisdiction ... is a legal question that [appellate courts] review de
novo.” Tyus v. Indianapolis Power & Light Co., 134 N.E.3d 389, 398 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2019) (internal quotations omitted). “This third tier, a review of whether
5
The Commission is expressly excepted from the Administrative Orders and Procedures Act. Ind. Code § 4-
21.5-2-4(a)(8).
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 13 of 21
the Commission’s action was contrary to law, is precisely what DCRWD has
requested in this appeal.” 6 Reply Brief at 9.
[19] DCRWD’s argument is that “the IDEM [S]tatutes, under which DCRWD was
created and now operates, should govern DCRWD’s rights within its own
statutorily granted territory[,]” not the Regulated Territories Statutes, and to the
extent that they conflict, DCRWD argues that the IDEM Statutes should
control. Reply Brief at 14. We begin by examining the Regulated Territories
Statutes, pursuant to which the Commission issued its order.
[20] The legislature passed the Regulated Territories Statutes in 2014. I.C. § 8-1.5-6-
3 defines a “regulatory ordinance” as “an ordinance adopted by a municipality
that: (1) asserts the exclusive authority of a municipal utility to provide service
within a regulated territory; or (2) prohibits another utility from providing
utility service in the regulated territory.” Under both subsections (1) and (2),
the Ordinance at issue is a “regulatory ordinance”’ because it asserts the
exclusive authority for MSD to provide sewer service within the four miles
outside the corporate boundaries of Muncie and because it prohibits any other
utility from providing service in that area where they are not already serving.
6
While DCRWD notes “the disputed nature” of a number of facts that MSD and the Commission present as
undisputed in their appellate briefs, DCRWD states that “the Commission’s fact finding in this matter is not
the issue that DCRWD has raised with the Court on appeal” and that this court’s “analysis should not even
reach the Commission’s fact finding because the Commission acted outside of its jurisdiction in issuing its
order.” Appellant’s Reply Brief at 7, 17 (emphasis added); see also id. at 8 (“This case presents the purely legal
issue of the limitations on the Commission’s jurisdiction.”). Given DCRWD’s repeated affirmations that the
Commission’s findings are not at issue in this appeal, we do not address the sufficiency of the evidence
supporting the Commission’s factual findings.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 14 of 21
I.C. § 8-1.5-6-2 defines “regulated territory” to be “the area outside the
corporate boundaries of a municipality described in: (1) I.C. § 36-9-2-18; or (2)
I.C. § 36-9-23-36.” The four-mile area at issue is a “regulated territory” because
it is an area outside of the corporate boundaries of Muncie as described by I.C.
§ 36-9-2-18.
[21] I.C. § 8-1.5-6-9(b) provides that “[a] municipality may not enforce a regulatory
ordinance until the commission issues an order” and “[t]he municipality shall
petition the commission for approval of the regulatory ordinance[.]” The
petition must include, among other things, a list of any utilities actually or
potentially affected by the regulatory ordinance. I.C. § 8-1.5-6-9(b)(4) (emphasis
added). I.C. § 8-1.5-6-4 defines the term “utility” as “any utility” that provides
“wastewater service … regardless of whether that utility is under the jurisdiction
of the commission for the approval of rates and charges.” Thus, DCRWD is a
“utility” within the statute’s definition as it provides wastewater service in the
Regulated Territory. By requiring the petitioner to list any other affected
utilities, the statute recognizes a possible overlap in service from competing
utilities.
[22] I.C. § 8-1.5-6-9(c) provides that, after notice and hearing, the Commission:
shall issue an order resolving all issues presented in the petition
described in subsection (b), including the enforceability of the
regulatory ordinance in the manner that the commission
determines is in the public interest. In making a determination of
the public interest, the commission shall consider the factors set
forth in section 8(g) of this chapter.
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In determining the public interest under Section 8(g), the Commission is
required to consider: (1) the ability of another utility to provide service in the
regulated territory; (2) the effect on customer rates; (3) the effect on economic
development, (4) the history of utility service in the regulated territory; and (5) any
other factors the Commission considers necessary. I.C. § 8-1.5-6-8(g)
(emphases added). That the statute requires the Commission to consider the
history of the utilities providing service in the area and the ability of other
utilities to provide service demonstrates that the Regulated Territories Statutes
contemplate competing territorial claims for the Commission to resolve.
[23] I.C. § 8-1.5-6-6 addresses jurisdiction and is the authority under which the
Commission acted to approve the Ordinance. It provides:
Notwithstanding any other provision in this title or IC 36, the
offering or provision of service by a utility in a regulated territory
is under the jurisdiction of the [C]ommission as set forth in
sections 7, 8, 9, and 10 of this chapter.
(Emphases added.) This section reflects that the Commission has jurisdiction
of the “provision of service by a utility” – and as already stated DCRWD is a
utility within the meaning of the statute – “in a regulated territory” – which the
disputed four-mile area is. We agree with the Commission that “[t]he General
Assembly passed the Regulated Territories Statute[s] in 2014 for the purpose of
making the Commission the referee in disputes over service in regulated areas.”
Appellee Commission’s Brief at 14.
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[24] In support of its assertion that it should prevail in the dispute with MSD,
DCRWD relies on City of North Vernon v. Jennings Northwest Regional Utilities,
829 N.E.2d 1 (Ind. 2005). There, the Court was presented with a territorial
dispute, in which a municipality, North Vernon, was expanding its sanitary
service outside of its municipal boundaries and into the territory of a regional
wastewater district, Jennings Northwest Regional Utilities (JNRU), which was
established by IDEM order under the IDEM Statutes. The order creating
JNRU excluded North Vernon’s corporate boundaries from the JNRU service
area, but North Vernon had already been providing service outside of its
corporate boundaries at the time JNRU was created, creating an overlap
between JNRU’S service area and North Vernon’s service area. After North
Vernon secured a 30-year agreement to provide services to a school in the
overlapping territory, JNRU sought a declaratory judgment that it had the
exclusive right to serve the school.
[25] In arguing that it was entitled to provide the services, North Vernon relied on its
broad powers under the Home Rule Act, I.C. §§ 36-1-3-1 to -9, which grants
municipalities not only all powers granted to it by statute, but also “all other
powers necessary or desirable in the conduct of its affairs, even though not
granted by statute.” I.C. § 36-1-3-4(b)(2). The Home Rule Act also contains
limiting language, however, providing that “a unit may exercise any power it
has to the extent that the power: (1) is not expressly denied by the Indiana
Constitution or by statute; and (2) is not expressly granted to another entity.”
I.C. § 36-1-3-5(a)(1)-(2). Relying on the “expressly granted to another entity”
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 17 of 21
language, JNRU argued that because IDEM had “expressly granted” it
authority to provide service in the area, the Home Rule Act did not provide
relief to North Vernon.
[26] The Jennings Court observed that “disputes of this kind ordinarily are resolved
during administrative proceedings,” but there existed “no . . . statutory dispute
resolution mechanism for territorial boundary disputes between municipalities
and regional district.” Jennings, 829 N.E.2d at 7. Consequently, the Court
explained:
We must therefore reconcile the broad-ranging authority granted
municipalities under the Home Rule Act and Indiana Code
section 36-9-23-36 (granting municipalities the authority to
provide sewer services “in areas within ten (10) miles outside its
corporate boundaries”) with the powers granted regional districts
under Indiana Code sections 13-26-1 to -14. In doing so we
conclude that where there is an overlap between the service area
of a regional district and the service area of a municipality, and
absent a resolution during the IDEM permitting process, under
the “expressly granted” provision of the Home Rule Act, the
district prevails unless the municipality was already providing
services to the area at the time the district’s service area was
created.
Id. Because, there, the town of North Vernon was already providing service to
the disputed area when JNRU was created, North Vernon prevailed.
[27] DCRWD urges that, unlike North Vernon, MSD was not already providing
service to the now disputed areas and, under the reasoning of Jennings, it should
prevail. We disagree that Jennings controls here. Jennings was decided nine
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years before the enactment of the Regulated Territory Statutes, and the Court
conducted its analysis in the absence of any dispute-resolution mechanism
created by the legislature. In fact, the Jennings Court expressly recognized that
the lack of an existing dispute resolution mechanism required it to reconcile the
Home Rule Act provisions with the powers granted to regional districts by the
IDEM Statutes. By enacting I.C. § 8-1.5-6-6, the legislature specifically put the
provision of service by a utility in a regulated territory or the approval of a
regulatory ordinance under the jurisdiction of the Commission.
[28] As noted by MSD and the Commission, the creation of the Regulated
Territories Statutes appears to be in direct response to another territorial dispute
case, Town of Newburgh v. Town of Chandler, 999 N.E.2d 1015, 1021 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2013), trans. denied, which involved a dispute between two municipal
sewer service providers that, for decades, had been providing service in the four-
mile ring outside their respective boundaries pursuant to I.C. §§ 36-9-2-17, -18, -
19. The towns’ respective four-mile rings somewhat overlapped. In April
2007, Newburgh adopted an ordinance stating that it had an exclusive license to
furnish sewer service in the regulated territory, and six weeks later, Chandler
adopted a similar ordinance. A developer approached both towns about
providing service to a new subdivision in the overlapping area, and ultimately,
the developer contracted for service with Chandler, prompting Newburgh to sue
the developer for violating its ordinance. Chandler responded by suing
Newburgh seeking a declaratory judgment that Newburgh’s ordinance could
not prohibit Chandler from providing services in the overlapping area. Both
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towns argued that the provisions of Ind. Code Chapter 36-9-2 granted them the
statutory power to regulate and provide service in the four miles outside their
towns, and both had passed ordinances to do so.
[29] On appeal, this court discussed the Jennings case but found that Jennings
involved a dispute between a municipality and a regional sewer district, unlike
the dispute between the two municipalities in Chandler. The Chandler court
ultimately found for Newburgh but observed:
Resolution of disputes like the one before us by a commission in
the executive branch could likely produce more effective and
efficient results. The creation of such mechanisms, however, is
in the domain of the legislature and not the courts.
Chandler, 999 N.E.2d at 1021. Chandler was decided on December 23, 2013,
rehearing was denied in February 2014, and transfer was denied in July 2014.
In March 2014, the Regulated Territories Statutes became effective, vesting the
Commission with the authority to resolve all issues raised in a petition to
approve a regulatory ordinance, which may include addressing other utilities
that are or could provide service in the area, and places the provision of service
by a utility in a regulated territory under the jurisdiction of the Commission.
I.C. §§ 8-1.5-6-6, -9(c).
[30] DCRWD urges that the Regulated Territories Statutes do “not purport to
withstand – nor [] even mention – the contrary provisions of Ind. Code Art. 13-
26 and its predecessor statutes, under which DCRWD was created[,]” and
therefore the Commission did not have the authority “to override” those
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-EX-2964 | July 22, 2020 Page 20 of 21
statutes. Appellant’s Brief at 20, 23. We disagree. The IDEM Statutes that
DCRWD relies on concern establishment and regulation of regional waste
districts, and while they address objections at the time a district is established,
those statutes do not address resolution of competing territorial claims between
an existing waste district and another wastewater utility. The Regulated
Territories Statutes do so.
[31] In sum, the Regulated Territories Statutes task the Commission, when
presented with a petition to approve a regulatory ordinance, with resolving
territorial disputes by considering any utilities that are actually or potentially
affected by a regulatory ordinance (including regional districts), evaluating their
ability to provide service and their history of service, and making a decision that
is in the best interest of the public. Accordingly, we find that in this case the
Commission had the jurisdiction and authority to approve the Ordinance and
its order was, therefore, not contrary to law.
[32] Judgment affirmed.
Bailey, J. and Crone, J., concur.
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