Puckett v. City of Muldraugh

CLAY, Commissioner.

In this declaratory judgment action the basic bone of contention is whether the owner of rental property may be required by a city, operating a water system, to pay for such utility services furnished to his premises. The trial court decided that question in the affirmative and the property owner appeals.

In 1958, the City of Muldraugh (a fifth class city) began the operation of a water *253and sewage system. The ordinance in controversy provides in part:

“The rates and charges aforesaid shall he billed to the owner of the premises except that upon application by the tenant of any premises, who is not the owner thereof, filed with the Board of Trustees of said city, an application to have water and sewer services rendered to said tenant, renter, or party occupying premises. Application must have a cash deposit in the sum of one hundred dollars ($100.-00) plus five dollars ($5.00) to turn water on.” (Our emphasis.)

Appellant owns 20 houses which are usually rented to enlisted personnel from Ft. Knox, the rent ranging from $40 to $65 per month per rental unit. He paid for the installation of separate water meters for each of his rental units, but the service charges have always been billed to him and penalties imposed if not promptly paid.

Appellant poses the principal question as being whether or not a landlord can legally be required to guarantee and pay his tenant’s utility bills, but that is hedging somewhat on the real issue. The ordinance does not require a property owner to guarantee or pay his tenant’s bills — it simply requires him to pay for those services rendered to premises which he owns. Ultimately we believe the question must resolve itself into the right of a city operating a public utility to treat the owner of property as the consumer.

Appellant relies heavily on City of Covington v. Ratterman, 128 Ky. 336, 108 S.W. 297, 17 L.R.A.,N.S., 923. In that case the city refused to furnish water to a purchaser of property until he had paid a delinquent bill of a former tenant of his vendor. The Court properly held that the purchaser could not be required to pay the debt of another. In the course of the opinion it was said that the purchased building could not contract for the water, and further, “[liability for the water rent, therefore, rests upon the person or persons to whom the water was furnished * * This case is not very helpful. Clearly a water service charge is not (in the absence of a lien created by statute) an encumbrance running with the land, but the above quoted language leaves open the question as to just who may be the party to whom water is furnished.

Appellant cites other authorities to the general effect that, in the absence of a statute specifically authorizing the imposition of such liability, the property owner is not liable to pay for water furnished his tenant. Etheredge v. City of Norfolk, 148 Va. 795, 139 S.E. 508, 55 A.L.R. 781, is cited as a controlling case. There the general factual situation was similar to the one before us. The suit was initiated to recover the amount paid on a delinquent water bill by the owner of the premises. The ordinance in question provided that the owner “shall cause the water rent for the use of water on said premises to be paid”. The city billed the water rent not to the owner or the occupant, but to the premises. (This may or may not have significance.)

The court stated that the question involved was whether the imposition of liability on the owner for the water rent had deprived him of his property without due process of law. On this ground the court held the ordinance invalid. As far as we can observe, the Virginia court never came to grips with the question of whether an owner could be reasonably classified as a consumer, or whether there might be an implied contract between the city and the owner which arose when water was supplied to his premises. The court said (page 510 in 139 S.E., page 785 in 55 A.L.R.):

“The authorities are also practically unanimous that the regulation of a water company or ordinance of a municipality which requires the property owner to pay a delinquent bill for water furnished the tenant of the premises, which the owner has not *254contracted to pay, is unreasonable and void, unless a lien is given on the premises by statute, or there is at least some statutory authority therefor by virtue of the charter or otherwise.” (Emphasis in the opinion.)

There is case law support for this'statement, but it refers to a “delinquent” bill as if this was the debt of another, and it assumes the nonexistence of a contractual relationship. The matter of statutory authority we will discuss later. The court went on to say (page 511 in 139 S.E., page 787 in 55 A.L.R.):

“The city can adopt any reasonable plan it chooses to collect its water rents from the consumers who obligate themselves to pay them, in lieu of the present arbitrary and unreasonable policy of attempting to exact such rents from those who are in no way liable, in the absence of state legislative enactment making them so.”

This language patently begs the basic question by assuming that (1) the owner is not liable and (2) any attempt to impose liability on him is arbitrary and unreasonable. In our opinion the reasoning in that case is not persuasive.

At this point it may be well to discuss the statutory authority question. The cases almost without exception acknowledge that a legislature may authorize a public utility to impose liability for water rents upon the owner of property without violating the doctrine of due process. See 43 Am.Jur., Public Utilities and Services, section 62 (page 610); 94 C.J.S. Waters § 302 b, page 212; Waldron v. International Water Co., 95 Vt. 135, 112 A. 219, 13 A.L.R. 340. This would seem to effectively extinguish such ground as a valid legal basis for declaring a public utility regulation invalid. If the matter was really one of due process, a state legislature could no more violate this right than could a public utility acting independently.

The matter of legislative authority is not one of due process. It involves the power of the municipality to act. For example, (as some cases indicate) a municipality would probably not have the power to impose a lien on property to secure the payment of a water bill in the absence of statutory authorization. We do not have that question here, although some of the opinions we have read allude to it when denying the right to charge the owner with the water bill. See cases annotated in 13 A.L.R. 346.

In this case we find no difficulty on the question of statutory authority. KRS 106.210 grants the city extensive powers to do those things necessary for the acquisition, operation and maintenance of a water system, including the right to charge and collect reasonable rates for services rendered. The method adopted by the city was clearly within the scope of its statutory authority. In Pfau v. City of Cincinnati, 142 Ohio St. 101, 50 N.E.2d 172, it was expressly decided that general powers granted a municipality to operate a water works constitute sufficient authorization for a regulation of this sort.

Having disposed of the due process and the statutory authority objections (which were rather obliquely raised by appellant), the remaining question on this point is whether the regulation is arbitrary and unreasonable to the extent it violates section 2 of our Constitution. Just what is arbitrary and unreasonable about a regulation that treats the owner of premises as the consumer and requires him to pay the water bill? After extensive research we have not found a case which satisfactorily explains this.1

We may acknowledge that this method of charging and collecting water bills is *255not the one customarily adopted by public utilities. We may further recognize that it may result in the changing of lease provisions and in many instances cause inconvenience to property owners. We have before us, however, a legal question. The property owner must take the position that it is unlawful for a municipality to charge him for a public utility service furnished to his premises. Wherein lies the illegality of such a regulation?

It is interesting to note here appellant expressly concedes that where two or more residential units are served by a single meter it is not arbitrary or unreasonable to make the owner responsible for the charges. As a matter of fact, one of the cases which tends to support appellant’s principal argument specifically found such practice was “reasonable and practicable”. Millville Improv. Co. v. Millville Water Co., 92 N.J.Eq. 480, 113 A. 516. See also Cox v. City of Cynthiana, 123 Ky. 363, 96 S.W. 456. This of course is a recognition that the property owner may be classified as the consumer and there is no legal reason why a public utility should be required to collect water charges from each tenant who ultimately benefits from the service.

The Supreme Court of Ohio has had no difficulty with this problem. Pfau v. City of Cincinnati, 142 Ohio St. 101, 50 N.E.2d 172. There an ordinance provided that any owner of real estate installing or maintaining water service connections should be considered as agreeing to be liable for the charges whether the accounts for such premises were carried in the name of such owner, or his tenants, or other persons. There was no specific statutory authority to enact such an ordinance. The court could find nothing unauthorized, arbitrary or unreasonable in such a regulation. It is significant that the Ohio court considered the difference immaterial between such an ordinance and a similar statute upheld in City of East Grand Forks v. Luck, 97 Minn. 373, 107 N.W. 393, 394, 6 L.R.A.,N.S., 198, 7 Ann.Cas.1015.

While we have not heretofore considered this question in Kentucky, we have recently decided a case in which the governing principle is the same. In Cassidy v. City of Bowling Green, Ky., 368 S.W.2d 318, a city ordinance required the owners of property to be responsible for garbage disposal service charges which were furnished in conjunction with water and sewer services, the ordinance further providing that water and sewer services could be discontinued if the garbage disposal service charge was not paid. The validity of the ordinance was attacked by landowners whose premises were occupied by tenants. In answering the precise contention here made by appellant we said (page 320 of 368 S.W.2d):

“The contention that this service charge may not be imposed upon the property owner when the service is rendered to the tenant is without merit. This service is rendered to the property and the benefits accrue to the owner as well as the tenant. The question is again one of reasonableness and it is certainly not unreasonable to require property owners to contribute to the support of a system which benefits all property and all inhabitants within the City.”

We are of the opinion this reasoning is sound and applies to the problem before us. See Rand v. Marshall, 84 Vt. 161, 78 A. 790. The water service is furnished to the property owner. He primarily benefits from this service even though the ultimate consumer is one of his tenants. He is the consumer to the extent water is supplied to and used on his premises. If he requests this service or accepts it, he impliedly agrees to pay the service charge as provided in the ordinance. See Dunbar v. City of New York, 177 App.Div. 647, 164 N.Y.S. 519. There is nothing arbitrary or unreasonable about such a method of collecting water rents, it is not requiring the owner to pay the debt of another, and there is no taking of his property *256without due process of law. See Dunbar v. City of New York, 251 U.S. 516, 40 S.Ct. 250, 64 L.Ed. 384. As we have before pointed out, the principal case relied upon by appellant assumed that the obligation was that of another, assumed that the owner could not be liable, and assumed the regulation was arbitrary and unreasonable. None of these assumptions strikes us as justifiable.

It might be suggested that since appellant had separate tap-ins on the waterline for each of his rental units, the water flowing through the meter must be charged to the occupant who actually uses it. The nature of a connection, however, has nothing to do with the question of liability for water rent. A meter is simply a device to register consumption. If the owner connects his property to the waterline, he thereby utilizes the service and properly may be charged therefor. It was so held in Dunbar v. City of New York, 177 App.Div. 647, 164 N.Y.S. 519, affirmed 223 N.Y. 597, 119 N.E. 1039; affirmed 251 U.S. 516, 40 S.Ct. 250, 64 L.Ed. 384.

We are aware that it is customary to charge utility services to tenants, and many landlords prefer it that way. Doubtless the ordinance involved will cause appellant inconvenience. On the other hand, and particularly in such a city as Muldraugh, with a very transient population, good business practice would seem to require this method of charging and collecting water bills. It is not arbitrary or unreasonable, and we can find no taint of illegality. The Chancellor correctly decided this issue.

Our next question is whether the city is required to enact an ordinance which would permit the tenant to apply directly for water services for which he would be exclusively responsible. The ordinance in question did contain such a provision, but because it required a cash deposit of $100 the Chancellor held this part of the ordinance “invalid as being arbitrary”.

Although the city contends to the contrary, we are inclined to follow the Chancellor to the extent that his finding may be construed as meaning that the deposit required was so excessive that for practical purposes it foreclosed a tenant’s independent application for service. (This was obviously the purpose of the excessive cash deposit required.) The city’s principal contention on this point is that appellant, being the property owner, has no standing in court to assert the possible rights of his tenants.

There is substance to this argument, but assuming appellant can raise the question of the reasonableness of this provision, it is, as the Chancellor decided, an academic one insofar as appellant is concerned. His position must be that because this right of a tenant is an illusory one, liability for the water service charges will always be imposed upon him. Since we have decided that this may be done legally by the municipality, he has no valid ground upon which to assert the impairment of his rights when the city has done by indirection what it could do directly. He cannot properly insist that the city relieve him of a liability which it has the authority to impose. The independent rights of tenants with respect to this water service are not before us.

What we have just said disposes of appellant’s contention that the trial court should have fixed a reasonable cash deposit charge.

Appellant’s final contention is that the city was without authority to make a minimum monthly service charge when the property was vacant and no water was being consumed on the premises. Appellant does not claim the charge ($2.20 a month) is unreasonable but insists no charge whatever could be made. The city in its brief fails to answer this argument but we will attempt to do so.

*257The right of a public utility to make a fixed or minimum service charge is generally recognized. 43 Am.Jur., Public Utilities and Services, section 51 (page 605); 94 C.J.S. Waters § 300, page 208. Appellant takes the position that this charge is in effect “meter rent” and that such a charge is not proper. There is apparently a conflict of authorities on this question. See 94 C.J.S. Waters § 301, page 209.

Appellant relies on Louisville Gas Co. v. Dulaney, 100 Ky. 405, 38 S.W. 703, 36 L.R.A. 125. The holding in that case was that the public utility could not charge a “meter rent” because this charge would require the consumer to pay for gas services an amount in excess of the maximum rate which the utility was permitted to charge. The opinion then goes on to suggest that but for this limitation the Court would have been inclined to approve an additional charge, if reasonable, provided it did not violate the provisions of the corporate charter.

We can find nothing illegal in a minimum charge per se, which is compensation for the availability of service. Like other charges, the criterion is one of reasonableness. Appellant does not contend this charge is unreasonable.

The judgment is affirmed.

. It may be divined that the ancient sacredness of property ownership lies at the root of the conclusion that it is arbitrary and unreasonable to impose a burden on the owner which customarily has been and may be shifted to the tenant.