SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-3810-98T5
NESTLÉ USA - BEVERAGE DIVISION,
INC., a Delaware Corporation,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
MANASQUAN RIVER REGIONAL SEWERAGE
AUTHORITY, A Public Body Corporate
and Politic of the State of
New Jersey,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued April 18, 2000 - Decided May 5, 2000
Before Judges Pressler, Kimmelman and Ciancia.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Monmouth County.
Linda Hayes Grasso argued the cause for appellant
(Cleary Alfieri & Grasso, attorneys; Ms. Grasso
and Stephen C. Vanna III, on the brief).
Mark L. Mucci argued the cause for respondent
(LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae, attorneys;
Mr. Mucci, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PRESSLER, P.J.A.D.
This declaratory judgment action arises under the Sewerage
Authorities Law, N.J.S.A. 40:14A-1 to -37. The sole issue before
us is whether a regional sewerage authority is authorized by
N.J.S.A. 40:14A-8 to charge a user who is already in the system an
additional connection fee when its wastewater flow increases even
though it will pay an increased service charge based on the
additional daily gallonage. The trial judge granted summary
judgment to plaintiff Nestlé, USA - Beverage Division, Inc., and
denied the cross-motion of defendant Manasquan River Regional
Sewerage Authority (MRRSA). Judge McGann held that an additional
connection fee may not be charged based only on increased water
usage where there is in fact no actual additional physical
connection. MRRSA appeals. We agree with Judge McGann's
conclusion and consequently affirm.
The essential facts are not in dispute. MRRSA is a regional
sewerage authority established in 1979 pursuant to the Sewerage
Authorities Law by the Boroughs of Freehold and Farmingdale and the
Townships of Wall, Freehold and Howell, all of whom entered into a
Service Agreement with it. At that time Nestlé was a user of the
Freehold system and consequently became an indirect user of MRRSA.See footnote 11
MRRSA collects the waste water from the systems of its member
municipalities and transmits it through its pipelines for final
treatment to the Ocean County Utilities Authority (OCUA), whose
customer MRRSA is. Nestlé, moreover, pre-treats its waste water on
site.
In 1996 Nestlé's Freehold plant, which had theretofore
produced primarily coffee products, planned to add instant tea
production, resulting in a projected increase in its daily flow
from 500,000 gallons to 720,000. It is undisputed that OCUA had no
objection to Nestlé's application for the increased flow, requiring
only that it be approved by MRRSA. It is further undisputed that
this increased flow entailed no new or additional physical
connection by Nestlé to any sewer system and that the transmission
lines of MRRSA were fully adequate to handle this flow and thus
that no new lines were required to be installed, enlarged or
modified in any way. Despite the foregoing, MRRSA took the
position that it was entitled to charge Nestlé a connection fee on
the sole basis of the increased flow. Using the measure of an
equivalent dwelling unit (EDU) as equal to a daily flow of 300
gallons, the MRRSA calculated that the increased flow of 220,000
gallons constituted 733.33 EDUs. Since the scheduled connection
fee per EDU was $740, MRRSA demanded a connection fee of
$542,664.20 as a condition of its approval of Nestlé's increased
flow application. In order to avoid production delays, Nestlé paid
this sum under protest pursuant to an escrow agreement with MRRSA
and commenced this declaratory judgment action seeking a
determination that the connection fee was improperly charged.
A sewerage authority's authority to assess fees against its
direct and indirect users is circumscribed by N.J.S.A. 40:14A-8.
Paragraph (b) permits two types of fees, a connection fee and a
service charge. It spells out in detail the various bases upon
which the annual service fee may be calculated including, of
course, the amount of flow. It also permits in "addition to any
such periodic service charges, a separate charge in the nature of
a connection fee or tapping fee, in respect of each connection of
any property with the sewerage system." The connection fee has two
components: the cost of physical connection if made by the
authority and an amount representing "a fair payment" by the
connector "toward the cost of the system." In three numbered
subparagraphs, the manner of calculating a fair payment is
prescribed in order to assure that new users contribute fairly to
the capital costs incurred by the authority in having developed the
system as it exists at the time the new user joins it. The
fundamental scheme is for the new user, who is benefitting from
those capital costs, to contribute to the authority's already
incurred debt service and thereby to relieve prior users of a
portion of that burden in order that all users share the debt
service equally. Paragraph (b) further requires the authority to
recompute the connection fee annually after a public hearing and
then to impose that revised connection fee "upon those who
subsequently connect ... to the system."
The concept of escalating connection fees in order to
accomplish parity, although not mathematically certain parity, was
approved by the Supreme Court in Airwick Industries, Inc. v.
Carlstadt Sewerage Authority,
57 N.J. 107 (1970), cert. denied,
402 U.S. 967,
91 S. Ct. 1666,
29 L. Ed.2d 132 (1971), pursuant to
which N.J.S.A. 40:14A-8 was amended by L. 1975, c. 320, § 1, to
expressly so provide. Clearly, however, not all of the debt
service is reasonably recoupable by way of connection fees. Thus
paragraph (c) of N.J.S.A. 40:14A-8, which governs the fixing of the
service charge and requires that the service charge be adequate to
pay "all expenses of operation and maintenance of the sewerage
system" specifically contemplates inclusion in the service charge
calculation of "principal of and interest on any bonds and ... such
reserves or sinking funds therefor as may be required ... or ...
deemed necessary or desirable by the sewerage authority."
In view of this statutory framework in the context of the
Airwick rationale, we think it plain that a new connection fee may
not be charged unless a new actual physical connection or an
enlargement or other such modification of an existing connection is
made. As the Court made clear in Airwick:
The Authority may, therefore, include as
part of the connection fee a sum of money
which will represent a fair contribution by
the connecting party toward the debt service
charges theretofore met by others. The
statute need not be read to require precise
mathematical equality, but rather to contem
plate rough equality, keeping in mind that we
are now in an area in which, as with respect
to other tax impositions, absolute equality is
neither feasible nor constitutionally vital.
The Authority may, therefore, in its
discretion, prescribe a schedule of connection
fees escalating with the passage of time,
requiring a potential user to absorb a fair
proportion of the sum theretofore paid by the
actual users for principal and interest on the
bonds. [57 N.J. at 122 (Emphasis added.)]
In our view the Court thus plainly limited the charging of a
connection fee to those not already in the system, and we are
persuaded that, at best, what MRRSA was attempting to do by
charging Nestlé a connection fee based on increased flow is to
achieve just that absolute mathematical precision which the Court
determined was not feasible and for which the Legislature has given
no warrant.
We have heretofore construed N.J.S.A. 40:14A-8 to prohibit the
imposition of a new connection fee on a user already in the system.
Thus in Animated Family Rest. v. East Brunswick Sewerage,
209 N.J.
Super. 532 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
104 N.J. 441 (1986), the
local authority attempted to impose a connection fee on premises
whose use had change from commercial retail offices and warehousing
to a dinner theater for pre-teens although no new sewerage
connection was required or made. We held that it could not do so
since the "clear import of this language [N.J.S.A. 40:14A-8(b)] is
that an actual connection to the sewerage system is a prerequisite
to the imposition of a connection fee." 209 N.J. Super. at 537.
We are satisfied that our reasoning in Animated Family Rest., by
which we concluded that a change of use alone could not justify an
additional connection fee, applies as well to increased flow alone.
As we there observed, "[t]he imposition of a new connection fee
upon a change in use would raise a number of technical problems
which the Legislature could have been expected to address if it had
intended to authorize such a fee." Id. at 538. The same is true
here. Nestlé will obviously be paying an increased service charge
to account for its increased flow. But in these circumstances, an
additional connection fee may not be exacted.
Finally, we note that MRRSA points to the definition of
"connection" contained in N.J.A.C. 7:14A-1.2. "Connection" is
therein defined as
any physical or operational change, associated
with an increase in projected flow, to a
collection system of any building, facility,
or other structure, either proposed or
existing for which a building permit or other
municipal approval including site plan or
subdivision approval is required, and which
connects directly or indirectly with any
portion of a treatment works.
The simple answer to MRRSA's reliance on this definition is that
the regulation is inapplicable to a regional or local sewerage
authority established pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:14A-1, et seq., and
certainly has nothing to do with connection fees as therein
prescribed. The subject of the regulation, N.J.S.A. 7:14A, is the
creation of the State's Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NJPDES) and its purpose, as set forth in N.J.A.C. 7:14A-2.1(a) is
to establish
the regulatory framework under the authority
of N.J.S.A. 58:10A-1 et seq., 58:11A-1 et
seq., 58:11-49 et seq., 58:10-23.11 et seq.,
58:11-18.10 et seq., 13D-1 et seq.,13:1E-1 et
seq., 58:4A-5, 58:4A-4.1, 58:12A-1 et seq.,
42 U.S.C.
§§300F et seq. and
33 U.S.C.
§§1251 et
seq., within which the Department [Department
of Environmental Protection] regulates the
discharge of pollutants to the surface and
ground waters of the State.
It prescribes a system for issuance of NJPDES permits by the
Department of Environmental Protection. While the NJPDES system
may be complementary to activities of a sewerage authority, it is
entirely separate and apart in implementation, applicability, and
definition.
The summary judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1It is stipulated that Nestlé never paid a connection fee to MRRSA since it was grandfathered in at the time the MRRSA was established. It presumably paid for its connection to the Freehold system. MRRSA takes the position on this appeal that the issue is unaffected by whether Nestlé paid its connection fee to Freehold or to it, asserting its right to charge a new connection fee for Nestlé's increased flow even if it had been the recipient of the original connection fee.