louisville/jefferson County Metro Government Waste Management District v. Jefferson County League of Cities, Inc. ( 2021 )


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  •                                                      RENDERED: JUNE 17, 2021
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2019-SC-0520-DG
    LOUISVILLE/JEFFERSON                                                  APPELLANTS
    COUNTY METRO GOVERNMENT
    WASTE MANAGEMENT DISTRICT;
    GREG FISCHER, IN HIS OFFICIAL
    CAPACITY AS MAYOR OF LOUISVILLE
    METRO GOVERNMENT AND ROBERT
    SCHINDLER
    ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.        CASE NOS. 2018-CA-0150; 2018-CA-0151; 2018-CA-0154;
    2018-CA-0156; 2018-CA-0158; 2018-CA-0160
    FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT NO. 17-CI-00327
    JEFFERSON COUNTY LEAGUE OF CITIES,                                      APPELLEES
    INC.; CITY OF BANCROFT; CITY OF
    BELLEWOOD; CITY OF INDIAN HILLS;
    CITY OF JEFFERSONTOWN; CITY OF
    SENECA GARDENS; CITY OF SHIVELY;
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
    ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT CABINET;
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY EX REL.
    ATTORNEY GENERAL DANIEL J.
    CAMERON; NATIONAL WASTE AND
    RECYCLING ASSOCIATION, KENTUCKY
    CHAPTER
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VANMETER
    AFFIRMING IN PART AND REVERSING IN PART
    Kentucky Constitution Section 156a permits the legislature to classify
    cities on a number of bases but requires that “[a]ll legislation relating to cities
    of a certain classification shall apply equally to all cities within the same
    classification.” In 2017, the legislature amended KRS1 Chapter 109 to give
    home rule cities located in a county containing a consolidated local government
    certain rights with respect to the waste management district in the county.
    The question we must resolve is whether the amended statutes comply with the
    requirement of Section 156a. We hold that they do not. We therefore affirm in
    part and reverse in part the Court of Appeals’ opinion and remand this matter
    to the Franklin Circuit Court for the entry of a new judgment in conformity
    with this opinion.
    I.     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The legislature appears to have first considered garbage and refuse
    disposal on a statewide basis in 1966 with the enactment of KRS Chapter 109.2
    Over the ensuing decades, it made a number of changes in the chapter,
    significantly in 19783 and 1991.4 All of these enactments were general acts
    applying statewide to every county and/or every city regardless of size. See,
    e.g., Act of Mar. 28, 1978, ch. 115 § 2(2)-(3) (defining “city” as “an existing city
    of any class[,]” and “county” as the “governing body of a county, including
    urban county governments[]”); Act of March 23, 1966, ch. 66 § 2(1) (“[t]he fiscal
    court of any county may . . . establish and maintain one or more garbage and
    1   Kentucky Revised Statutes.
    2 Act of Mar. 23, 1966, ch. 66, 
    1966 Ky. Acts 416
     (“An Act relating to garbage
    and refuse, its collection and disposal[]”).
    3 Act of Mar. 28, 1978, ch. 115, 
    1978 Ky. Acts 234
     (“An Act relating to solid
    waste[]”).
    4 Act of Feb. 26, 1991, ch. 12, 1991 (1st Ex. Sess.) Ky. Acts 13 (“An Act relating
    to solid waste management and declaring an emergency[]”).
    2
    refuse disposal districts[]”); 
    Id.
     § 2(3) (“[a]ny city . . . may . . . establish and
    maintain one or more garbage and refuse disposal districts[]”).
    In 1980, the Court of Appeals issued an opinion holding that the 1978
    Act did not vest full control over garbage collection to a county, and cities
    retained that power within their limits. City of Radcliff v. Hardin Cnty., 
    607 S.W.2d 132
    , 136 (Ky. App. 1980). The legislature wasted little time in clarifying
    that it intended counties to be the primary local government unit in charge of
    solid waste disposal. Act of Mar. 9, 1982, ch. 74 § 1(9), 
    1982 Ky. Acts 112
    (stating legislative intent that KRS Chapter 109 and KRS 67.083(3)(o) was to
    “provide counties with exclusive authority to develop a solid waste management
    system for solid waste generated within the geographical boundaries of the
    county, consistent with the provisions of this chapter and KRS Chapter 224[]”).
    This Court recognized that statutory change in 1996. See E. Ky. Res. v. Arnett,
    
    934 S.W.2d 270
    , 273 (Ky. 1996) (stating “[t]he management of solid waste,
    including its disposal, is vested exclusively in county fiscal courts[]”). Explicitly
    the Court cited KRS 67.083(3)(o) including among a fiscal court’s powers
    “[e]xclusive management of solid wastes by ordinance or contract or both[.]” 
    Id.
    The Court of Appeals followed Arnett in 2005, recognizing county primacy
    in the area, but also noting “[u]nder the present statutes, cities do not act
    unilaterally in the regulation of solid waste, but are permitted to act with the
    permission of counties which have developed a solid waste management plan.”
    City of Salyersville v. Magoffin Cnty., ex rel. May, 
    178 S.W.3d 539
    , 541 (Ky.
    App. 2005). Further, the court stated, “in cities already operating solid waste
    3
    management systems the responsibility rests jointly with the county and the
    city. Only when it is in the public interest, and by mutual agreement and
    approval of the Environmental and Public Protection Cabinet, may a county
    delegate its authority to cities.” 
    Id.
     (citing KRS 109.011(6)).
    Against this backdrop, the Jefferson County Fiscal Court adopted a
    waste management district in December 1990. Jefferson Cnty., Ky., Ordinance
    16-1990 (adopted and effective Dec. 11, 1990); see also Plan for solid-waste
    management district OK’d, Courier-Journal [Louisville, KY], Dec. 12, 1990, at
    23. Following the 2003 approval of the merger of Louisville and Jefferson
    County as consolidated local government, “[t]he Louisville/Jefferson County
    Metro Government Waste Management District succeeded to the county’s and
    Jefferson County Waste Management District’s designation by the Cabinet as
    the solid waste management area within and for the geographical boundaries of
    the county.” Louisville Metro Am. Ordinance No. 44-2005; see also KRS
    67C.113 (“any . . . special taxing or service districts of any kind existing upon
    successful passage of the question to consolidate a city of the first class and its
    county shall continue in existence[]”). As a result, since 1990, the District has
    been responsible for policies related to solid waste management in Jefferson
    County. In Urban Services District, roughly the former City of Louisville, the
    Louisville Metro Department of Public Works is responsible for trash pickup.
    The home rule cities in Jefferson County contract with a private waste
    management company, such as Eco-Tech Environmental LLC, Rumpke, or
    Waste Management, within their boundaries. And Jefferson County
    4
    homeowners not located in an incorporated area contract with a private waste
    management company.
    In 2014, in order to reduce solid waste going to landfill, the District
    passed a regulation requiring yard waste to be placed in paper bags and
    prohibiting the collection of yard waste in plastic bags. Louisville/Jefferson
    Cnty. Metro Gov’t Waste Mgt. Dist. Reg. 51.507R. The purpose of the change
    was to reduce waste going to the landfills by directing yard waste collected in
    paper bags to composting facilities.
    The change was not, apparently, universally popular. As a result, in
    2017, the legislature enacted HB 246. Act of March 21, 2017, ch. 105, 
    2017 Ky. Acts 782
     (the “Act”).5 The effect of the Act was to modify the composition of
    a Board of a waste management district in a county containing a consolidated
    local government, and to prohibit certain regulations of the District from going
    into effect without the approval of a home rule city in the county.
    In the case at bar, the Franklin Circuit Court held that Section 2 of the
    Act concerning the organization and structure of a local governmental unit
    constituted a reasonable classification that did not violate Kentucky
    Constitution Sections 59 and 60. The trial court, however, ruled the balance of
    the Act was unconstitutional. On appeal, the Court of Appeals held the trial
    court erred as to its decision concerning Sections 1, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7. It
    5 In 2016, a similar bill, 2016 HB 454, was introduced, but did not pass the
    House of Representatives.
    5
    therefore affirmed in part and reversed in part. The District filed its motion for
    discretionary review which we granted.
    Before proceeding, we note that the District concedes the
    constitutionality of Section 2 (relating to the organization and structure of local
    government), and Section 5 (relating to the responsibility of individual property
    owners and having statewide application). Section 6 relates to the composition
    of the District Board, as reorganized by Section 2. Since the District has
    conceded the constitutionality of Section 2, logic dictates that Section 6 is also
    constitutional. As to Section 7, the emergency declaration, that section only
    advances the effective date of the Act. As noted by the trial court in its final
    Opinion and Order, the passage of time has mooted any claim under Kentucky
    Constitution Section 55; see Zuckerman v. Bevin, 
    565 S.W.3d 580
    , 604 n.29
    (Ky. 2018) (absent an effective emergency clause, an act becomes effective
    ninety days following legislature’s adjournment); McIntyre v. Commonwealth,
    
    221 Ky. 16
    , 20, 
    297 S.W. 931
    , 933 (1927) (holding that when emergency clause
    in bill was ineffective, “the bill took effect 90 days after the adjournment of the
    [l]egislature[]”). Our review is therefore limited to the District’s claims as to the
    constitutionality of Sections 1, 3 and 4 of the Act.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This case involves a facial challenge to the constitutionality of the Act
    under the Kentucky Constitution. We recognize, of course, that all laws
    “contrary to this Constitution, shall be void.” Kentucky Constitution Section
    26. “Our functions are to determine the constitutional validity and to declare
    6
    the meaning of what the legislative department has done. We have no other
    concern.” Johnson v. Commonwealth, ex rel. Meredith, 
    291 Ky. 829
    , 833, 
    165 S.W.2d 820
    , 823 (1942). Furthermore, “an [a]ct should be held valid unless it
    clearly offends the limitations and prohibitions of the constitution. . . . [A]lways
    the burden is upon one who questions the validity of an Act to sustain his
    contentions.” 
    Id.
     at 833–34, 
    165 S.W.2d at 823
    . “In considering an attack on
    the constitutionality of legislation, this Court has continually resolved any
    doubt in favor of constitutionality rather than unconstitutionality.” Hallahan v.
    Mittlebeeler, 
    373 S.W.2d 726
    , 727 (Ky. 1963) (citing Reynolds Metal Co. v.
    Martin, 
    269 Ky. 378
    , 381–82, 
    107 S.W.2d 251
    , 253 (1937)). We have also held
    that “the propriety, wisdom and expediency of statutory enactments are
    exclusively legislative matters.” Hallahan, 373 S.W.2d at 727 (citing Craig v.
    O'Rear, 
    199 Ky. 553
    , 557, 
    251 S.W. 828
    , 830 (1923)). Further,
    courts are not at liberty to declare a statute invalid because, in their
    judgment, it may be unnecessary, or opposed to the best interests
    of the state. . . . [A]n act will not be declared void on the ground that
    it is opposed to the spirit supposed to pervade the Constitution, or
    is against the nature and spirit of the government, or is contrary to
    the general principles of liberty, or the genius of a free people.
    Craig, 199 Ky. at 557–58, 251 S.W. at 830 (citations omitted).
    Since the issues involve questions of law, our review is de novo, and we
    do not defer to the legal conclusions of the trial court. Adams v. Sietsema, 
    533 S.W.3d 172
    , 177 (Ky. 2017).
    III.   ANALYSIS
    Although the ratified Constitution resulting from Kentucky’s 1890-91
    Constitutional Convention contained a prohibition against special and local
    7
    legislation, see Sections 59 and 60, another section, Section 156, directed that
    classification of cities and towns be based on population. Notably, Section 156
    stated that “[t]he organization and powers of each class shall be defined and
    provided for by general laws, so that all municipal corporations of the same
    class shall possess the same powers and be subject to the same restrictions.”
    KY. CONST. § 156. In 1994, the Commonwealth’s voters approved a revision,
    deleting Section 156 and adopting Section 156a. This new section states:
    The General Assembly may provide for the creation, alteration of
    boundaries, consolidation, merger, dissolution, government,
    functions, and officers of cities. The General Assembly shall create
    such classifications of cities as it deems necessary based on
    population, tax base, form of government, geography, or any other
    reasonable basis and enact legislation relating to the classifications.
    All legislation relating to cities of a certain classification shall apply
    equally to all cities within the same classification. The classification
    of all cities and the law pertaining to the classifications in effect at
    the time of adoption of this section shall remain in effect until
    otherwise provided by law.
    KY. CONST. § 156a.
    While the lower courts analyzed the issues in this case primarily under
    Sections 59 and 60’s prohibition against special and local legislation, Section
    156a is dispositive. If legislation relating to local government is permitted by
    Section 156a, then it is obviously constitutional. Conversely, if not permitted
    under this section, reference to other sections of the constitution is
    superfluous. See Calloway Cnty. Sheriff’s Dep’t v. Woodall, 
    607 S.W.3d 557
    ,
    566 n.8 (Ky. 2020) (noting that Section 156 permitted classification of cities
    and was an exception to Section 59); Klein v. City of Louisville, 
    224 Ky. 624
    ,
    8
    629, 
    6 S.W.2d 1104
    , 1106 (1928) (stating “if the act is within the purview of
    [Section 156] the provisions of section 59 do not apply”).
    In 2015, the legislature enacted a wholesale revision of the classification
    of cities. Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government remained a city of the
    first class, but all other cities were classified as “home rule class.” KRS
    81.005(1). The differentiation between home rule cities is based on whether
    their form of government is city manager plan, mayor-council plan, or
    commission plan. KRS 81.005(1)(b). As pertains to Jefferson County, and as
    noted in the record, at the time the Act passed, it had 83 home rule cities.6
    As explained by Appellees, the Act merely shifts decision-making
    authority for solid waste management to a county with a consolidated local
    government. Section 1 of the Act, codified as KRS 109.041(3)(g), states that the
    District shall not “prohibit or otherwise restrict materials recovery . . . by any
    municipality located within the geographic area of the county or waste
    management district created to serve that county.” Another provision in
    Section 1 of the Act, codified at KRS 109.041(14), limits the ability of the
    District to restrict a city from using a waste management facility or charging
    6 Prior to 2015, the legislature classified cities based on population. KRS
    81.010. In its final version prior to repeal, Jefferson County cities were classified as
    follows: first class, one (Louisville); second class, one (Jeffersontown); third class, two
    (Prospect and Shively); fourth class, ten (Anchorage, Douglass Hills,
    Graymoor/Devondale, Hurstborne, Hurstborne Acres, Indian Hills, Lyndon,
    Middletown, Saint Regis Park, and St. Matthews); fifth class, fifteen (Audubon Park,
    Barbourmeade, Beechwood Village, Heritage Creek, Hollow Creek, Indian Hills-
    Cherokee, Lynnview, Meadowvale, Northfield, Plantation, Rolling Hills, Watterson
    Park, West Buechel, Windy Hills, and Woodlawn Park); and sixth class, all the rest,
    approximately fifty-four. 
    Id.
    9
    fees based on the city’s waste management stream “if [that city’s] solid waste
    stream is in conformity with state and federal law for the use of the solid waste
    management facility receiving the waste.” Section 3 of the Act, codified at KRS
    109.120(2)-(3), requires the District to adopt new rules and regulations. It then
    provides:
    These rules and regulations shall not be enforceable within the
    boundaries of the city until approved by the legislative body of the
    city or, if outside of an incorporated municipality, the legislative
    body of the consolidated local government, where the rule or
    regulation is intended to apply. A city shall approve any rule or
    regulation if rejecting it would cause the city to be in violation of its
    approved solid waste management plan adopted in accordance with
    the provisions of KRS 224.43-340 and 224.43-345.
    Finally, Section 4 of the Act, codified at KRS 224.43-340(2), permits the
    cities in a consolidated local government to opt out of the solid waste
    management plan adopted by the waste management district (although the city
    is still required to “comply with all requirements of KRS Chapter 224 and
    administrative regulations promulgated thereunder”).
    The District and Amicus, Kentucky Resources Council, argue that the
    Act violates Section 156a for the simple reason that no other home rule cities
    in the Commonwealth possess the same authority, whether it be couched as
    veto rights, opt out rights, or merely the power to decide, over decisions of a
    waste management district. Appellees counter that the Act is merely a general
    act related to consolidated local government, as a separate form of government,
    and is therefore a reasonable classification under Section 156a. This argument
    is somewhat strained since Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government is
    not a party to this action; only the District is a party and its powers and
    10
    authority have been questioned. Appellees further argue the Act does nothing
    more than rebalance the power over waste management between the
    consolidated local government and its waste management district and the
    home rule cities in the county.
    Our view is that Sections 1, 3 and 4 of the Act are unconstitutional as
    violative of Section 156a of the Constitution. While we acknowledge Appellees’
    arguments about rebalancing the power of Jefferson County’s 83 home rule
    cities, we note, prior to 2017, KRS Chapters 109 and 224 were established as
    general laws, treating all counties, from the largest to the smallest, the same.
    Further, the statutes included flexibility to accommodate different
    circumstances around the Commonwealth. The Act, however, deviates from
    treating all home rule cities equally, in violation of Section 156a’s requirement
    that “[a]ll legislation relating to cities of a certain classification shall apply
    equally to all cities within the same classification.”
    In Atherton v. Fox, 
    245 Ky. 718
    , 
    54 S.W.2d 11
     (1932), our predecessor
    court held unconstitutional an act that required registration of all voters in a
    county including a city of the first class. While the court discussed several
    constitutional provisions, it noted that Section 156 was violated “since it
    requires registration of voters in three cities of the sixth class, while there is no
    law at present requiring registration in the other sixth-class cities of the state.”
    
    Id. at 722
    , 54 S.W. at 13.
    Appellees rationalize that the legislature’s action could have been based
    on size difference between Louisville Metro and a Jefferson County city, like
    11
    Bancroft, in terms of tax base and resources, thereby providing Bancroft with
    little input into the decisions of the District. Appellee Bancroft points to home
    rule cities like Columbia in Adair County and Scottsville in Allen County as one
    city/one county jurisdictions in which a city has greater input into the
    composition of its county’s waste management district. While true that
    Jefferson County has the most home rule cities of any county in the
    Commonwealth and the comparison to Adair and Allen may be apt, Appellees
    ignore that of the 120 counties in the Commonwealth, 82 counties have two or
    more cities.7 Kenton County has 17 cities; Boone County has 3; Campbell
    County has 15.8 If the home rule cities in Jefferson County need protection
    from the power and influence of Louisville Metro, we fail to perceive why
    smaller home rule cities all over the Commonwealth would not require the
    same protection from their larger neighbors. In other words, the Act violates
    Section 156a’s requirement that “[a]ll legislation relating to cities of a certain
    classification shall apply equally to all cities within the same classification.”
    See Louisville/Jefferson Cnty. Metro Gov’t v. O’Shea’s-Baxter, LLC, 
    438 S.W.3d 379
    , 386 (Ky. 2014) (stating that “no reason to assume that the concentration
    of retail drink licenses in Louisville is ‘fraught with other or different
    consequences’ than the concentration of similar licenses in other Kentucky
    cities[]”).
    7 Kentucky League of Cities (https://www.klc.org/InfoCentral/Detail/2/
    classification). Last visited Mar. 25, 2021.
    8   
    Id.
    12
    IV.       CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated herein, we hold that Sections 1, 3 and 4 of the Act
    violate Kentucky Constitution Section 156a. The Court of Appeals’ opinion is
    affirmed in part and reversed in part. This matter is remanded to the Franklin
    Circuit Court for entry of a judgment in conformity with this opinion.
    All sitting. Minton, C.J.; Conley, Hughes, Lambert, Nickell and
    VanMeter, JJ., all concur. Keller, J., concurs in result only without separate
    opinion.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANTS:
    Peter Frank Ervin
    Assistant Jefferson County Attorney
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
    JEFFERSON COUNTY LEAGUE
    OF CITIES:
    Culver Vaughn Halliday
    Adam Clay Reeves
    Stoll Keenon Ogden PLLC
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE, CITY
    OF BANCROFT:
    Terri Elaine Boroughs
    Chapin Elizabeth Scheumann
    Richard Paul Schiller
    Schiller Osbourn Barnes & Maloney, PLLC
    13
    COUNSEL FOR APPELEES, CITY OF
    BELLEWOOD; CITY OF INDIAN HILLS
    AND CITY OF SHIVELY:
    Finn Robert Cato
    Cato & Cato
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES,
    CITY OF JEFFERSONTOWN AND
    CITY OF SENECA GARDENS:
    Schuyler John Olt
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
    ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT CABINET:
    Daniel Clark Cleveland
    Joseph Anthony Newberg
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
    EX REL. ATTORNEY GENERAL
    DANIEL J. CAMERON:
    Barry Lee Dunn
    Matthew Franklin Kuhn
    Victor Bruce Maddox
    Assistant Attorney General
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
    NATIONAL WASTE AND RECYCLING
    ASSOCIATION, KENTUCKY CHAPTER:
    Robert Kenyon Meyer
    Young-Eun Park
    Joshua Tanner Watkins
    Dinsmore & Shohl, LLP
    Kathryn Kirby Wood
    14
    COUNSEL FOR AMICUS, KENTUCKY
    RESOUCES COUNCIL:
    Thomas Joseph FitzGerald
    15