Sarber v. La Paz ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    KELLY SARBER,
    Plaintiff/Appellant,
    v.
    LA PAZ COUNTY,
    Defendant/Appellee.
    No. 1 CA-CV 22-0045
    FILED 11-10-2022
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. CV2019-006977
    The Honorable Timothy J. Thomason, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Dalimonte Rueb Stoller, LLP, Phoenix
    By Paul L. Stoller, Ashley Carrington Crowell
    Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant
    Gust Rosenfeld, PLC, Phoenix
    By Charles W. Wirken
    Counsel for Defendant/Appellee
    SARBER v. LA PAZ
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Presiding Judge David D. Weinzweig delivered the decision of the Court,
    in which Judge Randall M. Howe and Judge D. Steven Williams joined.
    W E I N Z W E I G, Judge:
    ¶1          Kelly Sarber appeals the superior court’s grant of La Paz
    County’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Landfill Project
    ¶2             Ms. Sarber is a business consultant, doing business as
    Strategic Management Group. On September 17, 2012, during an open
    meeting, the La Paz County Board of Supervisors unanimously authorized
    County Administrator Dan Field “to enter into a consulting agreement with
    [Sarber] for preparation of the Request for Proposals for the operation of
    the La Paz County Landfill, to manage the bidder meetings and inquiries,
    [and] to assist the County with negotiation of a Landfill host agreement and
    marketing economic development opportunities on contiguous Landfill
    lands.”
    ¶3            Sarber contends she and the County entered a consulting
    agreement (“2012 Agreement”) after the vote, but the County contends she
    never signed or returned the agreement. At any rate, the 2012 Agreement
    defined the scope of engagement:
    ENGAGEMENT AND SCOPE. La Paz County hereby
    retains [Sarber] to provide the advice and services related to
    the development, operation and management of the 160-acre
    permitted Subtitle D La Paz County Landfill (“Landfill”) and
    the contiguous land 480 acres of land owned by the County
    (“Additional Land”) and to provide for on-going consulting
    services with the goal of optimizing the economic value of the
    Landfill and the Additional Land to the County.
    ¶4          The 2012 Agreement contained a merger clause. The
    “compensation” section provided: “For services rendered by Consultant
    under the Agreement, the County will require that the Operator [of the
    2
    SARBER v. LA PAZ
    Decision of the Court
    landfill] pay the Consultant an amount equal to 10% of all fees, royalties,
    rents or similar amounts payable to the County under the Operating
    Agreement, for the term of the Operating Agreement.” But this section was
    unfinished, using a placeholder to “[ADD FEE LANGUAGE].”
    ¶5           After a few months, Sarber asked Administrator Field to
    change her compensation from commission to monthly fees. She and the
    County thus entered a second consulting agreement in February 2013,
    (“2013 Agreement”), which restated much of the 2012 Agreement, adding
    that Sarber would be paid $12,500 per month “for each calendar month
    during the term of this Agreement.” Six months later, Sarber and the
    County entered a third agreement, the “Fee Agreement,” which explained
    the County would pay Sarber a percentage of fees received under a landfill
    operation agreement.
    Solar Energy Project
    ¶6            Four years after the 2012 Agreement, Sarber pitched a new
    project to the Board of Supervisors involving a solar energy development.
    She explained that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) was close to
    approving an interstate electric power transmission line that would cross
    from California into the County. And so, she advised the County to buy
    federal land near the power line on which to build a solar energy project,
    and to then retain a solar energy developer to build and operate the solar
    energy project. The Board of Supervisors told Sarber to “move forward”
    with the land purchase in November 2016.
    ¶7           As she continued to work on this project in 2017, Sarber asked
    the County to enter into a new consulting agreement that would cover the
    solar energy project. The County refused.
    ¶8           The Board of Supervisors later approved the solar energy
    project, awarding the development to a solar energy developer in
    December 2017. The solar energy project was built about 26 miles away
    from the landfill. Sarber expects the solar energy project to generate more
    than $500 million for the County.
    This Lawsuit
    ¶9           Sarber sued the County for a declaratory judgment that
    Sarber and the County had an oral agreement, formed in 2013, for Sarber to
    receive a 10% commission on the solar energy project. Sarber twice
    amended her complaint, pointing each time to the oral agreement.
    3
    SARBER v. LA PAZ
    Decision of the Court
    ¶10            The County eventually moved for summary judgment,
    arguing the alleged oral agreement was unenforceable because it was never
    approved in an open meeting under Arizona law. At that point, for the first
    time, Sarber claimed she sued under the 2012 Agreement, which did meet
    the open meeting laws. On reply, the County argued that summary
    judgment was still appropriate under the plain and unambiguous terms of
    the 2012 Agreement, which was limited to Sarber’s consulting services on
    the landfill “and the contiguous land 480 acres.” Only then, after the briefs
    were in, did Sarber supply the newly minted declaration of Administrator
    Field, who said that “contiguous” meant “not contiguous,” and his
    definition would include “all County-owned land other than the other
    encumbered properties then owned by the County on which development
    was not feasible.”
    ¶11           The superior court granted summary judgment to County
    based in part on the plain and unambiguous terms of the 2012 Agreement,
    which limited consulting services to “the landfill or the contiguous 480
    acres,” and “[t]he renewable energy project has nothing to do with landfill
    operations.”     The court considered Administrator Field’s belated
    declaration and rejected it, recognizing it contradicted the 2012
    Agreement’s plain language and Field’s prior sworn testimony.
    ¶12          Just days later, Sarber moved for reconsideration, offering
    new theories and her own new affidavit. The superior court denied the
    motion upon a careful and detailed analysis, recognizing that Sarber’s
    argument had changed from “the County promised to sign an agreement
    to compensate Sarber for the [solar project] and failed to do so,” to the
    County breached the 2012 Agreement. The court then reiterated but refined
    the issue:
    Despite all of the rhetoric, the case comes down to one simple
    premise. In order for plaintiff to prevail, the Court would
    conclude that “contiguous” does not mean “contiguous.” The
    2012 Consulting Agreement is not reasonably susceptible to
    plaintiff’s interpretation. The Consulting Agreement does
    not, under any reasonable interpretation, entitle plaintiff to
    compensation for a project located many miles away from the
    Landfill and the contiguous parcel. Indeed, plaintiff’s own
    position during the bulk of this case acknowledged that there
    was no written agreement that entitled her to compensation.
    ¶13           Sarber appeals.    We have jurisdiction.     See A.R.S. § 12-
    2101(A)(1).
    4
    SARBER v. LA PAZ
    Decision of the Court
    DISCUSSION
    ¶14             Sarber argues the superior court erroneously granted
    summary judgment to the County because the 2012 Agreement required
    the County to compensate her for consulting services on the solar energy
    project, and the 2012 Agreement complied with Arizona’s open meeting
    laws. Because we hold that the 2012 Agreement does not promise
    compensation for consulting services on the solar energy project, we do not
    reach the open meeting issue. See Rancho Pescado, Inc. v. Nw. Mut. Life Ins.
    Co., 
    140 Ariz. 174
    , 178 (App. 1984) (appellate court need not decide other
    issues if it can resolve the case on the first issue).
    ¶15          We review de novo the superior court’s grant of summary
    judgment, Jackson v. Eagle KMC LLC, 
    245 Ariz. 544
    , 545, ¶ 7 (2019),
    construing the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party,
    Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Allen, 
    231 Ariz. 209
    , 213, ¶ 14 (App. 2012).
    Summary judgment is appropriate when “the moving party shows that
    there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and [it] is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” Ariz. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    ¶16            Contract interpretation is a question of law we review de
    novo. Grosvenor Holdings, L.C. v. Figueroa, 
    222 Ariz. 588
    , 593, ¶ 9 (App.
    2009). We construe a contract to determine and enforce the parties’ intent.
    Taylor v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    175 Ariz. 148
    , 152 (1993). Arizona
    courts consider “the plain meaning of the words” of a contract in the context
    of the whole contract to determine the meaning of the document. Terrell v.
    Torres, 
    248 Ariz. 47
    , 49-50 (2020).
    ¶17             Sarber waived most of her arguments by first raising them on
    a motion for reconsideration before the superior court. See Evans
    Withycombe, Inc. v. W. Innovations, Inc., 
    215 Ariz. 237
    , 240, ¶ 15 (App. 2006)
    (“Generally we do not consider arguments on appeal that were raised for
    the first time at the trial court in a motion for reconsideration.”). Even when
    considered, however, Sarber’s arguments fail under the 2012 Agreement’s
    plain language.
    ¶18            Sarber contends the 2012 Agreement included her consulting
    services for the solar energy project. Her arguments cannot withstand the
    plain and unambiguous scope of the 2012 Agreement, which does not
    envision or contemplate the solar energy project. According to the first
    paragraph of the 2012 Agreement, the County hired Sarber to provide
    consulting services on the “[l]andfill” and “contiguous 480 acres of land
    5
    SARBER v. LA PAZ
    Decision of the Court
    owned by the County.” The solar energy project is not located or operated
    on the landfill or the contiguous 480 acres.
    ¶19           Given that language, Sarber relies on extrinsic evidence of the
    parties’ intent to contradict the 2012 Agreement. But that evidence is
    inadmissible under Arizona law, which has adopted a two-part test to
    determine the admissibility of extrinsic evidence that would vary or
    contradict the meaning of a contract’s written words.
    ¶20            The superior court must “first consider the allegations made
    by the proponent of the extrinsic evidence as to the appropriate
    interpretation of the writing in light of the extrinsic evidence alleged.” Long
    v. City of Glendale, 
    208 Ariz. 319
    , 328, ¶ 28 (App. 2004). Here, like Humpty
    Dumpty, Sarber insists: “When I use a word, it means just what I choose it
    to mean—neither more nor less.” Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in
    Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass 124-25 (N.Y., The MacMillan Co.
    1897).     She offered Field’s declaration as external evidence that
    “contiguous” meant “not contiguous” in the 2012 Agreement, and the
    parties instead intended the word to subsume “all County-owned land
    other than the other encumbered properties then owned by the County on
    which development was not feasible.”
    ¶21           Next, the court must decide if the contract’s language is
    “reasonably susceptible to the interpretation suggested by the proponent of
    the extrinsic evidence.” Long, 208 Ariz. at ¶ 28. If yes, “the court should
    admit the extrinsic evidence,” but if not, “the court must preclude
    admission of any extrinsic evidence or argument.” Id. at ¶ 29.
    ¶22           The 2012 Agreement is not reasonably susceptible to Sarber’s
    interpretation, which reimagines the word “contiguous land” to capture an
    unknown universe of land that might or might not be acquired in the future.
    “Contiguous” is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary as “[t]ouching at a point
    or along a boundary.” Contiguous, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    And the record shows the solar energy project was not built on or aside the
    landfill and contiguous 480 acres. And as the superior court noted, “[the
    solar] energy project has nothing to do with landfill operations.” Because
    the 2012 Agreement is not reasonably susceptible to Sarber’s interpretation,
    we do not consider her external evidence.
    6
    SARBER v. LA PAZ
    Decision of the Court
    CONCLUSION
    ¶23           We affirm. We grant the County’s request for attorney fees as
    the prevailing party on appeal under A.R.S. § 12-341.01. We also grant the
    County its costs upon compliance with ARCAP 21.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1 CA-CV 22-0045

Filed Date: 11/10/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/10/2022