Southwest Power Pool, Inc. v. Kanis & Denny Roads Suburban Water Improvement District No. 349 of Pulaski County Ex Rel. Haas , 2016 Ark. LEXIS 112 ( 2016 )


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  •                                     Cite as 
    2016 Ark. 135
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.   CV-15-606
    SOUTHWEST POWER POOL, INC.                       Opinion Delivered   March 31, 2016
    APPELLANT
    V.                                               APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NO. 60CV-13-1018]
    KANIS AND DENNY ROADS
    SUBURBAN WATER IMPROVEMENT                       HONORABLE W. MICHAEL REIF,
    DISTRICT NO. 349 OF PULASKI                      JUDGE
    COUNTY, ARKANSAS, BY AND
    THROUGH ITS COMMISSIONERS
    BARRY HAAS, ROD NEAL, JAMES
    FONTENOY, SHIRLEY HERNDON,
    BILL ADAIR (DECEASED), AND MIKE                  REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    REBICK
    APPELLEE
    PAUL E. DANIELSON, Associate Justice
    Appellant Southwest Power Pool, Inc. (“SPP”), appeals an order of summary judgment
    entered in favor of appellee Kanis and Denny Roads Suburban Water Improvement District
    No. 349 of Pulaski County (“the District”). On appeal, SPP argues that the Pulaski County
    Circuit Court erred in granting summary judgment on SPP’s challenge to the reasonableness
    of an assessment of benefits and accompanying levy of taxes. We reverse and remand.
    The District was formed in 2000 for the primary purpose of constructing water lines
    and related improvements to serve real properties within the District. The District was
    financed by bond issues; in order to repay its debts and fund general operations, the District
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    assessed the benefits accrued to each real property within the District resulting from the
    construction of the water lines, and levied taxes accordingly. The District completed
    construction of the water lines in 2006. At that time, the District conveyed and dedicated its
    easements and water lines to Central Arkansas Water (“CAW”), which has owned, operated,
    and maintained the easements and water lines since that time.
    In 2010, SPP purchased 24.04 acres of unimproved real property lying within the
    District. SPP dedicated 3.2 acres to the City of Little Rock and constructed its commercial
    facility on the remaining 20.84 acres. This property had originally been part of an 80-acre
    tract, which was initially assessed in the amount of $138,078 in 2003. This assessment resulted
    in an annual levy of approximately $3,500, which was paid without protest from 2003
    through 2012, and which SPP conceded was fair.1 In 2013, the District reassessed SPP’s
    property, determining that the assessed benefits to the 20.84 acres alone totaled $2,521,954.
    This assessment resulted in an annual levy of $60,653.
    SPP appealed the 2013 reassessment to the District’s board of equalization, composed
    of its assessor and commissioners. The reassessment was confirmed. SPP then filed its
    complaint in circuit court, asserting that the reassessment was wrong as a matter of law and
    as a matter of fact.2 Specifically, SPP argued that an assessment was supposed to represent the
    1
    According to SPP, the 2003 assessment resulted in an annual levy of $3,492; according
    to the District, the 2003 assessment resulted in an annual levy of $3,600.
    2
    Pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated section 14-92-228(c)(1) (Repl. 1998), the
    remedy against the levy of taxes by a suburban improvement district shall be by suit in
    chancery.
    2
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    benefit to its property resulting from the District’s construction of water lines, which had been
    completed in 2006, and that the subsequent construction of its facility on the property would
    not have changed that value. SPP also alleged that it had chosen not to use the District’s
    water lines and instead connect to lines that had already been constructed by the owner of the
    original 80-acre tract and CAW. Thus, it contended, the presence of the District’s water lines
    near its property was of no benefit to it, and the assessment should have been reduced to zero.
    For the same reason, SPP argued that it was exempt from assessment under Arkansas Code
    Annotated section 14-92-225(c)(2). SPP maintained that the reassessment violated procedural
    and substantive due process and equal protection and constituted a taking without just
    compensation. Finally, SPP alleged that the District had failed to follow statutory procedures
    for reassessment, including those having to do with notice.
    The District answered and filed its motion for summary judgment. The District
    disagreed with SPP’s interpretation of section 14-92-225(c)(2), arguing that it did not exempt
    SPP from assessment and that it allowed the District to assess property in proportion to the
    benefit conferred. The District also argued that it had provided proper notice to SPP and that
    the reassessment was reasonable. In response to the motion for summary judgment, SPP
    submitted the affidavit of Ray Owen, Jr., a licensed attorney and registered professional
    engineer who had experience serving as an assessor for over thirty improvement districts over
    a period of more than four decades. Owen opined that the reassessment of SPP’s property
    was improper because there was little to no benefit accruing to the property as a result of the
    District’s earlier construction of water lines. Additionally, Owen questioned the assessor’s
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    calculations, which apparently valued SPP’s land and the facility built upon it at $0.00 prior
    to the District’s construction of its water lines. Owen also referenced minutes of the District’s
    commissioners’ meetings and emails between the District’s assessor and commissioners,
    opining that the commissioners’ input on the SPP reassessment was inappropriate and
    questioning whether the reassessment was independently made by the assessor as required by
    statute.
    Following further briefing and two hearings, the circuit court granted the District’s
    motion for summary judgment on all issues except notice.3 The court found that a material
    physical change in property after an original assessment is a basis for reassessment and that all
    assessments and reassessments are presumptively reasonable (citing Sugarloaf Dev. Co., Inc. v.
    Heber Springs Sewer Improvement Dist., 
    34 Ark. App. 28
    , 
    805 S.W.2d 88
    (1991), and Kelley
    Trust Co. v. Paving Improvement Dist. No. 47 of Ft. Smith, 
    185 Ark. 397
    , 
    47 S.W.2d 569
    (1932)). The court concluded that SPP’s connection to a CAW line did not exempt it from
    assessment under section 14-92-225(c)(2); rather, SPP’s “alternative water source is not
    supposed to be taken into consideration at all.” In addition, the court determined that the
    reassessment was not void because of the communications between the District’s
    commissioners and its assessor. SPP filed a motion for reconsideration, which was denied.
    Following a bench trial on the issue of the sufficiency of the 2013 notice of reassessment, the
    3
    The circuit court denied the District’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of
    notice and also denied a subsequent motion for summary judgment on the issue of notice filed
    by SPP, reserving this issue for trial.
    4
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    circuit court entered a final order granting judgment in favor of the District.4 SPP filed a
    timely notice of appeal.
    SPP’s appeal challenges the circuit court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of the
    District. The law is well settled regarding the standard of review used by this court in
    reviewing a grant of summary judgment. See, e.g., Anderson’s Taekwondo Ctr. Camp Positive,
    Inc. v. Landers Auto Group No.1, Inc., 
    2015 Ark. 268
    . A circuit court will grant summary
    judgment only when it is apparent that no genuine issues of material fact exist requiring
    litigation and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See 
    id. The burden
    of proof shifts to the opposing party once the moving party establishes a prima facie
    entitlement to summary judgment, and the opposing party must demonstrate the existence
    of a material issue of fact. See 
    id. After reviewing
    the undisputed facts, the circuit court
    should deny summary judgment if, under the evidence, reasonable minds might reach
    different conclusions from the same undisputed facts. See 
    id. 4 SPP’s
    property was also reassessed in 2014; that reassessment was unchanged from the
    2013 reassessment. SPP challenged the 2014 reassessment, and the board of equalization
    confirmed it. SPP filed an amended complaint contesting the 2014 reassessment, and the
    District filed an amended motion for summary judgment to address it. The circuit court’s
    order granting summary judgment applied to the 2014 reassessment as well as the 2013
    reassessment. Following entry of the summary judgment, SPP’s property was again reassessed
    in 2015, with the assessed benefit remaining the same as in the 2013 and 2014 reassessments.
    SPP challenged the 2015 reassessment, the board of equalization confirmed it, and SPP filed
    a second amended complaint contesting it. The District renewed its motion for summary
    judgment, asking the circuit court to apply its earlier ruling granting summary judgment to
    the 2015 reassessment as well. This motion was granted.
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    On appeal, this court determines if summary judgment was appropriate based on
    whether the evidentiary items presented by the moving party leave a material question of fact
    unanswered. See 
    id. This court
    views the evidence in the light most favorable to the party
    against whom the motion was filed, resolving all doubts and inferences against the moving
    party. See 
    id. This review
    is not limited to the pleadings but also includes the affidavits and
    other documents filed by the parties. See 
    id. SPP raises
    four points on appeal: (1) that the circuit court erred in granting summary
    judgment in favor of the District; (2) that the District’s commissioners improperly assumed
    the role of the assessor, which violated statutory guarantees and denied SPP due process; (3)
    that the amount of the reassessment and the erroneous way in which it was determined are
    very much in dispute and present issues for trial; and (4) that any ambiguity in section 14-92-
    225(c)(2) is required to be resolved in favor of the taxpayer. Our analysis begins and ends
    with SPP’s fourth point on appeal because it raises a threshold issue and is dispositive.
    SPP argues that section 14-92-225(c)(2) prohibits any assessment of its facility. Section
    14-92-225(c) provides as follows:
    (1) The assessment shall embrace not merely the lands, but shall embrace all
    railroads, tramroads, telegraph lines, telephone lines, pipelines, and other
    improvements on real estate that will be benefited by the acquiring or making of the
    improvement.
    (2) No assessment shall apply against any pipelines or other improvements
    which are extensions of or connected to the pipeline distribution system or other
    improvements within any city adjacent to the district.
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    Ark. Code Ann. § 14-92-225(c) (Repl. 1998). The parties have totally opposing views
    concerning the meaning of the plain language of this statute. According to SPP, the statute
    can only mean that its facility cannot be assessed because it is an improvement that is
    connected to a CAW line within the City of Little Rock, which is adjacent to the District.
    The District reads the statute differently, contending that subsection (c)(1) specifically requires
    the assessment to embrace SPP’s facility and that subsection (c)(2) specifically excludes from
    consideration SPP’s connection to a CAW line.
    The question of the correct application and interpretation of an Arkansas statute is a
    question of law, which this court decides de novo. See, e.g., Rose v. Harbor E., Inc., 
    2013 Ark. 496
    , 
    430 S.W.3d 773
    . We are not bound by the circuit court’s decision; however, in the
    absence of a showing that the circuit court erred, its interpretation will be accepted as correct
    on appeal. See 
    id. The basic
    rule of statutory construction to which all other interpretive
    guides defer is to give effect to the intent of the drafting body. See 
    id. In reviewing
    issues of
    statutory interpretation, we first construe a statute just as it reads, giving the words their
    ordinary and usually accepted meaning in common language. See 
    id. When the
    language of
    a statute is plain and unambiguous and conveys a clear and definite meaning, there is no need
    to resort to rules of statutory construction. See 
    id. It is
    axiomatic that this court strives to
    reconcile statutory provisions to make them consistent, harmonious, and sensible. See 
    id. We find
    SPP’s interpretation of the plain language of section 14-92-225(c) to be
    correct. It seems that the parties’ disagreement stems from confusion over the meaning of the
    word “improvement” within the statute. Section 14-92-225 as a whole makes clear that the
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    benefits to be assessed and taxed are those arising from the improvements constructed by the
    improvement district, not those arising from improvements constructed on the taxpayer’s real
    property by the taxpayer. For example, subsection (a)(1) states that the assessor shall “assess
    the benefits which will accrue to the real property within the district from the acceptance of
    the gift of improvement or facilities, the purchase of the improvement or facilities, or the
    construction of the improvement or facilities” that the district’s board of commissioners has
    voted to accept, purchase, or construct. Ark. Code Ann. § 14-92-225(a)(1). Subsection (a)(2)
    states that the assessor will assess “all benefits that will accrue to the landowners of the district
    by reason of the acceptance, purchase, or construction of the proposed improvement or
    facilities, sometimes referred to as ‘improvement.’” Ark. Code Ann. § 14-92-225(a)(2).
    Subsection (b) describes the process to be undertaken by the assessor: he or she shall
    determine the “Assessed Value of Lands Prior to Improvements” and the “Assessed Value of
    Lands After Improvements,” and “[i]f the assessed value of land after improvements is greater
    than the assessed value of land before improvements . . . then the difference between the two
    shall be the assessed benefits that will accrue to each tract by reason of the improvement.”
    Ark. Code Ann. § 14-92-225(b)(1) & (2)(A)(i).
    Subsection (c) is somewhat different in that it uses the word “improvement” to refer
    to both improvements made by the improvement district and those made by the taxpayer.
    We read subsection (c)(1) to mean that an assessment shall take into account the land plus any
    improvements on the land constructed by the taxpayer—such as SPP’s commercial
    facility—that will be benefited by the construction of improvements by the improvement
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    district. It follows that the word “improvements” appearing in the first clause of subsection
    (c)(2) would refer to those improvements made on the land by the taxpayer—again, such as
    SPP’s commercial facility. Thus, “[n]o assessment shall apply against” SPP’s facility because
    it is “connected to the pipeline distribution system” within the City of Little Rock. Ark.
    Code Ann. § 14-92-225(c)(2).
    The District’s interpretation of subsection (c)(2), which the circuit court accepted as
    correct, does not comport with the plain language of the statute. If the General Assembly had
    intended to say that a taxpayer’s connection to an adjacent city’s waterworks system could not
    be considered in the assessment process, it presumably would have said that. The “[n]o
    assessment shall apply” language simply does not lend itself to that interpretation. In addition,
    as SPP points out, any ambiguity in the statute must be resolved in favor of it as the taxpayer.
    See, e.g., Cent. & S. Cos., Inc. v. Weiss, 
    339 Ark. 76
    , 
    3 S.W.3d 294
    (1999).
    Moreover, we are unpersuaded by the District’s argument that section 14-92-225(c)(2)
    evidences the General Assembly’s intent to protect improvement districts from encroachment
    by neighboring municipalities. Section 14-92-219 sets out the purposes for which a suburban
    improvement district may be organized, including to construct a waterworks system and “to
    operate and maintain any such waterworks system it may purchase, construct, or own.” Ark.
    Code Ann. § 14-92-219(1) (Supp. 2015). It is clear that some suburban improvement
    districts, including the District involved here, are organized for the purpose of constructing
    a waterworks system or related improvements, but not for the purpose of operating or
    maintaining that system. Here, as noted above, the District conveyed all of its water lines and
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    easements to CAW upon completion of construction, and CAW has owned, operated, and
    maintained the lines since then. The District is not, and has never been, a source of water.
    Its water lines were apparently always intended to tie onto CAW lines. Section 14-92-
    225(c)(2) covers this precise situation, providing that improvements attached to an adjacent
    city system are not subject to assessment.
    For these reasons, we hold that SPP’s commercial facility, an improvement on its
    property that is connected to the City of Little Rock’s waterworks system, cannot be assessed.
    Accordingly, the 2013 reassessment, and the 2014 and 2015 reassessments that followed, are
    invalid. We reverse the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment and remand for entry of
    an order consistent with this opinion.5
    Reversed and remanded.
    Mitchell, Williams, Selig, Gates & Woodyard, P.L.L.C., by: M. Samuel Jones III, for
    appellant.
    Quattlebaum, Grooms & Tull, PLLC, by: John E. Tull III, Joseph R. Falasco, and R. Ryan
    Younger, for appellee.
    5
    Because the issue is likely to arise on remand, we note that the 2003 assessment
    amount covered the entire 80-acre tract, of which SPP now owns only 20.84 acres. See, e.g.,
    Rees v. Smith, 
    2009 Ark. 169
    , 
    301 S.W.3d 467
    (reversing grant of summary judgment and
    addressing remaining arguments that were likely to arise again on remand).
    10