City of Fort Smith, Arkansas v. Jennifer Merriott, Individually and on Behalf of Those Similarly Situated , 2023 Ark. 51 ( 2023 )


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  •                                      Cite as 
    2023 Ark. 51
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.   CV-22-698
    Opinion Delivered: March   16, 2023
    CITY OF FORT SMITH, ARKANSAS
    APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                              [NO. 66FCV-17-637]
    JENNIFER MERRIOTT, INDIVIDUALLY HONORABLE STEPHEN TABOR,
    AND ON BEHALF OF THOSE           JUDGE
    SIMILARLY SITUATED
    APPELLEE REVERSED AND DISMISSED.
    RHONDA K. WOOD, Associate Justice
    Jennifer Merriott, on behalf of the citizens and taxpayers of Fort Smith (Class), sued
    the City of Fort Smith after discovering that Fort Smith was dumping nearly all its
    recyclables in a landfill. Merriott claimed that Fort Smith’s continued collection of monthly
    sanitation charges, which purportedly included fees for recycling, was an illegal exaction and
    that Fort Smith had been unjustly enriched. The circuit court agreed and awarded the Class
    $745,057.85. Fort Smith appeals the merits, and we reverse and dismiss.
    I. Background
    Fort Smith’s residential-recycling program, which was initiated in the 1980s, is
    operated by Fort Smith’s sanitation department. By ordinance, Fort Smith set the residential
    fee for the collection and disposal of solid waste, which included curbside pickup of trash,
    recyclables, and yard waste. During the relevant time, the unified sanitation fee was $13.28
    per month. Fort Smith did not charge a separate, independent fee for curbside recycling.
    The collected fees were deposited into Fort Smith’s sanitation enterprise fund, which
    supported the sanitation department’s operating expenses.1
    For years, Fort Smith had a no-cost processing contract for recycled waste, meaning
    that its recycling-process vendor did not charge Fort Smith to accept and process its
    recyclables. In 2014, the contract expired, and the processor proposed a $35 per-ton
    processing fee to continue the service. Fort Smith did not renew the contract and thus began
    a multiyear process in which Fort Smith admittedly dumped most of its recycling. It
    continued to run a separate curbside-recycling route, advertise its recycling program, and
    give warning stickers to residents that failed to properly separate their trash and their
    recyclables. This occurred despite Fort Smith’s practice of dumping the recyclables.
    In April 2017, following press coverage, citizens learned that Fort Smith was sending
    all the residents’ recyclables to a landfill. Eventually, Fort Smith admitted to the practice.
    After this public discovery, Fort Smith contracted with a new recycling-process vendor in
    July 2017.
    Merriott filed this class-action lawsuit against Fort Smith for the misuse of sanitation
    fees.2 She raised two claims: illegal exaction and unjust enrichment. Merriott claimed that
    Fort Smith collected monthly sanitation fees from its residential customers but did not
    actually process the recyclables. She also alleged that Fort Smith deceived citizens from
    1
    Separate fees for commercial and industrial collection and landfill-disposal fees,
    which are not at issue here, are also deposited into the sanitation enterprise fund.
    2
    Fort Smith previously appealed the circuit court’s denial of its motion to compel
    class notice. We reversed and remanded. City of Fort Smith v. Merriott, 
    2020 Ark. 94
    , 
    593 S.W.3d 481
    .
    2
    October 2014 to May 2017 by having them believe that the recyclables were being recycled
    when they were instead being dumped into a landfill. She alleged the sanitation fees
    constituted an illegal exaction because they included recycling services, but the residents did
    not actually receive the benefit of recycling services. She also claimed Fort Smith was
    unjustly enriched because it received the benefit of the fees for recycling and those paying
    the fees expected to have their waste recycled, but Fort Smith did not recycle.
    The circuit court held a bench trial on the illegal-exaction and unjust-enrichment
    claims. It concluded that the sanitation fees constituted an illegal exaction in violation of
    article 16, section 13 of the Arkansas Constitution because recycling was a separate benefit
    and service paid for by residents that they did not receive. It also concluded that Fort Smith
    was unjustly enriched because the Class paid money expecting to receive recycling services.
    It awarded the Class $745,057.85 in damages. Fort Smith appealed this judgment.
    II. Analysis
    A. Standard of Review
    Our standard of review from a bench trial is whether the circuit court’s findings are
    clearly erroneous. Williams v. Baptist Health, 
    2020 Ark. 150
    , at 14, 
    598 S.W.3d 487
    , 497. A
    finding is clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing
    court, on the entire evidence, is left with the firm conviction that a mistake has been made.
    
    Id.
     But a circuit court’s conclusions on questions of law are reviewed de novo. 
    2020 Ark. 150
    , at 14–15, 598 S.W.3d at 498.
    3
    B. Illegal Exaction
    Our constitution provides that citizens of any city, county, or town may bring suit
    for illegal exactions. Ark. Const. art. 16, § 13. An illegal exaction is the imposition of a tax
    or other expenditure of public funds for an unauthorized purpose or one contrary to law.
    Hartwick v. Thorne, 
    300 Ark. 502
    , 
    780 S.W.2d 531
     (1989). Fort Smith argues that its
    sanitation fees are not taxes and that the illegal-exaction claim for the misapplication of
    public funds from tax revenue fails for this reason. Merriott responds that fees can be
    “denominated as a tax” for illegal-exaction purposes. Merriott is correct. Illegal-exaction
    claims do not depend on the government’s label of the charge as a fee or a tax. A
    governmental levy of any charge is subject to an illegal-exaction claim unless it meets both
    elements of the following two prong test: (1) it is fair and reasonable; and (2) it bears a
    reasonable relationship to the benefits conferred on those receiving the services. Barnhart v.
    City of Fayetteville, 
    321 Ark. 197
    , 
    900 S.W.2d 539
     (1995).3
    Here, the circuit court agreed the fee was fair and reasonable but found that an illegal
    exaction occurred because of Fort Smith’s flagrant deceit. The circuit court held that citizens
    paid a sanitation fee for what they thought included recycling. Fort Smith then committed
    3
    For example, in Barnhart, we held that a city sanitation fee was an illegal tax because
    the revenue was spent to pay bond debt owed by another city and county and was not
    reasonably related to providing sanitation services. Barnhart, 
    321 Ark. at
    205–06, 
    900 S.W.2d at
    542–43. We said its “true character” made it illegal. 
    Id.
     Yet in Baioni, we held that a
    municipality’s water fee of $150 to tap and access its system, when the true cost was around
    $20, was not an illegal tax but a permissible fee. City of Marion v. Baioni, 
    312 Ark. 423
    , 427,
    
    850 S.W.2d 1
    , 3; Watson v. City of Blytheville, 
    2020 Ark. 51
    , at 10, 
    593 S.W.3d 18
    , 24 (“We
    have previously rejected the argument that simply because a utility fee generates a surplus
    in a utility fund, the exaction must be a tax.”).
    4
    an illegal exaction when it failed to disclose it wasn’t using the fee for that purpose. This
    reasoning is emotionally compelling but fails to satisfy the second prong of the test. Once a
    fee is determined fair and reasonable, the question is whether it bears a reasonable
    relationship to the benefits conferred. Barnhart, 
    321 Ark. at
    205–06, 
    900 S.W.2d at
    542–43.
    Fort Smith used the fee for its intended purpose. The Fort Smith ordinance set a
    single fee for the cost of residential collection and disposal of solid waste, recycling, and yard
    waste. And Fort Smith spent the funds on the collection and disposal of solid waste,
    recycling, and yard waste. No evidence showed that the fee did not bear a reasonable
    relationship to the benefits conferred. The circuit court’s findings that Fort Smith failed to
    notify the public, deceived citizens, and destroyed public trust are indisputable. But those
    facts do not make the sanitation fee’s relationship to the services less reasonable.
    Also there was no evidence of unauthorized use of the fees. The charges were
    maintained in the sanitation enterprise fund, which Fort Smith used to operate the sanitation
    department. The fee wasn’t collected for sanitation services and then spent for nonsanitation
    purposes. Nor were the residents charged a separate fee specifically designated for recycling
    their recyclables, which was spent on other services. Fort Smith charged a unified fee that
    Fort Smith could, and did, spend within the sanitation department.
    Thus, even though Fort Smith continued to collect recyclables and general trash
    separately and appeared to run a recycling program, it still used the sanitation fee to collect
    and dispose of sanitation. Because the circuit court’s finding that the fee was an illegal
    exaction was clearly erroneous, we reverse and dismiss the illegal-exaction claim.
    5
    C. Unjust Enrichment
    Fort Smith also appeals the circuit court’s finding that it was unjustly enriched. To
    find unjust enrichment, a party must have received something of value, to which it is not
    entitled and which it must restore. Hatchell v. Wren, 
    363 Ark. 107
    , 
    211 S.W.3d 516
     (2005).
    An action based on unjust enrichment is maintainable where a person has received money
    or its equivalent in the context that, in equity and good conscience, he or she ought not to
    retain. 
    Id.
    The circuit court granted Merriott’s claim for unjust enrichment because it
    concluded that a portion of the sanitation fee funded the recycling program. The circuit
    court’s order explained:
    [T]he class paid money expecting, in part, to receive recycling services. Further, Fort
    Smith accepted that money knowing the expectations of those paying the money
    and that the reasonable value of the expected services has been established.
    It awarded damages in the amount Fort Smith paid to run the curbside-recycling operation
    even though it was not recycling. On appeal, Fort Smith argues that Merriott presented no
    evidence on which restitution for unjust enrichment can be based. We agree.
    “To measure damages, the courts look at the plaintiff’s loss or injury; to measure
    restitution, the courts look at the defendant’s gain or benefit.” Hartness v. Nuckles, 
    2015 Ark. 444
    , at 8, 
    475 S.W.3d 558
    , 564. A claimant seeking restitution for unjust enrichment can
    generally recover the value of the benefit conferred upon the party unjustly enriched. 
    Id.
     If
    the claimant’s evidence will not yield even a reasonable approximation of damages, the
    unjust enrichment is merely speculative, and restitution will not be awarded. 
    Id.
     (citing
    Restatement (Third) of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment § 51 cmt. i (2011)).
    6
    We agree with Fort Smith that Merriott’s restitution evidence was merely
    speculative. To meet her burden, Merriott had to show what unjust benefit Fort Smith
    gained that it must return. Merriott did not introduce any evidence of the unjust value of
    the benefit Fort Smith received from the Class. Again, the Class paid a sanitation fee for
    sanitation services. But Merriott offered no evidence that Fort Smith gained anything from
    its deception. While Fort Smith’s decision to suspend the program conflicts with the public
    policies of both Fort Smith and the State of Arkansas, no evidence showed that Fort Smith
    profited or otherwise benefited from its actions. Unjust enrichment does not exist to punish
    but to restore wrongful benefits, and there was no evidence that Fort Smith retained
    financial benefits from its actions that could be returned to the Class.
    In sum, the damages evidence Merriott presented—the cost of Fort Smith’s fake
    recycling program—is not a valid measure of restitution. And because Merriott presented
    no evidence of Fort Smith’s wrongful gain from the suspension of the recycling operation,
    the circuit court’s restitution award was clearly erroneous. Therefore, we reverse and dismiss
    the unjust-enrichment claim.
    Reversed and dismissed.
    WOMACK, J., concurs.
    SHAWN A. WOMACK, Justice, concurring. A government-imposed exaction,
    regardless of its name, is illegal if it violates our constitution, a statute, or other law. Despite
    the dishonest and misleading actions of the City here, the imposition of the fee at issue was
    authorized by statute, and the funds collected were used in a manner authorized by law.
    Accordingly, Jennifer Merriott’s illegal-exaction claim fails because the City of Fort Smith’s
    7
    fee was not illegal, not because it was fair and reasonable. Our constitution provides that
    “[a]ny citizen of any county, city or town may institute suit, in behalf of himself and all
    others interested, to protect the inhabitants thereof against the enforcement of any illegal
    exactions whatever.” Ark. Const. art. 16, §13 (emphasis added). Although a government
    fee might be unreasonable or unfair, it may nevertheless be legal. Similarly, a fee may be
    completely reasonable and fair but nevertheless illegal.
    Arkansas law requires that “[a]ll municipalities shall provide a solid waste
    management system which will adequately provide for the collection and disposal of all solid
    wastes.” 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 8-6-211
    (a) (Repl. 2022). To effectuate this requirement, “[t]he
    governing body of the municipality shall have the authority to levy and collect such fees
    and charges and require such licenses as may be appropriate to discharge its responsibility
    under this subchapter, and the fees, charges, and licenses shall be based on a fee schedule as
    set forth in an ordinance.” Id § 8-6-211(b)(1). In accordance with this statute, the City
    adopted ordinances in 2007, 2013, and 2015, which governed the City’s solid-waste disposal
    and were in effect during the recycling disruption. In short, these ordinances set a fee for
    residential sanitation services, which did not expressly include recycling, and established
    various procedures for solid waste collection.
    The City’s deception notwithstanding, the fee—an exaction—was not illegal.
    Because the recycling program was voluntary and offered to the City’s residents at no extra
    cost, Merriott paid the same fee as a resident who did not participate in the City’s recycling
    program. Absent a municipal ordinance to the contrary, no law requires a city to maintain
    a recycling program—let alone a recycling program that actually recycles 100 percent of the
    8
    materials collected. See 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 8-9-203
    (a) (requiring cities, among other
    governmental entities, to establish a recycling program for government-generated but not
    resident-generated recyclables). In fact, state law explicitly vests cities with the discretion
    to implement recycling programs.
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 8-6-211(e) provides:
    The governing body of a municipality shall have the right to establish policies
    for and enact laws concerning all phases of the operation of a solid waste
    management system, including . . . the character and kinds of wastes accepted
    at the disposal site, the separation of wastes according to type by those
    generating them prior to collection, the type of container for storage of wastes,
    the prohibition of the diverting of recyclable materials by persons other than
    the generator or collector of the recyclable material, the prohibition of
    burning of wastes, the pretreatment of wastes, and such other rules as may be
    necessary or appropriate, so long as the laws, policies, and rules are consistent
    with, in accordance with, and not more restrictive than those adopted by,
    under, or pursuant to this subchapter or any laws, rules, or orders adopted by
    state law or incorporated by reference from federal law, the commission, or
    the regional solid waste management boards or regional solid waste
    management districts . . . .
    Simply put, while the statute authorizes municipal governments to establish and maintain
    recycling programs, it also vests them with the discretion to do so or not, and there is no
    requirement in Arkansas law that cities must implement residential recycling programs.
    See 
    id.
     Although the General Assembly has announced it is the public policy of this state
    “to encourage and promote recycling in order to conserve natural resources, conserve
    energy, and preserve landfill space[,]” this is a stated “goal” of the legislature and is not a
    requirement placed upon cities. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 8-9-101
    .
    Because there was no separate fee charged for the City’s recycling services, each
    household paid the same fee whether the City “picked-up” its recycling or not.
    9
    Consequently, the City’s operations were consistent with the relevant ordinances and state
    law and were, therefore, legal. Thus, I would reverse the circuit court’s illegal-exaction
    judgment for the foregoing reasons.
    I respectfully concur.
    Daily & Woods, P.L.L.C., by: Jerry L. Canfield and Colby T. Roe, for appellant.
    Monzer Mansour and W. Whitfield Hyman, for appellee.
    10