Assured Guaranty Corp. v. Madison County Ex Rel. Board of Supervisors , 693 F. App'x 287 ( 2017 )


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  •      Case: 16-60303      Document: 00514013472         Page: 1    Date Filed: 05/31/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT      United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 16-60303                                 May 31, 2017
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    ASSURED GUARANTY CORPORATION, Successor in interest to Radian
    Asset Assurance Incorporated,
    Plaintiff–Appellee,
    v.
    MADISON COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, acting by and through its duly elected
    Board of Supervisors,
    Defendant–Appellant.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Mississippi
    USDC No. 3:13-CV-686
    Before KING, JOLLY, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    This case stems from a dispute over the interpretation of a Contribution
    Agreement between Appellant Madison County, Mississippi (“the County”),
    and Parkway East Public Improvement District (“Parkway East”), a
    Mississippi special-purpose government entity. Appellee Assured Guaranty
    Corporation (“Assured”) insured bonds issued by Parkway East. Assured seeks
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
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    No. 16-60303
    a declaratory judgment finding the Contribution Agreement valid and
    obligating the County to advance bond payments regardless of whether
    Parkway East reimburses the County within the two-year period described in
    the contract. The district court found in favor of Assured, and the County now
    appeals. Because the plain language of the Contribution Agreement conditions
    the County’s advancement obligation on Parkway East’s performance of its
    obligations, we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On November 22, 2002, the County created a special-purpose
    government entity called Parkway East under Mississippi Code § 19-31-1. 1
    “Parkway East was created for the purpose of financing and managing the
    acquisition,    construction,    and     operation     of      capital   infrastructure
    improvements within the 1,050 acres of land that comprise” the district.
    Landowners within Parkway East are responsible for “all costs and expenses
    to be incurred by Parkway East in the construction and financing of the
    District Project and/or in the furtherance of Parkway East’s purposes.” To this
    end, in July 2005, Parkway East issued special assessment bonds in an
    aggregate principal amount of $27,770,000. The final maturity date of the
    bonds is 2030. Proceeds from the bonds are to be used to cover construction
    costs, and Parkway East is required to make bond payments by levying special
    assessments on parcels of land within the district.
    On July 27, 2005, Parkway East and the County entered into a
    Contribution Agreement to help Parkway East market the bonds at a lower
    1  Two years later, Parkway East was divided into two districts—Parkway South and
    the Parkway East that now exists. When we refer to Parkway East in this opinion, we are
    referring to the newer iteration of that district.
    2
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    interest rate. 2 The Contribution Agreement begins with a set of “whereas”
    provisions establishing the facts underlying the agreement. Among other
    things, this portion of the contract includes a paragraph describing the purpose
    of the Contribution Agreement as “memorializ[ing] [the parties’] mutual
    understanding with respect to the joint participation of the County and
    Parkway East in the financing of public infrastructure improvements and
    facilities to be located within the County and Parkway East.” These
    paragraphs are then followed by seventeen numbered sections describing a
    series of “mutual covenants and promises.”
    Section 3 of the Contribution Agreement, which is at issue in this case,
    describes three obligations by which the County and Parkway East are bound.
    The parties disagree about the following portions of Section 3: (1) a promise
    that the County advance funds when Parkway East cannot make bond
    payments if the County is satisfied with Parkway East’s performance of its
    obligations under the Contribution Agreement, and (2) a requirement that
    Parkway East reimburse the County for such advances within two years of
    when they are made.
    In connection with its issuance of bonds, Parkway East also purchased a
    bond insurance policy from Radian Asset Assurance, Inc. (“Radian”). During
    this litigation, Radian was purchased by Assured. Thus, Radian’s assets and
    obligations became the assets and obligations of Assured. 3 As bond insurer,
    Assured only makes bond payments if a shortfall remains after applying funds
    from special assessment collections and any contribution made by the County.
    2  Assured also posits that the Contribution Agreement made the bonds eligible for
    bond insurance.
    3 Hereinafter, for convenience, we will refer to the bond insurer as “Assured”
    regardless of whether Radian or Assured actually took the action(s) being described.
    3
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    Unfortunately, the anticipated commercial development of Parkway
    East never materialized. And in October 2011, Parkway East, being unable to
    make its regularly scheduled bond payments, requested that the County,
    pursuant to Section 3 of the Contribution Agreement, advance payment to
    service the debt. The County advanced bond payments four times—in October
    2011, April 2012, October 2012, and April 2013. On October 18, 2013, the
    County refused to make any further advance payments because Parkway East
    had failed to reimburse the County within two years, an obligation the County
    alleged had to be fulfilled before the County was required to make advances.
    Since November 2013, Assured has, and continues to, advance funds to cover
    any bond payment deficiencies.
    On November 1, 2013, Assured sued the County seeking, among other
    things, a declaration that the County is obligated to continue advancing funds
    under the Contribution Agreement regardless of whether Parkway East
    reimburses the County within two years. 4 On November 21, 2014, both parties
    filed motions for partial summary judgment. In April 2015, the district court
    entered an order granting in part and denying in part Assured’s motion and
    denying the County’s motion. As relevant to this appeal, the district court held
    that the two-year reimbursement requirement in Section 3 of the Contribution
    Agreement was not a condition precedent to the County’s obligation to advance
    bond payments. That said, the court did acknowledge the conditional nature of
    the County’s obligation to make bond payments and agreed with the County
    that Parkway East’s reimbursement obligation was binding on it. The district
    court also determined that the County’s obligation to make such advance
    payments lasted for the life of the bonds.
    4 Assured can sue for enforcement of the contract as a third-party beneficiary to the
    Contribution Agreement.
    4
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    In March 2016, Assured filed a second motion for partial summary
    judgment, which the district court granted on April 27, 2016. In its order, the
    district court once again found that the County was obligated to advance
    payments so long as the bonds remained outstanding, regardless of whether
    Parkway East reimbursed the County within two years. The court further
    ordered the County to pay Assured $3,160,616.70—$1,153,211.47 to reimburse
    Assured for payments it made servicing the debt, and $2,007,405.23 to
    replenish Parkway East’s Debt Service Reserve Fund. This appeal followed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    This Court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo using the same
    standard as the district court. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Murchison, 
    937 F.2d 204
    , 207 (5th Cir. 1991). Summary judgment is appropriate where “there is no
    genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56.
    This Court also reviews de novo the initial determination of whether a
    contract is ambiguous. Clardy Mfg. Co. v. Marine Midland Bus. Loans Inc., 
    88 F.3d 347
    , 352 (5th Cir. 1996). Where a contract is unambiguous, interpretation
    of that contract is likewise a question of law reviewed de novo. 
    Id. But if
    a
    contract is ambiguous and its interpretation requires the Court to consider
    extrinsic evidence, we review for clear error. 
    Id. The applicable
    rules of contract
    interpretation are furnished by state law—here, that of Mississippi. 
    Id. The Mississippi
    Supreme Court has laid out the following tiered
    approach to contract interpretation:
    First, the “four corners” test is applied, wherein the reviewing
    court looks to the language that the parties used in expressing
    their agreement. Second, if the court is unable to translate a clear
    understanding of the parties’ intent, the court should apply the
    discretionary “canons” of contract construction. Finally, if the
    contract continues to evade clarity as to the parties’ intent, the
    court should consider extrinsic or parol evidence. It is only when
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    the review of a contract reaches this point that prior negotiations,
    agreements and conversations might be considered in determining
    the parties’ intentions in the construction of the contract.
    Tupelo Redevelopment Agency v. Abernathy, 
    913 So. 2d 278
    , 284 (Miss. 2005)
    (citations omitted). When looking at the language of a contract, a court must
    “read the contract as a whole, so as to give effect to all of its clauses.” Royer
    Homes of Miss., Inc. v. Chandeleur Homes, Inc., 
    857 So. 2d 748
    , 752 (Miss.
    2003).
    The controversy in this case centers on Section 3 of the Contribution
    Agreement:
    County Contribution. [1] Provided that the covenants, agreements
    and obligations of Parkway East as stated herein are performed
    and/or provided to the County’s satisfaction, the County hereby
    agrees that in the event Parkway East fails, for any reason, to levy
    and/or collect (or have collected) a sufficient amount of Special
    Assessments from the owners of land within Parkway East in
    order to satisfy any Debt Service Payment, the County shall
    advance to the paying agent, and/or the Bond trustee, the
    outstanding amount required to satisfy the deficient Debt Service
    Payment. [2] The parties also agree that, in the event of a sale of
    a parcel of land for taxes (pursuant to Section 19-31-33 of the Act)
    upon which a Special Assessment was levied but not collected, the
    County shall be immediately reimbursed for the County’s advance
    to such deficiency with the proceeds of such tax sale. The Amount
    of such reimbursement shall be equal to the amount the County
    advanced to the paying agent, and/or the Bond trustee, pursuant
    to this Section 3, including any interest accrued thereon at the
    statutory rate. [3] Notwithstanding the above, Parkway East
    hereby covenants and agrees to provide full reimbursement to the
    County, no later than two (2) years from the date the deficient Debt
    Service Payment is made, for the amounts the County provides to
    the paying agent, and/or the Bond trustee, pursuant to this Section
    3, regardless of the source of the Parkway East funds to pay such
    reimbursement. 5
    5 To aid in explanation we have numbered this provision and will hereinafter refer to
    Parts 1, 2, and 3.
    6
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    In essence: Part 1 obligates the County to advance bond payments when
    Parkway East cannot make them; Part 2 provides that when a parcel of land
    is sold for taxes, Parkway East shall immediately use that money to reimburse
    the County for any advances it has made; and Part 3 otherwise requires
    Parkway East to reimburse the County for bond-payment advances within two
    years of when the advances were made.
    The parties agree that the Contribution Agreement is unambiguous, but
    disagree about the import of Part 3. The County argues that Part 3’s
    reimbursement provision is a condition precedent to its obligation to advance
    funds for bond payments. In other words, the County contends that if Parkway
    East fails to reimburse it for bond-payment advances within two years of when
    the advances are made, it is no longer required to make any future advance
    payments. Assured, however, argues that Part 3’s reimbursement provision is
    separate and removed from any conditional language in Part 1 and accordingly
    that reimbursement is not a condition precedent to the County’s obligation to
    make advance payments under Part 1. Thus, Assured posits that the County
    is obligated to make bond-payment advances as long as the bonds remain
    outstanding, regardless of whether Parkway East ever reimburses the County.
    Section 12 of the Contribution Agreement provides that the agreement shall
    last for “the duration of any Bonds issued by Parkway East.”
    A.    The Plain Text of the Contribution Agreement
    As an initial matter, both parties agree that the plain meaning of the
    words “provided that,” which begin Part 1, is to create a condition. See
    Provided, Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary (1975) (defining “provided” to
    mean “on condition that”). But the parties disagree over which “covenants,
    agreements and obligations” are included in the condition created by Part 1.
    Assured argues that the covenant set forth by Part 3 is not one of the
    covenants to which Part 1 refers because Parts 1 and 3 are both spatially and
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    syntactically separated from one another. Assured argues that: (1) there is no
    connection between Parts 1 and 3 because the two are separated by several
    sentences, and (2) the words “[n]otwithstanding the above,” which begin Part
    3, “carve out” the reimbursement provision from any condition created by Part
    1.
    Assured’s arguments are unpersuasive. The plain text of the contract
    does not suggest that the “covenants, agreements and obligations” referred to
    in Part 1 are limited to any particular set of covenants provided in the contract.
    Rather, the condition in Part 1 refers generally to any covenant in the
    Contribution Agreement to which Parkway East agreed. Moreover, use of the
    word “notwithstanding” in Part 3 does not carve out any promise created by
    the sentence that follows. The plain meaning of “notwithstanding” is “in spite
    of” or “despite.” Notwithstanding, Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary (1975);
    see also Adams v. Baptist Mem’l Hosp.-Desoto, Inc., 
    965 So. 2d 652
    , 656 (Miss.
    2007) (defining “notwithstanding” to mean “(1) In spite of; (2) Nevertheless; (3)
    In spite of the fact that”). Consistent with this definition, there is also general
    agreement among courts that “a ‘notwithstanding’ clause clearly signals the
    drafter’s intention that the provisions of the ‘notwithstanding’ section override
    conflicting provisions of any other section.” Cisneros v. Alpine Ridge Grp., 
    508 U.S. 10
    , 18 (1993); see also, e.g., Warberg Opportunistic Trading Fund, L.P. v.
    GeoResources, Inc., 
    973 N.Y.S.2d 187
    , 191 (N.Y. App. Div. 2013) (“It is well
    settled that trumping language such as a ‘notwithstanding’ provision ‘controls
    over any contrary language’ in a contract.”); cf. 
    Adams, 965 So. 2d at 656
    (holding that “notwithstanding” language in a subsection of a state statute
    overrode a specifically identified conflicting subsection). We agree with this
    interpretation.
    Given that the plain meaning of “notwithstanding” is “in spite of,” logic
    dictates that the word “notwithstanding” implies some contradiction regarding
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    what it refers to. Thus, Assured is only correct that the reimbursement
    covenant in Part 3 is carved out from the remainder of the provision at issue if
    Part 3 contradicts both Parts 1 and 2. However, only Part 2—requiring
    immediate reimbursement by Parkway East under certain circumstances—
    conflicts with the two-year reimbursement requirement of Part 3. Part 1, on
    the other hand, is wholly consistent with Part 3. There is no tension between
    a requirement that the County advance bond payments when Parkway East is
    unable to make them if Parkway East satisfies its obligations under the
    Contribution Agreement (Part 1) and a requirement that Parkway East
    reimburse the County for such advances within two years of when they are
    made (Part 3). Accordingly, we find that the language “notwithstanding the
    above” does not carve out Parkway East’s obligation to reimburse the County
    from the obligations referred to in Part 1.
    Assured also argues that requiring Parkway East to reimburse the
    County for bond-payment advances is nonsensical because if Parkway East is
    unable to make bond payments and the County then advances payment,
    Parkway East clearly cannot afford to reimburse the County. This argument
    is unpersuasive for two reasons. First, the event triggering the County’s
    obligation to advance bond payments is Parkway East’s failure to “levy and/or
    collect (or have collected) a sufficient amount of Special Assessments from the
    owners of land within Parkway East.” But Parkway East is required to
    reimburse the County within two years of an advance “regardless of the source
    of . . . funds.” Accordingly, it is entirely possible that Parkway East would be
    unable to levy or collect a sufficient amount of funding from special
    assessments to cover the bond payments but would be able to use other funding
    sources to reimburse the County. For example, in at least one instance,
    Parkway East used money from the Revenue Fund, at the County’s request, to
    make bond payments in November 2009 because insufficient special
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    assessments had been levied/collected. Second, as the County points out in its
    reply brief, the reimbursement provision gives Parkway East two years to
    recover its financial footing. Indeed, Part 2 of the provision clearly illustrates
    one way in which this could occur—Parkway East could have collected
    insufficient special assessments when bond payments became due but later
    could have sold a parcel of land, giving it the ability, and obligation, to
    reimburse the County immediately for a previous advance. Thus, there is
    nothing necessarily illogical about requiring Parkway East to reimburse the
    County for bond-payment advances within two years.
    B.     The Amortization Approval Certificate
    1. The Language
    Assured also argues that the Amortization Approval Certificate (“the
    Certificate”), signed by the County at bond closing, unambiguously shows that
    the reimbursement provision is not one of the covenants on which the County’s
    obligation to advance bond payments is conditioned. Under Mississippi law, a
    court can construe several documents together to form a single instrument
    where “they are executed at the same time, by the same parties, as part of the
    same transaction.” Avakian v. Citibank, N.A., 
    773 F.3d 647
    , 652 (5th Cir. 2014)
    (quoting Sullivan v. Mounger, 
    882 So. 2d 129
    , 135 (Miss. 2004)). This is true
    even where the documents do not “include a written provision which
    specifically recites that all documents are part of an integrated, or global,
    transaction.” 
    Id. (quoting Sullivan
    v. Protex Weatherproofing, Inc., 
    882 So. 2d 256
    , 259–60 (Miss. 2005)). Because the Certificate and Contribution
    Agreement meet these requirements, we construe them together.
    The Certificate, signed by a County representative, provides the
    following:
    I, Paul Griffin, President of the Board of Supervisors of Madison
    County, Mississippi (the “County”), pursuant to and as required by
    10
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    Sections 5 and 7 of that certain Contribution Agreement dated
    July 27, 2005 (the “Contribution Agreement”) by and between the
    County and the Parkway East Public Improvement District (the
    “District”), for and on behalf of the County do hereby approve the
    bond amortization and debt service schedule attached as Exhibit
    A hereto in connection with the District’s $27,770,000 Special
    Assessment Bonds, Series 2005, dated July 27, 2005, and further
    state, for and on behalf of the County, that the covenants,
    agreements and obligations of the District as stated in the
    Contribution Agreement have been performed and/or provided to
    the County’s satisfaction.
    Assured argues that the language in the Certificate describing Parkway East’s
    “covenants, agreements and obligations” that must be performed to “the
    County’s satisfaction” 6 evinces a limitation on what conditions are specified by
    this language. Given that the Certificate was signed at bond closing, Assured
    claims it would not make sense for the County to agree that Parkway East’s
    obligations had been performed to the County’s satisfaction where Parkway
    East would not yet have had the opportunity to perform—for example, in the
    case of the reimbursement requirement. 7 Accordingly, Assured contends that
    the “covenants, agreements and obligations” to which the Certificate refers
    only include those that would have been performed at the time of bond closing.
    Because the Certificate and Part 1 of the Contribution Agreement contain
    near-identical condition of satisfaction clauses, Assured concludes that the
    condition created in Part 1 of the Contribution Agreement provision likewise
    only refers to the conditions Parkway East would have performed at the time
    of the bond closing. Thus, according to Assured, the County’s duty to advance
    bond payments is not be conditioned on Parkway East’s promise to reimburse.
    6  We will also refer to this language as a “condition of satisfaction clause” or “condition
    of satisfaction language.”
    7 In fact, the County enumerates seven other obligations Parkway East bore under
    the Contribution Agreement and that Parkway East would not have performed at bond
    closing.
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    Assured’s argument falls short. While Assured is correct that the
    condition of satisfaction language in the Certificate must only have related to
    the covenants Parkway East was able to perform before bond closing, an
    identical understanding cannot extend to the Contribution Agreement. As the
    County outlines in its reply brief, under Assured’s interpretation, none of the
    post-closing covenants in the Contribution Agreement could serve as
    conditions precedent to the County’s obligation to make advance payments.
    Parkway East could “sell land for taxes and not reimburse the County, sell
    land for residential purposes and not use proceeds to redeem bonds, refuse to
    allow the County to have parcels appraised, not maintain a construction
    contingency fund, or fail to reimburse the County for its advances” and the
    County would still be required to advance bond payments. Because Assured’s
    interpretation makes Part 1’s conditional language superfluous, the condition
    of satisfaction language in Part 1 must unqualifiedly refer to all the
    “covenants, agreements and obligations” created by the Contribution
    Agreement. See S. Ry. Co. v. Anderson & Fuller, 
    130 So. 743
    , 744 (Miss. 1930)
    (holding that all contract provisions must be given effect).
    This interpretation is also consistent with the Certificate’s language. It
    is possible that both the Certificate and Contribution Agreement require the
    County to be satisfied that Parkway East is performing its obligations under
    the contract, but that these evaluations occur at different times and thus
    inherently include different obligations. While the Certificate requires the
    County to assess its satisfaction with Parkway East’s conduct at the time of
    bond closing, the Contribution Agreement requires the County to do the same
    when Parkway East is unable to make a bond payment. Accordingly, we
    conclude that the Contribution Agreement unambiguously conditions the
    County’s obligation to advance bond payments on Parkway East’s performance
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    of all its covenants under the Contribution Agreement—including its promise
    to reimburse the County.
    2. Quasi-Estoppel
    Finally, Assured contends that the Certificate serves to estop the County
    from asserting that it is dissatisfied with Parkway East’s performance and
    accordingly suspending bond payments. Mississippi’s doctrine of quasi-
    estoppel “precludes a party from asserting, to another’s disadvantage, a right
    inconsistent with a position [it has] previously taken.” Bailey v. Estate of Kemp,
    
    955 So. 2d 777
    , 782 (Miss. 2007) (alteration in original) (quoting Bott v. J.F.
    Shea Co., Inc, 
    299 F.3d 508
    , 512 (5th Cir. 2002)). Quasi-estoppel “applies when
    it would be unconscionable to allow a person to maintain a position
    inconsistent with one to which he acquiesced, or from which he accepted a
    benefit.” 
    Id. (quoting Bott,
    299 F.3d at 512).
    Assured’s quasi-estoppel argument is only compelling if the County
    signed the Certificate intending to agree that it was satisfied with Parkway
    East’s performance of all its obligations under the Contribution Agreement—
    including those that Parkway East could not possibly have performed by bond
    closing. Because such an interpretation makes little sense, we hold that the
    County is not estopped from arguing that Parkway East’s performance was
    unsatisfactory and suspending bond payments.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we hold that Section 3 of the Contribution
    Agreement unambiguously conditions the County’s duty to advance bond
    payments on Parkway East’s reimbursement of such advances within two
    years. Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment and REMAND the case for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    13