Deric Liddell v. State of Missouri ( 2023 )


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  •                United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 20-3574
    ___________________________
    Deric James Liddell; Caldwell/NAACP
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    United States of America
    Intervenor Plaintiff
    Lediva Pierce; Michelle Neals
    Intervenor Plaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    Special School District
    Defendant
    State of Missouri
    Defendant - Appellant
    St. Louis County; City Board; Lindbergh School District; Maplewood Richmond
    Heights School District; Board of Education of the City of St. Louis
    Defendants
    ------------------------------
    Confluence Academy
    Amicus on Behalf of Appellant(s)
    ___________________________
    No. 20-3658
    ___________________________
    Deric James Liddell; Caldwell/NAACP
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    United States of America
    Intervenor Plaintiff
    Lediva Pierce; Michelle Neals
    Intervenor Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    Special School District
    Defendant
    State of Missouri
    Defendant - Appellee
    St. Louis County; City Board; Lindbergh School District; Maplewood Richmond
    Heights School District; Board of Education of the City of St. Louis
    Defendants
    ------------------------------
    Confluence Academy; National Parents Union
    Amici on Behalf of Appellant(s)
    ___________________________
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    No. 21-1262
    ___________________________
    Deric James Liddell; Caldwell/NAACP
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    United States of America
    Intervenor Plaintiff
    Lediva Pierce; Michelle Neals
    Intervenor Plaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    Special School District
    Defendant
    State of Missouri
    Defendant - Appellee
    St. Louis County; City Board; Lindbergh School District; Maplewood Richmond
    Heights School District; Board of Education of the City of St. Louis
    Defendants
    ------------------------------
    National Parents Union
    Amicus on Behalf of Appellee(s)
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Missouri - St. Louis
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    ____________
    Submitted: September 20, 2022
    Filed: April 20, 2023
    ____________
    Before COLLOTON, WOLLMAN, and STRAS, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    STRAS, Circuit Judge.
    Two parties to a decades-old school-desegregation agreement believe that
    Missouri improperly diverted $86 million from the St. Louis Public School District
    to a group of charter schools. We disagree, so we affirm the district court’s
    judgment, but vacate the part requiring charter schools to spend those funds on
    “desegregation measures.”
    I.
    This case started more than fifty years ago when Minnie Liddell sued to
    desegregate the St. Louis public school system. As the litigation moved forward,
    the NAACP joined the lawsuit, and the State of Missouri (among others) became a
    defendant. In 1983, after years battling in court, the parties struck a deal that lasted
    until 1999, when they agreed to end Missouri’s remedial obligations.
    The end of Missouri’s role did not mean desegregation was over. The St.
    Louis School Board agreed to implement its own “measures” for “at least ten years,”
    including “magnet schools,” “[a]ll-day kindergarten,” and “[s]ummer school.” The
    funding would come from two sources: state aid and a special sales tax. The more
    revenue from the tax, the greater the amount of state aid the St. Louis Public School
    District would receive. See 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 163.031.1
     (1998).
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    The Missouri Legislature, for its part, ratified the parties’ settlement
    agreement and created a charter-school option. Open to everyone, see 
    id.
    § 160.410.2, charter schools had no legacy of segregation and remained
    “independent” of local school boards, id. § 160.400.1.
    They also receive funding under a separate formula. The money originally
    flowed through the St. Louis Public School District, which was supposed to “pay”
    the charter schools their share on a “per[-][]pupil” basis. Id. § 160.415.2(1). Based
    on its interpretation of the settlement agreement, however, the District thought it
    could keep all the special-sales-tax revenue for itself.
    A group of charter schools complained to the Missouri Legislature, which
    altered the funding formula in 2006. The revised formula, part of Senate Bill 287,
    is what has led to today’s dispute. The bill had two important features. First, it
    clarified that charter schools have the right to receive their per-pupil share of “local
    tax revenues,” including the special sales tax. 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 160.415.2
    (1) (2006).
    Second, it gave charter schools the option of receiving direct funding, rather than
    having the St. Louis Public School District serve as an intermediary. See 
    id.
    § 160.415.4. No matter the approach, each dollar Missouri gave to a charter school
    meant the St. Louis Public School District would receive one dollar less. Id.
    Opposition soon followed. The complaint was that the new formula
    improperly diverted funds “that the District [w]ould otherwise [have] receive[d]”
    under the settlement agreement. Despite unhappiness with the change, the case
    remained at a standstill. Then, nearly a decade later, the St. Louis Public School
    District 1 and one of the plaintiffs asked the district court to enforce the settlement
    agreement by having Missouri reimburse it for the special-sales-tax revenue it had
    lost under the new funding formula.
    1
    The District had agreed in the settlement agreement to seek relief in state
    court, so it was removed from the case. The NAACP eventually took its place by
    joining the motion to enforce the settlement agreement.
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    The district court sided with Missouri. It concluded that charter schools
    should have received their per-pupil share of special-sales-tax revenue under state
    law all along, and nothing in the settlement agreement changed that fact. And, based
    on the need to provide “[e]quality and [a] path for opportunity,” it went on to order
    charter schools to spend their own special-sales-tax proceeds on “remediation
    programs.”
    Both sides appealed. The plaintiffs continue to believe that the St. Louis
    Public School District should receive all the special-sales-tax revenue. And
    Missouri argues that the desegregation-spending condition finds no support in the
    settlement agreement.
    II.
    We review these questions de novo. See Gilbert v. Monsanto Co., 
    216 F.3d 695
    , 700 (8th Cir. 2000). In doing so, we apply “basic principles of contract law,”
    Sheng v. Starkey Lab’ys, Inc., 
    53 F.3d 192
    , 194 (8th Cir. 1995) (applying state law),
    and interpret the settlement agreement according to its “clear, plain[,] and
    unequivocal” terms, Kells v. Mo. Mountain Props., Inc., 
    247 S.W.3d 79
    , 85 (Mo. Ct.
    App. 2008).
    A.
    The statutory background here is complicated, but the parties’ arguments are
    not. The plaintiffs start with the premise that, under the settlement agreement, the
    parties must “disregard[]” any “statutory or administrative change[]” that has a
    “disproportionate adverse financial impact” on the St. Louis Public School District.
    In their view, the change to the funding formula falls squarely within that
    prohibition. And Missouri’s position is that charter schools had a right to that money
    from the moment they came into existence.
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    Missouri law lingers in the background because the funding formulas matter.
    After all, the obligations created by the settlement agreement, including “magnet
    schools,” “[a]ll-day kindergarten,” and “[s]ummer school,” were all “subject to
    financing pursuant to Missouri Senate Bill 781.” The formula, in other words,
    “controlled or affected the obligations” created by the agreement. Sharp v. Interstate
    Motor Freight Sys., 
    442 S.W.2d 939
    , 945 (Mo. banc 1969) (quoting Conn. Mut. Life
    Ins. Co. v. Cushman, 
    108 U.S. 51
    , 65 (1883)).
    As we know, however, the Missouri Legislature amended the funding formula
    in 2006. If the amendment reduced the funding available to the St. Louis Public
    School District, then the outcome of this case would turn on whether the “adverse
    financial impact” was “disproportionate.” If, on the other hand, charter schools
    always had a right to their per-pupil share of special-sales-tax revenue, then there
    would be no “adverse financial impact” at all, much less a “disproportionate” one.
    Our starting point is Senate Bill 781, which contained the original charter-
    school funding formula. It required the St. Louis Public School District to “pay”
    charter schools “an annual amount equal to the . . . adjusted operating levy for school
    purposes . . . times the guaranteed tax base per eligible pupil . . . times the number
    of the district’s resident pupils attending the charter school . . . .” 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 160.415.2
    (1) (1998). The formula was as complicated as it sounded.
    It had three components. First, the “guaranteed tax base per eligible pupil,” a
    technical reference to the state contribution. See 
    id.
     § 163.011(11). Second, the
    “number of the district’s resident pupils attending the charter school,” another
    technical reference, but this time to the number of in-district students opting to attend
    a charter school. Id. § 160.415.2(1). Third, the “adjusted operating levy for school
    purposes.” Id.
    The last component is the focus of this case. Most Missouri municipalities
    fund school districts through a property-tax levy. See 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. §§ 163.011
    (2),
    164.011. But Senate Bill 781 created another option: a “sales tax equivalent.” Mo.
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    Rev. Stat. § 163.011(13) (1998) (emphasis added). Viewed against the backdrop of
    Missouri’s (complicated) school-funding system, it referred to supplementary-
    funding mechanisms like St. Louis’s special sales tax.
    The parties’ settlement agreement is what created the need for supplemental
    funding. “[M]agnet schools,” “[a]ll-day kindergarten,” and “[s]ummer school” are
    expensive to operate. And, under state law, property-tax hikes are difficult to pass.
    See, e.g., Mo. Const. art. X, § 11(c) (1998). So rather than risk the progress the
    parties had made in reaching a settlement, they opted to supplement existing
    property taxes with a special sales tax that passed by referendum vote. See 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 162.1100.5
     (1998); Liddell v. Special Admin. Bd. of Transitional Sch. Dist.
    of City of St. Louis, 
    894 F.3d 959
    , 963 (8th Cir. 2018). This “sales tax equivalent,”
    
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 163.011
    (13) (1998), then became a part of the “adjusted operating
    levy” that had to be shared with charter schools, 
    id.
     § 160.415.2(1).
    The plaintiff’s argument to the contrary reads out the words “sales tax
    equivalent.” It is also inconsistent with how Missouri funded its schools at the time.
    The amount of state aid depended on the district’s local tax revenue. See id.
    § 163.031.6. The goal was to try to equalize the amount of funding each district
    received on a per-pupil basis. See id. (incorporating an “eligible[-]pupils”
    component). If property-tax levies and sales-tax equivalents did not count, as the
    plaintiffs apparently argue, some districts would have reaped a windfall. And charter
    schools would have been chronically underfunded.
    We have reached a similar conclusion before. Charter schools, as we have
    observed, are “funded by diverting federal, state, and local education funding away
    from [school districts] on a per-pupil basis.” Jenkins v. Kan. City Mo. Sch. Dist.,
    
    516 F.3d 1074
    , 1078–79 (8th Cir. 2008) (emphasis added). The system, in other
    words, is supposed to work in exactly this way.
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    B.
    Nothing in the parties’ settlement agreement is to the contrary. The plaintiffs
    rely on a provision creating a “Transitional District” that must “unconditionally
    assign[]” any “revenue[] from . . . taxes imposed through a ballot measure” to the
    St. Louis School Board. From there, they leap to the conclusion that none of the
    special-sales-tax revenue belongs to charter schools.
    The Transitional District once served an important role in facilitating the
    transfer of power from the federal courts back to the St. Louis School Board. See
    
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 162.1100
     (1998). It had two relevant duties: submit the special
    sales tax for voter approval and “unconditionally assign[]” the revenue to the Board.
    The “unconditional assign[ment],” however, did not give the Board a blank
    check to spend the money however it wished. In context, the language had a limited
    meaning: it prohibited the Transitional District from pocketing some of the money
    or placing conditions on its use. After all, the settlement agreement set the ground
    rules. The Transitional District was there to pass the money along.
    The settlement agreement also contemplated the end of the Transitional
    District—something that happened years ago. The operative language today says
    that “all taxes and other receipts approved for the Transitional [District] are assigned
    to the [St. Louis School] Board.” Notice the word that is missing: “unconditionally.”
    Any unconditional right that once existed under the settlement agreement is now
    gone.
    By itself, the word “assign” simply means to “transfer to another in writing.”
    Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 132 (2002); see Black’s Law
    Dictionary 127 (8th ed. 2004) (defining “assign” as “[t]o convey; to transfer rights
    -9-
    or property”). The word tells us who gives what to whom. It does not tell us where
    the money goes after that.
    State law fills in the gaps. There is no doubt that the St. Louis Public School
    District was entitled to keep some of it. See 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 162.1100.2
    (1) (1998).
    But so were the charter schools, which had a right to a per-pupil “pay[ment],” 
    id.
    § 160.415.2, that included any “sales tax equivalent” passed by St. Louis voters, id.
    § 163.011(13). And that right has existed from day one, which means later changes
    to the charter-school funding formula had no “adverse financial impact.”
    C.
    “Law of the case” does not move the ball for the plaintiffs either. They point
    to our statement in a previous appeal that “Senate Bill 781 . . . had not required the
    [St. Louis Public School] District to pay any portion of its local tax revenue to the
    charter schools.” Liddell, 
    894 F.3d at 963
    . But facts are not law, and we did not
    purport to “actually decide[]” how charter-school funding worked last time around.
    United States v. Bates, 
    614 F.3d 490
    , 494 (8th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted).
    *      *      *
    Missouri law provides the answer here: there has been no “disproportionate
    adverse financial impact” on the St. Louis Public School District because it never
    had a right to keep all the special-sales-tax revenue for itself. On that point, we agree
    with the district court.
    III.
    Where we differ is on the conclusion that charter schools must spend their
    share of special-sales-tax revenue on school-desegregation measures. Likely
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    intended as a middle ground, there is nothing in the settlement agreement to support
    it.
    An obvious problem is that charter schools, which did not exist at the time,
    were not a party to the settlement agreement. So it could not have obligated them to
    do anything, much less foot the bill for desegregation measures they did not need.
    See Lawrence v. Beverly Manor, 
    273 S.W.3d 525
    , 529 (Mo. banc 2009). Indeed, the
    Missouri Legislature created charter schools to offer students a non-segregated
    alternative to an already-segregated public-school system.
    For these reasons, we also reject the argument that allowing charter schools
    to spend their money as they see fit is inconsistent with the “purpose” of the
    settlement agreement. See Dunn Indus. Grp., Inc. v. City of Sugar Creek, 
    112 S.W.3d 421
    , 428–29 (Mo. banc 2003) (explaining that a contract’s unambiguous text
    controls). If anything, it places responsibility for desegregation squarely in the hands
    of the St. Louis School Board. We will not shift it elsewhere by rewriting the
    contract.
    IV.
    We accordingly vacate the condition that charter schools must spend special-
    sales-tax proceeds on desegregation measures, but otherwise affirm the judgment of
    the district court.
    ______________________________
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