Salem Grain Co. v. City of Falls City ( 2019 )


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    Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
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    SALEM GRAIN CO. v. CITY OF FALLS CITY
    Cite as 
    302 Neb. 548
    Salem Grain Company, Inc., a Nebraska
    corporation, et al., appellants, v.
    City of Falls City et al., appellees.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed March 22, 2019.    No. S-17-277.
    1.	 Declaratory Judgments: Appeal and Error. In an appeal from a
    declaratory judgment, an appellate court, regarding questions of law, has
    an obligation to reach its conclusion independently of the conclusion
    reached by the trial court.
    2.	 Statutes: Appeal and Error. Statutory interpretation presents a ques-
    tion of law, for which an appellate court has an obligation to reach
    an independent conclusion irrespective of the decision made by the
    court below.
    3.	 Actions: Equity: Public Meetings: Appeal and Error. An appellate
    court reviews actions for relief under the Open Meetings Act in equity
    because the relief sought is in the nature of a declaration that action
    taken in violation of the act is void or voidable.
    4.	 Equity: Appeal and Error. On appeal from an equity action, an appel-
    late court tries factual questions de novo on the record and, as to ques-
    tions of both fact and law, is obligated to reach a conclusion independent
    of the conclusion reached by the trial court. But when credible evidence
    is in conflict on material issues of fact, an appellate court may give
    weight to the fact the trial court observed the witnesses and accepted
    one version of the facts over another.
    5.	 Statutes. Statutes relating to the same subject, though enacted at differ-
    ent times, are in pari materia and should be construed together.
    6.	 Statutes: Legislature: Intent. Statutes relating to the same subject
    should be construed together to determine the intent of the Legislature,
    so that different provisions are consistent, harmonious, and sensible.
    7.	 ____: ____: ____. When two statutes are capable of coexistence, it is
    the duty of the courts, absent a clearly expressed legislative intention to
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    SALEM GRAIN CO. v. CITY OF FALLS CITY
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    302 Neb. 548
    the contrary, to regard each as effective, and to harmonize overlapping
    statutes so long as each reaches some distinct cases.
    8.	 Statutes. Where it is possible to harmonize apparently conflicting stat-
    utes, a court should do so.
    9.	 Actions: Bonds: Contracts: Statutes: Presumptions: Time. Construed
    together, Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01 (Reissue 2012)
    effectively provide that any suit, action, or proceeding brought outside
    the 30-day period established in § 18-2142.01 will be subject to the con-
    clusive presumptions required by §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01, as long
    as the action is one challenging the validity or enforceability of a rede-
    velopment bond or contract and the bond or contract recites in substance
    the language required by the statutes.
    10.	 Statutes: Legislature: Intent. In the absence of clear legislative intent,
    a construction of a statute will not be adopted which has the effect of
    nullifying or repealing another statute.
    11.	 Statutes. It is not within the province of the courts to read a meaning
    into a statute which is not there.
    12.	 Pleadings. An affirmative defense raises a new matter which, assum-
    ing the allegations in the petition or complaint to be true, constitutes
    a defense to the merits of a claim asserted in the petition. An affirma-
    tive defense generally avoids, rather than negates, the plaintiff’s prima
    facie case.
    13.	 Statutes: Presumptions: Limitations of Actions. A statute providing
    a conclusive presumption is very different from a statute of limitations,
    and the conclusive presumptions under Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 18-2129 and
    18-2142.01 (Reissue 2012) are not statutes of limitation.
    14.	 Rules of Evidence. In proceedings where the Nebraska Evidence Rules
    apply, the admissibility of evidence is controlled by these rules; judicial
    discretion is involved only when the rules make discretion a factor in
    determining admissibility.
    15.	 Judges: Evidence: Appeal and Error. The exercise of judicial discre-
    tion is implicit in determining the relevance of evidence, and an appel-
    late court will not reverse a trial court’s decision regarding relevance
    absent an abuse of discretion.
    16.	 Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists when
    the reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly
    depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in mat-
    ters submitted for disposition.
    17.	 Evidence: Words and Phrases. Relevant evidence means evidence
    having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of conse-
    quence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable
    than it would be without the evidence.
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    SALEM GRAIN CO. v. CITY OF FALLS CITY
    Cite as 
    302 Neb. 548
    Appeal from the District Court for Richardson County:
    Daniel E. Bryan, Jr., Judge. Affirmed.
    Stephen D. Mossman, Ryan K. McIntosh, and J.L. Spray, of
    Mattson Ricketts Law Firm, for appellants.
    John M. Guthery, Jeanette Stull, and Derek A. Aldridge, of
    Perry, Guthery, Haase & Gessford, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee
    Community Redevelopment Authority of the City of Falls City.
    Terry C. Dougherty, Kari A.F. Scheer, and Audrey R. Svane,
    of Woods & Aitken, L.L.P., for appellee Consolidated Grain
    and Barge Co.
    Michael R. Dunn, of Halbert, Dunn & Halbert, L.L.P., for
    appellee City of Falls City.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, and
    Papik, JJ., and Vaughan, District Judge.
    Stacy, J.
    This is the latest in a series of appeals involving liti-
    gation over a redevelopment project in the City of Falls
    City, Nebraska.1 In this case, the plaintiffs filed suit seeking
    a declaratory judgment that the redevelopment project was
    not planned or adopted in accordance with the Community
    Development Law2 and requesting a permanent injunction to
    prevent the project from proceeding. Most of the plaintiffs’
    claims were dismissed on summary judgment, and the remain-
    ing claims were dismissed after a bench trial. The plaintiffs
    appeal. Although our reasoning differs from that of the district
    court, we affirm.
    1
    See, Salem Grain Co. v. Consolidated Grain & Barge Co., 
    297 Neb. 682
    ,
    
    900 N.W.2d 909
    (2017); Frederick v. City of Falls City, 
    295 Neb. 795
    ,
    
    890 N.W.2d 498
    (2017); Frederick v. City of Falls City, 
    289 Neb. 864
    , 
    857 N.W.2d 569
    (2015).
    2
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 18-2101 to 18-2144 (Reissue 2012).
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    SALEM GRAIN CO. v. CITY OF FALLS CITY
    Cite as 
    302 Neb. 548
    I. BACKGROUND
    1. R edevelopment Project
    Falls City is a community located in Richardson County,
    Nebraska. Pursuant to the Community Development Law,
    Falls City created the five-member Falls City Community
    Redevelopment Authority (the Authority) to redevelop blighted
    or substandard areas within Falls City.3
    In 2012, Consolidated Grain and Barge Co. (Consolidated
    Grain) proposed a redevelopment project that involved con-
    structing a new commercial grain receiving, storage, and ship-
    ping facility in Falls City using tax increment financing (TIF).
    The owner of another commercial grain facility in the area,
    Salem Grain Company, Inc. (Salem Grain), opposed the rede-
    velopment project.
    During the summer and fall of 2012, land for the redevel-
    opment project was annexed by Falls City, a zoning change
    was recommended and approved for the annexed land, a study
    was conducted upon which the land was declared blighted
    and substandard, a cost-benefit analysis was conducted, and
    a redevelopment plan was prepared. Ultimately, in September
    and October 2012, the redevelopment project was approved at
    separate public meetings of the Authority, the city council of
    Falls City, and the planning commission of Falls City.
    On November 10, 2012, the Authority and Consolidated
    Grain formally entered into a redevelopment contract.
    Summarized, the redevelopment contract required Consolidated
    Grain to acquire the land for the project and construct the grain
    facility, and in exchange, the Authority agreed to enter into
    and utilize TIF indebtedness to fund a portion of the project.
    Thereafter, a TIF bond in the amount of $3,710,000 was issued
    by the Authority and sold to Consolidated Grain. The bond
    funds were disbursed to Consolidated Grain pursuant to the
    redevelopment contract. Roughly 1 year later, Consolidated
    3
    See § 18-2101.01.
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    SALEM GRAIN CO. v. CITY OF FALLS CITY
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    302 Neb. 548
    Grain completed construction of the commercial grain facility
    and began business operations.
    2. Lawsuit
    (a) Original Complaint
    On October 24, 2012, approximately 2 weeks before the
    redevelopment contract was formally entered into, Salem Grain
    and two residents of Falls City (collectively Salem Grain) filed
    a lawsuit against the City of Falls City, the Authority, and
    Consolidated Grain in the district court for Richardson County,
    Nebraska. The complaint sought declaratory and injunctive
    relief and was styled as 12 separate causes of action.
    The first 11 causes of action sought declarations that the
    redevelopment project had not been planned and adopted in
    accordance with the Community Development Law, alleging
    specifically that (1) the blighted and substandard study was
    insufficient, (2) the redevelopment plan did not conform to
    a “‘general plan’” for the development of Falls City, (3) the
    Authority acted without a quorum at several key meetings, (4)
    the cost-benefit analysis was insufficient, (5) it was improper
    to include TIF in the redevelopment plan, (6) the redevelop-
    ment plan was improperly adopted by the city council, (7) the
    redevelopment plan was improperly adopted by the Authority,
    (8) the city council impermissibly renamed a portion of the
    platted land included in the redevelopment project, (9) Falls
    City provided an insufficient public comment period regarding
    its plan to finance the redevelopment project using community
    development block grant program funds, (10) the Authority’s
    adoption of the resolution approving TIF was null and void,
    and (11) the land for the redevelopment project was improperly
    annexed. Salem Grain’s 12th cause of action sought to equita-
    bly estop the city council from asserting that the redevelop-
    ment project was not feasible without TIF funding.
    The prayer for relief sought (1) declarations that the rede-
    velopment project was not properly planned or adopted for all
    of the reasons alleged in the various causes of action; (2) a
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    declaration that because the project was not properly adopted,
    the “Redevelopment Contract, and any bonds issued thereto,
    are null and void”; and (3) a permanent injunction blocking the
    redevelopment project from proceeding.
    Falls City, the Authority, and Consolidated Grain (collec-
    tively the defendants) moved to dismiss the original complaint
    for reasons that are not relevant to the issues on appeal. The
    district court granted the motion to dismiss, and Salem Grain
    was given leave to file an amended complaint.
    (b) Amended Complaint
    The amended complaint was filed January 22, 2013, and
    is the operative complaint in this action. Like the original
    complaint, the amended complaint was styled as 12 causes of
    action. The first 11 sought declarations that the redevelopment
    project had not been planned and adopted in accordance with
    the Community Development Law for generally the same rea-
    sons alleged in the original complaint.
    The 12th cause of action alleged the Authority held two
    meetings which violated Nebraska’s Open Meetings Act 4
    (NOMA), and it sought to have the actions taken during those
    meetings declared void.5 The first meeting allegedly occurred
    on August 15, 2012, when three members of the Authority
    attended a community dinner that included the mayor, mem-
    bers of the city council, community business leaders, and
    representatives from Consolidated Grain. The second meeting
    allegedly occurred on November 9, in the context of email
    communications between members of the Authority.
    Like the original complaint, the amended complaint sought
    (1) declarations that the redevelopment project was not prop-
    erly adopted for all of the reasons alleged in the various
    causes of action; (2) a declaration that because the project was
    not properly adopted the “Redevelopment Contract, and any
    bonds issued thereto, are null and void”; and (3) a permanent
    4
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 84-1407 to 84-1414 (Reissue 2008 & Supp. 2011).
    5
    See § 84-1414.
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    SALEM GRAIN CO. v. CITY OF FALLS CITY
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    injunction blocking the redevelopment project from proceed-
    ing. In addition, the amended complaint sought a declaration
    that any formal action taken by the Authority in violation of
    NOMA was void.6
    After the amended complaint was filed, the court dismissed
    the 11th cause of action for reasons that are not relevant to
    the issues on appeal. Thereafter, answers were filed and the
    defend­ants proceeded to defend the amended complaint on
    the merits. Due to the procedural complexity of this case, we
    discuss only that which relates to the issues raised on appeal.
    (c) Completion of Redevelopment Project
    While the lawsuit was pending, the redevelopment project
    was completed. It is undisputed that the project was completed
    in September 2013 and that Consolidated Grain has been oper-
    ating the commercial grain receiving, storage, and shipping
    facility since that time.
    (d) Motion to File Second
    Amended Complaint
    On December 17, 2015, nearly 2 years after completion of
    the redevelopment project, Salem Grain tried unsuccessfully
    to further amend its complaint. The proposed second amended
    complaint sought to add claims of “improper economic devel-
    opment” and “unjust enrichment” resulting from the TIF funds
    provided to Consolidated Grain. The proposed second amended
    complaint also sought to alter the nature of the relief being
    requested; rather than seeking injunctive relief to prevent the
    redevelopment project from proceeding, the proposed second
    amended complaint sought “[r]ecission, recoupment and resti-
    tution” of the TIF funds paid to Consolidated Grain.
    After a hearing, the district court denied leave to amend,
    finding that Salem Grain’s request was unnecessarily delayed
    and that the proposed amendment would be unduly prejudicial
    to the defendants.
    6
    See 
    id. - 555
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    SALEM GRAIN CO. v. CITY OF FALLS CITY
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    (e) Summary Judgment
    In April 2016, the defendants moved for summary judg-
    ment on the amended complaint, claiming the requested
    declaratory and injunctive relief had been rendered moot by
    completion of the redevelopment project. The district court
    agreed and granted partial summary judgment in favor of the
    defendants on Salem Grain’s first 10 causes of action. But the
    court denied summary judgment on the 12th cause of action
    alleging NOMA violations, reasoning that the completion
    of the redevelopment project had not rendered the NOMA
    claims moot. A bench trial was set to resolve the remaining
    NOMA claims.
    (f) Motion to File Third
    Amended Complaint
    As the date for the bench trial neared, Salem Grain filed a
    motion to continue trial and again requested leave to further
    amend its complaint. Salem Grain’s proposed third amended
    complaint was substantially similar to the proposed second
    amended complaint which had not been permitted, but it
    alleged several additional NOMA violations. The district court
    overruled the motion to amend and refused to continue the
    bench trial.
    (g) Trial
    The bench trial on the alleged NOMA violations was held
    on February 9, 2017. Salem Grain tried to offer evidence
    related to several alleged NOMA violations, but the defendants
    objected on relevancy grounds and the district court limited
    the evidence to the violations alleged in the operative com-
    plaint: the August 15, 2012, dinner and the November 9, 2012,
    email communications.
    Salem Grain argued that both the August 15, 2012, dinner
    and the November 9 email communications were “meetings” of
    the Authority under § 84-1409, and it sought to have any action
    taken on the redevelopment project during these meetings
    declared void under § 84-1414. After considering the evidence,
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    the district court concluded that neither event was a meeting of
    the Authority under NOMA.
    Regarding the dinner, the district court found it was
    hosted by the Falls City Economic Development and Growth
    Enterprise, and was attended by many Falls City community
    leaders, including three members of the Authority. At the din-
    ner, which some witnesses described as a “meet-and-greet,”
    Consolidated Grain gave a presentation regarding its interest
    in constructing the grain facility. Salem Grain argued that
    because of the presentation, members of the Authority were
    essentially “brief[ed]” by Consolidated Grain during the dinner
    and later used that information to approve the redevelopment
    project. The district court found the dinner was not a meeting
    that required compliance with NOMA, reasoning that there
    was insufficient evidence regarding the substance of the infor-
    mation actually presented at the dinner and that there was no
    direct evidence any Authority member used the information in
    later approving the redevelopment project.
    Regarding the November 9, 2012, email communications,
    the court found an email had been sent by the Authority’s
    chairman to all Authority members. The email advised that
    Salem Grain had recently filed a lawsuit and told the mem-
    bers that the chairman intended to proceed with executing the
    redevelopment contract with Consolidated Grain, but that he
    would be adding amendments recommended by counsel to
    (1) disclose the lawsuit and (2) add language to the existing
    indemnification provision. Prior to November 9, the Authority
    had approved the redevelopment contract with Consolidated
    Grain during a public meeting and had adopted a resolution
    authorizing the chairman to “take any and all actions, and to
    execute any and all documents” deemed necessary to conclude
    the transaction. The chairman’s November 9 email stated:
    Should any [Authority] member find need to discuss
    and/or act upon these matters, notice needs to be provided
    to me by 8 pm today (11/9/12) so that I may schedule
    a special meeting for that purpose. Otherwise, you are
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    hereby notified that I intend to execute the Redevelopment
    Contract as previously authorized by the [Authority] with
    the above cited immaterial changes recommended by
    legal counsel and proceed with the issuance of bonds and
    a TIF Grant to Consolidated Grain . . . .
    All members of the Authority responded via email to the chair-
    man, indicating that a special meeting was not necessary and
    that the chairman could proceed to execute the redevelopment
    contract pursuant to the earlier resolution. The district court
    found this email exchange was not a “meeting” as defined
    in § 84-1409(2), reasoning that no new action was taken or
    authorized by the Authority during this exchange beyond that
    which already had been taken or authorized during the earlier
    public meeting.
    After concluding Salem Grain had not met its burden of
    proving either alleged violation of NOMA, the court entered
    an order dismissing the action. No attorney fees were allowed.
    Salem Grain timely appealed, and we moved the case to
    our docket.
    II. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Salem Grain assigns, restated, that the district court erred in
    (1) making certain discovery rulings, (2) denying Salem Grain
    leave to file a second amended complaint, (3) granting the
    defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment, (4) deny-
    ing Salem Grain leave to file a third amended complaint, (5)
    denying Salem Grain’s motion to continue trial, (6) excluding
    evidence of additional NOMA violations at trial, and (7) dis-
    missing the NOMA claims after trial.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] In an appeal from a declaratory judgment, an appellate
    court, regarding questions of law, has an obligation to reach
    its conclusion independently of the conclusion reached by
    the trial court.7 Statutory interpretation presents a question of
    7
    Ray Anderson, Inc. v. Buck’s, Inc., 
    300 Neb. 434
    , 
    915 N.W.2d 36
    (2018).
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    law, for which an appellate court has an obligation to reach an
    independent conclusion irrespective of the decision made by
    the court below.8
    [3,4] An appellate court reviews actions for relief under
    NOMA in equity because the relief sought is in the nature of
    a declaration that action taken in violation of the act is void or
    voidable.9 On appeal from an equity action, an appellate court
    tries factual questions de novo on the record and, as to ques-
    tions of both fact and law, is obligated to reach a conclusion
    independent of the conclusion reached by the trial court.10 But
    when credible evidence is in conflict on material issues of fact,
    we consider and may give weight to the fact the trial court
    observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts
    over another.11
    IV. ANALYSIS
    1. Supplemental Briefing
    After oral argument, the parties were ordered to file supple-
    mental briefs (1) addressing whether Salem Grain brought its
    lawsuit within the timeframe set forth in § 18-2142.01 and
    (2) analyzing the impact, if any, of this court’s holding in
    Community Dev. Agency v. PRP Holdings12 on Salem Grain’s
    claims. This briefing was requested to assist the court in deter-
    mining whether the conclusive presumptions contained in the
    Community Development Law13 have any effect on Salem
    Grain’s action challenging the validity and enforceability of the
    redevelopment contract and bonds.
    8
    Salem Grain Co., supra note 1.
    9
    Schauer v. Grooms, 
    280 Neb. 426
    , 
    786 N.W.2d 909
    (2010).
    10
    
    Id. 11 Id.
    12
    Community Dev. Agency v. PRP Holdings, 
    277 Neb. 1015
    , 
    767 N.W.2d 68
          (2009).
    13
    See §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01.
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    Salem Grain’s supplemental briefing urges this court to
    find that the reasoning of PRP Holdings is inapplicable and
    that the conclusive presumption does not foreclose its claims
    under the Community Development Law. The defendants, in
    a joint supplemental brief, argue just the opposite. Although
    they advance different statutory interpretations, no party raises
    a constitutional challenge to any provision of the Community
    Development Law. Because we find the applicability of the
    conclusive presumption to be dispositive of Salem Grain’s
    claims under the Community Development law, we begin our
    analysis with an overview of the relevant statutory scheme.
    2. Conclusive Presumptions Under
    Community Development Law
    In 1951, the Nebraska Legislature passed an act referred
    to as the Community Development Law.14 Included in that
    act is § 18-2129, which at the time of the instant litigation
    provided:
    In any suit, action, or proceedings involving the validity
    or enforceability of any bond of an authority or the secu-
    rity therefor, any such bond reciting in substance that it
    has been issued by the authority to aid in financing a rede-
    velopment project, as herein defined, shall be conclusively
    deemed to have been issued for such purpose and such
    project shall be conclusively deemed to have been planned,
    located, and carried out in accordance with the purposes
    and provisions of [the Community Development Law].15
    Section 18-2129 applies only to certain suits, actions or
    proceedings—those involving the validity and enforceability
    of bonds issued by a community redevelopment authority
    where the bond recites certain language. But when these fac-
    tual predicates are met, § 18-2129 applies to more than just
    14
    1951 Neb. Laws, ch. 224, § 1, p. 797 (currently codified at § 18-2101).
    15
    See 1951 Neb. Laws, ch. 224, § 10(6), p. 813.
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    the redevelopment bonds and requires a court to “conclusively
    deem[]” the entire redevelopment project to have been planned,
    located, and carried out in accordance with the Community
    Development law. The Community Development Law does not
    expressly label this a “conclusive presumption,” but we adopt
    that term for ease of reference because it accurately describes
    the legal effect of the statutory language.
    In 1997, the Legislature added another statute16 to the act
    which, as we explain below, created a narrow exemption from
    the conclusive presumption established by § 18-2129. But
    before we discuss the 1997 statute, we discuss the nature of
    conclusive presumptions generally.
    Commentators have observed that a conclusive presump-
    tion “is not a presumption at all, but rather, a substantive rule
    of law directing that proof of certain basic facts conclusively
    proves an additional fact which cannot be rebutted.”17 The
    legislative decision to make a presumption conclusive is one
    based on “overriding social policy”18 and typically “rest[s]
    upon grounds of expediency or public policy so compelling in
    character as to override the requirement of proof.”19 The Utah
    Supreme Court has explained that “[w]hen the Legislature
    includes a conclusive presumption in a statute, [it is] stating
    that the objective promoted by the conclusive presumption
    is of greater importance than the opportunity to present facts
    challenging the presumed fact.”20
    It has been observed that conclusive presumptions frequently
    occur in statutes pertaining to decisions of governmental
    16
    1997 Neb. Laws, L.B. 875 (currently codified at § 18-2142.01).
    17
    29 Am. Jur. 2d Evidence § 201 at 215 (2008). Accord 1 Clifford S.
    Fishman, Jones on Evidence Civil and Criminal § 4:57 (7th ed. 1992).
    18
    1 Fishman, supra note 17 at 393.
    19
    29 Am. Jur. 2d, supra note 17, citing U.S. v. Provident Trust Co., 
    291 U.S. 272
    , 
    54 S. Ct. 389
    , 
    78 L. Ed. 793
    (1934).
    20
    Davis v. Provo City Corp., 
    193 P.3d 86
    , 90-91 (Utah 2008).
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    entities.21 This is certainly the case in Nebraska, where conclu-
    sive presumptions appear in several different statutes address-
    ing suits brought to challenge the actions of governmental
    entities.22 Some of these Nebraska statutes reference a point
    in time after which the conclusive presumption applies,23 and
    others do not contain any temporal limitation.24 But regardless,
    when considering the application of conclusive presumptions,
    it is important to understand they are evidentiary rules affect-
    ing the merits of an action and not procedural time limits on
    bringing an action.25
    As stated, Nebraska’s Community Development Law con-
    tains two separate statutes governing conclusive presumptions.
    The first is § 18-2129, which was quoted above. The other is
    § 18-2142.01, enacted in 1997, which provides:
    (1) In any suit, action, or proceeding involving the
    validity or enforceability of any bond of a city, village, or
    authority or the security therefor brought after the lapse
    of thirty days after the issuance of such bonds has been
    authorized, any such bond reciting in substance that it has
    been authorized by the city, village, or authority to aid in
    financing a redevelopment project shall be conclusively
    deemed to have been authorized for such purpose and
    21
    Davis, supra note 20.
    22
    See, e.g., Neb. Rev. Stat. § 13-1109 (Reissue 2012); Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 13-2512 (Reissue 2012); §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01; Neb. Rev. Stat.
    §§ 18-2424 and 18-2434 (Reissue 2012); Neb. Rev. Stat. § 58-519
    (Reissue 2010); Neb. Rev. Stat. § 70-1406(5) (Reissue 2018); Neb. Rev.
    Stat. § 71-15,116 (Reissue 2018).
    23
    See, e.g., § 13-1109(3) (conclusive presumption applies to actions “brought
    after the lapse of thirty days after” contract is formally entered into or
    issuance of bonds has been authorized); § 18-2142.01 (same); § 58-519
    (conclusive presumption applies in actions “brought after the lapse of
    thirty days after the bonds are issued”).
    24
    See, e.g., §§ 13-2512, 18-2129, 18-2424, 18-2434, 70-1406(5), and
    71-15,116.
    25
    Davis, supra note 20.
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    such redevelopment project shall be conclusively deemed
    to have been planned, located, and carried out in accord­
    ance with the purposes and provisions of the Community
    Development Law . . . .
    (2) In any suit, action, or proceeding involving the
    validity or enforceability of any agreement of a city, vil-
    lage, or authority brought after the lapse of thirty days
    after the agreement has been formally entered into, any
    such agreement reciting in substance that it has been
    entered into by the city, village, or authority to provide
    financing for an approved redevelopment project shall be
    conclusively deemed to have been entered into for such
    purpose and such project shall be conclusively deemed
    to have been planned, located, and carried out in accord­
    ance with the purposes and provisions of the Community
    Development Law . . . .
    Neither § 18-2129 nor § 18-2142.01 expressly references
    the other, but both statutes relate to the same subject matter:
    application of a conclusive presumption in actions brought
    to challenge redevelopment contracts and bonds under the
    Community Development Law. Section 18-2129 addresses
    actions brought to challenge bonds of a redevelopment author-
    ity, while § 18-2142.01 addresses actions brought to challenge
    both redevelopment bonds and redevelopment contracts. But
    under both statutes, when the factual predicates are met and
    the conclusive presumption applies, courts are required to
    deem the entire redevelopment project to have been “planned,
    located, and carried out in accordance with the purposes and
    provisions of ” the Community Development Law.26
    Despite their similarities, there is tension between
    §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01. The former contains no temporal
    restriction on application of the conclusive presumption, but
    the latter expressly identifies a time period after which the
    26
    § 18-2129. Accord § 18-2142.01(1) and (2).
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    conclusive presumption applies.27 This is our first opportunity
    to construe this competing language, and in doing so, we are
    guided by well-settled principles of statutory construction.
    [5-7] Long ago we recognized the fundamental principle
    that statutes relating to the same subject, although enacted
    at different times, are in pari materia and should be con-
    strued ­together.28 Because §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01 address
    the same conclusive presumption under the Community
    Development Law, we construe them together to determine
    the intent of the Legislature, so that different provisions are
    consistent, harmonious, and sensible.29 And when two statutes
    are capable of coexistence, it is the duty of the courts, absent a
    clearly expressed legislative intention to the contrary, to regard
    each as effective, and to harmonize overlapping statutes “so
    long as each reaches some distinct cases.”30
    The conclusive presumption established in § 18-2129 already
    existed when § 18-2142.01 was enacted, but the two statutes
    plainly overlap. The conclusive presumption under § 18-2129
    applies to all suits challenging the validity or enforceability
    of a redevelopment bond, without regard to when the suit was
    brought. The conclusive presumption under § 18-2142.01 also
    applies to suits challenging redevelopment bonds (as well as
    contracts), but that statute only applies the conclusive pre-
    sumption to suits “brought after the lapse of thirty days after”
    the issuance of the bonds has been authorized31 or the contract
    has been formally entered into.32
    27
    See § 18-2142.01(1) (“after the lapse of thirty days after” triggering
    event). Accord § 18-2142.01(2).
    28
    Enyeart v. City of Lincoln, 
    136 Neb. 146
    , 
    285 N.W. 314
    (1939).
    29
    See State v. McGuire, 
    301 Neb. 895
    , 
    921 N.W.2d 77
    (2018).
    30
    See Citizens of Humanity v. Applied Underwriters, 
    299 Neb. 545
    , 560,
    
    909 N.W.2d 614
    , 627 (2018), cert. denied ___ U.S. ___, 
    139 S. Ct. 274
    ,
    
    202 L. Ed. 2d 135
    , quoting J. E. M. Ag Supply, Inc. v. Pioneer Hi-Bred
    International, Inc., 
    534 U.S. 124
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 593
    , 
    151 L. Ed. 2d 508
    (2001).
    31
    § 18-2142.01(1).
    32
    § 18-2142.01(2).
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    [8] Where it is possible to harmonize apparently conflict-
    ing statutes, a court should do so.33 Reading the plain text of
    §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01 together, we conclude they can
    be harmonized, and each can be given effect, if § 18-2129
    is understood to create a conclusive presumption that applies
    anytime the factual predicates are met and § 18-2142.01 is
    understood to modify that conclusive presumption by creat-
    ing a narrow exemption for actions brought during the 30-day
    period after the contract is formally entered into or the bond is
    authorized to be issued.
    [9] So construed, §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01 together effec-
    tively provide that any suit, action, or proceeding brought
    outside the 30-day period established in § 18-2142.01 will be
    subject to the conclusive presumptions required by §§ 18-2129
    and 18-2142.01, as long as the action is one challenging the
    validity or enforceability of a redevelopment bond or contract
    and the bond or contract recites in substance the language
    required by the statutes.
    Although not dispositive, we note the legislative history sup-
    ports such a construction. Ordinarily, when construing statutes,
    we look no further than the plain text.34 But a court may inquire
    into legislative history when a statute is open to construction
    because its terms require interpretation or may reasonably be
    considered ambiguous.35 The senator who introduced what
    became § 18-2142.01 described it as creating “a 30-day win-
    dow” to challenge the validity and enforceability of redevelop-
    ment bonds and contracts, before the conclusive presumption
    applied.36 Without any discussion of § 18-2129, we adopted a
    similar interpretation in PRP Holdings.37
    33
    See Hoiengs v. County of Adams, 
    254 Neb. 64
    , 
    574 N.W.2d 498
    (1998).
    34
    See McGuire, supra note 29.
    35
    
    Id. 36 See
    Floor Debate, L.B. 875, 95th Leg., 1st Sess. 8095 (May 22, 1997)
    (remarks of Senator Paul Hartnett).
    37
    PRP Holdings, supra note 12.
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    In that case, the community development agency (Agency)
    entered into a redevelopment contract to convert a building
    into apartments. The redevelopment contract included TIF
    funding. After the redevelopment project was completed, it
    was sold to a subsequent purchaser. The Agency, claim-
    ing the subsequent purchaser was not entitled to TIF funds,
    brought a lawsuit seeking to have the redevelopment contract
    declared void ab initio, alleging it failed to comply with the
    Community Development Law. The district court found the
    conclusive presumption under § 18-2142.01(2) foreclosed the
    Agency from contesting the redevelopment contract’s valid-
    ity. On appeal, we agreed. After reciting the provisions of
    § 18-2142.01(2), we explained the purpose and effect of that
    statute as follows:
    The Legislature has set a specific window of time
    during which a party can challenge a redevelopment con-
    tract. Under the statute, after the window has closed, the
    contract has conclusively complied with the [Community
    Development Law] and Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 18-2145 to
    18-2154 (Reissue 1997). In short, § 18-2142.01(2) pro-
    vides finality and gives all parties to a contract that pro-
    vides financing for a redevelopment project a green light
    to proceed. The only exception is if a suit or other pro-
    ceeding is initiated within 30 days of the parties’ formally
    entering into the contract.38
    In PRP Holdings, we found the redevelopment agreement
    at issue was “formally entered into” when the redevelopment
    contract was signed by the Agency and the redevelopers,39 and
    we found the Agency’s declaratory judgment action challeng-
    ing the validity of that agreement was not filed until 8 years
    later. Because the Agency had not filed suit to contest the
    38
    
    Id. at 1020,
    767 N.W.2d at 72 (emphasis supplied).
    39
    
    Id. at 1016,
    767 N.W.2d at 70. See § 18-2103(15) (defining “[r]edevelop­
    ment contract” as “a contract entered into between an authority and a
    redeveloper for the redevelopment of an area in conformity with a redevel­
    opment plan”).
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    validity of the redevelopment agreement “within 30 days after
    the contract was signed,” we found it was precluded from con-
    testing the contract’s validity and we did not address the merits
    of the claim being raised, reasoning that Ҥ 18-2142.01(2)
    forecloses all of the Agency’s arguments.”40
    In PRP Holdings, we considered the application of the
    conclusive presumption to an action brought after the 30-day
    time period in § 18-2142.01. The instant appeal requires us
    to consider how, if at all, the conclusive presumption applies
    in an action brought before the commencement of that 30-day
    time period.
    3. Conclusive Presumption A pplies
    to Salem Grain’s Claims
    No party disputes that Salem Grain’s suit falls within the
    category of actions governed by §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01.
    Salem Grain admits this action was brought to challenge the
    validity and enforceability of the redevelopment contract and
    the bonds issued pursuant thereto, and the record shows the
    necessary statutory language was recited in substance in both
    the redevelopment contract and the bond.
    But Salem Grain argues the conclusive presumption
    should not apply to foreclose its claims, because its lawsuit
    was already on file when the 30-day window opened under
    § 18-2142.01. Salem Grain asks us to find, summarized, that
    § 18-2142.01 exempts from the conclusive presumption not
    only those actions brought during the 30-day period after the
    redevelopment contract is executed or the bond is authorized to
    be issued, but also those actions already pending at that point.
    We must reject this interpretation for two reasons.
    [10] First, Salem Grain’s position would require that we
    construe the statutory scheme in a manner that effectively nul-
    lifies § 18-2129. But the Legislature did not repeal § 18-2129
    upon enacting § 18-2142.01 in 1997. And in 2018, when the
    Community Development Law was amended, both statutes
    40
    PRP Holdings, supra note 
    12, 277 Neb. at 1019
    , 
    1020, 767 N.W.2d at 72
    .
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    were retained and updated.41 Under the statutory scheme,
    § 18-2129 creates a conclusive presumption that applies to
    any action challenging the validity or enforceability of a bond
    reciting the statutory language—and this necessarily includes
    actions already pending at the time such a redevelopment bond
    is issued. In the absence of clear legislative intent, a construc-
    tion of a statute will not be adopted which has the effect of
    nullifying or repealing another statute.42 We decline to inter-
    pret § 18-2142.01 in a manner that would effectively nullify
    § 18-2129.
    [11] Next, we must reject Salem’s Grain’s position because
    it advocates the judicial expansion of the narrow category of
    suits which the Legislature has chosen to exempt from the
    conclusive presumption. While there may be sound policy
    reasons for the Legislature to expand the 30-day exemption
    under § 18-2142.01 to include suits already pending when a
    redevelopment contract is formally entered into or a bond is
    authorized to be issued, it has not done so. And it is not within
    the province of the courts to read a meaning into a statute
    which is not there.43 We decline Salem Grain’s invitation to
    construe § 18-2142.01(2) in a way that expands the category of
    cases exempted from the conclusive presumption established
    by the Legislature.
    We instead adhere to the construction of § 18-2142.01
    we articulated in PRP Holdings.44 When a redevelopment
    contract or bond recites in substance the language set out in
    § 18-2142.01(1) and (2), that statute establishes a specific win-
    dow of time during which a party may challenge the validity
    or enforceability of the redevelopment contract or bond, unen-
    cumbered by the conclusive presumption under the Community
    41
    See 2018 Neb. Laws, L.B. 874, §§ 23 and 30.
    42
    State ex rel. City of Elkhorn v. Haney, 
    252 Neb. 788
    , 
    566 N.W.2d 771
          (1997).
    
    43 Stew. v
    . Nebraska Dept. of Rev., 
    294 Neb. 1010
    , 
    885 N.W.2d 723
          (2016).
    44
    PRP Holdings, supra note 12.
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    Development Law. That window opens on the date the rede-
    velopment contract is formally entered into45 or the bond is
    authorized to be issued,46 and it closes 30 days later. And while
    the plain text of § 18-2142.01 does not apply the conclusive
    presumption to actions brought before this 30-day period, the
    conclusive presumption of § 18-2129 applies to all actions
    regardless of when they are brought.
    When §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01 are construed together,
    the effect is that any suit, action, or proceeding brought outside
    the 30-day period established in § 18-2142.01 will be subject
    to the conclusive presumptions required by §§ 18-2129 and
    18-2142.01, assuming the action is one challenging the valid-
    ity or enforceability of a redevelopment bond or contract and
    the bond or contract recites in substance the language required
    by the statutes. We emphasize that this construction is applied
    only because the Legislature chose to include both §§ 18-2129
    and 18-2142.01 in the Community Development Act and both
    statutes must, if possible, be given effect. The construction
    articulated here would not be required in the absence of either
    § 18-2129 or § 18-2142.01.
    No party raises it as an issue in the present case, but we
    pause here to point out a practical challenge presented by the
    statutory scheme. The Community Development Law does
    not require that a redevelopment contract be executed dur-
    ing a public meeting.47 Nor does it require that the public be
    given notice of either the date a redevelopment agreement is
    “formally entered into” or the date a bond is “authorized” to
    be issued for purposes of § 18-2142.01. Consequently, while
    parties to the redevelopment agreement and those who are
    involved in or closely following the redevelopment project
    may have personal knowledge of when the 30-day time period
    under § 18-2142.01 begins to run, others may not. This could
    45
    § 18-2142.01(2).
    46
    § 18-2142.01(1).
    47
    See § 18-2119(1).
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    present a practical challenge for those wishing to challenge
    the validity or enforceability of a redevelopment contract or
    bond within the 30-day window under § 18-2142.01. But the
    proper role of this court is to declare the law as it finds it,48
    not to redesign the statutory scheme. Consideration of whether
    the Community Development Law should include some form
    of public notice when a redevelopment agreement is executed
    or the issuance of a bond is authorized is a policy matter for
    the Legislature.
    To summarize, when Salem Grain filed its suit on October
    24, 2012, challenging the validity and enforceability of the
    redevelopment contract and bond, no conclusive presumption
    yet applied under § 18-2129 because, at that point, the factual
    predicates of the statute had not been met. Specifically, no
    redevelopment contract had yet been executed, so no bond
    had yet been issued and it was not possible to determine
    whether the bond recited in substance the language required by
    § 18-2129.
    But later, when the redevelopment contract was executed
    and the bond was issued, reciting in substance the requisite
    language, the action became one to which the conclusive pre-
    sumption under § 18-2129 applied as a matter of law. And
    assuming without deciding that an amended complaint brought
    within the 30-day period “after the lapse of thirty days after”
    the contract was executed and the bond was issued could trig-
    ger the narrow exemption created by § 18-2142.01, Salem
    Grain’s amended complaint was filed outside that time period.
    On these facts, the conclusive presumption under § 18-2129
    applied as a matter of law as soon as the factual predicates were
    met, and the narrow 30-day exemption under § 18-2142.01 was
    never triggered.
    Thus, as a matter of law, the conclusive presumption man-
    dated by § 18-2129 applies to Salem Grain’s suit and requires
    48
    Woodmen of the World v. Nebraska Dept. of Rev., 
    299 Neb. 43
    , 
    907 N.W.2d 1
    (2018).
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    that the redevelopment project at issue “shall be conclu-
    sively deemed to have been planned, located, and carried
    out in accord­ance with the purposes and provisions of ” the
    Community Development Law.49 This conclusive presumption
    is nonrebuttable, and it forecloses all of Salem Grain’s alleged
    challenges to the validity and enforceability of the redevelop-
    ment contract and the bond issued pursuant thereto, under the
    Community Development Law.
    Therefore, although our reasoning differs from that applied
    by the district court, we find no error in the court’s dismissal of
    Salem Grain’s first 10 causes of action. Moreover, because all
    of Salem Grain’s claims under the Community Development
    Act are foreclosed by the conclusive presumption, there could
    be no reversible error in the trial court’s discovery rulings on
    those claims or in its refusal to allow Salem Grain to further
    amend its complaint to present additional challenges to the
    validity and enforceability of the redevelopment agreement and
    the bond.
    (a) Conclusive Presumption Is Not
    Affirmative Defense
    Salem Grain equates the conclusive presumption to a statute
    of limitations and argues it should not apply here because it
    was not raised below as an affirmative defense. The defen-
    dants’ answers included the general allegation that the amended
    complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted, but Salem Grain is correct that no defendant alleged
    the claims were foreclosed by application of the conclusive
    presumption.
    Nebraska’s pleading rules require that certain enumerated
    defenses “and any other matter constituting an avoidance or
    affirmative defense” must be pled in a defendant’s answer.50
    But the conclusive presumptions of §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01
    49
    § 18-2129. Accord § 18-2142.01(1) and (2).
    50
    Neb. Ct. R. Pldg. § 6-1108(c).
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    are neither affirmative defenses nor statutes of limitations, and
    the fact that they were neither alleged nor argued below does
    not preclude their application, as a matter of substantive law,
    to this case.
    [12] An affirmative defense raises a new matter which,
    assuming the allegations in the petition or complaint to be true,
    constitutes a defense to the merits of a claim asserted in the
    petition.51 It generally avoids, rather than negates, the plain-
    tiff’s prima facie case.52
    [13] A statute of limitations is an affirmative defense,53 but
    “[a] statute providing a conclusive presumption is very differ-
    ent from a statute of limitations.”54 The purpose of a statute of
    limitations is to prevent recovery of stale claims.55 In contrast,
    a conclusive presumption is “a substantive rule of law direct-
    ing that proof of certain basic facts conclusively proves an
    additional fact which cannot be rebutted.”56 The conclusive
    presumptions under §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01 are not proce-
    dural statutes of limitations.
    Nor are they affirmative defenses. The statutory mandate
    that a redevelopment project “shall be conclusively deemed to
    have been planned, located, and carried out in accordance with
    the purpose and provisions of” the Community Development
    Law57 does not raise a new matter or constitute a defense to the
    merits of the claim. Rather, as explained previously, it is a sub-
    stantive evidentiary rule that forecloses or negates any proof
    51
    See, Armstrong v. Clarkson College, 
    297 Neb. 595
    , 
    901 N.W.2d 1
    (2017);
    ACI Worldwide Corp. v. Baldwin Hackett & Meeks, 
    296 Neb. 818
    , 
    896 N.W.2d 156
    (2017).
    52
    John P. Lenich, Nebraska Civil Procedure § 12:11 (2018).
    53
    See § 6-1108(c).
    54
    Davis, supra note 
    20, 193 P.3d at 89
    .
    55
    Becker v. Hobbs, 
    256 Neb. 432
    , 441, 
    590 N.W.2d 360
    , 366 (1999).
    56
    29 Am. Jur. 2d, supra note 17, § 201 at 215. Accord 1 Fishman, supra
    note 17.
    57
    § 18-2129. Accord § 18-2142.01(1) and (2).
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    to the contrary. Stated differently, when the factual predicates
    are met, §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01 establish the legal stan-
    dard courts must apply to actions brought outside the 30-day
    window challenging the validity or enforceability of redevelop-
    ment agreements and bonds.58 The fact that the conclusive pre-
    sumption was neither alleged nor argued below does not affect
    its applicability as a matter of substantive law.
    (b) Community Development Law
    and NOMA Claims
    Finally, Salem Grain argues that even if the conclusive pre-
    sumption applies to foreclose its claims under the Community
    Development Law, it should have no effect on Salem Grain’s
    NOMA claims related to the redevelopment project. It con-
    tends that regardless of the conclusive presumption under the
    Community Development Law, NOMA provides a separate
    legal basis for declaring void any resolution made or formal
    action taken by the Authority in violation of NOMA.
    Salem Grain alleged multiple causes of action, includ-
    ing NOMA violations, to support its ultimate request that
    the redevelopment contract and any bonds issued pursuant
    thereto be declared null and void. The question becomes
    whether, in light of the conclusive presumption required by
    §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01, any violation of NOMA could
    affect the validity and enforceability of the redevelopment
    contract and bonds.
    There is potential tension between the conclusive presump-
    tions under the Community Development Law and the provi-
    sions under § 84-1414 for declaring void a resolution made or
    formal action taken by a public body in violation of NOMA.
    That is because the Community Development Law contains
    express provisions governing the public hearing and notice
    requirements for redevelopment plans59 and also makes clear
    58
    PRP Holdings, supra note 12.
    59
    See, e.g., §§ 18-2109, 18-2115, 18-2115.01, and 18-2119 (Cum. Supp.
    2018).
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    that the Community Development Law “shall be full authority
    for the . . . exercise of the powers therein granted to a city or
    village and to such authority” and that “[i]nsofar as the provi-
    sions of [the Community Development Law] are inconsistent
    with the provisions of any other law . . . the provisions of [the
    Community Development Law] shall be controlling.”60
    When the conclusive presumption of §§ 18-2129 or
    18-2142.01 applies, the “project shall be conclusively deemed
    to have been planned, located, and carried out in accord­
    ance with the purpose and provisions of” the Community
    Development Law.61 This presumption necessarily encom-
    passes an authority’s compliance with the public hearing and
    notice provisions of the Community Development Law and
    prompts the question whether the public meeting require-
    ments under NOMA, and in particular the provisions under
    § 84-1414 for declaring void a resolution made or formal action
    taken by a public body in violation of NOMA, are inconsist­
    ent with the conclusive presumption under the Community
    Development Law.
    This case, however, does not require that we resolve any
    possible tension between the Community Development Law
    and NOMA. That is because, as we explain below, no NOMA
    violation has been proved.
    An appellate court reviews actions for relief under NOMA
    in equity because the relief sought is in the nature of a dec-
    laration that action taken in violation of the act is void or
    voidable.62 On appeal from an equity action, an appellate court
    tries factual questions de novo on the record and, as to ques-
    tions of both fact and law, is obligated to reach a conclusion
    independent of the conclusion reached by the trial court.63
    But when credible evidence is in conflict on material issues
    60
    § 18-2144.
    61
    § 18-2129. Accord § 18-2142.01(1) and (2).
    62
    Schauer, supra note 9.
    63
    
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    of fact, we consider and may give weight to the fact the trial
    court observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the
    facts over another.64
    Salem Grain alleged that two events—the August 15, 2012,
    dinner and the November 9 email communications—were
    “meetings” of the Authority for purposes of NOMA. And
    Salem Grain argued that because NOMA requirements were
    not followed with respect to such meetings, any action taken
    by the Authority was invalidated pursuant to § 84-1414. The
    Authority denied that either event was a meeting governed by
    NOMA, and the district court agreed. After a de novo review
    of the record, so do we.
    (i) Dinner
    NOMA defines a “[m]eeting” as “all regular, special, or
    called meetings, formal or informal, of any public body for the
    purposes of briefing, discussion of public business, formation
    of tentative policy, or the taking of any action of the public
    body.”65 NOMA also provides, however, that it
    does not apply to chance meetings or to attendance at
    or travel to conventions or workshops of members of
    a public body at which there is no meeting of the body
    then intentionally convened, if there is no vote or other
    action taken regarding any matter over which the pub-
    lic body has supervision, control, jurisdiction, or advi-
    sory power.66
    In Schauer v. Grooms,67 parties seeking to challenge the
    annexation of land for a redevelopment project involving an
    ethanol plant claimed that a dinner and walking tour of another
    ethanol facility constituted a public meeting of the city coun-
    cil under NOMA. The dinner and tour were hosted by the
    64
    
    Id. 65 §
    84-1409(2).
    66
    § 84-1410(5).
    67
    Schauer, supra note 9.
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    economic redevelopment board and attended by the mayor,
    three members of the city council, and approximately 40 other
    people. The city council members testified that during the din-
    ner, they “did not discuss or receive information associated
    with the redevelopment plan and contract” and did not “take
    any formal action on behalf of the city council.”68 We found the
    plaintiffs had not presented any evidence the dinner was “‘for
    the purposes of briefing, discussion of public business, forma-
    tion of tentative policy, or the taking of any action of the public
    body’”69 and thus found no violation of NOMA.
    Here, witnesses testified that Consolidated Grain gave a
    presentation during the dinner, but no witness could recall
    specifics about the content of that presentation. The quo-
    rum of Authority members who attended the dinner testified
    that no business was discussed and that they did not rely on
    any information from the dinner to support their subsequent
    decisions during public meetings to approve the redevelop-
    ment project.
    On this record, we agree there is insufficient evidence
    that the dinner involved any “briefing, discussion of public
    business, formation of tentative policy, or the taking of any
    action”70 by the Authority. The dinner did not constitute a
    meeting under NOMA.
    (ii) Email
    For similar reasons, we agree with the district court that the
    email communications were not a “[m]eeting” as defined in
    § 84-1409(2), as there was no purpose to hold a briefing ses-
    sion, discuss public business, form tentative policy, or take any
    action of the public body. To the contrary, the record shows
    the purpose of the email communications was to let Authority
    members know Salem Grain had filed suit and advise that
    68
    
    Id. at 447,
    786 N.W.2d at 926.
    69
    
    Id., quoting §
    84-1409(2).
    70
    § 84-1409(2).
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    the previously approved contract was being amended to dis-
    close the litigation and to include additional indemnification
    language recommended by counsel. The chairman was not
    seeking permission to take these actions, because the Authority
    already had authorized him to “take any and all actions, and
    to execute any and all documents,” deemed necessary to con-
    clude the transaction.
    Section 84-1410(4) provides in part, “No closed session,
    informal meeting, chance meeting, social gathering, email,
    fax, or other electronic communication shall be used for the
    purpose of circumventing the requirements of the act.” Salem
    Grain argues the emails were used by the Authority to circum-
    vent the requirements of NOMA. But the chairman’s email
    stated that if any member wanted to “discuss and/or act upon
    these matters,” the chairman would “schedule a special meet-
    ing for that purpose.”
    Properly understood, the chairman’s email demonstrates it
    was sent not to circumvent the requirements of NOMA, but,
    rather, to adhere to them. The district court did not err in find-
    ing no NOMA violation with respect to the emails.
    4. Evidence of A dditional
    NOMA Violations
    [14-16] Lastly, Salem Grain assigns error to the district
    court’s exclusion of certain evidence offered at trial and
    objected to as irrelevant. In proceedings where the Nebraska
    Evidence Rules apply, the admissibility of evidence is con-
    trolled by these rules; judicial discretion is involved only
    when the rules make discretion a factor in determining admis-
    sibility.71 The exercise of judicial discretion is implicit in
    determining the relevance of evidence, and we will not reverse
    a trial court’s decision regarding relevance absent an abuse
    of discretion.72 A judicial abuse of discretion exists when
    71
    Arens v. NEBCO, Inc., 
    291 Neb. 834
    , 
    870 N.W.2d 1
    (2015).
    72
    
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    the reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable,
    unfairly depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying
    just results in matters submitted for disposition.73
    [17] The evidence excluded by the trial court pertained to
    NOMA violations which had not been alleged in the operative
    amended complaint. Relevant evidence means evidence having
    any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of con-
    sequence to the determination of the action more probable or
    less probable than it would be without the evidence.74
    The NOMA violations alleged in Salem Grain’s amended
    complaint focused exclusively on the August 15, 2012, din-
    ner and the November 9 email exchange. Because only those
    two alleged NOMA violations were at issue, and because the
    proffered evidence of other possible NOMA violations had
    no tendency to make any fact of consequence to those two
    violations any more or less probable, the evidence had no
    relevance and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    excluding it.
    V. CONCLUSION
    The conclusive presumptions of §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01
    present a formidable hurdle to those seeking to challenge the
    validity or enforceability of a redevelopment contract or bond
    under the Community Development Law. We find that all of
    Salem Grain’s claims challenging the procedure by which
    the redevelopment project was adopted and the validity and
    enforceability of the redevelopment agreement and bond are
    conclusively foreclosed by §§ 18-2129 and 18-2142.01. And
    after a de novo review of the NOMA claims, we agree with the
    district court that no open meeting violation occurred. Finding
    all of Salem Grain’s assignments of error to be without merit,
    we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    A ffirmed.
    73
    
    Id. 74 Id.