REO Enters. v. Village of Dorchester , 312 Neb. 792 ( 2022 )


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    - 792 -
    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    REO Enterprises, LLC, a Nebraska limited
    liability company, appellant, v. Village
    of Dorchester, a Nebraska political
    subdivision, appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed November 4, 2022.   No. S-21-752.
    1. Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will
    affirm a lower court’s grant of summary judgment if the pleadings
    and admitted evidence show that there is no genuine issue as to any
    material facts or as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from
    the facts and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.
    2. Constitutional Law: Ordinances. The constitutionality of an ordinance
    presents a question of law.
    3. Judgments: Appeal and Error. An appellate court independently
    reviews questions of law decided by a lower court.
    4. Administrative Law: Statutes: Appeal and Error. The meaning
    and interpretation of statutes and regulations are questions of law for
    which an appellate court has an obligation to reach an independent
    conclusion irrespective of the decision made by the court below.
    5. Appeal and Error. Plain error is error plainly evident from the record
    and of such a nature that to leave it uncorrected would result in damage
    to the integrity, reputation, or fairness of the judicial process.
    6. Special Legislation. A legislative act constitutes special legislation if
    (1) it creates an arbitrary and unreasonable method of classification or
    (2) it creates a permanently closed class.
    7. Special Legislation: Public Policy. To be valid, a legislative clas-
    sification must be based upon some reason of public policy, some
    substantial difference in circumstances that would naturally suggest
    the justice or expediency of diverse legislation regarding the objects to
    be classified.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    8. Special Legislation. Legislative classifications must be real and not
    illusive; they cannot be based on distinctions without a substantial
    difference.
    9. ____. A legislative body’s distinctive treatment of a class is proper if
    the class has some reasonable distinction from other subjects of a like
    general character. And that distinction must bear some reasonable rela-
    tion to the legitimate objectives and purposes of the legislative act.
    Appeal from the District Court for Saline County: Vicky L.
    Johnson, Judge. Affirmed.
    Gregory C. Damman, of Blevens & Damman, for appellant.
    Kelly R. Hoffschneider and Timothy J. Kubert, of
    Hoffschneider Law, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
    Per Curiam.
    The Village of Dorchester, Nebraska, enacted an ordinance
    providing that renters of property could receive utility services
    from the village only if their landlord guaranteed that the land-
    lord would pay any unpaid utility charges. REO Enterprises,
    LLC (REO), an owner of rental property within the village,
    filed an action seeking a declaration that the ordinance was
    unenforceable for various reasons. The district court initially
    granted the relief REO sought, declaring that the ordinance
    violated the Equal Protection Clauses of the U.S. and Nebraska
    Constitutions. In an appeal filed by the village, however, we
    reversed the district court’s judgment on that question and
    remanded the cause for the district court to consider REO’s
    other claims. See REO Enters. v. Village of Dorchester, 
    306 Neb. 683
    , 
    947 N.W.2d 480
     (2020) (REO I). On remand, the
    district court found that the village was entitled to summary
    judgment on each of REO’s other claims. The case now returns
    to us, this time at the behest of REO. We find no error on the
    part of the district court and therefore affirm.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    BACKGROUND
    The Ordinance.
    The village enacted the ordinance at issue in this appeal in
    2017. The ordinance addresses the village’s provision of utility
    services, including water, sewer, and electricity. The ordinance
    requires that all residents of the village “subscribe to [the]
    [v]illage utility services” and provides terms for billing, collec-
    tion of bills, and discontinuance of service.
    The ordinance also sets forth the process by which persons
    may apply to receive utility services. Under the ordinance,
    an application for utility services must be submitted to the
    village clerk, who is to require payment of “a service deposit
    and tap fees for water and sewer service.” Of particular rel-
    evance to this appeal, the ordinance provides the following
    with respect to applications for utility services filed by rent-
    ers of property: “Before a tenant’s utility application will be
    accepted, the landlord shall be required to sign an owner’s
    consent form and agree to pay all unpaid utility charges for
    his or her property.”
    EO’s Complaint.
    Several months after the ordinance was enacted, REO filed
    a lawsuit against the village in which it asked the district
    court to declare the ordinance unenforceable. In its complaint,
    REO alleged that when one of its tenants, Ange Lara, applied
    to receive utility services and paid the requested deposit, the
    village clerk told her that she would not be provided with
    such services until REO signed a guarantee as required by the
    ordinance. According to the complaint, when REO informed
    the village that it would not sign the guarantee, the village pro-
    vided utility services to the property, but through an account
    held by a member of REO rather than through an account
    in Lara’s name. Although REO’s complaint named Lara as a
    third-party defendant, nothing in our record indicates that Lara
    has participated in the proceedings as a party.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    REO’s complaint alleged that the ordinance was unconsti-
    tutional and in violation of state and federal statutes. REO
    alleged that the ordinance violated the Equal Protection Clauses
    of the U.S and Nebraska Constitutions, as well as article III,
    § 18, of the Nebraska Constitution. It also alleged that the
    ordinance violated the federal Equal Credit Opportunity Act,
    see 
    15 U.S.C. § 1691
     et seq. (2018), and Nebraska’s Uniform
    Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, see 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 76-1401
     to 76-1449 (Reissue 2018 & Supp. 2021). REO
    asked the district court to declare that the ordinance was void
    and unenforceable on each of these grounds.
    Summary Judgment Evidence.
    REO and the village eventually filed cross-motions for sum-
    mary judgment. At the summary judgment hearing, the district
    court received an affidavit from the village clerk, Gloria Riley.
    In her affidavit, Riley asserted that she was responsible for
    managing utility accounts for the village. Riley stated that a
    previous renter of the property REO rented to Lara failed to
    pay a utility bill of over $500 and that the residency of that
    former tenant was unknown. She also stated that the village
    “has spent substantial resources in trying to locate former
    residential tenant utilities customers that have left town with
    unpaid utility account obligations” and that the village had
    previously used collection agencies to assist in pursuing a
    recovery for these unpaid bills, but that such agencies would
    charge 50 percent of the amount collected. According to Riley,
    the ordinance was adopted to “further the goal of collection
    by reducing the possibility that [the village] will be faced
    with the administrative expenses associated with repeatedly
    resorting to cumbersome and expensive foreclosure or collec-
    tion proceedings.”
    The district court also received an affidavit of Lara. Lara’s
    affidavit was consistent with the allegations in REO’s com-
    plaint regarding the village’s response to Lara’s application
    for utility services.
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    Initial District Court Order
    and First Appeal.
    After the hearing on the motions for summary judgment,
    the district court entered an order granting summary judgment
    in favor of REO. In its order, the district court found that the
    ordinance violated the Equal Protection Clauses of the U.S.
    and Nebraska Constitutions. It reasoned that the ordinance
    treated residential owners of property and residential tenants
    differently and that there was no rational relationship between
    the difference in treatment and the village’s interest in collect-
    ing unpaid utility bills. The district court did not address the
    other grounds REO offered in support of its request that the
    ordinance be declared invalid.
    The village appealed the district court’s decision, and we
    reversed. We held that although the ordinance classified resi-
    dential tenants and residential owners separately, the classifica-
    tion was subject to and satisfied rational basis scrutiny and thus
    did not violate the Equal Protection Clauses of the U.S. and
    Nebraska Constitutions. We found that ensuring the collection
    of utility bills was a plausible policy reason for the requirement
    that renters obtain a landlord guarantee and that the differential
    treatment of renters and owners was sufficiently related to the
    goal of ensuring payment of utility bills so as not to render
    the treatment arbitrary or irrational.
    Proceedings on Remand.
    After receiving and spreading our mandate in REO I, the
    district court entered an order addressing REO’s other claims.
    It found that the village was entitled to summary judgment
    on each of those claims and thus granted the village’s motion
    for summary judgment, overruled REO’s motion for summary
    judgment, and dismissed the case.
    REO timely appealed. We moved the case to our docket
    on our own motion pursuant to 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 24-1106
    (3)
    (Cum. Supp. 2020).
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    REO assigns that the district court erred by finding that
    the ordinance (1) did not violate article III, § 18, of the
    Nebraska Constitution, (2) did not violate the federal Equal
    Credit Opportunity Act, and (3) was not void as against the
    public policy of Nebraska. REO also assigns that the district
    court committed plain error by finding that the village had
    statutory authority to enact the ordinance.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] An appellate court will affirm a lower court’s grant of
    summary judgment if the pleadings and admitted evidence
    show that there is no genuine issue as to any material facts or
    as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from the facts
    and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. D-CO, Inc. v. City of La Vista, 
    285 Neb. 676
    , 
    829 N.W.2d 105
     (2013).
    [2,3] The constitutionality of an ordinance presents a ques-
    tion of law. Dowd Grain Co. v. County of Sarpy, 
    291 Neb. 620
    , 
    867 N.W.2d 599
     (2015). An appellate court independently
    reviews questions of law decided by a lower court. 
    Id.
    [4] The meaning and interpretation of statutes and regula-
    tions are questions of law for which an appellate court has
    an obligation to reach an independent conclusion irrespec-
    tive of the decision made by the court below. In re App. No.
    P-12.32 of Black Hills Neb. Gas, 
    311 Neb. 813
    , 
    976 N.W.2d 152
     (2022).
    [5] Plain error is error plainly evident from the record and
    of such a nature that to leave it uncorrected would result in
    damage to the integrity, reputation, or fairness of the judicial
    process. North Star Mut. Ins. Co. v. Miller, 
    311 Neb. 941
    , 
    977 N.W.2d 195
     (2022).
    ANALYSIS
    Special Legislation.
    REO first claims that the district court should have declared
    the ordinance unenforceable on the grounds that it violates
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    article III, § 18, of the Nebraska Constitution. The text of
    article III, § 18, prohibits “[t]he Legislature” from “pass[ing]
    local or special laws” in a set of enumerated circumstances.
    The section concludes, “In all other cases where a general law
    can be made applicable, no special law shall be enacted.” Id.
    We have described article III, § 18, as generally prohibiting
    “special legislation.” Big John’s Billiards v. State, 
    288 Neb. 938
    , 944, 
    852 N.W.2d 727
    , 734 (2014). We have said that the
    special legislation prohibition applies to municipal ordinances.
    See, e.g., D-CO, Inc., 
    supra.
    [6] So what exactly is it that article III, § 18, prohibits? Our
    precedent holds that a legislative act constitutes special legis-
    lation if (1) it creates an arbitrary and unreasonable method
    of classification or (2) it creates a permanently closed class.
    D-CO, Inc., 
    supra.
     REO’s sole argument is that the ordinance
    creates an arbitrary and unreasonable classification, so we next
    turn our attention to the tests we have developed to identify
    such classifications.
    [7-9] In order to withstand a special legislation challenge,
    i.e., to be valid, a legislative classification must be based
    upon some reason of public policy, some substantial difference
    in circumstances that would naturally suggest the justice or
    expediency of diverse legislation regarding the objects to be
    classified. 
    Id.
     Legislative classifications must be real and not
    illusive; they cannot be based on distinctions without a sub-
    stantial difference. 
    Id.
     A legislative body’s distinctive treatment
    of a class is proper if the class has some reasonable distinction
    from other subjects of a like general character. 
    Id.
     And that
    distinction must bear some reasonable relation to the legitimate
    objectives and purposes of the legislative act. 
    Id.
    REO argues that by requiring only renters’ applications for
    utility services to be supported by the guarantee of a third
    party, the ordinance treats renters differently than it treats
    owners. And it argues that there is no substantial difference in
    circumstances between renters applying for utility services and
    owners doing the same that justifies the differential treatment.
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    REO observes that some renters may be very creditworthy
    while some owners may have very poor credit, and thus argues
    that requiring only renters’ applications to be supported by a
    guarantee is arbitrary.
    If the village was attempting to defend the ordinance based
    on a claim about the relative creditworthiness of renters and
    owners of property, REO’s argument might have some force.
    But, in fact, the village does not claim that the ordinance
    is justified based solely on a difference in creditworthiness
    between those two groups. Instead, the village’s argument
    and Riley’s affidavit focus on the time and expense associ-
    ated with collecting unpaid utility bills from renters. As noted
    above, Riley’s affidavit stated that the village had spent sub-
    stantial resources trying to locate former renters of property
    with unpaid utility bills and had resorted to using collection
    agencies that would take half of any amount collected. The
    ordinance’s requirement of a landlord guarantee, according to
    Riley, was intended to minimize the time and expense associ-
    ated with those efforts.
    We agree with the village that there is a substantial difference
    in circumstances between renters and owners as to the time and
    expense that are likely necessary to collect unpaid utility bills.
    On this point, we find our opinion in REO I instructive. In the
    course of our equal protection analysis in that case, we found
    compelling the village’s assertion that “administrative and col-
    lection costs associated with unpaid utility bills are more likely
    to increase when seeking payment for services provided to
    tenants versus residential owners.” REO I, 
    306 Neb. 683
    , 693,
    
    947 N.W.2d 480
    , 488 (2020). We observed that tenants are
    connected to the property through only a lease agreement and
    that their connection to the property thus ceases when they
    are no longer acting under the agreement, while owners are
    more “tied” to the serviced property and thus provide a “static
    source” that can be more easily contacted and from which
    collection can be more easily pursued. Id. at 693, 694, 947
    N.W.2d at 488. We also noted that a landlord guarantee could
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    help the village minimize collection costs, because the guar-
    antee provides another party to account for amounts due, but
    concluded that “a third-party guarantee does not equally apply
    to residential owners who do not have a landlord third-party
    relationship and are already tied to the serviced propert y.” Id.
    at 694, 947 N.W.2d at 488.
    Although the foregoing analysis was conducted in the con-
    text of an equal protection challenge in REO I, we find it also
    supports the conclusion that there is a substantial difference
    in circumstances between renters and owners that justifies the
    ordinance’s differential treatment of the two groups. We have
    previously acknowledged that special legislation analysis is
    similar to an equal protection analysis and that, in some cases,
    both issues can be decided on the same facts. See Hug v. City
    of Omaha, 
    275 Neb. 820
    , 
    749 N.W.2d 884
     (2008). As a result,
    language normally applied to an equal protection analysis is
    sometimes used to help explain the reasoning employed under
    a special legislation analysis. 
    Id.
     That is the case here.
    We are not dissuaded from our conclusion that the ordinance
    did not violate article III, § 18, by an alternative argument
    raised by REO challenging the adequacy of Riley’s affidavit.
    In support of this argument, REO compares Riley’s affidavit to
    a commissioned study a municipality offered in defending an
    ordinance regulating rental properties against a special legisla-
    tion challenge in D-CO, Inc. v. City of La Vista, 
    285 Neb. 676
    ,
    
    829 N.W.2d 105
     (2013). REO also contends that Riley’s affi-
    davit failed to compare the resources the village had expended
    pursuing unpaid utility bills of renters to unpaid utility bills
    of property owners and failed to consider the effectiveness of
    other means the village could have used to recover renters’
    unpaid utility bills, such as requiring deposits or pursuing liens
    imposed on the property.
    We disagree with REO’s contention that Riley’s affidavit
    was inadequate. Although the municipality in D-CO, Inc.,
    
    supra,
     relied on a commissioned study, our opinion in that
    case did not require that type of evidence in every special
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    legislation challenge. Moreover, in that case, we relied on
    more than just the commissioned study to determine that there
    were substantial differences in circumstances between rental
    properties and owner-occupied properties that justified the
    municipality’s rental property regulations. The study did not
    specifically show that rental properties within the municipal-
    ity were dilapidated, but we relied on evidence of complaints
    the municipality received about the condition of some rental
    properties and of code violations it had found in some rental
    properties. This anecdotal evidence is not unlike the evidence
    set forth in Riley’s affidavit.
    We also disagree with REO that the village was required
    to offer evidence comparing the resources it had expended
    attempting to collect unpaid utility bills from renters as opposed
    to owners or show that it had considered the effectiveness of
    other potential means of pursuing renters’ unpaid utility bills.
    REO’s argument that this information was required overlooks
    aspects of our special legislation doctrine. Even assuming the
    village had also invested significant time and money in pursu-
    ing unpaid utility bills associated with owner-occupied proper-
    ties, our special legislation jurisprudence would not preclude it
    from attempting to minimize the resources it must expend to
    pursue renters’ unpaid utility bills. As we said in D-CO, Inc.,
    in response to an argument that there were also maintenance
    problems associated with owner-occupied properties in the
    relevant municipality, government entities are “not required to
    solve every problem at once.” 
    285 Neb. at 685
    , 829 N.W.2d
    at 112.
    In addition, even if the village may have had other means
    at its disposal to pursue renters’ unpaid utility bills, it does
    not follow that the ordinance is prohibited special legisla-
    tion. As we have explained, the special legislation inquiry
    is focused on whether the distinctive treatment of classes is
    based on a substantial difference in circumstances between
    the classes that justifies the distinctive treatment. Because
    we find that there was such a substantial difference here, we
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
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    312 Neb. 792
    conclude that REO’s special legislation challenge to the ordi-
    nance fails.
    Equal Credit Opportunity Act.
    We next consider REO’s contention that the ordinance is
    unenforceable because it violates the federal Equal Credit
    Opportunity Act (ECOA). The ECOA prohibits creditors from
    discriminating against applicants for credit on various bases.
    See 
    15 U.S.C. § 1691
    (a). REO’s argument that the ordinance
    violates the ECOA is based on a regulation promulgated to
    enforce that statute. The regulation REO relies upon provides
    that creditors may not generally require “the signature of an
    applicant’s spouse or other person” on a credit instrument “if
    the applicant qualifies under the creditor’s standards of credit-
    worthiness for the amount and terms of the credit requested.”
    
    12 C.F.R. § 1002.7
    (d)(1) (2021). REO contends that when a
    renter applies to receive utility services from the village, he or
    she is applying for credit. And because the ordinance requires
    that the renter’s application be supported by the guarantee of
    his or her landlord without any consideration of the renter’s
    creditworthiness, REO argues that the ordinance violates the
    ECOA. As we will explain, however, it is not necessary for
    us to determine whether the ordinance is inconsistent with
    the ECOA, because REO was not entitled to seek relief under
    that act.
    REO claims that a provision of the ECOA, 15 U.S.C.
    § 1691e(c), authorized it to ask the district court to declare the
    ordinance invalid. Section 1691e(c) of the ECOA provides that
    “[u]pon application by an aggrieved applicant, the appropriate
    United States district court or any other court of competent
    jurisdiction may grant such equitable and declaratory relief as
    is necessary to enforce the requirements imposed under this
    subchapter.” REO focuses on the language authorizing courts
    of competent jurisdiction to grant equitable and declaratory
    relief, but it glosses over the fact that § 1691e(c) authorizes
    only an “aggrieved applicant” to seek such relief.
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    The ECOA defines an “applicant” as “any person who
    applies to a creditor directly for an extension, renewal, or con-
    tinuation of credit, or applies to a creditor indirectly by use of
    an existing credit plan for an amount exceeding a previously
    established credit limit.” 15 U.S.C. § 1691a(b). For present
    purposes, we will assume for the sake of argument that when
    a person applies to the village to receive utility services, he
    or she is requesting an extension of credit for purposes of the
    ECOA. Having made this assumption, we would have no dif-
    ficulty in finding that a renter seeking utility services is an
    “applicant” under the ECOA. But, even with that assumption,
    it is not so clear that REO is an “applicant” for purposes of
    the statute.
    REO asserts that the ordinance violates the ECOA by
    requiring REO to serve as a guarantor. At least two federal
    courts of appeal have expressly held that, notwithstanding a
    regulation of the Federal Reserve Bank providing that “the
    term [applicant] includes guarantors,” see 
    12 C.F.R. § 202.2
    (e)
    (2021), a guarantor is not an “applicant” under the ECOA.
    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit reached that
    conclusion in Hawkins v. Community Bank of Raymore, 
    761 F.3d 937
     (8th Cir. 2014), affirmed by an equally divided court,
    
    577 U.S. 495
    , 
    136 S. Ct. 1072
    , 
    194 L. Ed. 2d 163
     (2016). It
    observed that to qualify as an “applicant” under the definition
    provided in the ECOA, a person must “apply” for, that is,
    request, credit. It reasoned that a guarantor is not an “appli-
    cant,” because a guarantor agrees to pay the debt of another in
    the event of default, but does not itself request credit. As the
    Eighth Circuit put it, “[a] guarantor engages in different con-
    duct, receives different benefits, and exposes herself to differ-
    ent legal consequences than does a credit applicant.” Hawkins,
    761 F.3d at 942.
    More recently, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh
    Circuit also concluded that a guarantor was not an “applicant”
    under the ECOA. See Regions Bank v. Legal Outsource PA,
    
    936 F.3d 1184
     (11th Cir. 2019). Relying on a number of legal
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
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    312 Neb. 792
    and other dictionaries, that court concluded that the ordinary
    meaning of the term “applicant” under the ECOA is “one who
    requests credit to benefit himself.” Regions Bank, 936 F.3d at
    1191. The Eleventh Circuit concluded that a guarantor did not
    fit within this definition, explaining that “[a]lthough a guaran-
    tor makes a promise related to an applicant’s request for credit,
    the guaranty is not itself a request for credit, and certainly not
    a request for credit for the guarantor.” Id.
    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has also
    expressed doubt about whether a guarantor qualifies as an
    “applicant” under the ECOA in Moran Foods v. Mid-Atlantic
    Market Development, 
    476 F.3d 436
     (7th Cir. 2007). The court
    ultimately decided that case on other grounds, but not before
    observing that “there is nothing ambiguous about ‘applicant’
    and no way to confuse an applicant with a guarantor.” 
    Id. at 441
    .
    Although one other federal court of appeals has concluded
    that for purposes of the ECOA, “applicant” could reasonably
    be construed to include a guarantor, see RL BB Acquisition v.
    Bridgemill Commons Dev. Group, 
    754 F.3d 380
     (6th Cir. 2014),
    we find the reasoning of the Seventh, Eighth, and Eleventh
    Circuits persuasive. A guarantor may support an application
    for credit, but, in our view, a guarantor does not itself apply
    for credit and is thus not an “applicant” under the plain terms
    of the ECOA.
    Because REO did not qualify as an “applicant” under the
    ECOA, it could not seek declaratory or equitable relief under
    15 U.S.C. § 1691e(c). And, contrary to REO’s suggestion
    otherwise, it could not obtain relief under the ECOA by nam-
    ing Lara as a third-party defendant. As we have discussed,
    § 1691e(c) authorizes courts to grant relief to enforce the
    ECOA “[u]pon application by an aggrieved applicant . . . .”
    Even if Lara qualified as an “applicant” for credit under the
    ECOA, she did not make an “application” to the district court
    for relief. REO alone asked the district court to declare the
    ordinance invalid.
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    REO ENTERS. V. VILLAGE OF DORCHESTER
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 792
    Because we find that REO was not entitled to seek relief
    under the ECOA, we find no error in the district court’s entry
    of summary judgment on REO’s claim that the ECOA rendered
    the ordinance invalid.
    Public Policy.
    Next, we address REO’s argument that the district court
    erred by rejecting REO’s claim that the ordinance violated
    Nebraska public policy. REO alleged in its complaint and now
    argues on appeal that the ordinance “violates public policy as
    established by the Nebraska Uniform Residential Landlord
    [and] Tenant Act.” Brief for appellant at 12. REO focuses on
    a particular provision of the Uniform Residential Landlord and
    Tenant Act, § 76-1416, which generally prohibits landlords
    from demanding a security deposit exceeding 1 month’s rent.
    REO argues that because state law caps the amount landlords
    may demand as a security deposit, the ordinance cannot create
    the potential for additional liability by requiring a landlord to
    provide a guarantee in support of a tenant’s application for util-
    ity services.
    While REO clearly takes the position that the district court
    should have declared the ordinance invalid given the statutory
    limit on the amount landlords may require as a security deposit,
    the precise legal theory it is relying on is less obvious. REO
    claims that the ordinance is “void as against public policy.”
    Brief for appellant at 26. The only case it relies on in support
    of this argument is a New Jersey case that used that language
    in finding a municipal ordinance unenforceable. See Economy
    Enterprises, Inc. v. Township Committee, 
    104 N.J. Super. 373
    ,
    
    250 A.2d 139
     (1969). REO does not, however, direct us to any
    Nebraska authority holding that a municipal ordinance can be
    “void as against public policy,” and we are not aware of any
    such doctrine under Nebraska law.
    Municipal ordinances can of course be preempted by state
    law. See State ex rel. City of Alma v. Furnas Cty. Farms, 
    266 Neb. 558
    , 
    667 N.W.2d 512
     (2003). This can occur in three
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    different circumstances: (1) where the Legislature expressly
    declares in explicit statutory language its intent to preempt
    municipal ordinances, (2) where the Legislature’s intent to
    preempt municipal ordinances may be inferred from a compre-
    hensive scheme of legislation, and (3) where a municipal ordi-
    nance actually conflicts with state law. See 
    id.
     REO, however,
    has not made a preemption argument of any kind, let alone
    shown that the ordinance is preempted under the recognized
    categories discussed above.
    We find no error in the district court’s rejection of REO’s
    claim that the ordinance violated Nebraska public policy.
    Plain Error.
    Finally, we come to REO’s argument that the district court
    committed plain error. Here, REO contends that the village
    lacked the statutory authority to enact the ordinance. And while
    REO concedes that it did not raise this issue before the district
    court, it asserts that the district court nonetheless plainly erred
    by finding that the village had the statutory authority to enact
    the ordinance. We disagree.
    Plain error is error plainly evident from the record and
    of such a nature that to leave it uncorrected would result in
    damage to the integrity, reputation, or fairness of the judicial
    process. North Star Mut. Ins. Co. v. Miller, 
    311 Neb. 941
    , 
    977 N.W.2d 195
     (2022). While REO assigns that the district court
    erred by finding that the village had the statutory authority to
    enact the ordinance, the district court did not expressly con-
    sider that issue. That is not surprising given REO’s concession
    that it did not raise the issue of the village’s statutory authority
    to enact the ordinance in the district court.
    To the extent REO claims the district court committed plain
    error by not finding that the village lacked statutory author-
    ity, we would still disagree. As noted above, the district court
    resolved the case on the parties’ cross-motions for summary
    judgment. We have held, however, that a court may not enter a
    summary judgment on an issue not presented by the pleadings.
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    See, e.g., Green v. Box Butte General Hosp., 
    284 Neb. 243
    ,
    
    818 N.W.2d 589
     (2012). Because the district court could not
    properly enter summary judgment on an issue REO concedes
    it did not raise in the district court, the district court obviously
    did not commit plain error by not doing so.
    CONCLUSION
    We find no error in the district court’s entry of summary
    judgment in favor of the village and against REO. Accordingly,
    we affirm.
    Affirmed.
    Papik, J., concurring.
    I agree with the majority opinion in all respects, including
    its conclusion that under our current precedent, the ordinance
    at issue does not qualify as special legislation prohibited by
    article III, § 18, of the Nebraska Constitution. I write sepa-
    rately, however, to suggest that certain aspects of our precedent
    in this area may not be consistent with the text and original
    meaning of that constitutional provision.
    Application to Municipal Ordinances.
    I have more than one concern with our current special leg-
    islation precedent. The first is whether the limits on special
    legislation expressed in article III, § 18, properly apply to
    municipal ordinances like the one challenged in this case. This
    court held that a municipal ordinance violated article III, § 18,
    as early as 1964. See Midwest Employers Council, Inc. v. City
    of Omaha, 
    177 Neb. 877
    , 
    131 N.W.2d 609
     (1964). We have
    since said on numerous occasions that article III, § 18, applies
    to municipal ordinances. See, e.g., Dowd Grain Co. v. County
    of Sarpy, 
    291 Neb. 620
    , 
    867 N.W.2d 599
     (2015); D-CO, Inc. v.
    City of La Vista, 
    285 Neb. 676
    , 
    829 N.W.2d 105
     (2013). But,
    as far as I can tell, we have never explored whether there is a
    principled basis for interpreting the text of article III, § 18, to
    do so. I am skeptical such a basis exists.
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    Article III, § 18, provides that “[t]he Legislature shall not
    pass local or special laws” in several enumerated circum-
    stances. (Emphasis supplied.) After that list of enumerated
    circumstances, article III, § 18, states as follows:
    Provided, that notwithstanding any other provisions of
    this Constitution, the Legislature shall have authority
    to separately define and classify loans and installment
    sales, to establish maximum rates within classifications
    of loans or installment sales which it establishes, and to
    regulate with respect thereto. In all other cases where a
    general law can be made applicable, no special law shall
    be enacted.
    (Second emphasis supplied.)
    Article III, § 18, thus contains three rules for three categories
    of cases: (1) an absolute prohibition on local or special laws
    in the specifically enumerated circumstances, (2) an explicit
    authorization of certain special legislation regarding loans and
    installment sales, and (3) for all other cases, a prohibition on
    special laws if “a general law can be made applicable.” For
    ease of reference, I will refer to these provisions respectively
    as “the absolute prohibition,” “the loans and installment sales
    exception,” and “the catchall prohibition.”
    I can discern no textual basis for concluding that the abso-
    lute prohibition applies to municipal ordinances. The text pro-
    vides that only “the Legislature” shall not pass local or special
    laws in the enumerated circumstances. No mention is made of
    acts of other branches or levels of government.
    As for the catchall prohibition, perhaps one could muster an
    argument that it applies to municipal ordinances by emphasiz-
    ing that the sentence in which it appears does not expressly
    refer to the Legislature. But while the catchall prohibition
    does not refer to any enacting authority, it immediately fol-
    lows the absolute prohibition and the loans and installments
    sales exception, both of which expressly refer only to the
    Legislature. This context suggests to me that all of article
    III, § 18, is aimed at laws passed by the Legislature. If that
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    context were not enough, the placement of this constitutional
    provision in article III, the article of the Nebraska Constitution
    discussing the enactment of statewide legislation, provides
    yet more evidence that article III, § 18, does not apply to
    municipal ordinances. See, also, Robert D. Miewald et al., The
    Nebraska State Constitution: A Reference Guide 156 (2d ed.
    2009) (observing that text of article III, § 18, appears to limit
    its application to Legislature).
    I recognize that this court has held that another provi-
    sion of the state Constitution that refers expressly only to the
    Legislature—article III, § 19—nonetheless applies to political
    subdivisions of the State. See Retired City Civ. Emp. Club of
    Omaha v. City of Omaha Emp. Ret. Sys., 
    199 Neb. 507
    , 
    260 N.W.2d 472
     (1977). In that case, we reasoned that to hold
    otherwise would permit the State to evade this constitutional
    restriction by creating a political subdivision and authoriz-
    ing it to do what the Nebraska Constitution prohibited the
    Legislature from doing.
    Whatever the merits of that reasoning with respect to article
    III, § 19, it seems a stretch to apply it to article III, § 18. In
    addition to restricting the enactment of “special laws,” the
    absolute prohibition of article III, § 18, forbids the enactment
    of “local” laws on subjects including “[r]egulating [c]ounty
    and [t]ownship offices”; “changing or amending the charter of
    any [t]own, [c]ity, or [v]illage”; “[p]roviding for the bonding
    of cities, towns, precincts, school districts or other munici-
    palities”; and “[p]roviding for the management of [p]ublic
    [s]chools.” If article III, § 18, applies to political subdivisions,
    its terms would appear to prevent those political subdivisions
    from governing themselves in several key areas. No such
    problems arise if article III, § 18, is interpreted to apply only
    to the Legislature.
    Special Legislation Test.
    I also have a more general concern about our special leg-
    islation jurisprudence: I question whether the test we use to
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    identify “special laws” is consistent with the original meaning
    of that term.
    Nebraska’s article III, § 18, is far from unique. Similar
    provisions are found in the legislative articles of approx-
    imately 30 other state constitutions. See Anthony Schutz,
    State Constitutional Restrictions on Special Legislation as
    Structural Restraints, 
    40 J. Legis. 39
     (2013). A number of
    jurists who have examined the history of such provisions have
    concluded that the restrictions on “special laws” would have
    been originally understood as restricting a then-common legis-
    lative practice of passing legislation that, by its terms, applied
    only to an individual person, corporation, or other entity.
    See, Laurance B. VanMeter, Reconsideration of Kentucky’s
    Prohibition of Special and Local Legislation, 
    109 Ky. L.J. 523
    ,
    524 (2021) (contending that original understanding of special
    legislation prohibited by Kentucky constitution was legisla-
    tion that “refer[red] only to a particular individual or entity”);
    Schutz, 40 J. Legis. at 58 (contending that “the primary focus
    of these provisions was on laws that identified an object and
    singled it out for special treatment”); Robert M. Ireland, The
    Problem of Local, Private, and Special Legislation in the
    Nineteenth-Century United States, 
    46 Am. J. Legal Hist. 271
    (2004). Under this conception, examples of special legislation
    would be acts granting a legal remedy or benefit to a specifi-
    cally identified party. See, also, Calloway Cty. Sheriff ’s Dep’t
    v. Woodall, 
    607 S.W.3d 557
    , 572 (Ky. 2020) (concluding that
    original understanding of local or special legislation is legisla-
    tion that “applies exclusively to particular places or particu-
    lar persons”).
    If these scholars are correct about the original understand-
    ing of the term “special laws,” our special legislation test
    may be due for reconsideration. We have held that a legisla-
    tive act will be found to constitute special legislation if it
    creates an arbitrary and unreasonable method of classifica-
    tion. See D-CO, Inc. v. City of La Vista, 
    285 Neb. 676
    , 
    829 N.W.2d 105
     (2013). But a statute could create an unreasonable
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    classification and be nothing like the type of individualized
    statutes the scholars cited above contend were the original tar-
    get of special legislation prohibitions. Taking this case as the
    basis for an example, if a statute unreasonably or arbitrarily
    treats property owners and property renters differently and
    without sufficient justification, it would be special legislation
    under our current precedent, but it is difficult to see how such
    a statute looks anything like a law that singles out a specifi-
    cally identified party for special treatment.
    Instead of policing individualized legislation, it seems to
    me that our current special legislation precedent’s focus on
    the reasonableness of classifications provides an avenue for
    parties to obtain something akin to heightened equal protec-
    tion review. Our precedent says that to withstand a special
    legislation challenge, a legislative classification “must rest
    upon some reason of public policy, some substantial difference
    in circumstances, which would naturally suggest the justice or
    expediency of diverse legislation regarding the objects to be
    classified.” Dowd Grain Co. v. County of Sarpy, 
    291 Neb. 620
    ,
    628, 
    867 N.W.2d 599
    , 606 (2015). To my ears, that sounds a
    lot like the intermediate scrutiny test developed by the U.S.
    Supreme Court under which certain types of classifications
    “must serve important governmental objectives and must be
    substantially related to achievement of those objectives.” See,
    e.g., Friehe v. Schaad, 
    249 Neb. 825
    , 832, 
    545 N.W.2d 740
    ,
    746 (1996).
    We have, I acknowledge, asserted that the focus of our spe-
    cial legislation test is different from the tests used to evaluate
    equal protection challenges. Specifically, we have said the
    following:
    The analysis under a special legislation inquiry focuses
    on the Legislature’s purpose in creating the class and
    asks if there is a substantial difference of circumstances
    to suggest the expediency of diverse legislation. This
    is different from an equal protection analysis under
    which the state interest in legislation is compared to the
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    statutory means selected by the Legislature to accomplish
    that purpose.
    Gourley v. Nebraska Methodist Health Sys., 
    265 Neb. 918
    , 939,
    
    663 N.W.2d 43
    , 66 (2003).
    With all due respect, I am not sure I grasp the difference the
    foregoing quote purports to identify. Instead, I am sympathetic
    to the view of a group of commentators who have called the
    distinction identified above “somewhat fleeting.” Miewald et
    al., supra at 159.
    To the extent our special legislation jurisprudence allows
    parties to obtain something like intermediate scrutiny equal
    protection review by alleging that a classification is spe-
    cial legislation, it is effectively a more expansive Equal
    Protection Clause. Unless a legislative classification jeop-
    ardizes the exercise of a fundamental right or categorizes
    on the basis of an inherently suspect characteristic, an equal
    protection challenge to that classification is analyzed using
    the deferential rational basis standard. See REO Enters. v.
    Village of Dorchester, 
    306 Neb. 683
    , 
    947 N.W.2d 480
     (2020).
    But this limitation does not apply to challenges brought to
    legislation under article III, § 18: One need not allege the
    jeopardization of a fundamental right or the use of a sus-
    pect classification to trigger the arguably heightened review
    required by our article III, § 18, precedent. It is not clear
    to me, however, that the text or history of article III, § 18,
    suggests that this provision should be policing the reason-
    ableness of legislative classifications at all, let alone under a
    heightened standard of scrutiny. See Schutz, 40 J. Legis. at
    55 (“[t]he text of special-legislation provisions reveals little
    in terms of a concern for substantive equality, whether it is
    the minoritarian concerns of the mid- to late-1800s or some
    broader notion of equality”).
    Conclusion.
    No party in this case asked us to reconsider whether article
    III, § 18, properly applies to municipal ordinances. Neither
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    were we asked to reconsider the tests we have developed to
    identify special legislation under that constitutional provision.
    In the absence of such arguments, the majority’s decision
    to analyze this case under our current precedent makes per-
    fect sense.
    That said, this court has emphasized that the “main inquiry”
    in interpreting the Nebraska Constitution is the original
    meaning of its provisions. See State ex rel. State Railway
    Commission v. Ramsey, 
    151 Neb. 333
    , 340, 
    37 N.W.2d 502
    ,
    507 (1949). We have also stressed the importance of adhering
    to the text of constitutional provisions. See 
    id.
     For the reasons
    discussed in this concurrence, I believe our precedent under
    article III, § 18, may not be entirely consistent with that pro-
    vision’s original meaning and text. In an appropriate case, I
    would be open to reconsidering that precedent.