Cambridge Southport, LLC v. Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District

721 S.E.2d 736, 218 N.C. App. 287, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 17, 2012
DocketCOA11-438
StatusPublished

This text of 721 S.E.2d 736 (Cambridge Southport, LLC v. Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cambridge Southport, LLC v. Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District, 721 S.E.2d 736, 218 N.C. App. 287, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 49 (N.C. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

McGEE, Judge.

Town and Country Developers at Wilmington, Inc. (Town and Country) obtained a loan from Regions Bank (the Bank) to develop an 88-unit townhome subdivision (the subdivision) in Brunswick County. Town and Country signed an Application for Service Capacity Allocation (the Application) on 23 January 2006 with Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District (Defendant), a sanitary district formed and operating in accordance with Article 2 of section 130A of the North Carolina General Statutes. The Application was a necessary prerequisite for Town and Country to obtain wastewater collection and treatment services from Defendant. The Application stated that Town and Country had three years “to complete the project as described in [the] Application or the allocation for service capacity [would] expire and any proceeds [Town and Country had] paid for this allocation approval [would] be non-refundable.” Town and Country was required to make a down payment in the amount of $88,000.00 at the time it filed the Application. Town and Country had paid Defendant the amount of $264,000.00 in total impact fees that *289 were required for Defendant to service the subdivision by 11 October 2006. The North Carolina Division of Water Quality (DWQ), a division of the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), issued a permit (the permit) to Defendant on 4 August 2006, which allowed Defendant to service the subdivision. The permit was effective from 4 August 2006 “until rescinded[,]” and the record is devoid of any evidence that the permit was ever rescinded.

In mid-2008, Town and Country defaulted on its obligations and the Bank foreclosed on the subdivision. Defendant sent the Bank a letter dated 9 December 2009 in which Defendant stated that the allocations for wastewater treatment issued for the subdivision had expired on 23 January 2009, and that the Bank “or another party” could “reapply for a new allocation” for the subdivision. Defendant stated that, under a revised cost schedule for allocations, in order to move forward with the subdivision, new allocation total impact fees would cost $648,000.00. Defendant further stated that the total impact fees of $264,000.00 previously paid by Town and Country were nonrefundable and would not apply toward the $648,000.00 that Defendant claimed was owed with “reapplication”

Cambridge Southport, LLC (Plaintiff) is a real estate developer. Plaintiff purchased the subdivision from the Bank on 31 December 2009 with the intention of moving forward with Town and Country’s original plan for the subdivision. Plaintiff contends, and Defendant does not dispute, that prior to foreclosure, Town and Country “completely built, installed and implemented all of the infrastructure necessary to service the wastewater needs of the entire [s]ubdivision[.]” DWQ received a “final engineering certification for the [subdivision] on March 15, 2007[,]” and accepted this certification. Initially, Plaintiff attempted to obtain direct approval from Defendant for a waiver of the “new” allocation fees. Though Defendant’s initial response to Plaintiff was optimistic, Defendant ultimately decided, at a 23 February 2010 Board of Commissioners meeting, to require Plaintiff to reapply and to pay the full amount of the newly assessed allocation fees.

Plaintiff filed an amended complaint dated 29 July 2010 alleging that Defendant’s action in requiring Plaintiff to reapply for waste-water service capacity allocation was unlawful. Defendant answered and counterclaimed. In a motion dated 12 October 2010, Plaintiff moved for “Summary Judgment and/or Declaratory Judgment.” Plaintiff contended that the North Carolina General Assembly, through 2009 N.C. Session Law ch. 406 (as amended by 2009 N.C. *290 Session Law ch. 484, 2009 N.C. Session Law ch. 550, 2009 N.C. Session Law ch. 572, and 2010 N.C. Session Law ch. 177), “An Act to Extend Certain Government Approvals Affecting the Development of Real Property Within the State” (the Act), “applies to the [subdivision] and entirely precludes Defendant’s [additional [f]ees” as a matter of law.

The trial court granted Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on 6 January 2011, ruling that the Act, as amended, applied to the Application and “precluded and prohibited” Defendant from charging Plaintiff additional fees. Defendant appeals.

I.

Defendant argues that the trial court “erred in granting . . . Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and/or declaratory judgment.” We disagree.

Defendant contends that the Application is not subject to the Act because it was only a contract between Defendant and Town and Country. Defendant argues that the Act could not serve to toll the three-year validity period included in the terms of the Application. The Act provides:

SECTION 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the “Permit Extension Act of 2009.”
SECTION 2. The General Assembly makes the following findings:
(1) There exists a state of economic emergency in the State of North Carolina and the nation, which has drastically affected various segments of the North Carolina economy, but none as severely as the State’s banking, real estate, and construction sectors.
(2) The real estate finance sector of the economy is in severe decline due to the creation, bundling, and widespread selling of leveraged securities, such as credit default swaps, and due to excessive defaults on sub-prime mortgages and the resultant foreclosures on a vast scale, thereby widening the mortgage finance crisis. The extreme tightening of lending standards for home buyers and other real estate borrowers has reduced access to the capital markets.
(3) As a result of the crisis in the real estate finance sector of the economy, real estate developers and redevelopers, including home builders, and commercial, office, and industrial developers, have experienced an industry-wide decline, *291 including reduced demand, cancelled orders, declining sales and rentals, price reductions, increased inventory, fewer buyers who qualify to purchase homes, layoffs, and scaled back growth plans.
(5) The process of obtaining the myriad of other government approvals, such as wetlands permits, treatment works approvals, on-site wastewater disposal permits, stream encroachment permits, flood hazard area permits, highway access permits, and numerous waivers and variances, can be difficult and expensive; further, changes in the law can render these approvals, if expired or lapsed, difficult to renew or reobtain.
(6) County and municipal governments, including local sewer and water authorities, obtain permits and approvals from State government agencies, particularly the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, which permits and approvals may expire or lapse due to the state of the economy and the inability of both the public sector and the private sector to proceed with projects authorized by the permit or approval.
(8) The current national recession has severely weakened the building industry, and many landowners and

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Bluebook (online)
721 S.E.2d 736, 218 N.C. App. 287, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cambridge-southport-llc-v-southeast-brunswick-sanitary-district-ncctapp-2012.