CFR Partners, LP, & CFR Dev., Inc. v. Jefferson Codorus Joint Sewer Auth.

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 13, 2020
Docket676 C.D. 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of CFR Partners, LP, & CFR Dev., Inc. v. Jefferson Codorus Joint Sewer Auth. (CFR Partners, LP, & CFR Dev., Inc. v. Jefferson Codorus Joint Sewer Auth.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CFR Partners, LP, & CFR Dev., Inc. v. Jefferson Codorus Joint Sewer Auth., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

CFR Partners, LP, and CFR : Development, Inc., : : Appellants : : v. : No. 676 C.D. 2019 : Argued: December 12, 2019 Jefferson Codorus Joint Sewer : Authority :

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE WOJCIK FILED: January 13, 2019

CFR Partners, LP, and CFR Development, Inc. (collectively, CFR)1 appeal from a final order of the Court of Common Pleas of York County (trial court) denying CFR’s motion for summary judgment and granting Jefferson Codorus Joint Sewer Authority’s (Authority) cross motion for summary judgment. CFR contends that the trial court erred in its interpretation of the Municipality Authorities Act (Act)2 and by determining that the Authority did not engage in ratemaking or feemaking when it entered into a contract with CFR establishing a “Reservation/Tapping Fee.” We affirm.

1 CFR Partners, L.P., is the successor in interest of CFR Development, Inc. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 372a.

2 53 Pa. C.S. §§5601-5623. I. Background The salient facts are not in dispute. CFR, a real estate developer, owns an 80-acre tract of land in Codorus Township, York County, Pennsylvania, upon which it is developing a residential subdivision known as “Codorus Estates” (Property). The Authority, a municipal authority created pursuant to the Act, operates a collection, transportation, and disposal system (Sewer System) for portions of Jefferson Borough and Codorus Township, including the Property. In order to develop the Property, CFR needed to arrange for sewage treatment. CFR initially purchased a private sewage treatment facility to temporarily serve the Property, but the private facility was not large enough to accommodate the proposed 419 Equivalent Dwelling Units (EDUs). Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 376a. Once development of the Property began, CFR entered into a Sewage Capacity Reservation Agreement with the Authority in July 2006 (2006 Agreement), in which it reserved 419 EDUs in the Sewer System at $2,500 per EDU for a total of $1,047,500. R.R. at 401a-11a. In August 2006, the parties also entered into a Construction and Improvements Agreement (Construction Agreement), by which CFR agreed to pay for the construction of certain parts of the Sewer System. R.R. at 413a-14a. At its September 2008 monthly meeting, the Authority publicly discussed applying for a Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) grant to help offset the cost of the construction of the Sewer System. The Authority again discussed the possibility of applying for a grant at its monthly meetings in November and December 2008. At the January 2009 meeting, the Authority, by Resolution No. 2009-01, authorized application for the DCED grant to help offset the cost of the construction of the Sewer System.

2 Following the housing market crash in 2008, CFR determined it did not need the entire amount of EDUs it had reserved in the 2006 Agreement and approached the Authority about renegotiating the terms of the 2006 Agreement. On August 5, 2009, CFR and the Authority entered into a new Sewage Capacity Reservation Agreement (2009 Agreement), by which the parties revoked the 2006 Agreement, modified the Construction Agreement, and agreed to reduce the number of EDUs reserved from 419 to 189 with CFR paying for the cost of such capacity including both the reservation and tapping fees, and its previously agreed upon share of the Sewer System construction costs for the lump sum of $1,100,000, which represented a cost of roughly $5,820.10 per EDU. The 2009 Agreement provided CFR with 20 years to use the reserved sewage capacity instead of the original 10 years contained in the 2006 Agreement. The 2009 Agreement further provided that the Reservation Fee “shall include any charge from the Authority for tapping into the [Sewer] System (‘Tapping Fee’) and such Tapping Fee for all units of Capacity reserved in this Agreement shall be considered pre-paid.” R.R. at 481a. The Authority approved the 2009 Agreement by Resolution No. 2009-07. At this point, the Authority had not passed a resolution at a public meeting establishing a tapping fee for the Sewer System. R.R. at 384a. At the same time the Authority entered the 2009 Agreement with CFR, the Authority accepted and, thereafter received, the DCED grant in the amount of $3,539,686 to aid in the construction of the Sewer System, which helped to offset construction costs of the Sewer System.3 The Authority also entered into an

3 DCED awarded the grant about two weeks before the parties entered into the 2009 Agreement. R.R. at 392a. CFR states it was not aware of the DCED grant application and award, even though it had been a topic of discussion at several public meetings. See Appellant CFR’s Brief at 17. 3 Amended and Restated Agreement (Codorus Ventures Agreement) with Codorus Ventures, LLC (Codorus Ventures) for the purchase of a wastewater treatment plant on a portion of Codorus Ventures’ property in Codorus Township, which was approved by Resolution No. 2009-06. R.R. at 491a-501a, 524a. Pursuant to the Codorus Ventures Agreement, Codorus Ventures agreed to construct the wastewater treatment plant and dedicate it to the Authority. R.R. at 493a. In exchange, the Authority agreed to reserve 189 EDUs in its Sewer System for Codorus Ventures and not charge it any fees for reserving such capacity. R.R. at 494a-95a. The Authority also agreed to make two payments to Codorus Ventures totaling $3,500,000. R.R. at 493a-94a. The Authority did not charge Codorus Ventures a reservation or tapping fee. R.R. at 490a-511a. On December 1, 2010, the Authority adopted for the first time a resolution establishing a tapping fee of $1,500 per EDU. R.R. at 549a, 559a-60a, 603a. The Authority did not establish a reservation fee or connection fee. Upon learning of the tapping fee of $1,500 per EDU, which was significantly less than the $5,820.10 per EDU that CFR agreed to pay pursuant to the terms of the 2009 Agreement, CFR commenced litigation to void the 2009 Agreement, in whole or in part, and in particular, the reservation and tapping fees charged thereunder. In 2011, CFR filed a writ of summons, followed by a complaint in 2013. In Counts 1-10 of the Complaint, CFR claimed that the 2009 Agreement violated the ratemaking and feemaking subsections of the Act by setting reservation and tapping fees. In Count 11, CFR averred that the Authority violated the competitive bidding requirements of Section 5614 of the Act, 53 Pa. C.S. §5614, by entering into a contract for the construction of a wastewater treatment plant without engaging in competitive bidding. On these grounds, CFR sought to rescind the 2009

4 Agreement and requested approximately $560,000 in damages, which it claimed were overpayments paid under the 2009 Agreement. In response, the Authority filed preliminary objections, which the trial court overruled. The Authority then filed an answer with new matter and a counterclaim, which CFR answered. The Authority responded that the 2009 Agreement was a contract entered into pursuant to its power to contract. The Authority claimed that its power to contract is not limited by the ratemaking and feemaking provisions of the Act, and therefore, the 2009 Agreement is valid and enforceable. The Authority also averred that it did not contract with Codorus Ventures for the construction of the wastewater treatment plant in question, but rather contracted to purchase an already completed wastewater treatment plant, which did not trigger the competitive bidding requirements of the Act. At the close of discovery, the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
CFR Partners, LP, & CFR Dev., Inc. v. Jefferson Codorus Joint Sewer Auth., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cfr-partners-lp-cfr-dev-inc-v-jefferson-codorus-joint-sewer-auth-pacommwct-2020.