CORRECTIONS CORPORATION OF AMERICA v. CITY OF PEMBROKE PINES

230 So. 3d 477
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 1, 2017
Docket4D14-4815
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 230 So. 3d 477 (CORRECTIONS CORPORATION OF AMERICA v. CITY OF PEMBROKE PINES) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CORRECTIONS CORPORATION OF AMERICA v. CITY OF PEMBROKE PINES, 230 So. 3d 477 (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

Ciklin, J.

We grant appellee’s motion for rehearing in part, withdraw our previously issued opinion, and substitute the following in its place to correct an erroneous factual reference.

Corrections Corporation of America (“CCA”) appeals a trial court order— sounding in declaratory relief—holding that the City of Pembroke Pines did not have a duty to provide water and sewer services to CCA’s property site, as well as a final order dismissing CCA’s counterclaims. Because we find that Pembroke Pines affirmatively expressed its intention to assume such a duty, we reverse the order determining that Pembroke Pines did not. Because it appears the trial court dismissed CCA’s counterclaims based on its determination that Pembroke Pines did not have a duty to CCA, we also reverse the order dismissing CCA’s counterclaims.

Background

CCA sought sewer and water services from Pembroke Pines for its property located in the Town of Southwest Ranches but adjacent to Pembroke Pines (“the CCA site”). Pembroke Pines operates potable water and sewer systems that service properties within its boundaries, as well as some properties outside of those boundaries. Those services provided outside of the boundaries extend to a limited number of residential and commercial properties. Southwest Ranches does not have potable water or sewer systems to service its residents, and Pembroke Pines is the only provider in the area. The CCA site is surrounded by four other properties, all of which are, or were at one time, serviced by Pembroke Pines’ water or sewer systems (or both). Only one of these properties is actually located within the boundaries of Pembroke Pines.1 At all times relevant to this dispute, Pembroke Pines admitted that it had the capacity and infrastructure in place to provide water and sewer services to the CCA site through its systems that abut the site.

In 2005, CCA and Southwest Ranches entered into an agreement concerning the development of a correctional facility on the CCA site. The agreement provided that “all required water, sewer and other utility services are available” at the CCA site. CCA was advised that while a water and sewer agreement with Pembroke Pines would be required, it was unclear whether the Pembroke Pines City Commission would grant those services. However, later in 2005, Southwest Ranches entered into an interlocal agreement with Pembroke Pines regarding local roadways and other matters (“Roadways ILA”), in which Pembroke Pines agreed not to interfere with the development or operation of CCA’s jail facility:

Jail Facility. [Pembroke Pines] shall not interfere with [CCA’s], or its successors or assigns, development and/or operation of the jail facility, or with [Southwest Ranches]’s Agreement with [CCA] concerning development of same.

In 2011, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) tentatively selected the CCA site to build a new detention facility. A few days later, Pembroke Pines and Southwest Ranches entered into another interlocal agreement concerning emergency medical and fire services (the “EMS ILA”) that provided, in pertinent part:

Jail Facility: [Pembroke Pines] acknowledges that it has sufficient capacity to deliver emergency medical protection and fire prevention services to [Southwest Ranchesj’s future 2,500 bed detention/corrections facility, located on property currently owned by [CCA]. [Pembroke Pines] agrees to timely provide Broward County, upon request, any documentation that Broward County may require to acknowledge that Pembroke Pines has the capacity, ability, and the willingness to service this facility under the terms and conditions contained herein.... Further, [Pembroke • Pines] agrees that it has sufficient capacity to provide water and sewer service to [Southwest Ranches]’s future 2,500 bed detention/corrections facility (approximately 500,000 gross square feet of floor area), and that it will expeditiously approve a water/waste water utility agreement to provide such service, at [Pembroke Pines Ys then pre-. vailing rate, in accordance with state law ([Pembroke Pinesj’s rate + surcharge).

(Emphasis added). In a special meeting on June 27, 2011, the Pembroke Pines City Commission voted on and approved the EMS ILA in Resolution No. 3312.

Some five months later, in December 2011, the City Commission passed yet another affirmative motion, that one being “to , approve direction that, should CCA come forward with a request for Pembroke Pines to provide them water and sewer service, that the water and sewer agreement stipulate that it would be for not more than 1,500 beds based on the Engineer’s report” (the “December 2011 Motion”). , CCA then submitted to Pembroke Pines a proposed Water and Sewer Installation and Service Agreement (the “W & S Agreement”) for a 1,500-bed facility, and requested that the matter be finalized at the first available City Commission meeting. Pursuant to the EMS ILA, the Pembroke Pines city attorney and the Pembroke Pines city manager agreed on the contractual terms with CCA and the W & S Agreement was then submitted to the City Commission. In an abrupt departure from the numerous manifestations of intent expressed by the Pembroke Pines City Commission over the previous six years, the City Commission did not vote on the W & S Agreement and quite to the contrary, formally adopted a resolution expressing its opposition to erecting the ICE detention center on the CCA site. In a later meeting, the City Commission voted to both terminate the EMS ILA and, because it was “in doubt as to its rights and obligations,” and to direct the city attorney to seek declaratory relief.

In its action for declaratory judgment, Pembroke Pines sought a ruling that it was not required to provide CCA with water and sewer services or, if it was required to provide utility services, a determination of “whether there1 [were] any limitations on the obligation to provide service.” Following trial, the court entered an order determining that Pembroke Pines did not, in.fact, have a duty to provide water and sewer services to CCA.

Analysis

On appeal, CCA argues that Pembroke Pines assumed a legally enforceable duty to provide the CCA site with those services by expressly manifesting a desire or intent to provide the services. CCA maintains the evidence at trial established that the ongoing conduct of Pembroke Pines created a duty to provide utilities. As such, the trial court’s rulings concerned a question of fact that “must be sustained if supported by competent substantial evidence.” Bellino v. W & W Lumber & Bldg. Supplies, Inc., 902 So.2d 829, 832 (Fla. 4th DCA 2005) (quoting State v. Glatzmayer, 789 So.2d 297, 301 n.7 (Fla. 2001)). We agree with CCA.

As a general rule, “a municipality has no duty to supply services to areas outside its boundaries.” Allen’s Creek Props., Inc. v. City of Clearwater, 679 So.2d 1172, 1174 (Fla. 1996). In Allen’s Creek, the Florida Supreme Court recognized exceptions to this general rule where (1) a municipality has agreed to extend its services by contract, and (2) where a municipality has assumed a duty to provide such services through its conduct. Id. at 1175-76.

With- regard to.the conduct exception, the court explained:

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Bluebook (online)
230 So. 3d 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corrections-corporation-of-america-v-city-of-pembroke-pines-fladistctapp-2017.