Executive Air Taxi v. City of Bismarck

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 2008
Docket06-3586
StatusPublished

This text of Executive Air Taxi v. City of Bismarck (Executive Air Taxi v. City of Bismarck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Executive Air Taxi v. City of Bismarck, (8th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 06-3586 ___________

Executive Air Taxi Corporation, a * North Dakota Corporation, * * Plaintiff/Appellant, * * v. * * Appeals from the United States City of Bismarck, North Dakota, a * District Court for the municipal corporation; Mark Fetch; * District of North Dakota. Dr. Steven J. Scherr, OnStar * Management, Inc.; Timothy J. Thorsen, * Airport Operations Manager; Gregory B.* Haug, Airport Manager; Robert H. * Simmers, Simson Investment Company; * Bryce Hill, City Commissioner with * Airport Portfolio; William Sorenson, * Former Mayor; Cook Leasing, Inc.; * Michael Aarestad, Aircraft Management * Services, dba Aircraft Maintenance * Services; Alan Sauter; William Wocken, * City Administrator, City of Bismarck, * * Defendants/Appellees. * * ___________

No. 06-3600 ___________

Executive Air Taxi Corporation, a * North Dakota Corporation, * * Plaintiff/Appellee, * * v. * * City of Bismarck, North Dakota, a * municipal corporation, * * Defendant/Appellant, * * Mark Fetch; Dr. Steven J. Scherr, * OnStar Management, Inc., * * Defendants, * * Timothy J. Thorsen, Airport Operations * Manager; Gregory B. Haug, Airport * Manager, * * Defendants/Appellants, * * Robert H. Simmers, Simson Investment * Company, * * Defendant, * * Bryce Hill, City Commissioner with * Airport Portfolio; William Sorenson, * Former Mayor; * * Defendants/Appellants, * * Cook Leasing, Inc.; Michael Aarestad, * Aircraft Management Services, dba * Aircraft Maintenance Services; Alan * Sauter, * * Defendants, *

-2- * William Wocken, City Administrator, * City of Bismarck, * * Defendant/Appellant. * * ___________

No. 06-3602 ___________

Executive Air Taxi Corporation, * a North Dakota Corporation, * * Plaintiff/Appellee, * * v. * * City of Bismarck, North Dakota, * a municipal corporation; Mark * Fetch; Dr. Steven J. Scherr, OnStar * Management, Inc.; Timothy J. * Thorsen, Airport Operations * Manager; Gregory B. Haug, Airport * Manager; Robert H. Simmers, * Simson Investment Company; * Bryce Hill, City Commissioner with * Airport Portfolio; William Sorenson, * Former Mayor, * * Defendants, * * Cook Leasing, Inc., * * Defendant/Appellant, * * Michael Aarestad, Aircraft Management *

-3- Services, dba Aircraft Maintenance * Services; Alan Sauter; William Wocken, * City Administrator, City of Bismarck, * * Defendants. * ___________

Submitted: September 24, 2007 Filed: March 4, 2008 ___________

Before COLLOTON, BEAM, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges. ___________

COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.

Executive Air Taxi Corporation (“EATC”) appeals an adverse grant of summary judgment on its equal protection and substantive due process claims related to its activities at the Bismarck Municipal Airport (“BMA”). It also appeals certain discovery rulings. The City of Bismarck (“the City”) and Cook Leasing, Inc., (“Cook”) cross-appeal adverse summary judgment rulings on a contract claim and a motion for sanctions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11. We affirm the district court1 in all respects.

I.

EATC is a North Dakota corporation that has provided commercial aeronautical services at BMA since the mid-1970s. From then until the filing of this suit, EATC was the only full-service fixed base operator (“FBO”) at BMA. A full-service FBO is a business that provides a full range of aeronautical services, including aircraft

1 The Honorable Patrick A. Conmy, United States District Judge for the District of North Dakota.

-4- fueling, aircraft maintenance, charter services, air ambulance services, and aircraft and hanger rental.

The City, which owns and operates BMA, was a limited service provider during the same time period, providing aircraft fueling, hangar storage, and towing services. The private party defendants are, or at one time were, limited service providers at BMA. Robert Simmers and Michael Aarestad own Simson Investment Company (“Simson”), which owns buildings on land leased at BMA; Simmers and Aarestad also own Aircraft Management Services, Inc., (“AMS”), which leases space from Simson, and provides pilot services, flight instruction, and aircraft maintenance. Steven J. Scherr owns OnStar Management, Inc., which rents aircraft. Cook Leasing, Inc. (“Cook”) also rents an aircraft. Mark Fetch and Allen Sauter provided flight instruction services based out of other airports, but occasionally picked students up at BMA, and at various times worked for other defendants.

In 1976, EATC negotiated a twenty-year lease with the City for land at BMA and renewed it for an additional ten years in 1995. The lease required EATC to operate a flying school, charter service, and an aircraft repair station, and to build facilities at BMA to provide these services. The agreement provided for low lease rates of two cents per square foot of unimproved property and six cents per square foot of improved property. By 2005, this rate had increased only to three cents per square foot of unimproved property and remained unchanged at six cents per square foot of improved property. No limited service provider had a comparable lease with BMA.

In 1989, the City issued EATC a permit to sell aviation fuel. The City and EATC are the only fuel providers at BMA. Revenue from fuel sales is a significant portion of the city’s total revenue from the airport.

-5- In May 2004, EATC brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the City violated the Equal Protection Clause and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by treating other businesses operating at BMA differently than EATC. According to EATC, the private party defendants conspired with the City in this discrimination, which caused EATC to lose revenue and to suffer a diminution in the value of its business. The district court rejected these claims, holding that the City had a rational basis for treating EATC differently, and that EATC was not deprived of any property interest protected by the Due Process Clause. The district court also refused to modify two discovery orders entered by a magistrate judge. The first order denied EATC’s request to use a special software retrieval program to search for deleted materials on a City employee’s laptop. The second order denied EATC’s discovery request for financial information from private party defendants. The district court also rejected the City’s counterclaim against EATC for breach of its fuel permit, holding that the statute of limitations barred any breach occurring before June 22, 1999, and that the entire alleged breach was waived. Finally, the district court denied Cook’s Rule 11 motion against EATC, finding that EATC’s allegations were not so baseless as to warrant sanctions.

II.

We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, considering the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the non- moving party. Uhiren v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., 346 F.3d 824, 827 (8th Cir. 2003).

A.

EATC claims that the City violated its constitutional right to equal protection of the laws by treating various limited service providers more favorably than EATC. It alleges that the City refused to provide it with towing services, references, and other

-6- means of attracting business that the City provided to other businesses.

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