FLORIDA PACE FUNDING AGENCY v. PINELLAS COUNTY

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 27, 2024
Docket23-0985
StatusPublished

This text of FLORIDA PACE FUNDING AGENCY v. PINELLAS COUNTY (FLORIDA PACE FUNDING AGENCY v. PINELLAS COUNTY) 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
FLORIDA PACE FUNDING AGENCY v. PINELLAS COUNTY, (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

FLORIDA PACE FUNDING AGENCY,

Appellant,

v.

PINELLAS COUNTY,

Appellee.

No. 2D23-985

March 27, 2024

Appeal pursuant to Fla. R. App. P. 9.130 from the Circuit Court for Pinellas County; George M. Jirotka, Judge.

James C. Dinkins of CivForge Law, P.A., Orlando, and Bradley J. Ellis, General Counsel of Icard, Merrill, Cullis, Timm, Furen & Ginsburg, P.A., Sarasota; and Anthony J. Manganiello, III, of Icard, Merrill, Cullis, Timm, Furen & Ginsburg, P.A., Sarasota (substituted as counsel of record), for Appellant.

Kelly L. Vicari, Senior Assistant County Attorney, and Donald S. Crowell, Chief Assistant County Attorney, Pinellas County Attorney's Office, Clearwater, for Appellee.

ROTHSTEIN-YOUAKIM, Judge. Florida PACE Funding Agency (FPFA) appeals the trial court's order denying its motion to dismiss for improper venue. See Fla. R. App. P. 9.130(a)(3)(A) (permitting appeal of nonfinal orders concerning venue). Pinellas County persuaded the court to apply the "sword-wielder" exception to the home venue privilege to keep this lawsuit in Pinellas County. Although we conclude that the County's claims do not trigger that exception, we nevertheless affirm because the forum selection clause in the interlocal agreement between the County and FPFA requires that this dispute be litigated in Pinellas County. Background FPFA is a local government entity created under section 163.01(7), Florida Statutes (2010). It finances energy conservation and hurricane "hardening" improvements on residential and commercial properties. Property owners may use FPFA financing to cover 100% of the costs for eligible projects, including equipment, materials, and labor. FPFA approves the companies that install those improvements. Section 163.08(3) then authorizes an entity like FPFA to levy non-ad valorem assessments to collect the cost of those improvements from the property owner over time. The County (like other counties in Florida) has used its home rule powers under article VIII, section 1(g), of the Florida Constitution to adopt consumer protection ordinances that regulate the operation of Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) local government entities such as FPFA. To that end, the County adopted ordinance 17-37 in 2017. That ordinance is codified at chapter 42, article XIV, of the Pinellas County Code. Article XIV imposes important limitations on a PACE local government's ability to operate in Pinellas County:  A PACE local government may operate a program only if it has an interlocal agreement with the County (§ 42-445).  Only nonresidential property owners are eligible to participate in a PACE program in the County (§§ 42-440, 42-447).

2  Even as to nonresidential property owners, a PACE local government must still comply with a series of requirements, including using only authorized contractors to perform any work, ensuring that any work complies with code, and utilizing materials that conform with federal and state standards (§ 42-446).  A PACE local government must also provide mandatory notices to nonresidential property owners on a variety of topics, including the total amount of the debt, that the PACE assessment will appear on the property owner's tax bill, and that the PACE assessment may hinder the sale or refinance of the property (§ 42-446). The interlocal agreement Initially, FPFA recognized the County's right to regulate its operations. Indeed, it entered into an interlocal agreement with the County in 2019 that recited the following: Whereas, the County adopted an ordinance setting minimum standards for the operation of any Property Assessed Clean Energy [program] . . . . ; Whereas, the Agency [FPFA] intends to operate a non- residential PACE program within Pinellas County and recognizes that, in addition to the limitations and requirements of applicable state and federal law, it must also comply with the limitations and requirements of the PACE Ordinance. The agreement then expressly adopts those recitals: "The 'whereas clauses' above are true, correct, and incorporated into this agreement." In addition, the agreement provides that "[a]ll requirements and conditions as defined for the conduct of a PACE Program within the PACE Ordinance are in full effect as if fully laid out herein." Such requirements and conditions necessarily include the ordinance's prohibition of residential PACE financing, together with the ordinance's requirement that a PACE local government entity like FPFA conduct its program in the County under an active interlocal agreement. The

3 agreement also provides that "venue for any legal or equitable action involving the County arising out of or relating to this Agreement or the Agency or its program in Pinellas County shall be in the appropriate state court in and for Pinellas County." (Emphasis added.) For a little more than two years, FPFA operated peaceably under the interlocal agreement. But that all changed in late 2022 after FPFA obtained a broad final judgment from a Leon County circuit court in a bond validation action. The bond validation judgment and FPFA's subsequent termination of the interlocal agreement In October 2022, a circuit court in Leon County validated a series of FPFA bonds worth up to $5 billion. Significantly, that same judgment includes language that seemingly permits FPFA to finance commercial and residential improvements statewide, without regard to municipal or county ordinances that regulate PACE local governments:1 The power and authority of [FPFA] to independently engage and transact with private property owners, enter into financing agreements in the manner provided by the Legislature with private property owners throughout the State to accomplish compelling state interests and impose non-ad valorem assessments, issue its obligations to fund and finance qualifying improvements, all as provided by general law is separate, alternative, concurrent with, and in all respects independent from any other financing regime or program implemented by any other local government in Florida, unless in all respects voluntarily agreed otherwise by [FPFA] from time to time. The additional supplemental authority and nonderogation provisions of sections 163.08(1) and (16), Florida Statutes,

1 The County was not a named party in the bond validation action

and contends that it had no notice of that lawsuit before the entry of the judgment. We express no view on whether the County is bound by the bond validation judgment or whether that judgment includes determinations that exceed the permissible scope of such a proceeding.

4 (2022) relate to the authority and subject matter of the compelling state interest in enabling property owners to voluntarily finance qualifying improvements with local government assistance, and does not authorize regulation of one local government by another in the financing and non-ad valorem assessment process described by the Legislature which in the instance of the Supplemental Act and its consensual general law authority providing for voluntary imposition of assessments for qualifying improvements on private property, is within the reserved general law domain of the Legislature.

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Bluebook (online)
FLORIDA PACE FUNDING AGENCY v. PINELLAS COUNTY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-pace-funding-agency-v-pinellas-county-fladistctapp-2024.