Franklin High Yield Tax-Free Income Fund v. County of Martin

152 F.3d 736, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 18697
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 1998
Docket97-3727
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 152 F.3d 736 (Franklin High Yield Tax-Free Income Fund v. County of Martin) 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
Franklin High Yield Tax-Free Income Fund v. County of Martin, 152 F.3d 736, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 18697 (8th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

FAGG, Circuit Judge.

In this breach of contract and securities fraud lawsuit, municipal bondholder Franklin High Yield Tax-Free Income Fund appeals the district court’s judgment on the pleadings in favor of several counties and their commissioners. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

We review de novo the district court’s decision to grant judgment on the pleadings. See Lion Oil Co. v. Tosco Corp., 90 F.3d 268, 270 (8th Cir.1996). Judgment on the pleadings is proper when the moving party clearly shows there are no material factual issues and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See id. “Under this strict standard, we accept as true all facts pled by [Franklin] and draw all reasonable inferences from the pleadings in [Franklin’s] favor.” We present the facts in this light.

To develop rental housing for moderate income and elderly tenants, five Minnesota counties (the counties) created the Southcen-tral Minnesota Multi-County Housing and Redevelopment Authority (the Authority) and appointed two members each to the Authority’s board. After the counties and the Authority established plans for the housing projects, the counties gave the Authority power to raise financing by issuing revenue bonds and to provide additional security for the bonds by guaranteeing funding for potential operating deficits. The guarantee was viewed as necessary to make the bonds attractive to investors. Thus, each county and the Authority signed identical operating deficit agreements (the Agreements) stating that if the Authority projected its revenues would fall short of its costs for an upcoming year, each county would pay its proportionate share to overcome the deficit. The Agreements provided that the Authority would collect each county’s share through a special benefit tax levied by the Authority with the county’s consent. See Minn.Stat. Ann. § 469.033 subd. 6 (West 1994) (“Subject to the consent by resolution of the governing body” of municipality, authority can levy special benefit tax on municipality’s taxable property). Because in the counties’ view, § 496.033 subdivision 6 prevented the counties from prospectively approving the Authority’s future levy of a special benefit tax, each county agreed “that during the term of this Agreement, the County will use its best efforts to approve the [Authority’s] Special Benefit Tax levy ... and the County represents that it reasonably expects to give such approvals to the [Authority]. The County further represents that it presently intends and expects that such levy will be approved.”

The Authority issued the bonds in May 1993 under a trust indenture that incorporated the Agreements as additional security for the bonds. To inform potential investors about the bonds, the Authority issued an official statement emphasizing that each county had agreed to use its best efforts to approve a tax levy to cover operating deficits. Athough the Agreements did not say so, the statement cautioned that the Agreements did not bind the counties to levy taxes and that the counties retained power to reject a levy “for any reason whatsoever.” A few days *739 later, the county attorney for each county issued an opinion letter confirming that the Agreement was a “valid and legally binding obligation of the County.” Relying on the Agreements, Franklin bought half of the bonds at a cost of $10 million. Individual investors purchased the rest.

The housing project did not fare well. The Authority projected an operating deficit for 1996 and sought the counties’ approval of a $516,876 tax levy. Although each county’s board of commissioners was the same as when the counties entered into the Agreements, each county board unanimously voted to deny the levy request after the commissioners communicated with each other about it. According to Franklin’s allegations, “none of the counties made any effort whatsoever to approve the levy.” Indeed, Franklin alleges the counties engaged in a concerted effort to deny the levy and to avoid the Agreements’ obligations. For example, when an Authority representative attended one county board meeting to provide information about the projected shortfall, the board cut his presentation short and voted to deny the request before the representative could ask for approval. Before the Authority’s meetings with the other four counties, officials from the first county contacted the other four counties’ officials and urged them to deny the levy request, and sent a letter stating the commissioners had no legal obligation to pledge tax dollars for the project. In denying the levy request, each county gave a similar explanation, stating that it would not approve the request because the other counties would not or had not done so.

As a result of the levy denial, Moody’s Investor Service downgraded the bond ratings, stating the counties’ refusal to approve the levy “contradicts the position they took at the time the issue was brought to market ... disregarding the concept and spirit behind the operating deficit agreement” and representing “a significant retreat from a position which was an important security feature of the [Authority’s] bond issue.” A few months later, the housing project went into receivership so that project revenues would go first to payment of operating costs rather than to pay bondholders.

In its lawsuit, Franklin alleges the counties breached the Agreements by failing to use their best efforts to approve the levy. Franklin also alleges fraud claims under state and federal securities laws. The district court dismissed. Franklin’s breach of contract claim, concluding the Agreements “cannot be read to require the Counties, in their legislative capacity, to approve the levy request,” and the best efforts clause was satisfied by the counties’ executive function merely recommending the levy to the legislative function. In the district court’s view, all of Franklin’s claims sought “to impose liability on the ground that the counties failed to approve the levy request, despite the fact that the counties reserved the right to deny such requests.” Thus, the district court held Franklin could not justifiably rely on the best efforts clause in the Agreements. Because justifiable reliance is an essential element of Franklin’s fraud claims, the district court dismissed them.

Franklin asserts the district court’s construction of the Agreements’ best efforts clause is inconsistent with its plain terms, with the intent of the parties, and with the judicial canon preferring an interpretation that gives a contract meaning over another that makes it meaningless. We agree. Even if the counties retained the right to deny a levy, which the Agreements do not expressly say, the counties’ promise to use their best efforts to approve a levy is not meaningless, as the district court essentially held. See New Valley Corp. v. United States, 119 F.3d 1576 (Fed.Cir.1997). The counties’ denial of a levy would not violate the Agreements if the counties used their best efforts, but in the absence of best efforts, the counties’ denial of a levy breaches the contracts. See id. at 1584.

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Bluebook (online)
152 F.3d 736, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 18697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-high-yield-tax-free-income-fund-v-county-of-martin-ca8-1998.