Musser v. Apple Valley

2025 UT App 197
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 26, 2025
DocketCase No. 20241334-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 UT App 197 (Musser v. Apple Valley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musser v. Apple Valley, 2025 UT App 197 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 197

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

DANIEL N. MUSSER, Appellant, v. TOWN OF APPLE VALLEY, DINA MASON WALTERS, AND KEVIN SAIR, Appellees.

Opinion No. 20241334-CA Filed December 26, 2025

Fifth District Court, St. George Department The Honorable Eric Gentry No. 220500229

Justin D. Heideman and Norman W. Peat, Jr., Attorneys for Appellant Roger H. Hoole, Attorney for Appellees

JUDGE AMY J. OLIVER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES RYAN M. HARRIS and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.

OLIVER, Judge:

¶1 Daniel N. Musser was hired by the mayor pro tem of the Town of Apple Valley (Apple Valley) to serve as the chief of its fire and police departments. Musser entered into an employment contract (the Contract), which the mayor pro tem signed on Apple Valley’s behalf. But the Apple Valley Town Council (Council) did not approve the Contract. When Dina Mason Walters took office as mayor one month later, she and the Council terminated Musser’s employment. Musser filed suit against Apple Valley, Walters, and Council member Kevin Sair (collectively, the Town) alleging breach of the Contract. The Town moved for summary judgment on the ground that the Contract was invalid, which the district court granted. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment. Musser v. Apple Valley

BACKGROUND 1

Musser’s Employment

¶2 On November 2, 2021, Walters was elected mayor of Apple Valley, with her term beginning in January 2022. Two days later, on November 4, 2021, Musser entered into the Contract with Apple Valley to employ him as the chief of its fire and police departments. 2 The mayor pro tem signed on behalf of Apple Valley. Musser began his employment on November 11, 2021.

¶3 In response to concerns about the validity of the Contract and Musser’s employment, the mayor pro tem presented the Council with a resolution (the Appointment Resolution) on December 2, 2021, to confirm Musser’s appointment as the police and fire chief. Of the five Council members, only three voted on the Appointment Resolution, with two in favor and one against. The other two Council members were absent from the vote.

¶4 A decade prior to the vote on the Appointment Resolution, the Council had passed a resolution establishing rules for voting on motions before it (the Voting Resolution), which states,

The majority of the public body constitutes a quorum for the public body and all motions of the public body shall be approved by a majority of the

1. “In reviewing the district court’s grant of summary judgment, we view the facts in the light most favorable to [Musser], as the nonmoving party.” Dierl v. Birkin, 2023 UT App 6, n.1, 525 P.3d 127. We present contrary facts only when necessary to understand the issues raised on appeal.

2. Although various signed and unsigned versions of the Contract were presented to the district court, we need not decide which version controls because the particulars of the Contract are not at issue on appeal.

20241334-CA 2 2025 UT App 197 Musser v. Apple Valley

public body (not just a majority of the quorum in attendance) . . . . There must be a minimum of a majority of the entire public body of affirmative votes for adoption of a motion.

(Emphasis added.) Thus, the required majority of the Council did not vote to approve the Contract. Despite this, Musser continued to work as the police and fire chief.

¶5 Walters took office on January 3, 2022. A week later, she and a majority of the Council sent Musser a letter terminating his employment, which gave several reasons for Musser’s termination. As relevant to this appeal, the letter explained that Musser’s termination was necessary because the Council “never approved or ratified” the Contract.

The Lawsuit

¶6 In response to his termination, Musser filed a complaint against the Town alleging breach of the Contract because he was terminated “without notice” and was not given the severance he was entitled to under the Contract. The Contract described reasonable and sufficient notice as “the greater of four (4) weeks or any minimum notice required by law” and provided, “Upon any termination, by [Apple Valley], the employee will be entitled to one full year of compensation paid within 14 days of termination.”

¶7 The Town moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Contract was invalid. The Town also argued that because Apple Valley was operating under a council-mayor form of government, Utah law required the advice and consent of the Council when appointing a department head. See Utah Code § 10-3b- 202(1)(d)(ii). And the Town pointed out that the Appointment Resolution failed to pass because only a majority of the Council members present voted in favor, rather than a majority of the Council as required by the Voting Resolution. In response, Musser

20241334-CA 3 2025 UT App 197 Musser v. Apple Valley

argued the Contract was valid and he was entitled to the benefits of the Contract under several different theories, including that the mayor pro tem had authority to hire him and that Apple Valley ratified the Contract.

¶8 The district court granted the Town’s motion for summary judgment. For purposes of the motion, the court assumed the existence of the Contract but noted its existence was “not material to the [c]ourt’s analysis.” The court then considered whether the Contract was entered into without the advice and consent of the Council. The court reiterated that the Appointment Resolution’s “effort to seek the advice and consent of the . . . Council after the Contract had already gone into effect proved ineffective” and there was “no genuine issue of material fact that [Musser’s] appointment was not approved by the . . . Council pursuant to Apple Valley’s” policies and procedures because “less than a majority of the entire governing body voted in the affirmative.” The court also concluded that because the Council did not give its advice or consent, the Contract “was a violation of Utah law” and of Apple Valley’s policies and procedures.

¶9 The district court then turned to whether the Contract was void as an ultra vires act 3 if it was entered into without the advice and consent of the Council and, if invalid, whether it would still be enforceable. Quoting Weese v. Davis County Commission, 834 P.2d 1 (Utah 1992), the court explained that “[a]n employee’s contract with a public employer that was executed in violation of statute is ‘null and void as an ultra vires act.’” Id. at 3. Then quoting Knight v. Salt Lake County, 2002 UT App 100, 46 P.3d 247, the court stated that “a public employee’s rights are ‘statutory rather than contractual.’” Id. ¶ 8. Based on Weese and Knight, the district court concluded,

3. An ultra vires act is one which is “[u]nauthorized” and “beyond the scope of power allowed or granted . . . by law.” Ultra Vires, Black’s Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024).

20241334-CA 4 2025 UT App 197 Musser v. Apple Valley

[P]ublic employment is a bundle of sticks and the bundle cannot be formed without constitutional and statutory authorization, but once formed, the public employer and employee may make incidental changes, consistent with or in furtherance of the authorizing statute, by adding or subtracting sticks to the bundle through express or implied agreement.

The . . . [C]ontract claimed by Musser, however, was never authorized and his bundle of sticks never legally existed.

¶10 The court also concluded that “[t]he authorizing statute allowed [Musser] to be hired as the head of the Apple Valley police and fire departments only with the advice and consent of the . . .

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2025 UT App 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musser-v-apple-valley-utahctapp-2025.