Nebuda v. Dodge Cty. Sch. Dist. 0062

CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 2015
DocketS-14-477
StatusPublished

This text of Nebuda v. Dodge Cty. Sch. Dist. 0062 (Nebuda v. Dodge Cty. Sch. Dist. 0062) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebuda v. Dodge Cty. Sch. Dist. 0062, (Neb. 2015).

Opinion

Nebraska Advance Sheets 740 290 NEBRASKA REPORTS

Richard J. Nebuda et al., appellants, v. Dodge County School District 0062 (Scribner-Snyder Community Schools) in the State of Nebraska, appellee. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed April 23, 2015. No. S-14-477.

1. Judgments: Appeal and Error. An appellate court independently reviews ques- tions of law decided by a lower court. 2. Statutes. The meaning and interpretation of a statute presents a question of law. 3. Judgments: Justiciable Issues. A justiciability issue that does not involve a factual dispute presents a question of law. 4. Moot Question: Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. Although mootness does not always preclude appellate jurisdiction, it is a justiciability doctrine that weighs against rendering a decision that will no longer have an impact on a live dispute between the parties. 5. Moot Question. Mootness refers to events occurring after the filing of a suit which eradicate the requisite personal interest in the dispute’s resolution that existed at the beginning of the litigation. 6. Moot Question: Words and Phrases. A moot case is one which seeks to deter- mine a question that no longer rests upon existing facts or rights—i.e., a case in which the issues presented are no longer alive. 7. Moot Question. The central question in a mootness analysis is whether changes in circumstances that prevailed at the beginning of litigation have forestalled any occasion for meaningful relief. 8. ____. A case is not moot if a court can fashion some meaningful form of relief, even if that relief only partially redresses the prevailing party’s grievances. 9. Injunction: Intent. Injunctive relief is intended to prevent future harm and is not available when the act complained of is already completed. 10. Moot Question: Injunction. A court’s inability to grant injunctive relief does not necessarily render a claim for declaratory relief moot. 11. Declaratory Judgments: Justiciable Issues. A plaintiff’s interest in a declara- tory judgment action must be more than the satisfaction of having a court declare that the defendant’s conduct was wrong. The declaration must be relevant to a live controversy or threat of harm. 12. Moot Question. A case becomes moot when the issues initially presented in litigation cease to exist or the litigants lack a legally cognizable interest in the litigation’s outcome. 13. ____. Unless an exception applies, a court or tribunal must dismiss a moot case when changed circumstances have precluded it from providing any meaningful relief because the litigants no longer have a legally cognizable interest in the dispute’s resolution. 14. ____. Nebraska recognizes a public interest exception to the mootness doctrine. 15. Moot Question: Appeal and Error. Under the public interest exception to moot- ness, an appellate court can review an otherwise moot case if it involves a matter Nebraska Advance Sheets NEBUDA v. DODGE CTY. SCH. DIST. 0062 741 Cite as 290 Neb. 740

affecting the public interest or when other rights or liabilities may be affected by its determination. 16. ____: ____. When determining whether a case involves a matter of public inter- est, an appellate court considers (1) the public or private nature of the question presented, (2) the desirability of an authoritative adjudication for future guidance of public officials, and (3) the likelihood of future recurrence of the same or a similar problem. 17. ____: ____. A party’s strategic mistakes do not preclude an appellate court’s review under the public interest exception to mootness when the issues on appeal require a generic statutory analysis instead of a fact-specific inquiry unique to the parties. 18. Statutes: Appeal and Error. Absent a statutory indication to the contrary, an appellate court gives words in a statute their ordinary meaning. 19. Statutes: Legislature: Intent: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will not look beyond a statute to determine the legislative intent when the words are plain, direct, or unambiguous. 20. Bonds: Words and Phrases. Generally, a governmental entity’s issuing of bonds refers to its offering and delivery of certificates of indebtedness for sale in a market to raise money for improvements—not to executing an instrument of indebtedness to a single lender. 21. Statutes: Judicial Construction: Legislature: Presumptions: Intent. When judicial interpretation of a statute has not evoked a legislative amendment, an appellate court presumes that the Legislature has acquiesced in the court’s interpretation.

Appeal from the District Court for Dodge County: Geoffrey C. Hall, Judge. Affirmed. Jovan W. Lausterer, of Bromm, Lindahl, Freeman-Caddy & Lausterer, for appellants. James B. Gessford, Gregory H. Perry, and Derek A. Aldridge, of Perry, Guthery, Haase & Gessford, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee. Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, Stephan, McCormack, Miller-Lerman, and Cassel, JJ. Connolly, J. SUMMARY After the voters in the appellee school district rejected a bond proposal to build an addition, the school district entered into a lease-purchase agreement with Scribner Bank to finance an addition. The appellants, residents and taxpayers in the Nebraska Advance Sheets 742 290 NEBRASKA REPORTS

district, sought declaratory and injunctive relief. The taxpayers contend that the agreement violates Neb. Rev. Stat. § 79-10,105 (Reissue 2012). After a trial, the district court denied relief and dismissed the taxpayers’ complaint. It concluded that under § 79-10,105, we have upheld the use of lease-purchase agreements to make school improvements without the voters’ approval if the project is not funded by bonded debt. The court found that the school district had not funded the project through bonded indebtedness. Because the addition has been completed, we address the issues presented under the public interest exception to the mootness doctrine. We conclude that a lease-purchase agreement is not the issuance of a bond under § 79-10,105. We affirm.

BACKGROUND Dodge County School District 0062, Scribner-Snyder Community Schools, is a Class III school district. At some point in 2009, the State Fire Marshal declared that the high school building had several safety concerns and code deficien- cies. The marshal gave the district until January 2014 to make corrections. The district’s superintendent worked with an archi- tectural firm and construction manager to obtain cost estimates for their work on improvements and then made recommenda- tions to the board for a bond proposal. In March 2012, the voters rejected a $7.5 million bond proposal to construct additional classrooms and renovate the existing building. Afterward, the district asked the construc- tion company and architectural firm to modify its project. The new plan called for adding an additional six classrooms in a detached preengineered metal building. The estimated con- struction cost was $623,000. The district did not submit a bond proposal to the voters for the modified project. The school board president testified that the district had funds to pay for the modified project but that it could not have done so without borrowing money to pay its monthly bills. Nebraska Advance Sheets NEBUDA v. DODGE CTY. SCH. DIST. 0062 743 Cite as 290 Neb. 740

In June 2012, the school board passed a resolution to authorize the superintendent to create a nonprofit “leasing” corporation, which would be controlled by the district, to make the improvements and lease the building back to the district. The superintendent and two school board members served as the corporation’s board of directors. The resolution stated that it did not constitute the board’s final approval of the project’s financing or the leasing corporation’s issuance of any bond obligations.

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Nebuda v. Dodge Cty. Sch. Dist. 0062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebuda-v-dodge-cty-sch-dist-0062-neb-2015.