OPT, LLC v. City of Springdale, Ark.

2017 Ark. App. 543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 25, 2017
DocketCV-17-174
StatusPublished

This text of 2017 Ark. App. 543 (OPT, LLC v. City of Springdale, Ark.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
OPT, LLC v. City of Springdale, Ark., 2017 Ark. App. 543 (Ark. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 543

ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No.CV-17-174

OPT, LLC Opinion Delivered: October 25, 2017 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE V. WASHINGTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT CITY OF SPRINGDALE, ARKANSAS, [NO. 72CV-16-812] AND DOUG SPROUSE, MAYOR APPELLEES HONORABLE CRISTI BEAUMONT, JUDGE

REVERSED AND REMANDED

RITA W. GRUBER, Chief Judge

OPT, LLC, appeals from the Washington County Circuit Court’s dismissal of its

complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. It argues that the circuit court failed to

construe the complaint in the light most favorable to it and resolve all reasonable inferences

in favor of the complaint. We hold that OPT, LLC, has pleaded sufficient facts to show that

the Washington County Circuit Court has subject-matter jurisdiction over the complaint

and, therefore, that the court abused its discretion in dismissing it. 1

I. Complaint

Appellee, the City of Springdale, enacted various ordinances dealing with the clean-

up of real property within its city limits. Appellant, OPT, LLC, owns real property within

1 In addition to allegations against appellee, City of Springdale, the complaint contained allegations against OPT, LLC’s, former lessees, who operated a salvage yard on the property that is the subject of this dispute. These parties were dismissed by the court in an order granting OPT, LLC’s, motion to nonsuit; this opinion does not address the allegations in the complaint pertaining to them. Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 543

the city limits that it and its predecessor had leased for use as a salvage yard for over thirty

years. According to the complaint, this lease terminated in August 2012, and appellant

immediately obtained a Phase I environmental site assessment of the property. The

assessment found that the property was contaminated and recommended that a Phase II

assessment be conducted to determine the extent of contamination.

In May 2013, appellee informed appellant that its property was the subject of

numerous code violations; if appellant did not remedy the violations, appellee would clean

the property and charge appellant for the cost of clean-up; and if the charges were not paid,

appellee would assert a lien on the property for the clean-up costs. Appellant alleges that it

had notified appellee that the property was subject to environmental contamination, and

clean-up could not be effected until a determination was made regarding the extent of the

contamination. Appellant alleges that, notwithstanding having been placed on notice of this,

appellee entered the property on March 10, 2014, and using heavy equipment, disturbed

the contaminated soil. Appellant alleges that appellee entered onto its property on several

occasions after March 10, 2014, “under the purported authority of city ordinances regarding

‘Unsanitary and Unsightly Conditions’ (see Article IV, Sections 42–76 thru 42–81).” 2 The

complaint alleges that appellee exceeded what was necessary to abate any sightliness issues.

The complaint also states that appellant “should have an offset and/or claim against

defendant City of Springdale for any damage caused by said City of Springdale for any

environmental problems it may have caused by its actions.”

2 We will refer to these general ordinances of the City of Springdale as the Enabling Ordinances.

2 Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 543

The complaint contends that many of the code violations appellant allegedly violated

concerned “aesthetics or sightliness issues” and “have no objective standard by which they

can be evaluated.” Appellant claims in the complaint that the relevant code provisions were

“void for vagueness and are unenforceable” and that any lien or claim against its property

by appellee “would have no basis and be void.” Appellant further alleges that “the court

should find the code sections cited by [appellee] to be void for vagueness as the same do not

contain objective criteria to determine a violation; that the Court should find that the

expenses incurred by the City of Springdale on or about March 10, 2014, and subsequently

were unnecessary and overly broad to cure the violations cited.” The complaint alleges that

appellee’s actions after March 10, 2014, in coming onto appellant’s property were

unnecessary as appellant had continually kept the premises “mowed and in proper state,”

that appellee’s actions were based on “vague and wholly subjective language in its ordinances

and are void actions,” and that the liens on the property to pay for these unnecessary actions

constitute “a slander of [appellant’s] title and damages its value.”

Appellant also asserts that Ark. Code Ann. § 14-55-202 (Repl. 1998) requires a city

to read all bylaws and ordinances of a general and permanent nature on three different

days—or waive this rule with a two-thirds council vote—before passage. Appellant alleges

that appellee routinely adopts ordinances in violation of this statute and that “the ordinances

and code provisions used by the City of Springdale to come upon [appellant’s] property

under the auspices of a right to clean up offending property and assert liens therefore, were

not properly passed and/or were passed in violation of Arkansas law.” Appellant requests

3 Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 543

that “any and all ordinances” found to have been passed in violation of this statute be

“stricken from the municipal records of the City of Springdale.”

Appellant prays in its complaint for an injunction against appellee directing it not to

assess or enforce a lien against its real property unless and until the court takes testimony and

proof regarding the issues raised. Appellant also prays for an injunction holding that the

ordinances and code provisions “relied upon by the City of Springdale were passed in

violation of Arkansas law and, therefore, were and are void and unenforceable.”

In conclusion, the complaint requests the following of the circuit court:

That the Court rule the ordinances and codes cited by the City are void for vagueness; that the Court rule that the ordinances, rules, regulations and codes cited by the City of Springdale in taking action against [appellant] were not enacted in accordance with Arkansas law and, as such, the same are void and unenforceable; that the Court rule that the expenses incurred by the City of Springdale on or about March 10, 2014, and subsequent thereto, are unnecessary and excessive and direct that [appellant] pay only those which are reasonable . . . .

II. Motion to Dismiss

In its motion to dismiss the complaint, appellee alleged that all of appellant’s claims

and requested relief pertained to three clean-up lien ordinances—Ordinance Nos. 4795.

passed on 5/27/14; 4822, passed on 8/26/14; and 5015, passed on 2/9/16 (collectively

referred to herein as the “Lien Ordinances”)—that were adopted to recover the unpaid

expenses appellee spent to remove overgrown brush and debris from appellant’s property.

These ordinances were not specifically designated in the complaint. Appellee attached

certified copies of the Lien Ordinances, which specifically identified appellant’s property,

stated that the owner had been given notice pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 14-54-903 to

clean the property in accordance with sections 42-77 and 42-78 of the Springdale Code of

4 Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 543

Ordinances, identified the amount of costs expended, and authorized the city council to

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