Osier v. The City of Burlington

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 2012
DocketS1588
StatusPublished

This text of Osier v. The City of Burlington (Osier v. The City of Burlington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osier v. The City of Burlington, (Vt. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Osier v. The City of Burlington, No. S1588-09 CnC (Crawford, J., Sept. 25, 2012)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Chittenden Unit DOCKET NO.: S1588-09 CnC

FRED OSIER and EUGENE SHAVER Plaintiffs

v.

THE CITY OF BURLINGTON and JONATHAN LEOPOLD Defendants

DECISION ON THE CITY’S MOTION TO DISMISS AND ON PENDING MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

This is a taxpayer lawsuit brought by two residents of the City of Burlington (the City). It alleges the misuse of general City funds to cover capital expenses and operating losses incurred by Burlington Telecom (BT)—a City-owned cable system. Alleging a need to recover taxpayer funds paid in violation of law, fraud and deceit, and breach of the duty of faithful performance, the plaintiffs seek to hold Jonathan Leopold, Chief Administrative Officer of the City during the period when the deficit was incurred, personally liable for approximately $17 million dollars paid out of the City’s “pooled cash account” to cover BT’s expenses during the years 2007 to 2010.

Plaintiffs also name the City as a defendant. Although they previously alleged conversion, plaintiffs now sue the City for “Recovery of Taxpayer Funds Paid to BT in Violation of Law.” As against the City, plaintiffs seek an order requiring BT to reimburse the pooled cash account for the $17 million it has borrowed from this account in violation of the Certificate of Public Good (CPG) issued by the Public Service Board. They also seek an accounting and an order permanently enjoining the City from taking any further actions that violate BT’s CPG or the City Charter, or that are likely to place Burlington taxpayers at further risk of financial loss.

Numerous motions are currently pending: (1) Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment against Mr. Leopold (filed Aug. 1, 2011); (2) the City’s motion for summary judgment (filed Oct. 24, 2011); (3) Mr. Leopold’s motion for summary judgment (filed Feb. 17, 2012); (4) the City’s Rule 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss (filed Apr. 2, 2012); (5) Mr. Leopold’s motion to dismiss Counts I and III (filed April 3, 2012); and (6) Mr. Leopold’s (renewed) motion for summary judgment on Count II (also filed April 3, 2012). On May 8, 2012, Mr. Leopold filed a motion to amend his answer and affirmative defenses to add 24 V.S.A. § 903 as an affirmative defense. The court held a hearing on all pending motions on June 27, 2012, granted Mr. Leopold’s motion to amend on August 3, 2012, and is now in receipt of the parties’ briefing on the question of 24 V.S.A. § 903 as well as all of the other issues raised in the earlier motions.

FACTS

The essential facts concerning the BT controversy are not in dispute. They have been the subject of several previous inquiries, most notably the order of the Public Service Board (PSB) which issued on 10/8/10, available at http://psb.vermont.gov/sites/psb/files/orders/2010/7044 OrderReSummaryJudgment.pdf.

The Burlington City Charter has long authorized the City to operate its own municipal electrical system. In 1996, the Vermont legislature amended the charter to permit City “ownership, operation and utilization of cable television, fiber optic cable and other telecommunications within the corporate limits of the city.” 1995, No. M-17 (Adj. Sess.), § 23 (codified as amended at 24 V.S.A. app. ch. 3 § 431(4) (City of Burlington)). The charter change required such a City-owned utility to obtain a certificate of public good (CPG) from the Public Service Board.

The charter amendments also addressed the issue of funding for BT. Section 438(c) of the City Charter provides in part:

If the city [elects to build a cable system], the public service board, in considering any application for a certificate of public good, shall ensure that any and all losses from these businesses, and, in the event these businesses are abandoned or curtailed, any and all costs associated with investment in cable television, fiber optic, and telecommunications network and telecommunications business-related facilities, are borne by the investors in such business, and in no event are borne by the city’s taxpayers, the state of Vermont, or are recovered in rates from electric ratepayers.

24 V.S.A. app. ch. 3 § 438(c). From its conception, BT was required to pay its own way. The legislature prohibited the use of taxpayers’ money to pay for capital or operating costs.

The Public Service Board issued a CPG in September 2005. The certificate includes Condition 60 which follows the charter amendment in forbidding the use of public money to pay for the cost of the BT “build-out” or construction. Condition 60 states:

The City shall make payments on behalf of [the build-out of BT] only when and to the extent that BT has cash reserves, revenues receivable, or other payments receivable that, collectively, equal or exceed the sum of the payments to be made by the City plus the balance of any other current payments owed to the City. BT

2 may participate in the City’s pooled cash management system provided, however, that BT shall reimburse the City within two months of the City’s expenditure for any expenses incurred or payments made by the City in support of services that BT provides to non-City entities. The City shall obtain Board approval prior to appropriating any funds other than as described above in the support of BT’s [build-out] activities.

Certificate of Public Good dated 9/13/05. Since 2007, BT has been unable to meet its construction costs and other expenses from operating revenues. Commencing in January 2007, it withdrew more money from the City’s pooled cash account than it paid in. (The pooled cash account is the equivalent of a common checking account maintained for the use of all City departments.) By March 2007, it was in violation of Condition 60 because it had run a deficit in the account for more than 60 days.

According to defendants, BT was able to repay its initial overdraft in August 2007 when it obtained financing from CitiCapital. The relief was short-lived. By November 2007, BT was, again, drawing more money out of the pooled cash account than it put in. By January 2008, it was in violation of Condition 60 because the deficit had lasted more than 60 days. The deficit position continues to the present day and is currently approximately $16.9 million.

Jonathan Leopold was the Chief Administrative Officer of the City from April 2006 until July 1, 2011. As CAO, Mr. Leopold had direct supervisory authority over the finances of BT and the use of the pooled cash account. In his deposition, Mr. Leopold states that he was unaware of Condition 60 and the restriction on the use of the account until an attorney for the City informed him about the condition in November 2008. Mr. Leopold describes his decision to allow BT to run a large deficit in violation of the original charter amendments and the Certificate of Public Good as a pragmatic decision to borrow money in the short-term until refinancing was in place. He states that refinancing became unavailable in 2008 when the credit markets in the United States and elsewhere entered a state of crisis.

There is no evidence that any funds withdrawn from the pooled cash account were used for any purpose except the construction costs and other normal business expenses of BT. City money drawn from many departments—and from the taxpayers—was used to meet BT’s expenses. There is no evidence—indeed, no allegation whatsoever—of corruption or personal benefit to Mr. Leopold or any other City employee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Osier v. The City of Burlington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osier-v-the-city-of-burlington-vtsuperct-2012.