Sasso v. State
This text of 686 A.2d 88 (Sasso v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
This case required us to answer a certified question involving the Providence Place Mall Project (the Project) — a proposed Brobdingnagian parking garage and retail-shopping facility “containing no less than 1,150,000 square feet” to be built in downtown Providence. See P.L.1995, ch. 400 (Enabling Act). Previously, we rejected a constitutional challenge to the Project’s enabling legislation. See Warwick Mall Trust v. State of Rhode Island, 684 A.2d 252 (R.I.1996) (Mall I) (explaining the court’s rationale for its July 19, 1996 order affirming the dismissal of the constitutional claims). And in this ease (Mall II), we issued an order shortly after oral argument in which we concluded that the Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation (EDC) was authorized to enter into and to ratify the various resolutions, agreements, and other documents necessary to implement the Project. 1
Two plaintiffs in Mall I, Warwick Mall Trust (Warwick Mall) and Bliss Properties, Inc. (Bliss Properties), were also plaintiffs in Mall II. They are the owner and the operator, respectively, of a retail shopping mall located in Warwick, Rhode Island. In filing this suit they joined forces with Eleanor C. Sasso and Leonidas P. Raptakis, two state legislators who voted against the Project’s Enabling Act.
In response to the Attorney General’s request, the Superior Court properly certified to us 2 the following question of law: Does the EDC possess the authority to authorize by resolution the execution, delivery, and performance of the various legal agreements and other documents necessary to implement the Project? 3 We now explain briefly the reasons why we responded to this question in the affirmative.
The plaintiffs claimed they would suffer harm if the challenged EDC resolutions and agreements relating to the Project were allowed to stand because, contrary to the Enabling Act, they do not require that the Project open and continue to operate *90 throughout its entire ninety-nine-year lease term (plus four optional renewal periods of like duration) with no fewer than 1,150,000 square feet of so-called upscale retail-shopping space and with no possibility of the developer’s sooner or later downsizing or changing any portion of the Project’s planned retail-shopping use to something else. 4 However, the Project’s legal documents tell a different tale. The lease agreement, for example, states that the Project must consist of no less than a “1,150,000 gross square foot 3-level shopping center.” It also contains strong disincentives to any changes in size or in use unless the EDC — the public corporation responsible for promoting economic development within the state — consents. Any major changes made without EDC approval will terminate the various public-investment benefits that serve as the economic linchpin of this Project.
The EDC possesses “all powers, authority, rights, privileges, and titles * * * necessary to enable it to accomplish [its] purposes.” G.L.1956 § 42-64-4(b). The EDO’s ability to agree to provisions that, in limited and defined circumstances and subject to various disincentives, permit commercially reasonable changes in the proposed use and renta-ble retail space of the Project’s property is inherent in its statutory power to manage such ventures responsibly, § 42 — 64—T(d), and to sell or to lease part of or all of its property “upon such terms” as it sees fit, § 42-64-6(d). 5 If it were not afforded this statutory elbow room in its commercial dealings, the EDC would be unduly hampered in its ability to promote effectively the economic development of the state, § 42-64^1(a), to undertake “all activities in relation thereto,” § 42-64-7(a), and to serve as a viable commercial partner in any economic-development enterprise, § 42-64r-6(l). Entrepreneurs and businesses would be less willing to enter into binding agreements with an inflexible governmental partner that was unable to accommodate and provide for the normal contingencies that are typically addressed in modern commercial contracts involving a development project of this size and scope. The “machinery of government,” Justice Holmes reminds us, “would not work if it were not allowed a little play in its joints.” Bain Peanut Co. of Texas v. Pinson, 282 U.S. 499, 501, 51 S.Ct. 228, 229, 75 L.Ed. 482, 491 (1931). The statutes creating the EDC and the Project’s Enabling Act wisely and properly allow for this “play” without dislocating the Project from its legal sockets and without including any rigid use and rentable-square-footage mandates that would hamstring its operational flexibility.
Thus, for example, the Enabling Act’s 1,150,000-square-footage requirement is directed to the size of the overall facility and not to how much of its rentable space must be dedicated to so-called upscale retail shopping. As plaintiffs’ own mall demonstrates, a commercial venture like this one does not lose its overall character as a retail-shopping facility merely because some of its rentable space may be used for other purposes. Whatever may have been the assumptions in the various studies that were used to explain or to tout the Project to the General Assembly — including those specifying the size of the facility’s anticipated rentable retail-shopping space — the Enabling Act, in its wisdom, does not mandate that all 1,150,000 square *91 feet of the facility must inevitably be devoted to upscale retail shopping during the next five centuries of this potential leasehold.
The plaintiffs also posited certain radical change-in-use scenarios involving the Project that, if they were ever to occur, might strain or even subvert one or more of the legislative purposes of the Enabling Act. 6 But we would have been remiss had we allowed these speculative and as yet unrealized concerns about what could or might happen to this Project during the next half of a new millennium to have diverted us from answering the only question that was presented to us. After all, that which is not ripe for decision cannot and should not be decided in a declaratory-judgment action. See Lamb v. Perry, 101 R.I. 538, 542, 225 A.2d 521, 523 (1967) (declaratory-judgment act “is not intended to seiwe as a forum for the determination of abstract questions or the rendering of advisory opinions”).
We have carefully considered these and all the parties’ other arguments and contentions concerning the validity of the resolutions, agreements, and other legal documents that were before us. Without precluding ab initio
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686 A.2d 88, 1996 R.I. LEXIS 321, 1996 WL 710903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sasso-v-state-ri-1996.