SDI, Inc. v. Pivotal Parker Commercial, LLC

2014 CO 80, 339 P.3d 672, 2014 Colo. LEXIS 1066, 2014 WL 6879133
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 8, 2014
DocketSupreme Court Case No. 12SC870
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2014 CO 80 (SDI, Inc. v. Pivotal Parker Commercial, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SDI, Inc. v. Pivotal Parker Commercial, LLC, 2014 CO 80, 339 P.3d 672, 2014 Colo. LEXIS 1066, 2014 WL 6879133 (Colo. 2014).

Opinion

JUSTICE EID

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

T1 In this case, we consider whether the Special District Act (the "Act"), sections 32-1-101 to -1807, C.R.S. (2014), gives special districts the power to assign to a private party the right to receive development fees. Here, Cherry Creek South Metropolitan District # 1 ("the District") assigned to a predecessor-in-interest of petitioner SDI, Inc. ("SDI") the right to receive fees that the District had assessed upon developers within its boundaries to finance the development of municipal infrastructure. The District had increased these development fees by about four percent in each of the years prior to the assignment. SDI also increased the fees it collected, but at a rate of eight percent per year. SDI brought an action against respondent Pivotal Parker Commercial, LLC ("Pivotal"), seeking to recover unpaid development fees and requesting a declaratory judgment that it was entitled to the fees, as increased annually, in the future.

T2 The trial court determined that SDI was entitled to receive the fees as increased annually, rejecting Pivotal's argument that the fee increase amounted to an improper delegation of legislative authority. On appeal, Pivotal again argued that the fee increase constituted an improper delegation of legislative authority. The court of appeals reversed the trial court. The court concluded that the District had no authority to assign fee revenue in the first place, an argument not raised by the parties or presented to the trial court. SDI, Inc. v. Pivotal Parker Commercial, LLC, 2012 COA 168, ¶ 17, 292 P.3d 1165. More specifically, it held that because the Act expressly authorizes special districts to "pledge" revenue under section 32-1-1001(1)(j)(I), and because an assignment differs from a pledge, the Act necessarily precludes districts from assigning revenue. Id. at ¶¶ 20-22.

I 3 We now reverse. We conclude that the reasoning of the court of appeals is contrary to the Act itself, which states that "specific powers shall not be considered as a limitation upon any power necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes and intent" of the Act. § 82-1-1001(1)(n). Thus, the express power to pledge does not, by itself, restrict the power to assign. We hold that the power to assign revenue falls within another express power given to districts, namely, the power to "dispose of ... real and personal property." § 32-1-1001(1)(f). The District's assignment of the right to collect development fee revenue was therefore a lawful exercise of its statutory authority. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals' holding to the contrary and remand to the court of appeals for consideration of the other issues raised by Pivotal on appeal, including whether SDI was entitled to increase the fees.

I.

4 In 1984, the town of Parker annexed a parcel of undeveloped land known as Stroh Ranch. The town then formed the District under the Act to facilitate development of the parcel. To raise revenue for developing public infrastructure, the District assessed a de[674]*674velopment fee at a specified amount per acre upon developers of property within its boundaries. The development fee would be due when the developer obtained a building permit for its property. Realizing that it might not be able to collect these fees for many years, and in recognition of the time value of the money, the District forecasted that these development fees would increase annually at a steady rate of two percent from 1986 to 2019. In practice, however, the development fees increased each year from 1996 to 1999 at a rate of about four percent.

¶ 5 The District also financed development of Stroh Ranch by borrowing millions of dollars from Stroh Ranch Development, LLC ("SRD"), one of Stroh Ranch's original developers. The District and SRD entered into a reimbursement agreement in June 1989, under which the District pledged the revenue it would receive from development fees to pay back its debts to SRD. This contractual relationship between the District and SRD endured over the course of several years and through six amended versions of the reimbursement agreement.

16 The District and SRD eventually entered into a seventh amended reimbursement agreement. In this Seventh Amendment, the District assigned to SRD the right to receive various "revenues that the District would otherwise have received as a result of the District's development of infrastructure within the District, including but not limited to development fees." In exchange for this assignment, the Seventh Amendment reduced the amount that the District owed to SRD by the value of these revenues. Documents which accompanied drafts of the amended agreement show that the District and SRD calculated the value of the development fees SRD would collect by using specific per-acre rates comparable to the rates in effect at that time. The Seventh Amendment was silent as to whether SRD could increase the development fees.

T7 The agreement was submitted to the District's board of directors in a special meeting in January 2000, at which the board approved of the agreement and authorized its execution. The board also held a regular meeting a week later, for which notice to the public was provided and at which members of the public were present. At the regular meeting, the amended agreement was again discussed and the minutes of the special meeting were reviewed and approved. That same year, SRD began collecting the development fees. SRD's manager later testified that there was no agreement between SRD and the District regarding the accrual of interest or the rate at which the development fees would increase. In the absence of any such agreement, SRD increased the development fees by eight percent each year, the statutory rate of interest, as calculated from the date of the assignment. See § 5-12-102(2), C.R.S. (2014).

T8 SDI, the petitioner in this case, later acquired SRD's rights to receive the development fees,, along with other real property within the District. SDI then entered into a contract to sell part of its property in Stroh Ranch to Pivotal, the respondent in this case. To lower the sale price, the contract specifically excluded several assets from the transaction, such as the right to receive the development fees that the District had assigned to SRD for property included in the sale.

T9 Before the contract between SDI and Pivotal closed, and with Pivotal's consent, SDI sold one of the lots within the property being transferred to Pivotal to E & T Li, LLC. SDI assigned its rights under its contract with E. & T Li to Pivotal when the SDI-Pivotal contract closed. Once the E & T Li contract closed some time later, E & T Li obtained a building permit for its lot. SDI then brought suit against both E & T Li and Pivotal, seeking payment for the development fees for the E & T Li property and a declaratory judgment that it would be entitled to payments for the development fees for Pivotal's remaining property in the future. The parties eventually stipulated that the price of E & T Li's contract for the purchase of its property included satisfaction of the development fees, and E & T Li was dismissed with prejudice.

[ 10 Following a bench trial, the trial court determined that the District's assignment of the development fees constituted a "mutual settlement of accounts" under section 5-12-102(2), and that therefore, because there was [675]*675"no agreement as to the rate" of interest to be charged on the debt, SDI was entitled to collect the statutory eight percent interest rate.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 CO 80, 339 P.3d 672, 2014 Colo. LEXIS 1066, 2014 WL 6879133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sdi-inc-v-pivotal-parker-commercial-llc-colo-2014.