The City of Shreveport v. CenturyTel Solutions, LLC

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 2021
Docket54,159-CA
StatusPublished

This text of The City of Shreveport v. CenturyTel Solutions, LLC (The City of Shreveport v. CenturyTel Solutions, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The City of Shreveport v. CenturyTel Solutions, LLC, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Judgment rendered November 17, 2021. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 54,159-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

THE CITY OF SHREVEPORT Plaintiff-Appellee

versus

CENTURYTEL SOLUTIONS, Defendants-Appellants LLC, ET AL.

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 591,661

Honorable Craig O. Marcotte, Judge

HAYES, HARKEY, SMITH & Counsel for Appellants, CASCIO, LLP CenturyTel Solutions, By: Thomas M. Hayes, III LLC, and CenturyLink Communications, LLC AYRES, SHELTON, WILLIAMS, BENSON & PAINE, LLC By: J. Todd Benson

KUTAK ROCK LLP By: Tiffanie D. Stasiak Thomas W. Snyder

CENTURYLINK LAW DEPARTMENT By: Marcy M. Heronimus COOK, YANCEY, KING & GALLOWAY, Counsel for Appellee APLC By: James Ashby Davis Sidney E. Cook, Jr. Elizabeth Mendell Carmody

Before PITMAN, GARRETT, and STEPHENS, JJ. PITMAN, J.

Defendants-Appellants CenturyTel Solutions, LLC, and CenturyLink

Communications, LLC (collectively, “CenturyLink”), appeal the trial court’s

ruling in favor of Plaintiff-Appellee the City of Shreveport (the “City”). For

the following reasons, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.

FACTS

On March 22, 2016, the City filed a petition for breach of contract. In

August 1996, it entered into a nonexclusive franchise agreement (the

“Agreement”) with KMC Telecom, Inc. (“KMC”), and allowed KMC to

install cable, wire, fiber or other transmission medium at any location on,

over or under the public rights-of-way (“PROW”) of the City for

telecommunications purposes. KMC agreed to pay a franchise fee of five

percent of its gross revenue (the “Fee”) for each year of the term of the

Agreement. For late payments, KMC agreed to pay simple interest accruing

at one percent per month until the City received the payment. In 2002,

CenturyLink purchased KMC’s assets, including its telecommunications

system in Shreveport. In its petition, the City alleged that CenturyLink

failed to pay the Fee since February 27, 2002, despite having enjoyed the use

and benefit of the City’s PROW. It stated that CenturyLink breached the

obligations it assumed under the Agreement and is liable to the City for all

amounts due under the Agreement.

On July 5, 2016, CenturyLink filed an answer and a counterclaim. It

admitted that the Fee had not been paid since February 27, 2002, but denied

that it was in breach of any agreement with the City or that it was liable for

any amounts under the Agreement. It asserted numerous affirmative

defenses, including that the Agreement is unenforceable and preempted by federal law; that CenturyLink detrimentally relied on the City’s actions; that

the City’s substantial breach precludes its enforcement of the Agreement and

CenturyLink has an excuse for nonperformance; and that the City’s claims

are barred by the expiration of the applicable prescriptive period.

As a counterclaim, CenturyLink requested a declaration that the Fee

violates the Telecommunications Act of 1996, 47 U.S.C. § 253 (“Section

253”), and is preempted by the Supremacy Clause of Article VI of the

United States Constitution. It argued that the City’s attempt to enforce the

Agreement is not fair or reasonable because it will drastically increase

CenturyLink’s costs for placing and maintaining its telecommunications

facilities and other facilities in the PROW. It stated that the Fee was

discriminatory because it had not been imposed on CenturyLink’s

competitors. It found fault with the City’s failure to adopt a master

telecommunications ordinance (“MTO”) and charge all telecommunications

providers a fee. It also requested an injunction prohibiting the City from

enforcing the Agreement.

On September 6, 2016, the City filed an answer to the counterclaim

and denied CenturyLink’s allegations. It objected to CenturyLink’s use of

federal law when state law provides an adequate procedural remedy.

On July 2, 2018, the City filed a motion for partial summary

judgment. It requested that the trial court find that the Agreement is valid

and enforceable and that CenturyLink is liable for all outstanding amounts

due under the Agreement.

CenturyLink filed an opposition to the City’s motion for partial

summary judgment. It contended that there is overwhelming evidence that

the Fee is discriminatory and inconsistent with Section 253. 2 On September 16, 2019, a hearing was held, and the trial court denied

the motion for partial summary judgment.

A two-day bench trial began on November 12, 2019. The parties

stipulated that interest would be calculated by dividing CenturyLink’s

annual revenues by 12 to obtain monthly amounts of revenue. Several

witnesses were tendered by the City.

Charles A. Albert, CPA, was accepted as an expert in the audit of

telecommunications companies. He stated that from March 2006 to 2018,

the total revenue from nonexempt customers was $80,734,316, which would

amount to a Fee of $4,036,715 that CenturyLink owed the City. He also

determined that CenturyLink owed $2,740,752 for the late-payment

assessment, which he calculated at one percent. In total, he calculated that

CenturyLink owed the City $6,777,467 through December 31, 2018. He

noted that this did not include any revenues from 2019.

Garth Ashpaugh, CPA, was accepted as an expert in the evaluation

and cost analysis of the PROW within municipalities. He stated that, as

evidenced by documents from the assignment of the Agreement in 2002,

CenturyLink realized and accepted its obligations under the Agreement,

including the payment of the Fee. He was not aware of any evidence that

CenturyLink sought to modify the Agreement. He testified that CenturyLink

was not the only user of the PROW, but that it did use them in furtherance of

its business, which impacted the costs incurred by the City for public works

maintenance. He stated that it is a standard of business for CenturyLink to

pay franchise fees to municipalities across the country and that it often

provides in-kind services as part of its franchise agreements. He opined that

3 CenturyLink’s payment of the Fee would not have impeded it from entering

or competing in the Shreveport market.

James A. Richardson, Ph.D., was accepted as an expert in economics.

He stated that franchise fees are commonly used around the country and that

a franchise fee of five percent in other parts of the country has not deterred

business or inhibited expansion of telecommunications services in those

areas. He concluded that the Fee was not an important factor to

CenturyLink in offering services in Shreveport and would not be a barrier to

entering the Shreveport market. On cross-examination, he was asked about

the discriminatory nature of the Fee in comparison to the City’s agreement

with AT&T. He differentiated AT&T’s residential market from

CenturyLink’s business market.

Charles J. Madden, the director of finance for the City, located checks

from KMC beginning in 1996 that were for a “franapp” fee, which is similar

to a franchise fee.

The City rested, and CenturyLink presented its witnesses.

Steven C. Gordon, the senior director of dark fiber and right-of-way

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