University of Idaho Foundation, Inc. v. Civic Partners, Inc.

199 P.3d 102, 146 Idaho 527, 2008 Ida. LEXIS 225
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 2008
DocketNo. 34461
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 199 P.3d 102 (University of Idaho Foundation, Inc. v. Civic Partners, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
University of Idaho Foundation, Inc. v. Civic Partners, Inc., 199 P.3d 102, 146 Idaho 527, 2008 Ida. LEXIS 225 (Idaho 2008).

Opinions

EISMANN, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a partial judgment holding that the University of Idaho Foundation is obligated to make payments under a contract between it and Civic Partners Idaho, LLC, and from the award of costs and attorney fees to the Capital City Development Corporation. We affirm the judgment of the district court and award attorney fees on appeal to the Capital City Development Corporation.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1990, Ada County acquired a fourteen-acre parcel of land for a new courthouse. The parcel is commonly called the “Ada County Courthouse Corridor” (Corridor) and is located within the urban renewal district managed by the Capital City Development Corporation (CCDC), which is the urban renewal agency for Boise, Idaho. Ada County and the CCDC entered into a master ground lease under which the CCDC leased the entire Corridor for a term of ninety-nine years. The CCDC also contracted to develop the land in the Corridor. Ada County and CCDC selected Civic Partners, Inc. (Civic Partners), as the real estate developer for the entire project, which included the construction of the courthouse and adjacent parking facilities on the western portion of the Corridor and the private development of land east of the courthouse site.

The Corridor was divided by Avenue A into a ten-acre parcel west of Avenue A and a four-acre parcel east of Avenue A. The four-acre site was commonly called the “Avenue A Site.” Ada County and the CCDC decided that the Avenue A Site should be developed separately from the remainder of the Corri[530]*530dor. They separated that site from the master ground lease, and on October 5, 2000, Ada County leased the Avenue A Site to the CCDC for ninety-nine years under what the parties called the “Surplus Ground Lease.” The CCDC intended to sublease the Avenue A Site to Civic Partners Idaho, LLC (Civic Idaho), who was to develop it. The Avenue A Site was divided into several parcels, one of which was designated “Parcel 1.”

The University of Idaho Foundation, Inc. (Foundation), had acquired property located south of the Corridor on which it intended to construct the Idaho Water Center (Water Center) to be used by the University of Idaho. It later decided that it wanted the Water Center to be located within the Corridor on Parcel 1. As a step towards accomplishing that, Civic Partners, Civic Idaho, Civic Partners West, LLC (Civic West), and the Foundation executed a document entitled “Memorandum of Understanding Pending Final Agreement Negotiations” (Memorandum of Understanding), which became effective on April 1, 2001. They agreed in principle, among other things, that Civic West would develop the Water Center on a portion of Parcel 1 designated as Unit 101 and that the Foundation would sub-sublease Parcel 1 from Civic Idaho.

The planned development of the Corridor included a multi-family housing project. The CCDC intended to construct an underground parking facility that would serve both the housing project and Parcel 1. Construction of that parking facility would be financed, in part, with a portion of the increased tax revenues resulting from increases in the assessed values of property in Parcel 1. If that property was owned or occupied by a tax-exempt entity, Civic Idaho was obligated to make payments in lieu of taxes to the CCDC equal to the amount of the lost tax revenues. Therefore, the Memorandum of Understanding provided that the Foundation, which is a tax-exempt entity, would make certain payments, including an “Annual Contribution” of $350,000 for thirty years to help pay for parking and other infrastructure improvements. The Memorandum also provided that the Foundation could terminate it upon three days written notice, but it would be liable for certain costs incurred by Civic Partners, Civic West, and Civic Idaho, which are collectively referred to as the “Civic Entities.”

The Foundation desired to finance the construction of the Water Center through the Idaho State Building Authority (ISBA), but the ISBA would not do so unless it owned the land and was the developer. Also, it would not purchase Unit 101 if that land was obligated to make the Annual Contribution for parking.

In the summer of 2002, the Foundation terminated the Memorandum of Understanding and Civic West as the developer. In order to conclude their relationship, the Foundation and the Civic Entities entered into a “Memorandum of Understanding, Reconciliation Agreement” (Reconciliation Agreement), which had an effective date of July 31, 2002. The Agreement contained various provisions, including the following:

(a) Section 2.5 of the Agreement provided that the parties would work together to secure the commitment of the owner and/or tenants of the Water Center to pay an “Annual Contribution” of $350,000 for thirty years. It also provided that the amount of the Annual Contribution could be reduced proportionally if the Forest Service or other tax-paying owners or tenants occupied space in Unit 101 and that it could be reduced by any parking access fees paid to the CCDC by owners or tenants of Unit 101, other than the CCDC’s customary fees for monthly or transient parking.
(b) The last sentence in Section 2.5 of the Reconciliation Agreement provided:
If financing for the Housing Project closes by March 1, 2003 and the Foundation transfers Unit 101 to ISBA prior to September 1, 2003, Unit 101 shall not be subject to any binding obligation to pay the Annual Contribution, but the Foundation shall commit to the Civic Entities to pay the Annual Contribution.
(c) Section 2.1 of the Agreement provided that upon the closing of the housing project, the Foundation and Civic Idaho would enter into a sub-sublease of Parcel 1 as described in Exhibit B attached to the Reconciliation Agreement. Exhibit B ac[531]*531knowledged that the sub-sublease had not yet been drafted. The Exhibit recited that the current draft of the Avenue A Sublease,1 which had not yet been executed by the CCDC and Civic Idaho, would require the Civic Entities to make payments in lieu of taxes if any portion of Parcel 1 was leased to a tax-exempt entity. The exhibit stated that such obligation could be satisfied with respect to Unit 101 by a $2,500,000 payment and by payment of the Annual Contribution set forth in Section 2.5 of the Reconciliation Agreement.
(d) The Reconciliation Agreement also provided that the sub-sublease would provide for the future acquisition of Unit 101 by the ISBA for development of the Water Center.

After execution of the Reconciliation Agreement, Civic Idaho entered into four contracts with the CCDC and/or the Foundation, all of which had effective dates of October 1, 2002. Those contracts were as follows:

(1) Civic Idaho and the CCDC had previously entered into an agreement for the development of the Avenue A Site, and they amended that agreement pursuant to an “Amended and Restated Avenue A Disposition and Development Agreement.” Under Section 116(H) of this Agreement, the CCDC agreed “to enter into a Parking Allocation Agreement with the owner or master tenant of Unit 101, as may be required pursuant to that Memorandum of Understanding Reconciliation Agreement, dated July 31, 2002.”
(2) Civic Idaho and the CCDC entered into a Parcel 1 Sublease, which was approved by Ada County. The Sublease required Civic Idaho to pay all taxes levied against Parcel 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 P.3d 102, 146 Idaho 527, 2008 Ida. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/university-of-idaho-foundation-inc-v-civic-partners-inc-idaho-2008.