Waste Management of Louisiana, L.L.C. v. Parish of Jefferson ex rel. Jefferson Parish Council

66 F. Supp. 3d 761, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171241, 2014 WL 7006003
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 10, 2014
DocketCivil Action No. 13-226
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 F. Supp. 3d 761 (Waste Management of Louisiana, L.L.C. v. Parish of Jefferson ex rel. Jefferson Parish Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waste Management of Louisiana, L.L.C. v. Parish of Jefferson ex rel. Jefferson Parish Council, 66 F. Supp. 3d 761, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171241, 2014 WL 7006003 (E.D. La. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

MARTIN L.C. FELDMAN, District Judge.

Before the Court are Jefferson Parish’s motion for summary judgment on liability and, in the alternative, its motion for partial summary judgment on damages. For the reasons that follow, the motion for summary judgment on liability is DENIED and the motion for partial summary judgment on damages is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.

Background

This malicious prosecution lawsuit arises from earlier litigation in which Jefferson Parish sued Waste Management in an effort to early terminate the parties’ Landfill Contract, so that Jefferson Parish could contract with another waste disposal services provider, River Birch. Waste Management now contends before this Court that Jefferson Parish pursued the prior lawsuit for years, even though it knew that its claims against Waste Management were factually and legally baseless. The record facts of this case, including prior litigation history, are necessarily presented here in detail.

Pursuant to a “Time Contract to Provide Services to Operate, Manage, and Maintain the Jefferson Parish Sanitary Landfill [764]*764Site” (the Landfill Contract), Waste Management of Louisiana, L.L.C.1 was to receive and dispose of waste for Jefferson Parish and also manage a portion of the Jefferson Parish Sanitary Landfill Site defined as the Expansion Area. In exchange, Jefferson Parish paid Waste Management a per-ton “tipping fee”.2 Additionally, Waste Management was also tasked with paying for the construction of all cells,3 as well as paying for placing a final cover on all the cells when they were filled and the contract had reached its term. Based on the Expansion Area’s capacity, the term of the Landfill Contract was to expire when certain permitted areas of the landfill, known as Phase IIIA and IIIB, were filled with waste.

Continuation of the Landfill Contract was contingent upon annual appropriation of the requisite funds by the Parish, as set forth in the.Annual Appropriation Dependency Clause (ADC), a key provision in the context of this lawsuit:

The continuation of this Agreement is contingent upon the appropriation of funds by the Jefferson Parish Council for the continued operation and maintenance of the Expansion Area. If the Council fails to appropriate sufficient monies to provide for the continuation of this Agreement, the Agreement shall terminate on the last day of the fiscal year for which funds were appropriated. Such termination shall be without penalty or expense to the Parish except for the payments which have been earned prior to the termination date.
Upon termination of this Agreement prior to the end of its term, the Parish shall be relieved of its obligations under this Agreement except for payment of Service/Work already performed and [Waste Management] shall be relieved of its obligations to maintain and operate the Landfill.
Termination of this Agreement by the Parish under the provisions of this section shall not constitute an event of default. However, the Parish hereby consents to submit to the Parish the necessary appropriation language to be adopted to allow payment by the Parish.
The Parish may effect such termination by giving [Waste Management] a written notice of termination.

It is Waste Management’s position that the contours of this provision first became of interest to Parish officials in 2004 because Parish officials wished to divert the Parish’s waste disposal business from Waste Management to its competitor, River Birch.

In early 2004, James “Dutch” Connick, who at the time was a consultant and lobbyist for Waste Management, says he was contacted by then-Jefferson Parish [765]*765Chief Administrative Officer Tim Whitmer. According to Connick, Whitmer said that then-Parish President Aaron Broussard was unhappy with Waste Management,4 had met with representatives of River Birch, and that he wanted River Birch to operate the Parish landfill.5 According to Connick, Whitmer told him that Broussard wanted him (Connick) to know that River Birch would hire him (Connick) as its consultant and registered lobbyist.6

Months later, on October 11, 2004 then-Jefferson Parish Attorney Tom Wilkinson wrote a nine-page opinion letter to the Council7 regarding the use of the ADC. The Parish Attorney wrote:

[I]t is the reasoned opinion of this office that the Annual Appropriation Dependency clause gives the Parish Council the discretion not to fund the [Landfill] Contract for fiscal years following the current fiscal year, at no cost or penalty to the Parish, as long as the Parish Council has a “good faith” basis for exercising its right not to fund the [Landfill] Contract. Should the Parish Council decide not to. appropriate funds to provide for the continuation of the [Landfill] Contract for the next fiscal year, the [Landfill] Contract terminates on the last day of the fiscal year for which funds were appropriated.

Interpreting the language of the ADC, Wilkinson wrote:

Clearly, the Agreement only requires the administration to submit the necessary appropriation language for consideration by the Council, which then decides whether to fund the contract. The Parish Council has the unfettered discretion to decide whether to fund the contract for the next fiscal year, or to not fund the contract and thereby evoke the [ADC]. [A]ny other interpretation of the [ADC] would create an illegal, unapproved future debt of the Parish, rendering the entire Agreement void and unenforceable ab initio.

In so opining, Wilkinson acknowledged that, absent an unqualified non-appropriations clause, multi-year service contracts such as the Landfill Contract constitute a debt that must be approved by the State Bond Commission.8 In support of his conclusion that a duty of good faith is imposed on a public entity choosing to exercise a non-appropriations clause, Wilkinson cited '“the only reported Louisiana decision”, All American Assurance Co. v. State, 621 So.2d 1129 (La.App. 1 Cir.1993), summarizing the case as follows:

[766]*766[T]he state entered into a five year lease for office space with RJV. The State terminated the lease early after notifying RJV that public funding was inadequate to meet the rental obligations of the lease. [Paragraph] 28 of the lease [provided]: “In the event that public funding by either federal or state governing is inadequate to meet the rental obligations of this lease, lessee may terminate the lease upon 60 days written notice.”
The State asserted that funds were unavailable due to the financial crisis experienced in 1988 and that in terminating the lease it acted in good faith. RJV argued that the State failed to make a good faith effort to appropriate funds for the lease. Testimony established that in late 1997 the governor in an attempt to put the State on sound financial footing began to identify and recommend budget cuts. One of the proposals presented as a cost-saving measure was to identify unused or under utilized state-owned space for agencies currently leasing space.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 F. Supp. 3d 761, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171241, 2014 WL 7006003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waste-management-of-louisiana-llc-v-parish-of-jefferson-ex-rel-laed-2014.