HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018CV149 - SUTHERLAND V. CITY OF FORT COLLINS, STEVE MILLER & IRENE JOSEY - 044 - REPLY IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINSDISTRICT COURT, LARIMER COUNTY, COLORADO
Court Address: 201 La Porte Avenue
Fort Collins, CO 80521
Phone Number: (970) 494-3500
▲COURT USE ONLY▲
Plaintiff: ERIC SUTHERLAND, pro se
v.
Defendants: THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS, a home rule
municipality in the State of Colorado; STEVE MILLER, in his
capacity as the Larimer County Assessor and all successors in
this office; IRENE JOSEY, in her capacity as the Larimer
County Treasurer and all successors to this office; and
Indispensable Parties: THE TIMNATH DEVELOPMENT
AUTHORITY, an Urban Renewal Authority; and COMPASS
MORTGAGE CORPORATION, an Alabama company doing
business in Colorado.
Attorneys for Defendant City of Fort Collins:
John W. Mill (#22348)
Amanda Levin Milgrom (#47871)
Sherman & Howard L.L.C.
633 17th Street, Suite 3000
Denver, CO 80202
Phone Number: (303) 297-2900
Email: jmill@shermanhoward.com
amilgrom@shermanhoward.com
Carrie M. Daggett, #23316
John R. Duval, #10185
Fort Collins City Attorney’s Office
300 LaPorte Avenue
Fort Collins, CO 80522-0580
970-221-6520
cddaggett@fcgov.com, jduval@fcgov.com
Case No.: 2018CV149
Courtroom/Division: 3C
REPLY IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS
The City of Fort Collins (the “City”), by and through its counsel, Sherman & Howard
L.L.C. and the Fort Collins City Attorney’s Office, submits this reply to Plaintiff’s Response to
DATE FILED: August 15, 2018 5:13 PM
FILING ID: C85757EEAC265
CASE NUMBER: 2018CV149
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Defendant City of Fort Collins Motion to Dismiss (“Plaintiff’s Response”), and in further support
of the Motion to Dismiss of the City of Fort Collins (“the City’s Motion”), and states as follows:
I. CLAIMS 14-19 MUST BE DISMISSED
Mr. Sutherland admits that Claims 14 through 19 “were not sufficiently expressed and
should be dismissed pursuant to C.R.C.P. Rule 12(b)(5).” Plaintiff’s Response at 2. Therefore,
this Court should dismiss with prejudice Claims 14 through 19.
II. CLAIM 13 MUST BE DISMISSED
Mr. Sutherland admits that Claim 13 is moot because the City’s “[p]reviously issued
debt . . . has now been paid in full” and “[n]o action of this Court may unring that bell.” Plaintiff’s
Response at 4. The Court should dismiss Claim 13 with prejudice.
Claim 13 should also be dismissed with prejudice because it fails to state a claim for relief
under the Colorado Supreme Court’s plausibility standard as explained in Section V of the City’s
Motion and in reliance on the same legal authority presented below in Section III.C of this Reply.
The Plaintiff provides no coherent argument why this is not so. Plaintiff’s Response at 4.
III. CLAIM 12 MUST BE DISMISSED DUE TO LACK OF STANDING, C.R.S. § 11-57-
210 AND FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM
The City’s Motion established that Claim 12 fails for three reasons. See City’s Motion at
3–8, 9–16. Plaintiff’s Response does not present any evidence to contradict the affidavits and
documents supporting the City’s Motion. Furthermore, Plaintiff’s Response does not present any
valid or persuasive argument that would save Claim 12 from dismissal.
A. Plaintiff Does Not Have Standing
Contrary to Mr. Sutherland’s unsubstantiated arguments in his Response, see Plaintiff’s
Response at 3, Mr. Sutherland does not have standing to challenge the bond issuance. He has
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suffered no injury in fact from the issuance of the 2018 Bonds.1
Mr. Sutherland fails to rebut the
City’s evidence with a single piece of evidence, which dooms his argument.2
The City submitted strong, conclusive evidence supporting its argument that Mr.
Sutherland’s alleged injury is too speculative and too remote in time for him to have standing. See
City’s Motion at 5–7. In summary:
1. The alleged injury is too speculative. This fact is supported by the affidavit of
Mike Beckstead, the City’s Chief Financial Officer. Based on his deep knowledge
of the circumstances leading up to the bond issuance, Mr. Beckstead stated in an
affidavit that he has “a high degree of confidence there will be no impact on
electric rate payers.” (Ex. 2 to the City’s Motion, ¶ 16.) Mr. Sutherland utterly
fails to rebut that statement with any evidence of his own.
2. The alleged injury is too remote in time. Again, the Mr. Beckstead stated under
oath that “[i]t will be 5 to 8 years before it can be determined whether there will be
any impact on electric utility rates.” (Ex. 2 to the City’s Motion, ¶ 16.) Once
again, Mr. Sutherland does not proffer a single piece of evidence to counter the
City’s evidence beyond his own opinions.
1 In addition, Plaintiff’s Response makes it questionable whether Mr. Sutherland has a “legally protected interest” that
has been injured, which interest is needed to satisfy the second prong of standing. Hickenlooper v. Freedom from
Religion Foundation, 338 P.3d 1002, 1006 (Colo. 2014). Plaintiff’s Response states: “My only claim and only
purpose for proceeding with this litigation is to hold open the possibility that, in the event the sales of broadband
services fail to provide sufficient revenue to make payments to bondholders in keeping with the terms, future decision
makers may elect not to raise electric rates in order to satisfy debt service requirements. In this regard, I do have
standing to request declaratory judgment of my rights under the City Code and City Charter.” Plaintiff’s Response at
3 (emphasis added.) Mr. Sutherland is clearly not seeking to protect his rights or interests, but those of a future City
Council. The Colorado Supreme Court has observed that the legally-protected-interest requirement “promotes judicial
self-restraint” and recognizes “that parties actually protected by a statute or constitutional provision are generally best
situated to vindicate their own rights [citation omitted].” Id. at 1007.
2 Mr. Sutherland agrees that the only issue at play is standing: “the only matter that needs to be decided here is
whether or not the possibility of injury . . . is sufficient to grant standing under the circumstances present here.”
Plaintiff’s Response at 5.
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Colorado courts universally hold that arguments of counsel do not constitute evidence. See Crow
v. Penrose-St. Francis Healthcare System, 262 P.3d 991, 999 (Colo. App. 2011) (refusing to
consider counsel’s argument regarding alleged differences in billing rates in opposition to motion
for attorneys’ fees as evidence to rebut the materials presented by plaintiff because “arguments of
counsel are not evidence.”); Sheldon v. Schmidt, 351 P.2d 288, 290 (Colo. 1960) (“the comments
and arguments of counsel are not evidence.”); Cook Inv. Co. v. Seven-Eleven Coffee Shop, Inc.,
841 P.2d 333, 334 (Colo. App. 1992). The same is true of arguments by a pro se party. Adams v.
Sagee, 410 P.3d 800, 803 (Colo. App. 2017) (“pro se parties must comply with procedural rules to
the same extent as parties represented by attorneys.”).
Therefore, Mr. Sutherland’s arguments consisting solely of his own opinion are not
sufficient to counter the City’s solid evidence in support of its argument that Mr. Sutherland does
not have standing to challenge the 2018 Bonds.
B. The City’s Compliance with C.R.S § 11-57-210 is Conclusive Evidence of the
Validity of the 2018 Bonds
The second, independent reason why Claim 12 fails as a matter of law is C.R.S. § 11-57-210
(“the Public Securities Statute”). See City’s Motion at 7–8. Plaintiff argues that the Public
Securities Statue “is, at best, a defense against the Twelfth Claim on the merits of the claim.”
Plaintiff’s Response at 10. Correct, the Public Securities Statue is an absolute bar, as a matter of
law, to Plaintiff’s Claim 12. Therefore, it follows that Claim 12 is not a viable claim and must be
dismissed.
Mr. Sutherland argues that the Public Securities Statute is “facially unconstitutional” and
“unconstitutional as applied” here. Plaintiff’s Response at 11. However, he does not cite any legal
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authority for why this is so. In fact, many states have a comparable statute that courts have reviewed
and upheld, as discussed in detail below.
Section 11-57-210 provides:
An act of issuance providing for the issuance of public securities or an indenture
may provide that the securities shall contain a recital that they are issued pursuant
to the supplemental public securities act. Such recital shall be conclusive evidence
of the validity and the regularity of the issuance of such public securities after their
delivery for value.
Id. (emphasis added). In Section 213 of the Bond Ordinance, see Ex. 1 to the City’s
Motion at 18, and in each of the bonds issued under the Ordinance, see id. at A-2 and B-2,
is the recital that satisfies this statute. Therefore, as a matter of law the 2018 Bonds have
been issued validly.
Many other states have similar statutes to Colorado’s Public Securities Statute, and the vast
majority of them deem compliance with such statute to be evidence that such bonds were issued
validly. In Allen v. City of Minot by and through Mayor & City Council, 363 N.W.2d 553 (N.D.
1985), the Supreme Court of North Dakota addressed a challenge to a bond issuance under its
version of the Public Securities Statute. The plaintiff challenged the issuance of municipal bonds
authorized by Minot’s city council and commenced a declaratory judgment action seeking
invalidation of the bonds. Id. at 554. On appeal, the question was whether “a competitor who has
opposed the issuance of [the] bonds may have the bonds invalidated by a court.” Id. The court
held the plaintiff could not challenge the bonds because they had been issued in accordance with
N.D.C.C. § 40-57-12, (North Dakota’s version of Colorado’s Public Securities Statute). The
North Dakota statute stated:
Revenue bonds bearing the signatures of the appropriate officers who are in office
on the date of the signing thereof shall be valid and binding obligations . . . The
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ordinance or resolution authorizing said bonds may provide that the bonds shall
contain a recital that they are issued pursuant to this chapter, and such recital shall
be conclusive evidence of their validity and of the regularity of their issuance.
N.D.C.C. § 40-57-112 (emphasis added). The court explained: “Pursuant to the terms of the
statute, the recital is conclusive evidence of the validity and regularity of issuance of the
bonds.” Id. at 555.
The plaintiff argued that the “validity” and “regularity” discussed in the last sentence only
apply to technical defects and do not preclude a challenge to the city council’s alleged failure to
comply with the bond issuance requirements. Id. The court disagreed. “We believe [] that the
Legislature intended to preclude any challenge to the validity of the bonds.” Id. The court
reasoned, “The legislature obviously intended to protect bondholders from the disruptive effect of
a subsequent invalidation of the bonds.” Id.
The same analysis is equally applicable here. Issuance of the 2018 Bonds under and in
compliance with the Colorado Public Securities Statute established conclusively the validity and
regularity of their issuance once they were delivered for value. Other states have similarly upheld
their versions of the Public Securities Statute against challenges. See, e.g., Town of Brewton v.
Spira, 17 So. 606, 607 (Ala. 1895) (“When the legislature authorizes a municipal corporation to
issue bonds” in compliance with a recital statute, such recital “operates as an estoppel against the
city from setting up a defense against an innocent purchaser that they were in fact issued for an
unauthorized purpose.”); Baxter v. Dickinson, 68 P. 601, 603 (Cal. 1902) (“Where the bonds on
their face recite the circumstances which bring them within the power, the corporation is estopped
to deny the truth of such recital.”); Crawford v. State ex rel. A.M. Klemm & Sons, 149 So. 340,
341 (Fla. 1933) (“where the power to issue municipal bonds exists, a bona fide purchaser of such
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bonds in the open market . . . is entitled to rely on the recitals . . . and such recitals in the
affirmative now preclude all inquiry, as against relators, who are shown to be innocent purchasers
for the value”).3
Even the U.S. Supreme Court has held that recitals in bonds, including general ones that
the bonds were issued pursuant to a recital statute, are conclusive. See Bd. of Com’rs of Knox
Cnty. v. Aspinwall, 62 U.S. 539 (1858). In Aspinwall, the court explained that “after the authority
has been executed, the stock subscribed, and the bonds issued, and in the hands of innocent
holders, it would be too late, even if a direct proceeding, to call it into question.” Id. at 545. The
court also provided a separate rationale: “The bonds on their face import a compliance with the
law under which they are issued . . . The purchaser was not bound to look further for evidence of a
compliance with the conditions to the grant of the power.” Id.
Therefore, in light of all this persuasive authority, the Court should reject Mr. Sutherland’s
inadequate attempt to challenge the constitutionality of the Public Securities Statute. The City’s
compliance with the Public Securities Statute established conclusively that the 2018 Bonds were
validly issued as a matter of law and are not subject to challenge by Mr. Sutherland in this action.
C. Claim 12 Does Not Meet the Plausibility Standard and Must Be Dismissed for
Failure to State a Claim
Finally, Claim 12 must be dismissed for failing to meet the plausibility standard set out in
Warne v. Hall, 373 P.3d 588 (Colo. 2016). Colorado’s pleading standards require that “only a
complaint that states a plausible claim for relief survives a motion to dismiss.” Warne, 373 P.3d at
3 There is one state court that has held to the contrary. See Evans v. McFarland, 85 S.W. 873, 877 (Mo. 1905). The
Missouri case, however, is against the great weight of authority. The City has not found any other states that follow
Evans.
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591 (emphasis added) (quoting Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 679 (2009)). Here, Mr.
Sutherland has failed to allege sufficient facts for Claim 12 to state a plausible claim for relief.4
See City’s Motion at 9–16.
The City countered each of Mr. Sutherland’s four arguments that make up Claim 12 with
strong evidence and arguments. Mr. Sutherland has failed to rebut any of this with additional
evidence or new arguments. The City’s four arguments supporting the fact that Mr. Sutherland
has failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted are as follows:
• The City complied with the applicable provisions of the City Charter and the City Code
when it formally introduced the Bond Ordinance in printed form at a regular meeting of
the City’s Electric Utility Enterprise Board on March 20, 2018, and it was adopted by a
vote of 6-0; held the final reading of the Bond Ordinance at a regular meeting of the Board
on April 3, 2018, where it passed by a vote of 7-0; published the Bond Ordinance in the
Fort Collins Coloradoan on March 25, 2018, and April 8, 2018; and the Board President
of the Enterprise signed it. See City’s Motion at 11–12.
• The City had the authority to issue the 2018 Bonds because they are an obligation of the
City’s Electric Utility Enterprise and not an obligation of the City. See City’s Motion at
13.
• The City substantially complied with the City Charter and the City Code by holding the
Board meeting the same day and immediately after the City Council meeting, so that any
person at the City Council meeting would automatically be in attendance at the beginning
of the Board meeting. See City’s Motion at 13–14.
• Neither the Colorado Constitution, the City Charter, nor the City Code requires that a
person be elected president of the Board so the City did not violate the Colorado
Constitution. See City’s Motion at 15–16.
Colorado appellate courts routinely affirm trial courts’ grants of motions to dismiss when
the plaintiff has failed to meet the plausibility standard. See, e.g., N.M. by and through Lopez v.
Trujillo, 397 P.3d 370, 377 (Colo. 2017) (under Warne’s plausibility standard, concluding that
4 The City believes it is clear from its Motion to Dismiss that it is not arguing, as Mr. Sutherland speculates, that this
Court does not have jurisdiction to review whether the City properly adopted the ordinance. See Plaintiff’s Response
at 13. Rather, the City is arguing that Mr. Sutherland fails to meet the pleading requirements to satisfy C.R.C.P. 8.
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“N.M. has not sufficiently stated a viable negligence claim on which relief could be granted.”);
Abu-Nantambu-El v. State, No. 16CA1524, 2018 WL 1247540, at *6 (Colo. App. 2018)
(affirming trial court’s granting defendant’s motion to dismiss for plaintiff’s failure to state a
plausible claim for relief); Semler v. Hellerstein, No. 15CA0206, 2016 WL 6087893, at *5 (Colo.
App. Oct. 6, 2016) (same); Ybarra v. Greenberg & Sada, P.C., No. 15CA0485, 2016 WL
4247809, at *6 (Colo. App. 2016) (same). Therefore, this Court should not hesitate to grant the
City’s Motion based on Mr. Sutherland’s failure to allege a plausible claim against the City.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the City respectfully requests that this Court dismiss with
prejudice all of Mr. Sutherland’s claims against the City--Claims 12 through 19. The Court
previously dismissed all claims against the “Indispensable Parties” (claims 1-11). See Order
Granting Defendants Timnath Development Authority and Compass Mortgage Corporation’s Joint
Motion to Dismiss, at 3, 4. Thus, dismissing Claims 12 through 19 will conclude this matter.
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Dated this 15th
day of August, 2018.
SHERMAN & HOWARD L.L.C.
By:/s/ John W. Mill
John W. Mill (#22348)
Amanda Levin Milgrom (#47871)
633 17th Street, Suite 3000
Denver, CO 80202
Telephone: (303) 297-2900
Email: jmill@shermanhoward.com
amilgrom@shermanhoward.com
ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANT
CITY OF FORT COLLINS
FORT COLLINS CITY ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
/s/ John R. Duval
John R. Duval, Esq., #10185
of City of Fort Collins
300 LaPorte Avenue
Fort Collins, CO 80521
970-221-6520
cdaggett@fcgov.com
jduval@fcgov.com
ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANT
CITY OF FORT COLLINS
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48824610.4
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify on the 15th
day of August, 2018, that a true and correct copy of the
foregoing REPLY IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS OF THE CITY OF FORT
COLLINS was served via ICCES e-filing system, upon the following:
Eric Sutherland, pro se
3520 Golden Currant Boulevard
Fort Collins, CO 80521
(By email and US Mail)
Eric R. Burris, Esq., pro hac vice
Cole J. Woodward, Esq.
Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP
410 Seventeenth Street, Suite 2200
Denver, CO 80202
Jeannine S. Haag, Esq.
George H. Hass, Esq.
Larimer County Attorney’s Office
224 Canyon Ave., Suite 200
Post Office Box 1606
Fort Collins, Colorado 80522
/s/ Stephanie Hendrickson
Stephanie Hendrickson, Legal Assistant