FORT PIERCE INDUSTRIAL PARK PHASES II, III & IV OWNERS ASSOCIATION, Appellant and Cross-Appellee, v. Thomas A. SHAKESPEARE; Gloria J. Shakespeare; Gloco, LC; Atlas Tower, LLC, Appellees and Cross-Appellants.
No. 20140137
Supreme Court of Utah
Filed June 22, 2016
2016 UT 28
¶55 OPC urges us to adopt these standards. And it interprets them as mandating a single, overarching sanction for a range of violations of the rules of professional conduct, or in other words as prohibiting separate sanctions for each of a list of separate charges. Because the district court imposed two separate sanctions in this case (a 30-day sanction for the rule 3.3 violation and a six-month sanction for the rule 3.8(d) violation), moreover, OPC claims error in the sanctions imposed here.
¶56 We see no error. We see little upside and plenty of downside in the proposed requirement of a single, overarching sanction proposed by OPC. The downsides are apparent in our review of the decision below. If the district court had imposed a single, overarching sanction, our review on appeal would have been hampered in a couple of respects: We could not have identified the separate sanction imposed for the count on which we reverse and remand, and we could not have evaluated the propriety of the sanction imposed on the count on which we affirm. The latter point seems especially significant. Our review as to the propriety of a sanction imposed for a violation of one of our rules of professional conduct would be substantially impaired if we had before us only a single, overarching sanction in a case involving multiple ethics charges.
¶57 For these reasons we reject the OPC‘s cross-appeal. We affirm the district court‘s decision to impose separate sanctions for the separate charges at issue in this case—and, indeed, urge future courts to follow the pattern that was followed here, as it will aid our review of attorney discipline cases on appeal.
David L. Elmont, M. Eric Olmstead, St. George, for appellees.
Justice Himonas authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Durrant, Associate Chief Justice Lee, and Justice Durham joined. Justice John A. Pearce became a member of the Court on December 17, 2015, after oral argument in this matter, and accordingly did not participate.
Justice Himonas, opinion of the Court:
INTRODUCTION
¶1 This case is about the authority of the Board of Trustees (Board) of the Fort Pierce Industrial Park Phases II, III & IV Owners Association (Association) to deny an application to construct a cell phone tower on a specific lot in the Fort Pierce Industrial Park. The lot in question is located along River Road, which is “the most aesthetically sensitive area of the” industrial park. In 2009, Gloria and Thomas Shakespeare; GLOCO, LC; and Atlas Tower, LLC (collectively, Shakespeares) applied for permission from the Board to construct a cell phone tower on that lot. Despite the denial of their application, the Shakespeares proceeded to construct the cell phone tower. The Association then brought suit against the Shakespeares in district court for breach of the CC & Rs.1
¶2 Following a bench trial, the district court held that the Shakespeares breached the CC&Rs by constructing the cell phone tower without permission from the Board. However, the district court also applied a presumption that “restrictive covenants are not favored in the law and are strictly construed in favor of the free and unrestricted use of property” and held that the Board did not have the right to limit the number of cell phone towers in the industrial park. Additionally, the district court found that the Board could consider aesthetics and the two-business limit but held that the Board did not “reasonably consider” these factors in making its decision.
¶3 As explained below, we hold that the court erred in strictly construing the CC&Rs rather than applying neutral principles of contract construction. Thus, we reverse the district court‘s holding regarding the Board‘s authority to deny the Shakespeares’ application and instead hold that the Board had sufficient authority under the CC&Rs to deny that application. We also affirm the district court‘s grant of summary judgment regarding the timeliness of the Board‘s denial, and we strike the attorney fees award and remand for a determination of attorney fees in light of this decision.
BACKGROUND
¶4 The Fort Pierce Industrial Park was created as “an attractive development option for companies seeking to start or expand businesses.” It is a “very nice industrial park” in Washington County, Utah, and is “intended . . . to be a cut above the norm.” The Board has authority to “enforce and administer the [CC&Rs],” which bind owners and operators within the industrial park. The purpose of the CC&Rs is to “establish a general plan for the improvement and development of the [Fort Pierce Industrial Park] Property[,] to [e]nsure adherence thereto so as to avoid improper development and use of the Property[,] and to provide adequately for consistent quality of improvement and use.” Among other things, the CC&Rs “require that external equipment be shielded” and impose “maintenance requirements, prohibitions against hazards, and parking and signage requirements.”
¶5 Under the CC&Rs, property owners in the industrial park must apply to the Board for written approval “[b]efore commencing the construction or alteration of any buildings . . . or any other structures or permanent improvements.” After the owner has submitted the required plans, the Board has “the right to refuse to approve any such plans and specifications.” In making its determination, the Board may consider the fol
¶6 Both the St. George city ordinances and the CC&Rs emphasize aesthetic considerations at the planning stage. Chapter 22 of the city ordinances is titled “Wireless Telecommunication Facilities” and addresses “planning issues, particularly aesthetic concerns, brought on by the demand for wireless communication facilities.”
¶7 The events giving rise to this case transpired after the Board learned of “a problem with cell phone coverage” in the industrial park in early 2008 and was approached by a couple of cell phone service providers. Before the Shakespeares applied for permission to construct the cell phone tower at issue in this case, two other cell phone tower developers had sought permission to build cell phone towers in the Fort Pierce Industrial Park. At the beginning of 2008, Alltel Communications’ (Alltel) cell phone tower proposal was approved by the Planning Commission of St. George,2 but Alltel “abandoned the project for cost reasons” without submitting a plan to the Board for approval. A few months later, InSite Towers, LLC, (InSite) approached the Board and inquired about constructing a cell phone tower in the industrial park. InSite and the Board discussed possible locations for several months; InSite suggested a couple of locations along River Road, but the Board discouraged InSite from locating a cell phone tower there because of concerns about visibility, aesthetics, and the two-business limit and because that area “was just very sensitive.” The Board finally approved a non-River Road location on the west boundary of the industrial park where InSite‘s cell phone tower “would not be along the ridge line” and would be “kind of concealed.”
¶8 In 2009, the Shakespeares applied to construct a cell phone tower on their lot, which is located on River Road. The lot is comparatively small and already had two businesses on it. The Shakespeares first obtained approval from the city and then sought approval from the Board. The district court found that the Board denied the application because it wanted to limit the number of cell phone towers “to the minimum number necessary to meet the community needs” and for “other reasons . . . including primarily the aesthetics and the two-business limit.” Despite the Board‘s denial, Gloria and Thomas Shakespeare and GLOCO, LC, permitted Atlas Towers (their lessee) to construct a cell phone tower on the lot, without notifying the Board. In early January 2010, the Board discovered that construction of a cell phone tower had begun on the Shakespeares’ lot, and the Board filed a lawsuit against the Shakespeares. The Shakespeares counter
¶9 The district court held that constructing the cell phone tower without Board approval constituted a breach of the CC&Rs. But because the district court found the Board‘s denial to be “unreasonable and arbitrary,” it held that “[t]he tower is approved and allowed to remain.” In finding the denial “unreasonable and arbitrary,” the district court presumed that restrictive covenants, such as the CC&Rs, are disfavored and should be “strictly construed in favor of the free and unrestricted use of property.” According to the district court, the Board breached the CC&Rs “by basing its denial of the Shakespeares’ application on use limits not found in the [CC&Rs], and by otherwise unreasonably and arbitrarily denying the application.” Specifically, the district court indicated that “Fort Pierce does not have the right under the Restrictive Covenants to limit the number of cell towers within the industrial park.” The district court found that the Board acted in good faith and that other concerns factored into the decision, “including primarily the aesthetics and the two-business limit.” However, the district court found that the testimony “establishe[d] that the dominant factor in the decision was the preference of one site [InSite‘s] over the other [the Shakespeares‘].” Because the district court, based on its strict construction of the CC&Rs, believed that the Board lacked the authority to limit the number of cell phone towers, and because it found that such a limitation was the main reason for the Board‘s denial of the application, the district court concluded that the denial was improper. The district court also granted partial summary judgment to the Association, holding that the Board‘s denial was issued within sixty days, as required by the CC&Rs. The district court awarded the Shakespeares 50 percent of their attorney fees.
¶10 The Association appealed the judgment to the Utah Supreme Court. The Shakespeares cross-appealed the grant of summary judgment regarding the timeliness of the Board‘s denial and also cross-appealed the part of the final judgment finding breach by the Shakespeares and the subsequent “reduc[tion] [of] the grant of the Shakespeares’ attorney[] fees by 50%.”
¶11 We hold that the district court erred in strictly construing the CC&Rs. We reject strict construction of restrictive covenants and hold that restrictive covenants should be construed under the same principles used to interpret contracts. Based on our analysis of the CC&Rs, we reverse the district court‘s holding that the Board‘s denial of the Shakespeares’ application was improper; instead, we hold that the Board acted within its authority in denying the Shakespeares’ application. We affirm the grant of summary judgment regarding the timeliness of the denial. And we strike the attorney fees award and remand for a determination of attorney fees in light of our decision.
PRESERVATION
¶12 The Shakespeares assert that the question of “whether the trial court erred in finding restrictive covenants to be disfavored” was “not properly preserved on appeal.” The Shakespeares also claim that this question “is subject to the invited-error doctrine.”
¶13 The issue of “whether the trial court erred in finding restrictive covenants to be disfavored” may properly be considered on appeal in this case. An issue is preserved by “present[ing] [it] to the trial court in such a way that the trial court has an opportunity to rule on that issue.” In re Adoption of Baby E.Z., 2011 UT 38, ¶ 25, 266 P.3d 702 (citation omitted). However, there are “some limited exceptions to our general preservation rule.” Patterson v. Patterson, 2011 UT 68, ¶ 13, 266 P.3d 828. Because “[o]ur preservation requirement is self-imposed and is therefore one of prudence rather than jurisdiction[,] . . . we exercise wide discretion when deciding whether to entertain or reject matters that are first raised on appeal.” Id. “The two primary considerations underlying the [preservation] rule are judicial economy and fairness.” Kell v. State, 2012 UT 25, ¶ 11, 285 P.3d 1133 (alteration in original) (citation omitted). In Kell v. State, we pointed out that the “district court not only had an opportunity to rule on the issue [that the State argued was not preserved]” but in fact “did rule on it.” Id. We indicated that “[t]he district court‘s decision to take up the question . . .
¶14 Nor does the invited-error doctrine preclude consideration of the issue of “whether the trial court erred in finding restrictive covenants to be disfavored” in this case. The invited-error doctrine is intended to “ensure[] that parties cannot entice the court into committing an error and then reap the benefit of objecting to that error on appeal.” State v. Moa, 2012 UT 28, ¶ 25, 282 P.3d 985; see also State v. McNeil, 2016 UT 3, ¶ 17, 365 P.3d 699 (“[A]n error is invited when counsel encourages the trial court to make an erroneous ruling. The rule discourages parties from intentionally misleading the trial court so as to preserve a hidden ground for reversal on appeal. . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted)). The Shakespeares appear to argue that the Association enticed the court into committing an error because the Shakespeares “have been unable to identify any instance in the proceedings below . . . where [the Association] cited any legal authority or provided any meaningful explanation of the proper standard the trial court should apply in interpreting the plain language of the CC&Rs.” The Shakespeares’ approach confuses the concepts of preservation and invited error. Moreover, as we recently expressed, inaction is not a basis for finding invited error. McNeil, 2016 UT 3, ¶ 21 (“The State claims that the invited error doctrine is triggered by the fact that defense counsel ‘did not dispute’ that the statement was not hearsay. The State also terms counsel‘s conduct as an ‘affirmative acquiescence.’ . . . The State‘s argument is unpersuasive because an error of this sort by the trial court is not invited but merely unpreserved, and thus remains subject to plain error review. Because the State‘s understanding of invited error would erode the doctrine of plain error review and is contrary to our present caselaw, we reject this broad definition of invited error.” (citation omitted)). Thus, the invited-error doctrine does not preclude us from reaching the issue regarding the construction of restrictive covenants on appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶15 Three standards of review are implicated by the issues raised in this case. First, we review the district court‘s conclusions of law for correctness. State v. Tiedemann, 2007 UT 49, ¶ 11, 162 P.3d 1106. This includes “questions of contract interpretation.” Holladay Towne Ctr., L.L.C. v. Brown Family Holdings, L.L.C., 2011 UT 9, ¶ 18, 248 P.3d 452; Fairbourn Commercial, Inc. v. Am. Hous. Partners, Inc., 2004 UT 54, ¶ 6, 94 P.3d 292 (“‘[Q]uestions of contract interpretation not requiring resort to extrinsic evidence’ are matters of law, which we review for correctness.” (citation omitted)).
¶16 Second, we review the district court‘s findings of fact for clear error. Brown v. State, 2013 UT 42, ¶ 37, 308 P.3d 486 (“We will set aside a district court‘s factual finding as clearly erroneous only if it is ‘against the clear weight of the evidence, or if [we] otherwise reach[] a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.‘” (alterations in original) (citation omitted)). In this case, the district court‘s application of an erroneous legal standard (i.e., strict construction of restrictive covenants) and incorrect conclusion about what the CC&Rs allowed for (i.e., that the CC&Rs did not permit the Board to limit the number of cell phone towers) caused the district court‘s “entire approach to [its] analysis” and many of its factual findings to be “unavoidably tainted by [those] misperception[s].” Those factual findings are clearly erroneous, and we owe them no deference.
¶17 Third, we review the district court‘s grant of summary judgment for correctness, with “the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom [being viewed] in
ANALYSIS
¶18 We begin our analysis by addressing the proper interpretation of restrictive covenants; we reject strict construction of restrictive covenants in favor of applying the rules of construction used for contracts. Then we analyze the CC&Rs for the Fort Pierce Industrial Park and hold that they provided the Board with sufficient authority to deny the cell phone tower application. We discuss the business judgment rule but decline to adopt a precise business judgment standard in this case. We also consider the summary judgment determination regarding the timeliness of the Board‘s denial of the Shakespeares’ application and hold that the denial was timely. Finally, we strike the award of attorney fees to the Shakespeares and remand for a determination of what attorney fees to award the Association.
I. INTERPRETATION OF RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS
¶19 The district court erred in applying strict construction to the CC&Rs. Restrictive covenants are a “method of effectuating private residential developmental schemes” and give property owners in such developments the right to enforce those cove
[t]he rule that servitudes should be interpreted to carry out the intent of the parties and the purpose of the intended servitude departs from the often expressed view that servitudes should be narrowly construed to favor the free use of land. It is based in the recognition that servitudes are widely used in modern land development and ordinarily play a valuable role in utilization of land resources.
II. BOARD AUTHORITY UNDER THE CC&RS TO LIMIT THE NUMBER OF CELL PHONE TOWERS AND BUSINESSES
¶20 In applying the wrong standard, the district court erroneously deter
¶21 Under the CC&Rs, the Board had authority to consider the need for an additional cell phone tower and the possibility for collocation. The CC&Rs indicate that the
¶22 Because the Board had approved a suitable site for another provider, InSite, to build a cell phone tower, it was reasonable and within the Board‘s discretion for the Board to consider whether the industrial park needed another cell phone tower and whether collocation was feasible,8 when considering the Shakespeares’ application. Nothing in the record suggests that more than one provider was expected to use InSite‘s cell phone tower at the time. Under these facts, the Board acted reasonably and within its discretion in deciding that an unneeded second cell phone tower was unsuitable for the industrial park and therefore denying the application. The district court erroneously held that the Board cannot “limit the number of cell towers within the industrial park” and that the proposed project should be “reviewed on the merits as if there were no other communications tower in the industrial park.” This holding does not appear to comport with the city ordinances’ encouragement of collocation of wireless communication facilities. If the Board were required to ignore the InSite cell phone tower when considering the Shakespeares’ proposal, it would be impossible for the Board to be guided by the city ordinances’ collocation preference when exercising its discretion in deciding whether to approve or deny the proposal, which would contravene the CC&Rs.
¶23 Section 6.4(i) of the CC&Rs further underscores the Board‘s broad authority to limit the use of properties in the industrial park. The CC&Rs give the Board authority to “approve or disapprove building plans, specifications, or site plans.” Section 6.4 emphasizes the breadth of that authority by listing certain uses that are “expressly prohibited.” Section 6.4(i) prohibits “the manufacturing, storage, or sale of milk products or milk substitutes” and provides an exception to this express prohibition by permitting such operations on one specific lot. This prohibition of a specific type of business, combined with the exception for a single lot, recognizes the Board‘s broad authority: the Board has broad discretion, and section 6.4(i) limits that discretion in regard to dairy busi
¶24 The Board also had discretion to consider the aesthetic impact of the cell phone tower and the two-business limit. Of these two considerations, we address only the two-business limit, which provides a particularly clear basis for the Board‘s denial.10 The CC&Rs require “specific written consent of the Board” for more than two simultaneous tenants or users or for more than two businesses to be conducted simultaneously on a single lot. As the district court correctly recognized, this rule means that “you can only have two businesses on any lot. To have more than two, the Board has to grant approval.” The Shakespeares’ lot already had two businesses on it. Supra ¶ 8. Because the cell phone tower constituted a third business on their comparatively small lot, the Shakespeares needed the written consent of the Board granting an exception to the two-business limit. Id. The Board acted within its authority in choosing not to grant the exception.11
¶25 Thus, when analyzing the CC&Rs as a contract, rather than strictly construing them “in favor of the free and unrestricted use of property,” it is clear that the Board acted
III. BUSINESS JUDGMENT RULE
¶26 The parties have argued extensively over the precise formulation of the business judgment standard applicable to this case, and the district court considered the business judgment rule in its judgment below. However, we agree with the Shakespeares that “the adoption of a precise business judgment standard is not actually necessary in order to decide this case.” Regardless of the formulation of that standard, it is clear that the district court erred in its determination that the Board‘s decision failed to satisfy the business judgment rule.12 The district court provided two reasons in support of its determination.
¶27 First, the district court held that the Board “based its decision on a fundamentally incorrect premise,” namely, “the improper notion that it had the right to limit the number of cell towers.” Therefore, the district court concluded that “the action was unreasonable, arbitrary, and capricious.” However, as already discussed, the district court misinterpreted the CC&Rs. See supra ¶¶ 20-23. The CC&Rs do in fact give the Board the right to limit the number of cell phone towers. Therefore, the Board‘s basing its decision on the premise that it has that right does not make the Board‘s decision unreasonable, arbitrary, and capricious.
¶28 Second, the district court determined that the Board did not act reasonably in making its decision based on aesthetics and the two-business limit. However, the district court‘s reasoning is suspect because the district court determined that the Board‘s
¶29 Thus, the reasons supporting the district court‘s determination that the Board‘s decision did not satisfy the business judgment rule were fatally flawed, and the district court‘s determination that “the action was unreasonable, arbitrary, and capricious”
IV. TIMELINESS OF THE BOARD‘S DECISION
¶30 The district court correctly held that the Board‘s decision was issued within sixty days as required by the CC&Rs. According to section 5.1 of the CC&Rs, the Board has sixty days to “approve or disapprove building plans, specifications, or site plans,” and if the Board does not act within that time period, “such approval will not be required.” The Board denied the Shakespeares’ application on December 10, 2009. The issue is when the application was submitted, starting the sixty-day clock. The Shakespeares argue that everything required for the application was submitted on October 7, 2009, more than sixty days before the Board denied the application.13 However, the Shakespeares submitted additional materials at a meeting of the Board on October 15, 2009. The district court held that even if the application “were ‘submitted’ under section 5.1 on October 7,” the sixty-day clock “was triggered anew when, at the October 15, 2009 meeting, Mr. Shakespeare presented a previously unsubmitted photograph” and that, therefore, the December 10, 2009 denial was within sixty days. In construing the CC&Rs, we deem them to grant the Board sixty days to act on such applications. If the sixty-day clock were deemed to start when materials are initially submitted and not restart when
the final supplemental materials have been submitted, applicants could supplement or alter their applications at any time after the initial submission and thus deprive the Board of the opportunity to review the application as a whole and make its decision over a period of sixty days. We hold that the application was finally submitted for purposes of section 5.1 of the CC&Rs when the additional materials were submitted on October 15, 2009. Thus, we affirm the district court‘s holding that the application was denied within sixty days.
V. ATTORNEY FEES
¶31 Due to the district court‘s errors as discussed above, the grant of 50 percent attorney fees to the Shakespeares is erroneous. The Association was denied its attorney fees because of the district court‘s erroneous holding that “the Board acted arbitrarily and unreasonably in denying the Shakespeares’ application,” but as detailed above, the Board acted within its proper authority in denying the application. The Shakespeares were awarded attorney fees due to the “incorrect denial of their application” (but denied full attorney fees because of their “deliberate[] violat[ion] [of] the Restrictive Covenants in constructing the tower“), but again, the Board‘s denial was not incorrect. Therefore, we strike the attorney fees awarded to the Shakespeares by the district court and remand for a determination of attorney fees in accordance with this opinion.14
CONCLUSION
¶32 We reject strict construction of restrictive covenants and hold that restrictive covenants should be interpreted according to the same principles as contracts. Based on our analysis of the CC&Rs for the Fort
No. 20150143
Supreme Court of Utah.
Filed July 1, 2016
2016 UT 29
Asa E. Kelley, Park City, for appellant.
Troy L. Booher, Derek J. Williams, Julie J. Nelson, Salt Lake City, for appellees.
Justice Pearce authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Durrant, Associate Chief Justice Lee, Justice Durham, and Justice Himonas joined.
Justice Pearce, opinion of the Court:
¶1 Phillip J. James, according to a voluntary acknowledgment of paternity, is the biological father of Baby Q. (Child), a girl who has now been adopted by D.Q. and S.Q. (Adoptive Parents). James sought to intervene in the adoption proceeding, but the district court denied his motion. The district court found that James had failed to take the actions needed to preserve his ability to contest the adoption within thirty days of receiving a prebirth notice informing him that Child‘s mother (Mother) intended to place Child for adoption. James appealed from the district court‘s order denying his intervention. On April 7, 2016, we entered an order
