Lead Opinion
PER CURIAM Opinion; Concurrence by Judge THOMAS.
OPINION
The City of Santa Ana appeals an order of the district court granting summary judgment in favor of the Southern California Gas Company. The district court held that the City’s trench cut fee could not be constitutionally applied to the Gas Company, because such an application would violate the Contracts Clause of the federal constitution. See U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, el. 1. We affirm the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the Gas Company, and adopt the district court’s opinion, Southern California Gas v. City of Santa Ana,
We also affirm the district court’s award of attorney’s fees in favor of the Gas Company pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. We reject the City’s argument that the Gas Company was not a “prevailing party” pursuant to section 1988.
A prevailing party in a section 1983 action is eligible for an award of attorney’s fees under section 1988. See 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). The Gas Company’s complaint specifically stated that its Contracts Clause claim was “brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and related California
The Supreme Court’s decision in Carter v. Greenhow,
We therefore find that the district court acted well within its discretion by awarding the Gas Company attorney’s fees.
AFFIRMED.
Appendix
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY, Plaintiff, v. CITY OP SANTA ANA, Defendant.
CV 02-00658-GHK(BQRx)
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER RE: MOTION TO DISMISS & MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This matter is before the court on the above-titled motions. After fully considering the parties’ papers and oral argument on April 22, 2002, we rule as follows:
1. Background
In 1938, the City of Santa Ana (“Santa Ana”) adopted an ordinance granting the Southern California Gas Company
The Gas Company, “where practicable and economically reasonable shall” lay pipe
In general, the Gas Company’s rights under the 1938 Franchise are subject to “all of the ordinances, rules and regulations heretofore or hereafter adopted by the legislative body of the City in the exercise of its police powers.... ” Id. § 8(a). Santa Ana may also “demand[ ] the cost of all repairs to public property made necessary by any operations of’ the Gas Company. Id. § 8(b).
In October 2001, Santa Ana adopted a resolution and ordinance, which are the subject of this action. Santa Ana, Cal., Resolution No.2001-063 (October 1, 2001) & Ordinance No. NS-2480 (October 15, 2001) (hereinafter collectively the “trench cut ordinance”). With certain exceptions, the trench cut ordinance requires advance payment by anyone wishing to perform excavations or trench cuts. The Gas Company contends the trench cut ordinance: (1) substantially impairs its rights under the 1938 Franchise in violation of the Contract Clause, (2) constitutes an uncompensated taking in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, and (3) is arbitrary and capricious in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive due process clause.
II. Procedural Posture
Santa Ana moves to dismiss the Gas Company’s federal claims pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Gas Company seeks partial summary judgment on the Contract Clause claim pursuant to Rule 56. While we normally consider motions to dismiss first, the parties rely largely on the same evidence for both motions. In addition, the motion for partial summary judgment is potentially dispositive of this action. Pl.’s Mot. for Partial Sum. J. (“PL’s Mot.”), p. 1 n. 1 (stipulating and moving to dismiss remaining claims without prejudice should its motion be granted). Therefore, we consider Plaintiffs motion first.
III. Summary Judgment Standard
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Santa Ana, we must determine whether a dispute exists as to any material fact, and whether the Gas Company is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56; see, e.g., Toscano v. Prof'l Golfers’ Ass’n,
We may grant summary judgment motions touching upon contract interpretation when the agreement is unambiguous. See
A party opposing summary judgment must direct our attention to specific, triable facts. See Cal. Practice Guide: Federal Civil Procedure Before Trial § 14:101.1, at 14-24.2. General references without page or line numbers are not sufficiently specific. Id. (citing Nissho-Iwai Am. Corp. v. Kline,
IV. Contract Clause Analysis
“No State shall ... pass any ... law impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 10. Though written in absolute terms, the Supreme Court narrowly construes the Contract Clause to ensure that local governments can effectively exercise their police powers. Seltzer v. Cochrane,
A. Applicability
Federal law controls whether an agreement constitutes a contract for purposes of Contract Clause analysis. General Motors Corp. v. Romein,
B. General Standard
To violate the Contract Clause, the trench cut ordinance must substantially impair the 1938 Franchise. Id. at 1101. In that event, the ordinance can nevertheless survive scrutiny if the impairment “was ‘both reasonable and necessary to fulfill an important public purpose,’ such
1. Substantial Impairment
The Gas Company first argues that the trench cut ordinance substantially impairs the 1938 Franchise because it “double-charges” the Gas Company for rights already granted by the franchise. Pl.’s Mot., p. 12. Second, the trench cut ordinance circumvents the “specific method” in the 1938 Franchise for demanding repairs; it imposes a fee before excavation, before proving actual damage, and without considering the quality of the repairs. Id. In opposition, Santa Ana argues the trench cut ordinance does not impair the 1938 Franchise because the parties anticipated future regulation and provided for such fees in the 1938 Franchise. See, e.g., Def.’s Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot. for Partial Sum. J., (“Def.’s Opp’n”), pp. 9, 12-14.
To rise to the level of substantial impairment, the trench cut ordinance need not totally destroy the Gas Company’s franchise rights. See U.S. Trust,
When assessing substantial impairment, we need not resolve the “question of valuation” in terms of dollars if an important financial provision is impaired. See U.S. Trust,
Even adjustments in implicit financial terms can constitute substantial impairment. In Cayetano, the State of Hawaii enacted a statute that allowed it to delay employees’ pay by one to three days on no more than six occasions over one year.
a. Application to trench cut ordinance
Having considered the trench cut ordinance and 1938 Franchise in their entirety, including the various sections referred to by the parties, we conclude that the trench cut ordinance substantially im
i Right to excavate
First, the trench cut ordinance requires the Gas Company to pay for a right it already possesses under the 1938 Franchise — namely the right to conduct excavations without paying an additional fee.
Nevertheless, Santa Ana believes section 8(b) of the 1938 Franchise provides for trench cut fees because it allows Santa Ana to “demand[ ] the cost of all repairs to public property made necessary by any operations of the grantee.... ” It views the trench cut ordinance as such a demand. Def.’s Statement of Genuine Issues in Opp’n, ¶ 5. Santa Ana does not explain how this interpretation is consistent with the purpose of the franchise or section 10. Upon our review, we find no suggestion that section 8(b) authorizes demands for loss of useful life or future repaving costs.
Section 8(b) only covers “repairs.” The word “repairs” indicates the damage in question has already occurred. But the trench cut ordinance imposes fees for some harms that may not be realized for over a quarter-century. See Alvarez Decl.
¶ 9 (service life of street with less than three trench cuts is twenty-six years). By referring to the “cost of all repairs,” section 8(b) also indicates that the amount recoverable must be for actual harms, not estimated ones as established in the trench cut ordinance.
Moreover, while section 8(b) authorizes demands for harms to “public property” in general, section 10 specifically provides remedies for damage to streets. A standard rule of contract interpretation is that when provisions are inconsistent, specific terms control over general ones. See, e.g., CaLCode Civ. Proc. § 1859 (2001) (“[A] particular intent will control a general one that is inconsistent with it.”). Thus, even assuming section 8(b) authorizes demands for as-yet-unrealized estimated future harms, section 10 supercedes it in the context of damage to streets.
Regardless, the parties’ past practice removes any doubt as to whether Santa Ana can impose trench cut fees. During oral argument, Santa Ana admitted the Gas Company has performed “thousands” of trench cuts since 1938. To Santa Ana’s knowledge, the Gas Company always patched trenches in conformity with section 10 of the 1938 Franchise. Santa Ana never demanded further or additional repairs pursuant to section 10, let alone repaving of streets, at least before the 1990s.
Furthermore, the interference is more substantial than in either Cayetano or U.S. Trust. The statute in Cayetano did not alter the amount of money paid to employees, only the timing, and even then only by a few days and on a limited number of occasions per year. Santa Ana wishes to indefinitely increase the Gas Company’s financial obligations beyond those specified in the 1938 Franchise for regularly recurring activities. In U.S. Trust, the financial harm to the bondholders was uncertain but nevertheless substantial because it affected the overall security of the bonds. See U.S. Trust,
As in U.S. Trust, when considering substantial impairment, we focus on the im-portanee of the term which is impaired, not the dollar amount. Santa Ana has already imposed fees on the Gas Company pursuant to the trench cut ordinance. Alvarez Decl. ¶ 14. Though the fees charged to date are relatively small, Santa Ana was only able to do so by impairing a right at the heart of the 1938 Franchise. Thus, we conclude the trench cut ordinance substantially impairs the Gas Company’s right to install and maintain “pipes and appurtenances” under Santa Ana’s streets.
ii. Right to repair
Separate from the right to excavate, the 1938 Franchise provides that the Gas Company shall repair streets after excavations. See 1938 Franchise §§ 10-11. If repairs are inadequate, Santa Ana may demand the Gas Company commence further repairs within ten days. Id. § 11. Santa Ana can only declare the franchise forfeited if the Gas Company subsequently fails to perform the repairs. Id.
In contrast, the trench cut ordinance imposes, in advance, an estimated fee regardless of the actual quality of repairs, without proof of actual harm, and without affording an opportunity to perform repair work. For example, the trench cut ordinance does not adjust fees even though Santa Ana admits high quality trench cuts reduce structural damage. See Alvarez Decl. ¶ 7. By presuming damage regardless of the quality of workmanship, the
The right to fix street damage caused by trenches is closely related to the right to excavate without paying additional fees. By making the repairs, the Gas Company avoids the cost of reimbursing Santa Ana for repairs and the complication of determining the value of such repairs. While not as central as the right to excavate, the impairment is nevertheless substantial. The right to perform repairs relates to the financial burdens assumed by the Gas Company. As a specifically contracted for provision, it is at least as important as the right to receive a paycheck on a particular day, Cayetano,
Consequently, the trench cut ordinance substantially impairs the separate right to repair damage to streets pursuant to sections 10 and 11 of the 1938 Franchise.
b. Reservation of rights
Despite the 1938 Franchise’s purpose and language and the parties’ past practice, Santa Ana argues there is no impairment because of a reservation of rights. Section 8(a) of the 1938 Franchise allegedly subjects the Gas Company’s rights to all ordinances “heretofore or hereafter adopted ... in the exercise of [Santa Ana’s] police powers....” Id. Read in conjunction with sections 8(b) and 9, Santa Ana contends the Gas Company .expressly acknowledged that its rights under the 1938 Franchise could be altered by future police power ordinances.
Santa Ana cannot avoid Contract Clause analysis merely by establishing that the trench cut ordinance is an otherwise legitimate exercise of police power.
Nor can it be said that the 1938 Franchise contemplates the future imposition of fees like those imposed by the trench cut ordinance. If anything, the presumption behind the trench cut ordinance cannot be reconciled with the language of the 1938 Franchise. Santa Ana and the trench cut ordinance presume trenched streets can never be returned to their original condi
c. Energy Reserves
Santa Ana next argues that Energy Reserves is squarely on point and thus an absolute defense. Furthermore, Defendant believes Energy Reserves either reversed or substantially limited the reasoning in U.S. Trust
As in this case, the parties in Energy Reserves made their agreement “subject to relevant present and future state and federal law.”
Rather than reverse or limit U.S. Trust, Energy Reserves approves of U.S. Trust’s holding and reasoning when state entities interfere with their own obligations. Id. at 412-413 & n. 14,
d. Summary of substantial impairment
The trench cut ordinance imposes an additional financial burden on the Gas Company’s right to install and maintain pipes under streets and impairs the Gas Company’s right to repair any street damage caused by trenching. Considered individually and/or together, the impairment of these rights is substantial.
2. Reasonable and Necessary
Because Santa Ana has substantially impaired its own contract, it has the burden of establishing that the trench cut ordinance is both reasonable and necessary to an important public purpose. Cayetano,
a. Reasonableness
We generally consider “the extent of the impairment as well as the public purpose
For example, in U.S. Trust, before issuing bonds, the Port Authority was aware of the need for mass transportation and the likelihood that commuter rail-lines would operate at a deficit. Id. at 21,
On the other hand, if a statute causes unforeseen and unintended consequences such that private parties would obtain windfalls they never expected, later amendment to realign a statute with the parties’ expected bargain may be reasonable. See U.S. Trust,
In that case, the -impairment of the defaulting purchasers’ contract rights was reasonable. Id. at 516-17,
In a conclusory fashion, Santa Ana asserts that the trench cut ordinance is reasonable. Def.’s Opp’n, pp. 14-16.
To the extent Defendant’s Statement of Genuine Issues in Opposition refers to six exemptions in the trench cut ordinance, it offers no explanation as to how those exemptions render the impairment reasonable. In any event, Santa Ana has no right to charge the Gas Company for trench cuts repaired in conformity with section 10. It has unilaterally imposed costs that were not assigned to the Gas Company by the 1938 Franchise.
Therefore, the trench cut ordinance is unreasonable because damage to streets was foreseen in 1938 and because the extent of infringement is not warranted by Santa Ana’s stated goals.
b. Necessity
In any event, Santa Ana cannot satisfy its heavy burden on necessity. The trench cut ordinance is not necessary if more moderate alternatives would serve Santa Ana’s purposes equally well without impairing the 1938 Franchise. Cayetano,
The one modern exception is El Paso v. Simmons,
The trench cut ordinance is designed to raise revenues to repair and maintain streets as well as encourage coordination among utilities and Santa Ana in the planning of trench cut work and road repairs. Santa Ana has other tools available to raise revenues, such as its taxing power. Santa Ana could also promote and/or require coordination between itself and utilities by, for example, (1) notifying them of planned street work, (2) establishing periodic meetings between their respective representatives, or (3) entering into separate agreements with the utilities to ensure trench cuts are performed during periods when the useful life will not be significantly impacted. In short, numerous alternatives exist, and Santa Ana has not claimed to have exhausted them.
As proof of necessity, Santa Ana cites scientific studies describing the harms caused by trench cuts. At oral argument, counsel also pointed out the burden of determining loss of useful life on a case-by-case basis. We do not question the usefulness or practicality of passing a trench cut ordinance. The issue is whether it is necessary to adopt an ordinance that substantially impairs the Gas Company’s rights. Unlike El Paso, where, limiting the right of redemption was “quite clearly necessary” to resolve the land title problems, Santa Ana does not need to raise funds for street repairs and maintenance through imposition of trench, cut fees on the Gas Company. It can designate moneys from its general fund.
Santa Ana has failed to explain, nor can we detect from the evidence submitted, why impairment is necessary in this case. If Santa Ana’s recognition of higher costs alone sufficed, few if any contracts with government entities would be safe from impairment.
C. Summary
Santa Ana has failed to raise a dispute as to the material facts. Construing the evidence in the light most favorable to Santa Ana, we conclude the Gas Company is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law on the Contract Clause claim.
Y. Disposition
We hereby GRANT Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment. As a result, Defendant’s motion to dismiss the Contract Clause claim is DENIED. Since Plaintiff stipulates to dismissal of the remaining state and federal claims, Pl.’s Mot., p. 1 n. 1, we decline to rule on the
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The ordinance refers to the Southern Counties Gas Company of California, the Gas Company’s predecessor in interest.
. The parties provided several copies of the 1938 Franchise. See, e.g., First Amended Complaint Ex. A.; Alvarez Decl. Ex. F.
. Plaintiff’s pendant state claims are not directly at issue.
. Though we cite to the summary judgment papers, we also considered all arguments bearing on the Contract Clause claim in the motion to dismiss.
. While trench cut fees are imposed incident to obtaining a permit, Santa Ana does not claim such fees are based on the cost of providing the permit. Instead, the fees are designed to compensate Santa Ana for the "unavoidable" loss of useful life caused by trench cuts and the additional costs incurred in repaving trenched streets. Santa Ana, Cal., Ordinance No. NS-2480 §§ l.E-F, 3. Further, the fees are meant to encourage coordination between entities performing trench cuts and the city to minimize damage to streets. Id.
. The City Engineer met with "affected utilities regarding the City’s proposed trench cut ordinance over a period of several years, be
. Even if we were to assume that the 1938 Franchise is ambiguous, the parties’ past practice is wholly inconsistent with Santa Ana's proposed interpretation. The Gas Company and Santa Ana have conducted business for over fifty years without trench cut fees, more than twice the amount of time relied upon by the employees in Cayetano. No reasonable trier of fact could resolve the purported ambiguity in Santa Ana’s favor.
. We assume for purposes of summary judgment that the trench cut ordinance is a valid exercise of Santa Ana’s police powers.
. Santa Ana analyzes reasonableness and necessity together, further obscuring the nature of its arguments. Def.'s Opp’n, pp. 14-16
. Moreover, the exemptions appear to be instances when the loss of useful life is marginal or the city's conduct requires the Gas Company to perform trench cuts. The ordinance exempts excavations performed within one year of planned "pavement structural improvements,” for trench cuts through sidewalks or concrete, or when city projects otherwise require relocation. Santa Ana, Cal., Ordinance No. NS-2480 § 33.59. In short, Santa Ana only exempts trench cuts when it is cheap for it to do so. However, unlike the statute in El Paso, the exemptions bear no relation to the parties’ expectations about the distribution of benefits and burdens under the 1938 Franchise.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the judgment. However, I would affirm the district court on narrower grounds.
I agree that, under the circumstances presented by this case, the franchise agreement between the City of Santa Ana (“City”) and Southern California Gas Company (“Gas Company”) functions as a contract. I also agree that the City was prohibited from using its police power to alter unilaterally the terms of the contract. Thus, the question is whether the trench ordinance impairs the contract, and does so in a manner that violates the Contract Clause. U.S. Const., art. I, § 10.
To prove a violation of the Contracts Clause, the Gas Company must show that the City has substantially impaired the franchise agreement. “This inquiry has three components: whether there is a contractual relationship, whether a change in law impairs that contractual relationship, and whether the impairment is substantial.” Gen. Motors Corp. v. Romein,
The district court largely analyzed this case under § 10 of the franchise agreement. However, to me, the key contract clause is § 8(b), not § 10. Unlike the district court, I am not persuaded that § 10 exclusively controls the less immediate repairs at issue here. More plausibly, § 10 covers the initial patches needed to cover up the trenches themselves, while § 8(b) covers other repairs, including those made necessary by long term damage. Specifically, § 8(b) provides that the Gas Company shall “pay to the City, on demand, the cost of all repairs to public property made necessary by any operations of the grantee under this franchise.” Thus, by its terms, the City had the right to extract from the Gas Company the cost of public repairs at issue in this case. However, nothing in the franchise agreement provided the City the right to assess these costs in advance, nor to allocate estimated total costs of repair for all projects in the form of a fee unrelated to the specific damages caused by the Gas Company on a particular project.
Applying Contract Clause analysis to the undisputed facts, I would conclude that there is a contractual relationship, that the change in the law impaired the contractual relationship, and that the impairment is substantial. With that conclusion, the burden shifts to the City to show that the ordinance is “both reasonable and necessary to fulfill an important public purpose such that the impairment is justifiable.” Cayetano,
In my opinion, the City presented enough evidence to demonstrate the significant long term, hidden costs of trench cuts and the failure of the current franchise agreement to compensate it for these costs, largely unforeseen in 1938. Although the parties anticipated some dam
