United States Court of Appeals
For the Eighth Circuit
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No. 16-1735
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Acciona Windpower North America, LLC
lllllllllllllllllllll Plaintiff - Appellee
v.
City of West Branch, Iowa
lllllllllllllllllllll Defendant - Appellant
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Appeal from United States District Court
for the Northern District of Iowa - Cedar Rapids
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Submitted: December 15, 2016
Filed: February 7, 2017
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Before KELLY and MURPHY, Circuit Judges, and MONTGOMERY,1 District
Judge.
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MURPHY, Circuit Judge.
In 2008 the city of West Branch, Iowa (West Branch or the city) entered into
an agreement with Acciona Windpower North America, LLC (Acciona), a company
1
The Honorable Ann D. Montgomery, United States District Judge for the
District of Minnesota, sitting by designation.
that manufactures and installs wind generation systems. Under the agreement,
Acciona would expand its business in West Branch if the city would consider
rebating a portion of Acciona's taxes each year for eight years. West Branch paid
rebates for three years, but then refused to pay subsequent rebates and ultimately
cancelled the agreement. The district court2 concluded that West Branch's actions
breached the contract and, after a bench trial, awarded Acciona $494,924.28 in
damages. West Branch appeals, and we affirm.
I.
Acciona and West Branch entered into a tax increment financing (TIF)
development agreement in 2008. TIF agreements are authorized by Iowa law, see
Iowa Code § 403.6, to encourage economic development in specified areas, see Fults
v. City of Coralville, 666 N.W.2d 548, 551 n.1 (Iowa 2003). The agreement between
West Branch and Acciona obligated the city to consider providing certain benefits to
Acciona if it expanded its business in West Branch. Most crucially, the agreement
obligated West Branch to consider "rebating to ACCIONA, for a period [of] eight
years, incremental property taxes actually paid with respect to" improvements made
by Acciona in West Branch. The agreement made clear that all rebate payments were
"subject to annual appropriation of the City Council." In the event that the city failed
to appropriate a rebate to Acciona in a given year, the agreement specified that "the
remaining rebate schedule shall be extended by one year so as to allow eight full
years of rebates under this Agreement."
West Branch paid rebates to Acciona pursuant to the agreement in fiscal years
2010, 2011, and 2012. In those years the procedure for determining whether a rebate
would be paid was the same. We therefore take fiscal year 2010 as an example. In
2
The Honorable Jon Stuart Scoles, United States Magistrate Judge for the
Northern District of Iowa, to whom the case was referred for final disposition by
consent of the parties pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c).
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November 2008 the West Branch city council approved a resolution rebating a
portion of Acciona's taxes for fiscal year 2010 to the company. The rebate was
included in the city's budget which was adopted in March 2009. After Acciona timely
paid its fiscal year 2010 taxes, the city formally approved and paid the rebate.
Approximately the same process was followed in fiscal years 2011 and 2012.
In November 2011 West Branch's city council approved a resolution obligating
for appropriation a tax rebate to Acciona for fiscal year 2013. The authorized rebate
was subsequently included in the city's budget which was adopted in March 2012.
After Acciona paid its taxes for fiscal year 2013, the city budget was amended and
the rebate to Acciona was removed. The city failed to pay a rebate to Acciona for
fiscal year 2014 under similar circumstances. Although the 2014 rebate was initially
approved in November 2012, and included in the city's budget in March 2013, the city
eliminated the rebate in amending its budget in May 2014.
In addition to failing to pay Acciona rebates for fiscal years 2013 and 2014,
West Branch cancelled the agreement in May 2013 on the ground that Acciona was
failing to meet its contractual obligations. Acciona responded by filing this breach
of contract action in March 2014, and the parties proceeded to file cross motions for
summary judgment. The district court ruled that West Branch had breached its
agreement by cancelling without cause. The court also decided that Acciona was not
entitled to damages for rebates that could be due in future fiscal years, however,
because the agreement only obligated the city to consider the appropriation of rebates.
The court therefore granted Acciona's request for specific performance for the future
fiscal years. Finally, the court concluded that genuine issues for trial remained on the
question of whether Acciona was entitled to damages for prior fiscal years in which
the city had obligated rebates for appropriation but subsequently failed to pay them.
After a bench trial, the district court ruled that Acciona was entitled to recover
compensatory damages for the tax rebates obligated for appropriation but not paid in
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fiscal years 2013 and 2014. West Branch filed a motion to amend or correct the
judgment which was denied. West Branch appeals, arguing that the district court
erred in finding that Acciona is entitled to damages for rebates not paid in fiscal years
2013 and 2014.
II.
As this appeal follows a bench trial, we review the district court's "legal
conclusions de novo and factual findings for clear error." Urban Hotel Dev. Co. v.
President Dev. Group, L.C., 535 F.3d 874, 879 (8th Cir. 2008). It is uncontested that
Iowa law applies in this diversity case. See id. at 877. Iowa courts "generally review
the construction and interpretation of a contract as a matter of law." Hartig Drug Co.
v. Hartig, 602 N.W.2d 794, 797 (Iowa 1999). An exception to this rule occurs when
a lower court's contract "interpretation was predicated upon extrinsic evidence," as
those findings "are binding on appeal if supported by substantial evidence." Id.
A.
West Branch first argues that the district court erred in its interpretation of the
parties' agreement. Specifically, West Branch contends that the district court erred
in concluding that the city breached the agreement when it failed to pay rebates in
fiscal years 2013 and 2014 that had been obligated for appropriation. West Branch
notes that all rebate payments under the agreement are "subject to annual
appropriation of the City Council" and suggests that a rebate is not appropriated until
the moment at which it is paid. In other words, West Branch argues that under the
agreement it had the power to decide not to pay the rebates obligated for
appropriation up until the moment the rebate checks were sent. In support of its
argument West Branch points to the meaning of "appropriate," witness testimony at
trial, and an admission by Acciona at the summary judgment stage. None of these
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pieces of evidence singly or in combination are sufficient to persuade us that West
Branch's interpretation of the parties' agreement is correct.
Under Iowa law, a key rule of contract interpretation is that courts "give effect
to the language of the entire contract according to its commonly accepted and
ordinary meaning." Hartig Drug Co., 602 N.W.2d at 797. A corollary of this rule is
that it is "well-established . . . that an 'interpretation which gives a reasonable, lawful,
and effective meaning to all terms is preferred to an interpretation which leaves a part
unreasonable, unlawful, or of no effect.'" DeJong v. Sioux Ctr., Iowa, 168 F.3d 1115,
1120 (8th Cir. 1999) (quoting Fashion Fabrics of Iowa, Inc. v. Retail Inv'rs Corp., 266
N.W.2d 22, 26 (Iowa 1978)). As the district court noted in its thorough and well
reasoned opinion, the parties' agreement specifies that West Branch must annually
certify "no later than December 1 . . . the amount obligated for appropriation for
rebate to Acciona." The agreement further states that, in the event the city decides
to obligate a rebate for appropriation, "[t]he rebate shall be paid to ACCIONA within
thirty days of receipt by the City of the incremental taxes paid." If we were to accept
West Branch's interpretation of the parties' agreement and conclude that the city could
permissibly decline at any time to issue a rebate payment it had obligated for
appropriation, this contractual provision would be "of no effect." See DeJong, 168
F.3d at 1120 (quoting Fashion Fabrics of Iowa, 266 N.W.2d at 26). This
interpretation of the parties' agreement is disfavored under Iowa law.
The better interpretation of the parties' agreement—one that gives full effect
to all of the agreement's provisions—is the interpretation adopted by the district court
and advanced by Acciona on appeal. Under this view, if the city council elects to
obligate a rebate for appropriation, nothing in the agreement prevents the city council
from changing its mind and "unappropriating" the rebate up until the moment
Acciona pays its taxes for a given fiscal year. Once Acciona pays its taxes, however,
the contractual provision mandating payment of the rebate within thirty days bars the
city from deciding not to pay a previously obligated rebate. In other words, a legal
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obligation to pay rebates that have been obligated for appropriation by the city
council and approved as part of the city's budget arises under the agreement once
Acciona pays its taxes for a given fiscal year. We conclude this is the proper
interpretation of the parties' agreement, and we agree with the district court that West
Branch breached the agreement when it declined to pay rebates it had obligated for
appropriation in fiscal years 2013 and 2014 after Acciona had already paid its taxes
for those years.
West Branch's arguments for rejecting this interpretation of the plain language
of the parties' agreement are not persuasive. For example, West Branch cites to the
testimony of two trial witnesses, one of whom testified for Acciona, in support of its
argument that the parties understood the word "appropriate" in their agreement to be
synonymous with "pay" and that West Branch therefore never appropriated rebates
for Acciona in fiscal years 2013 and 2014. While extrinsic evidence like that cited
by West Branch may be considered when interpreting a contract, "the words of the
agreement are still the most important evidence of the part[ies'] intentions at the time
they entered into the contract." Pillsbury Co. v. Wells Dairy, Inc., 752 N.W.2d 430,
436 (Iowa 2008). We have already concluded that the plain language of the parties'
agreement supports the interpretation adopted by the district court, not the
interpretation advocated by West Branch. Moreover, the district court found that the
Acciona witness who testified that the city had not made an "appropriation for
payment" in fiscal years 2013 and 2014 did not mean that the rebates had not been
appropriated, but rather that the rebates had not been paid. The district court's
findings regarding the meaning and weight to be accorded witness testimony are
factual determinations we review for clear error. See Urban Hotel Dev., 535 F.3d at
879; Pillsbury, 752 N.W.2d at 436. Since we see no clear error here, we conclude
that the evidence at trial does not require adopting the West Branch interpretation of
the parties' agreement.
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On a related matter, we agree with the district court that an admission made by
Acciona at the summary judgment stage does not compel a conclusion that the city
did not appropriate rebates in fiscal years 2013 and 2014. It is true, as West Branch
points out, that in its summary judgment papers Acciona averred that it was
undisputed that "[t]he City did not appropriate the $265,140 rebate to be paid to
Acciona" for fiscal year 2014. The district court noted, however, that Acciona has
always argued that the rebate was appropriated, just not paid. In other words the
district court concluded that Acciona, like its witness at trial, may have been
imprecise with a term of art but did not intend to admit that the rebate was never
appropriated. We agree. We have previously noted that "[a] judicial admission must
be deliberate, clear, and unambiguous," and we generally reject efforts to convert
"carelessly worded" stipulations into dispositive admissions. Grandoe Corp. v.
Gander Mountain Co., 761 F.3d 876, 885 (8th Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks
omitted). We agree with the district court that Acciona's admission at summary
judgment is best read as a poorly worded effort to admit that it is undisputed that the
rebates were never paid, not an unambiguous admission that the rebates were never
appropriated. West Branch is therefore not entitled to relief on this ground.
B.
West Branch also argues that if the district court's interpretation of the parties'
agreement stands, the agreement itself becomes null and void because it "purports to
contract away the city's legislative power and duty to make—and reconsider—annual
appropriation decisions." There is no question, however, that the Iowa Code permits
municipalities to enter into TIF agreements to stimulate economic development. See,
e.g., Fults, 666 N.W.2d at 552–53 (citing Iowa Code § 403). There are limits to
municipalities' powers with respect to such agreements, such as the limits imposed
by the Iowa Constitution on municipal indebtedness. See id. at 556. Municipalities
generally avoid overstepping their bounds with respect to TIF agreements by making
the payment of rebates under such agreements subject to annual appropriation. In
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other words, TIF agreements typically promise only that a city will consider
appropriating a rebate each year and avoid promising that such a rebate will actually
be paid. See, e.g., id. at 557. This is precisely the structure of the agreement between
Acciona and West Branch in this case, and it is a structure that has routinely been
approved by Iowa courts. See id.
West Branch nonetheless argues that the parties' agreement is null and void
because the agreement limits West Branch's ability to decline to pay rebates at any
time. In other words, West Branch contends that the fact that the agreement requires
the city to pay rebates already obligated for appropriation within thirty days of
Acciona paying its taxes amounts to an impermissible delegation of the city's
legislative power to appropriate funds. We disagree. First, and as noted above, TIF
agreements are clearly authorized by Iowa law, see Iowa Code § 403.6, which
distinguishes the agreement here from the contracts in the cases on which West
Branch relies for its legislative delegation argument, see, e.g., Marco Dev. Corp. v.
City of Cedar Falls, 473 N.W.2d 41, 43 (Iowa 1991) (concluding that a contract to
widen a street was an impermissible delegation of a city's legislative function).
Second, chapter 403.6 of the Iowa Code specifies that it should be "liberally
interpreted to achieve the purposes of th[e] chapter" and notes that cities have the
power "to make and execute contracts and other instruments necessary or convenient
to the exercise of its powers under th[e] chapter." Iowa Code § 403.6(1). Although
the Iowa Code may not specifically authorize cities to agree to pay rebates that have
been obligated for appropriation within a set time frame, a reasonable interpretation
of this part of the Iowa Code suggests that cities have the power to include
contractual provisions not specifically authorized so long as the provisions do not
meaningfully limit the city's legislative powers. Such is the case here.
The timing provision challenged by West Branch is extremely narrow and
essentially procedural; as noted above, West Branch could decide to unappropriate
rebates it had obligated for appropriation up until the moment at which Acciona pays
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its taxes for a given year. Under these circumstances, we conclude this provision and
the agreement as a whole are enforceable under Iowa law.
C.
Finally, West Branch argues that the district court abused its discretion by
"allow[ing] Acciona to change its damages theory and calculation on the eve of trial."
Before the district court, West Branch sought relief from Acciona's allegedly
improper actions through a motion for sanctions that invoked Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure 16(f) and 37(c). This motion was largely denied by the district court. We
review a district court's decision on whether to impose sanctions for abuse of
discretion. See Carmody v. Kan. City Bd. of Police Comm'rs, 713 F.3d 401, 404–05
(8th Cir. 2013) (Rule 37(c)); Nick v. Morgan's Foods, Inc., 270 F.3d 590, 594–95 (8th
Cir. 2001) (Rule 16(f)). We see no abuse of discretion here.
West Branch argues that Acciona was improperly permitted to change its
damages calculation on the eve of trial. Specifically, West Branch claims that
Acciona revealed too late that it would seek damages for both fiscal years 2013 and
2014 and that Acciona "ramped up the amount of tax rebates claimed" shortly before
trial. The district court concluded that Acciona's actions were essentially harmless
because they resulted in "no surprise or prejudice to the City." We see no abuse of
discretion in that decision. Contrary to West Branch's argument, Acciona sought
compensatory damages for multiple fiscal years from the very beginning of this
lawsuit. See, e.g., Compl. at 3–4 (JA0007–08) (requesting compensatory damages
for West Branch's breach of contract). Acciona's pretrial clarification that the
company would seek compensatory damages for fiscal years 2013 and 2014 was
therefore entirely consistent with the theory of damages articulated by Acciona at the
outset of this case, not a sea change on the eve of trial. This fact distinguishes this
case from those on which West Branch relies for its argument that Acciona should not
have been permitted to seek damages for fiscal year 2013. See, e.g., US Salt, Inc. v.
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Broken Arrow, Inc., No. 07-1988 (RHK/JSM), 2008 WL 2277602, at *3–4 (D. Minn.
May 30, 2008) (disallowing a party to change its theory of damages on the eve of trial
from lost profits to reliance, incidental, or consequential damages).
Furthermore, the damages calculation used by Acciona appears to have been
based on information in the parties' agreement and documents originally in West
Branch's control. The manner in which Acciona calculated its damages should
therefore not have surprised or prejudiced the city. Indeed, it appears the city
concedes that the damages calculation used by Acciona and the district court is
accurate, as West Branch does not challenge the damage calculations themselves on
appeal. Under these circumstances, we cannot find that the district court abused its
discretion by concluding that Acciona's alleged improper actions were harmless and
declining to sanction the company.
III.
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
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