Harper v. Southern Pine Electric

Case: 20-60451      Document: 00515736703         Page: 1     Date Filed: 02/08/2021




           United States Court of Appeals
                for the Fifth Circuit                            United States Court of Appeals
                                                                          Fifth Circuit

                                                                        FILED
                                                                 February 8, 2021
                                   No. 20-60451                    Lyle W. Cayce
                                                                        Clerk

   Kimberly Harper; Miranda Parrott; Roy Allen;
   Shennetta Draughn; Forrest W. Massa, Jr.;
   Carey Stewart; Cynthia C. Kelly,

                                                            Plaintiffs—Appellants,

                                       versus

   Southern Pine Electric Cooperative,

                                                            Defendant—Appellee.


                   Appeal from the United States District Court
                     for the Southern District of Mississippi
                                 No. 2:18-CV-31


   Before Higginbotham, Smith, and Dennis, Circuit Judges.
   Jerry E. Smith, Circuit Judge:
          Plaintiffs, who are member-ratepayers of Southern Pine Electric Co-
   operative, claim that Southern Pine is required to distribute to them $112.5
   million in “excess revenues.” Because Mississippi law does not impose that
   requirement, we affirm the dismissal for failure to state a claim.

                                          I.
          Southern Pine is an electric cooperative subject to Mississippi’s Elec-
   tric Power Association Law. Miss. Code Ann. § 77-5-201 et seq. (2016).
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   Mississippi requires cooperatives like Southern Pine to distribute to their
   members all “[r]evenues and receipts not needed” for “operating and main-
   tenance expenses and to the payment of such principal and interest and there-
   after to such reserves for improvement, new construction, depreciation and
   contingencies as the board may from time to time prescribe.” § 77-5-235(5).1
           According to plaintiffs, as of 2016, Southern Pine held $248 million in
   accumulated income—“equal to roughly 58% of its assets.”                         Plaintiffs
   maintain that that level of accumulated income “far exceeds what is reason-
   ably necessary to maintain reasonable working reserves . . . .” Thus, because
   Southern Pine has failed to refund “excess revenues,” plaintiffs contend that
   it has violated Section 20 of the 1936 Electric Power Association Act—the
   previously enacted version of § 77-5-235(5).
           Plaintiffs sued in state court, and Southern Pine removed to federal
   court, asserting jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1), the federal officer
   removal statute. After the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion to re-
   mand, a panel of this court reversed that decision. We determined that
   “[t]he requirements for federal officer removal” were met, so the federal
   court had jurisdiction. Butler v. Coast Elec. Power Ass’n, 926 F.3d 190, 201
   (5th Cir. 2019).
           Soon thereafter, plaintiffs filed their fourth amended complaint,
   asserting nine causes of action, only one of which is pressed on appeal.
   Relevant here, plaintiffs claim that Southern Pine improperly retained ap-
   proximately $112.5 million in excess revenue, which, according to plaintiffs,
   violated Section 20.2 Southern Pine moved, under Federal Rule of Civil


           1
             Although, as we discuss infra, plaintiffs contest which version of the statute
   applies, the language of this portion of both the 2016 and the 1936 versions is identical.
   Compare § 77-5-235(5), with 1936 Miss. Laws 351.
           2
               Plaintiffs conjure up that specific number by looking to requirements imposed by




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   Procedure 12(b)(6), to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief
   can be granted. The district court held that the modern version of the statute,
   § 77-5-235(5), applied retroactively, and, in any event, plaintiffs failed to state
   a claim under either version. On that reasoning, the district court granted
   Southern Pine’s motion and dismissed with prejudice. Plaintiffs appeal.

                                                  II.
           We must first determine which version of the statute applies. Plain-
   tiffs assert that, because they seek only to redress harms that occurred before
   2016, the modern version of the statute ought not apply under ordinary
   principles of statutory interpretation. Southern Pine counters that the pre-
   sumption against retroactivity does not apply, because the 2016 statute
   repealed and replaced the previously enacted version. We agree with South-
   ern Pine.

                                                 A.
           The general rule in Mississippi is that “statutes will be construed to
   have a prospective operation only, unless a contrary intention is manifested
   by the clearest and most positive expression.” Hudson v. Moon, 732 So. 2d
   927, 930–31 (Miss. 1999). But an exception exists “in situations involving



   one of Southern Pine’s federal lenders. Cooperatives such as Southern Pine fund their
   operations by borrowing money from federal lenders and retaining certain earnings allo-
   cated as “patronage capital.” Southern Pine receives loans from the Rural Utilities Ser-
   vice, a federal agency that “makes loans and loan guarantees to finance the construction of
   electric distribution, transmission and generation facilities . . . .” 7 C.F.R. § 1710.100
   (2020). Rural Utilities Service requires some of its borrowers to seek its approval before
   issuing any distributions to its members. 7 C.F.R. § 1717.617 (2020). It exempts borrowers
   from its pre-approval requirement if, among satisfying other conditions, “[a]fter giving
   effect to the distribution, the borrower’s equity will be greater than or equal to 30 percent
   of its total assets . . . .” Id. § 1717.617(a). To reach their specific claim for $112.5 million,
   plaintiffs effectively contend that anything above the 30% safe-harbor requirement is excess
   revenue.




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   the repeal or modification of statutes that create the right in question . . . .”
   Cellular S., Inc. v. BellSouth Telecomms., L.L.C., 214 So. 3d 208, 214 (Miss.
   2017). In those situations, “a statute modifying a previous statute has the
   same effect as though the statute had all the while previously existed in the
   same language as that contained in the modified statute, unless the repealing
   or modifying statute contains a saving clause.” Id. (quoting Stone v. Indep.
   Linen Serv. Co., 55 So. 2d 165, 168 (Miss. 1951)). Thus, “every right or rem-
   edy created solely by the repealed or modified statute disappears or falls with
   the repealed or modified statute . . . .” Id. (quoting Stone, 55 So. 2d at 168).
          Plaintiffs do not contest that the modern statute modified the 1936
   version, thus bringing it within the general contours of the Stone exception.
   Instead, they contend that, for two independent reasons, the Stone exception
   doesn’t apply. First, they maintain that the exception applies only in “law-
   suits that involve a public right . . . and lawsuits between the state and a pri-
   vate individual, firm or corporation” and that the present dispute does not
   fall within either category. Second, they aver that the exception is inapplica-
   ble here because to apply it would abrogate a vested right. The former con-
   tention is legally erroneous, the latter factually so. Thus, the modern statute
   controls.

                                          1.
          Plaintiffs maintain that the Stone exception does not apply where, as
   here, both sides are private entities and there is no public right at stake. That
   finds no basis in law. Plaintiffs claim that State ex rel. Pittman v. Ladner,
   512 So. 2d 1271, 1275 & n.2 (Miss. 1987), distinguished, for purposes of Stone,
   “litigation between the state . . . and an individual, firm or corporation” and
   “litigation between private individuals.” On further analysis, however, that
   distinction evaporates.
          Four years after Ladner, the Supreme Court of Mississippi reviewed




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   the effect of a statutory amendment in a probate dispute between private
   individuals. See Bell v. Mitchell, 592 So. 2d 528 (Miss. 1991). The court
   determined that the amendment “should be given retroactive operation and
   applied” it to the case before it. Id. at 533. It did the same the following year
   in a divorce proceeding. See Massingill v. Massingill, 594 So. 2d 1173, 1176
   (Miss. 1992). And federal courts in this circuit have followed suit.3 Thus,
   both this court and the Supreme Court of Mississippi have applied Stone in a
   way that is incompatible with plaintiffs’ proposed rule.4 Plaintiffs fail even
   to mention those cases, much less distinguish them.
           Alternatively, plaintiffs contend that the Stone exception applies only
   to lawsuits that involve a public right. The caselaw on which they rely for
   that proposition, however, is inapposite.
           First, plaintiffs quote from Cellular South, which states, 214 So. 3d at
   213, that “the question of whether amendments to statutes apply to existing
   public records covered by the Public Records Act is different from the ques-
   tions normally considered in the context of the retroactivity of statutory
   amendments.” Plaintiffs contend that the relevant difference in that case is
   that it involved a public right. But that’s wrong. Id. The “differen[ce]” to
   which the court referred was that of the retroactive “application of a wholly
   new statute—as opposed to an amendment to an existing statute—that
   modified existing rights that existed independently of and before the exis-
   tence of the statute.” Id. It is not for another six paragraphs that the Cellular
   South court discusses public rights. Id. at 215.


           3
             See, e.g., Wilson v. William Hall Chevrolet, Inc., 871 F. Supp. 279, 281 (S.D. Miss.
   1994), aff’d in part and rev’d in part on other grounds sub nom. Wilson v. Nelson Hall Chevrolet,
   Inc., No. 95-60107, 1996 WL 46788 (5th Cir. 1996) (per curiam).
           4
            Importantly, none of the aforementioned cases involved public rights, plaintiffs’
   second category to which they contend Stone is confined.




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           Although the statute at issue in Cellular South “create[d] . . . [a] right
   of the public,” that was relevant only because that meant that it did not “cre-
   ate rights in favor” of the litigants. Id. The holding, therefore, turned on the
   fact that there was no private right the amended statute abrogated—it did not
   depend on the existence of a public right.
           Plaintiffs’ reliance on Mississippi Department of Corrections v. Roderick
   & Solange MacArthur Justice Center, 220 So. 3d 929 (Miss. 2017), is similarly
   unavailing. That case, like Cellular South, discussed public rights only in the
   context of deciding whether the plaintiff had a vested right that retroactive
   application of the amended law would abrogate. Id. at 936–39. Stone applied
   because the statute did not establish “any type of private, vested right . . . .”
   Id. at 938. The court therefore “rejected” the argument that “the amended
   law abrogate[d] a vested right” and held that the statute at issue “ha[d] no
   impermissible retroactive effect in [that] case.” Id. As in Cellular South,
   then, the court appropriately applied Stone, because doing so did not abrogate
   a vested right—the existence of a public right was entirely incidental to that
   decisive fact.
           Plaintiffs can’t point to any case indicating that the Stone exception
   applies only in the limited circumstances for which they advocate. 5 Instead,
   both the Supreme Court of Mississippi and federal courts in this circuit have
   applied the Stone exception where, were we to accept plaintiffs’ contention,
   it was inapplicable. See, e.g., Massingill, 594 So. 2d at 1176; Wilson, 1996 WL
   46788, at *1 (affirming the district court’s application). And we see no reason
   to place talismanic significance on public rights for purposes of the Stone
   exception. Instead, public rights are but one area in which a retroactive appli-


           5
             Although plaintiffs make much of Ladner, even by their account it cannot be a full
   statement of the Stone exception’s application—it makes no mention of suits involving
   public rights. See generally Ladner, 512 So. 2d 1271.




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   cation of a statutory amendment will not abrogate a vested right.
          We therefore take at face value the characterization by the Supreme
   Court of Mississippi: “[E]very right or remedy created solely by the repealed
   or modified statute disappears or falls with the repealed or modified statute
   . . . save that no such repeal or modification shall be permitted to impair the
   obligation of a contract or to abrogate a vested right.” Cellular S., 214 So. 3d
   at 214 (quoting Stone, 55 So. 2d at 168). Unless plaintiffs can demonstrate
   that retroactive application would either impair the obligation of a contract
   or abrogate a vested right, the modern statute applies retroactively. With no
   contract at issue, our inquiry is confined to whether retroactive application
   would abrogate a vested right.

                                             2.
          As stated above, plaintiffs are correct that we may not apply a modi-
   fying statute retroactively if to do so would “abrogate a vested right.” Cell-
   ular S., 214 So. 3d at 214 (quoting Stone, 55 So. 2d at 168). Regardless, they
   have no vested rights under the 1936 statute.
          The Supreme Court of Mississippi defines a “vested right as a con-
   tract right, a property right, or a right arising from a transaction in the nature
   of a contract which has become perfected to the degree that it is not depen-
   dent on the continued existence of the statute.” Roderick, 220 So. 3d at 935
   (cleaned up). To be vested, the right must have “become a completed, con-
   summated right for present or future enjoyment; not contingent; uncondi-
   tional; absolute.”6
          Moreover, a future interest may be vested if it “confer[s] a fixed right



          6
         Est. of Greer v. Ball, 218 So. 3d 1136, 1140 (Miss. 2017) (quoting Vested, Black’s
   Law Dictionary (abr. 9th ed. 2010)).




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   of taking possession in the future.” Vested, Black’s Law Dictionary
   (11th ed. 2019) (cleaned up). To do so, it must satisfy two requirements.
   First, there must “be no condition precedent to the interest’s becoming a
   present estate” and, second, it must be “theoretically possible to identify
   who would get the right to possession if the interest should become a present
   estate at any time.” Id. (cleaned up). Put another way, it must be “not con-
   tingent” upon a future event taking place. Greer, 218 So. 3d at 1140 (quota-
   tion omitted).
          Plaintiffs purport to enjoy a vested right in excess earnings held by
   Southern Pine. That claim is based on the statutory language, which provides
   that “the revenues and receipts of a corporation shall first be devoted to such
   operating and maintenance expenses and to the payment of such principal
   and interest and thereafter to such reserves for improvement, new construc-
   tion, depreciation and contingencies as the board may from time to time pre-
   scribe.” 1936 Miss. Laws 351. The statute further states that revenues “not
   needed for these purposes shall be returned to the members, by the re-
   imbursement of membership fees, or by way of general rate reductions, as the
   board may decide.” Id.
          At bottom, plaintiffs claim that, because excess revenues “shall,” i.e.,
   must, “be returned to the members,” they possess a vested right in those
   revenues. Id. That theory is misplaced because it focuses on the wrong part
   of the statute. The issue is not whether the board must return excess rev-
   enues “to the members . . . .” Id. It must—the statute is unambiguous in
   that respect. But plaintiffs gloss over the relevant question: Who gets to
   determine when revenues become “not needed” for the defined purposes
   such that they must “be returned to the members”? Id. And the statute is
   unambiguous on that question as well. It leaves that discretion to “the
   board” as it “may from time to time prescribe.” Id.




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           Therefore, the legislature left it up to the board to determine when its
   revenues were no longer “needed” for specified purposes. Id. Only once the
   board makes that determination does the statute require it to return those
   revenues to the members. The right that plaintiffs assert, then, is contingent
   upon a determination of the board. And a right that is contingent is, defini-
   tionally, not vested.7 Because the 1936 statute did not grant plaintiffs a vested
   right, the modern statute provides the applicable law.

                                              III.
           Having concluded that the modern statute applies, the remaining
   question—whether plaintiffs have stated a claim for relief under
   § 77-5-235(5)—is easy: They have not. And when asked at oral argument,
   they conceded as much, stating that plaintiffs’ “claims necessarily depend
   on application of the pre-amendment version of the statute.”8 Nonetheless,
   we explain briefly why the statute does not provide the relief plaintiffs seek.
           In summary, the fourth amended complaint alleges that Southern Pine
   retained $248 million in accumulated income as of 2016. Of that, plaintiffs
   claim they are entitled to approximately $112.5 million. Such a distribution
   would reduce Southern Pine’s asset-to-equity ratio to 30%, which plaintiffs
   assert is the ceiling beyond which all revenues become excessive.

                                               A.


           7
            Greer, 218 So. 3d at 1140 (“A right is vested when it has ‘become . . . not
   contingent . . . .’” (quoting Vested, Black’s Law Dictionary (abr. 9th ed. 2010)).
           8
              Even if the 1936 statute applied, the above analysis compels the conclusion that
   plaintiffs have not stated a claim under that version either. Both versions of the statute
   grant the board discretion to determine when it has sufficient revenue such that it may
   distribute excess to its members. Thus, the claim plaintiffs bring—asserting a right to all
   revenue above a specific asset-to-equity ratio—is not cognizable under either statute. To
   hold as much would be to destroy the discretion that the legislature gave the board.




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           Like the prior version, the amended statute grants the board discretion
   over how to allocate the revenue the cooperative receives. It permits the
   board to determine, as it “may from time to time prescribe,” the adequate
   levels of revenues that should be held as “reserves for improvement, new
   construction, depreciation and contingencies . . . .” § 77-5-235(5). And, as
   explained above, the board must distribute the leftovers—all “[r]evenues
   and receipts not needed for these purposes”—to the members. Id. But it
   need not do so until it has determined that the revenues are truly excess, i.e.,
   “not needed” as “reserves.” Id. Thus, to state a claim, plaintiffs must iden-
   tify revenues beyond what is “needed” for the purposes outlined in the
   statute—as determined by the board. Id.
           That is not the claim plaintiffs press.9 Instead, they seek to impose a
   specific asset-to-equity ratio beyond which any and all revenues must be
   deemed excessive and returned to the member-ratepayers. One could urge



           9
              For the first time on appeal, plaintiffs attempt to reframe their claim. As they
   now describe it, their fourth amended complaint alleged “that Southern Pine retained and
   accumulated revenues prior to July 1, 2016 that were not devoted to operating and mainten-
   ance expenses, related debt obligations, or specific working reserves . . . .” Tellingly, plain-
   tiffs provide no record citation to support that assertion. And a review of the complaint
   reveals that that claim was not brought. Instead, plaintiffs asserted before the district court
   that “$248,000,000 far exceeds what is reasonably necessary to maintain reasonable
   working reserves . . . .”
             Plaintiffs then concluded that Southern Pine was required to return to plaintiffs
   “all excess revenues and receipts above 30% of its assets that it accumulated prior to July 1,
   2016 . . . .” Thus, instead of alleging that there existed revenues that Southern Pine had
   set aside as excessive, they asserted that all revenue “in excess of the recommended 30%
   asset-to-equity ratio . . . . should be returned to the member-ratepayers . . . .”
            Even assuming plaintiffs’ remodeled complaint would survive a Rule 12(b)(6)
   motion, they cannot do so by reframing it for the first time on appeal. See, e.g., Belliveau,
   Inc. v. Barco, Inc., No. 19-50717, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 2489, at *9 n.3 (5th Cir. Jan. 28,
   2021) (stating that a party “cannot raise an argument for the first time on appeal” (cleaned
   up)) (citation omitted).




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   that plaintiffs’ proffered ratio of 30% is good policy; Southern Pine argues
   vigorously that it’s not. In any event, it is not what the statute requires.
   Plaintiffs do not have a right to revenues until the board deems that those
   revenues are “not needed” for other purposes. Because the board has not
   done so, plaintiffs fail to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
          AFFIRMED.




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