Darcie Schires v. Cathy Carlat ( 2021 )


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  •                                   IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL.,
    Plaintiffs/Appellants
    v.
    CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.,
    Defendants/Appellees.
    No. CV-20-0027-PR
    Filed February 8, 2021
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    The Honorable Sherry K. Stephens, Judge
    No. CV2016-013699
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Memorandum Decision of the Court of Appeals
    Division One
    1 CA-CV 18-0379
    Filed January 23, 2020
    VACATED
    COUNSEL:
    Christina Sandefur (argued), Timothy Sandefur, Scharf-Norton Center for
    Constitutional Litigation at the Goldwater Institute, Phoenix, Attorneys for
    Darcie Schires, et al.
    Mary R. O’Grady (argued), Emma Cone-Roddy, Osborn Maledon, P.A.,
    Phoenix; Vanessa Hickman, City Attorney, Amanda Sheridan, Senior
    Assistant City Attorney, Saman J. Golestan, Assistant City Attorney, Office
    of the City Attorney, City of Peoria, Peoria, Attorneys for Cathy Carlat, et
    al.
    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    Mark Brnovich, Arizona Attorney General, Brunn (Beau) W. Roysden III,
    Solicitor General, Michael S. Catlett, Deputy Solicitor General, Dustin D.
    Romney, Assistant Attorney General, Phoenix, Attorneys for Amicus
    Curiae State of Arizona
    Benjamin Nielsen, Quarles & Brady LLP, Phoenix, Attorneys for Amici
    Curiae Arizona Tax Research Association
    Aditya Dynar, Dynar Law, PLC, Gilbert, Attorney for Amicus Curiae
    Americans For Prosperity Foundation - Arizona
    Kory Langhofer, Thomas Basile, Statecraft, Phoenix, Attorneys for Amicus
    Curiae Public Integrity Alliance
    Laura Conover, Pima County Attorney, Regina L. Nassen, Deputy County
    Attorney, Pima County Attorney’s Office, Tucson, Attorneys for Amicus
    Curiae Pima County
    Timothy J. Berg, Emily Ward, Taylor Burgoon, Fennemore Craig, P.C.,
    Phoenix, Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Greater Phoenix Leadership, et al.
    Christina Estes-Werther, General Counsel, The League of Arizona Cities
    and Towns, Phoenix, Attorneys for Amicus Curiae The League of Arizona
    Cities and Towns
    VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE BRUTINEL, and JUSTICES BOLICK, GOULD, LOPEZ,
    BEENE, and MONTGOMERY joined.
    VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER, opinion of the Court:
    ¶1           The Arizona legislature has authorized municipalities to
    “appropriate and spend public monies for and in connection with economic
    development activities.” A.R.S. § 9-500.11(A). This case addresses
    whether the City of Peoria violated article 9, section 7 of the Arizona
    Constitution (the “Gift Clause”) by spending public funds to induce a
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    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    private university to open a branch campus in Peoria.      We hold that the
    City violated the Gift Clause.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2            In 2010, the City of Peoria adopted strategies to spur economic
    development. One strategy was paying money to businesses in desirable
    fields, including higher education and technology, in return for their
    expansion within Peoria (existing businesses) or relocation there (new
    businesses). Another strategy was partially reimbursing eligible property
    owners for making tenant improvements to vacant commercial buildings
    in an underused area in Peoria known as the “P83 District.” This case
    arises from the City’s implementation of these strategies to persuade
    Huntington University, Inc. (“HU”), an accredited private institution based
    in Indiana, to open a branch in the P83 District.
    ¶3          In 2015, HU and the City entered into an agreement for HU to
    lease space from a private property owner and open a campus in the P83
    District to offer undergraduate degrees in digital media. HU also agreed
    to refrain from offering similar programs in other Arizona cities for seven
    years and to participate in “economic development activities” with the City
    to attract other targeted industries to Peoria. In return, the City promised
    to pay HU up to $1,875,000 over a three-year period for developing the
    campus and programs if HU met specified “performance thresholds” that
    tracked HU’s progress in opening and operating its campus.
    ¶4         To fulfill its agreement with the City, HU leased a building in the
    P83 District from Arrowhead Equities, LLC (“Arrowhead”). The City then
    agreed to reimburse Arrowhead up to $737,596 for renovating the building
    to suit HU’s needs, contingent on Arrowhead meeting certain
    “performance criteria” tied generally to Arrowhead’s performance of its
    lease obligations.
    ¶5             Plaintiffs are taxpayers residing in Peoria. They initiated
    this lawsuit to enjoin the above-described payments, asserting they violated
    the Gift Clause. The trial court granted summary judgment for the City
    and denied Taxpayers’ cross-motion for summary judgment. The court of
    appeals affirmed in a divided decision. Schires v. Carlat, No. 1 CA-CV 18-
    0379, 
    2020 WL 390671
    , at *1 ¶ 1 (Ariz. App. Jan. 23, 2020) (mem. decision).
    While this lawsuit was pending, the City completed all payments to HU but
    remains obligated to make payments to Arrowhead. We accepted review
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    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    to clarify our Gift Clause jurisprudence and provide guidance to public
    entities entering into economic development agreements, matters of
    statewide importance.
    DISCUSSION
    I. General principles
    ¶6            The Gift Clause provides:
    Neither the state, nor any county, city, town, municipality, or
    other subdivision of the state shall ever give or loan its credit
    in the aid of, or make any donation or grant, by subsidy or
    otherwise, to any individual, association, or corporation, or
    become a subscriber to, or a shareholder in, any company or
    corporation, or become a joint owner with any person,
    company, or corporation, except as to such ownerships as
    may accrue to the state by operation or provision of law or as
    authorized by law solely for investment of the monies in the
    various funds of the state.
    Ariz. Const. art. 9, § 7. We have frequently described the historical
    impetus for this provision and analogous ones that exist in many state
    constitutions. See, e.g., Day v. Buckeye Water Conservation & Drainage Dist.,
    
    28 Ariz. 466
    , 473 (1925); Indus. Dev. Auth. of Pinal Cnty. v. Nelson, 
    109 Ariz. 368
    , 372 (1973); Turken v. Gordon, 
    223 Ariz. 342
    , 346 ¶ 10 (2010). In a
    nutshell, “the evil to be avoided was the depletion of the public treasury or
    inflation of public debt by [a public entity] engag[ing] in non-public
    enterprises,” State v. Nw. Mut. Ins. Co., 
    86 Ariz. 50
    , 53 (1959), or “by giving
    advantages to special interests,” Wistuber v. Paradise Valley Unified Sch. Dist.,
    
    141 Ariz. 346
    , 349 (1984).
    ¶7            We adopted a two-pronged test in Wistuber to determine
    whether a public entity has violated the Gift Clause. First, a court asks
    whether the challenged expenditure serves a public purpose. See
    id. If not, the
    expenditure violates the Gift Clause, and the inquiry ends. See
    id. If a public
    purpose exists, the court secondarily asks whether “the value to
    be received by the public is far exceeded by the consideration being paid by
    the public.”
    Id. If so, the
    public entity violates the Gift Clause by
    “providing a subsidy to the private entity.” Id.; see also Turken, 
    223 Ariz. 4
                  DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    at 345 ¶ 7, 347–48 ¶¶ 19–22 (applying the Wistuber test); Cheatham v.
    DiCiccio, 
    240 Ariz. 314
    , 318 ¶ 10 (2016) (same). The party asserting a Gift
    Clause violation bears the burden of proving it. See 
    Wistuber, 141 Ariz. at 350
    .
    II. Application here
    A.   Public purpose
    ¶8             What constitutes a “public purpose” has proved elusive to
    define. See City of Glendale v. White, 
    67 Ariz. 231
    , 236 (1948) (stating that
    the term “is incapable of exact definition,” changes with the times, and is
    best elucidated by examples). In general, however, a public purpose
    promotes the public welfare or enjoyment.
    Id. at 237
    (citing City of
    Tombstone v. Macia, 
    30 Ariz. 218
    , 228 (1926)); see also 
    Macia, 30 Ariz. at 227
    –
    28 (stating cities are not limited to providing material necessities but may
    also “minister to their [citizens’] comfort, health, pleasure, or education”
    and listing less-obvious examples of permissible expenditures, such as
    opening an exhibit at an exposition and decorating buildings (citing Ruling
    Case Law, vol. 19, at p. 721)). A court can consider both direct and indirect
    benefits of a government expenditure in deciding whether it serves a public
    purpose and thus satisfies the first prong of the Wistuber test. See 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 348
    –49 ¶¶ 24–27. In making this determination, a court should
    not concern itself with the wisdom or necessity of the expenditure in
    question, as those considerations lie exclusively within the public entity’s
    discretion. See 
    Nelson, 109 Ariz. at 371
    .
    ¶9            Perhaps because of the difficulty in precisely defining “public
    purpose,” courts take “a broad view of permissible public purposes” and
    give significant deference to the judgment of elected officials, who are
    tasked with identifying and furthering such purposes. See 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 346
    ¶ 28 (“[T]he primary determination of whether a specific
    purpose constitutes a ‘public purpose’ is assigned to the political branches
    of government, which are directly accountable to the public.”); see also
    
    White, 67 Ariz. at 237
    (affording the city council “some latitude” in deciding
    whether membership in a city league would benefit the city and refusing to
    interfere with that judgment absent adverse proof); 
    Wistuber, 141 Ariz. at 349
    (“[C]ourts must not be overly technical and must give appropriate
    deference to the findings of the governmental body.”). As we reiterated
    in Turken, “[w]e find a public purpose absent only in those rare cases in
    which the governmental body’s discretion has been ‘unquestionably
    
    abused.’” 223 Ariz. at 349
    ¶ 28; cf. 
    White, 67 Ariz. at 238
    (characterizing a
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    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    prior case as recognizing that public money spent to defeat a proposed
    amendment to the Workmen’s Compensation Law served a political
    purpose rather than a public purpose (citing Sims v. Moeur, 
    41 Ariz. 486
    (1933))).
    ¶10           The City found that incentivizing HU to establish a branch
    campus in the P83 District and reimbursing Arrowhead for part of HU’s
    tenant improvements would serve the public by (1) diversifying the City’s
    economic base and work force and (2) revitalizing an underused area in the
    City. Taxpayers argue that stimulating economic development by paying
    private businesses like HU and Arrowhead to operate in the City is a
    “secondary, intangible, and indirect benefit[]” that cannot constitute a
    public purpose. They assert that Wistuber’s first prong is satisfied only if
    a government expenditure produces direct benefits to the public and
    involves a traditional government function.
    ¶11            We rejected Taxpayers’ narrow view of a public purpose in
    Turken. There, we found that the City of Phoenix’s agreement to pay a
    developer $97.4 million for public use of garage parking spaces in a mixed-
    use development served a public purpose. See 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 348
    ¶ 23. We went on to address Phoenix’s argument that the agreement also
    served “several indirect public purposes,” such as increasing the city’s tax
    base, producing denser development, decreasing pollution, and increasing
    employment opportunities for residents. See
    id. ¶ 24.
    The court of
    appeals had questioned whether such indirect benefits could establish a
    public purpose under Wistuber. See
    id. at 348–49 ¶ 25.
    Citing examples
    from prior cases, however, we pointed out that our jurisprudence had never
    drawn a bright line excluding indirect benefits from serving public
    purposes. See
    id. at 348–49 ¶¶ 25–27
    (citing 
    White, 67 Ariz. at 240
    (joining
    a municipal league to learn how other cities solve problems); 
    Nelson, 109 Ariz. at 373
    –74 (loaning money to a copper company to install air pollution
    control facilities that would protect public health); Humphrey v. City of
    Phoenix, 
    55 Ariz. 374
    , 387 (1940) (building low-income housing to clear
    slums, thus protecting against crime and disease and relieving
    unemployment)).
    ¶12          Here, the City did not unquestionably abuse its discretion in
    determining that its agreements with HU and Arrowhead served public
    purposes.    We have previously acknowledged that government
    expenditures for industrial development serve a public purpose. See
    
    Nelson, 109 Ariz. at 373
    –74; 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 349
    ¶ 27. Indeed, the
    6
    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    legislature has recognized the utility of such expenditures by authorizing
    cities to spend monies “for and in connection with economic development
    activities.” § 9-500.11(A). The fact that HU and Arrowhead also benefit,
    even primarily, does not alter the public purposes of the City’s
    expenditures. See 
    Nelson, 109 Ariz. at 373
    (“If there is a public purpose the
    loan or donation is not prohibited even though some organization derives
    special benefit from the project.”); 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 348
    ¶ 21 (rejecting
    consideration for Gift Clause purposes of whether private interests are
    unduly promoted). The HU and Arrowhead agreements satisfy prong
    one of the Wistuber test.
    B. Sufficient consideration
    ¶13            The second Wistuber prong acts as the primary check on
    government expenditures for Gift Clause purposes. To reiterate, under
    that prong, an expenditure violates the Gift Clause if “the value to be
    received by the public is far exceeded by the consideration being paid by
    the public.” 
    Wistuber, 141 Ariz. at 349
    ; see also 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 350
    ¶ 35
    (“[I]f the City’s payments to NPP under the Parking Agreement are grossly
    disproportionate to the objective value of what NPP has promised to
    provide in return, the consideration prong of the Wistuber test has not been
    satisfied.”).
    ¶14             Although the consideration paid by a public entity may be
    legally sufficient under contract law, it does not necessarily follow that it is
    sufficient under the Gift Clause “because paying far too much for
    something effectively creates a subsidy from the public to the seller.” See
    
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 349
    –50 ¶ 32. Our inquiry, therefore, focuses on what
    the public is giving and getting from an arrangement and then asks whether
    the “give” so far exceeds the “get” that the government is subsidizing a
    private venture in violation of the Gift Clause. See Yeazell v. Copins, 
    98 Ariz. 109
    , 112 (1965) (“The state may not give away public property or
    funds; it must receive a quid pro quo which, simply stated, means that it can
    enter into contracts for goods, materials, property and services.”). The
    relevant “consideration” consists of direct benefits that are “bargained for
    as part of the contracting party’s promised performance,” and does not
    include “anticipated indirect benefits.” See 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 350
    ¶ 33.
    “[A]nalysis of adequacy of consideration for Gift Clause purposes
    focuses . . . on the objective fair market value of what the private party has
    promised to provide in return for the public entity’s payment.”
    Id. 7
                  DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶15           Here, the court of appeals concluded that Taxpayers failed to
    prove that the consideration paid by the City far exceeded the returned
    value. See Schires, 
    2020 WL 390671
    , at *5 ¶¶ 22–23. It relied on the City’s
    expert, who opined that “the appropriate way to measure the fair market
    value [the City] received from the agreements was to measure the economic
    impact of the campus within the [City’s] limits,” which the expert found
    was $11.3 million—an amount far greater than the City’s maximum
    payment of $2,612,596. 1 See id at ¶ 22. The court rejected Taxpayers’
    argument that the anticipated economic impact from the HU campus was
    an irrelevant “indirect benefit” per Turken and instead found it resulted
    from “Arrowhead and HU promis[ing] to open a Peoria campus of HU in
    the P83 district.” See
    id. ¶16
              We agree with the court of appeals dissent that the economic
    impact from the agreements with HU and Arrowhead is an “anticipated
    indirect benefit” that is valueless under Wistuber’s second prong. See
    id. at *6 ¶¶ 27, 30
    (Morse, J., dissenting). As Turken instructs, the adequacy of
    consideration under the second prong focuses on the value of “what the
    private party has promised to provide in return for the public entity’s
    payment.” 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 350
    ¶ 33. Neither HU nor Arrowhead
    signed an enforceable promise to provide the City with any particular
    economic impact. Likewise, neither promised to provide the City with
    any goods or services, such as an ownership interest in the campus building
    or reduced tuition for Peoria residents. They simply promised to engage
    in their respective private businesses (educating and leasing).
    ¶17           In effect, HU and Arrowhead’s promises are no different than
    a hamburger chain promising to operate in Peoria in exchange for monetary
    incentives paid by the City in hope of stimulating the local economy. A
    private business will usually, if not always, generate some economic impact
    and, consequently, permitting such impacts to justify public funding of
    private ventures would eviscerate the Gift Clause. See Kromko v. Ariz. Bd.
    of Regents, 
    149 Ariz. 319
    , 321 (1986) (“Public funds . . . cannot be used to
    foster or promote the purely private or personal interests of any individual.”
    (quoting Town of Gila Bend v. Walled Lake Door Co., 
    107 Ariz. 545
    , 549 (1971)));
    
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 346
    ¶ 10 (noting the Gift Clause “was designed
    primarily to prevent the use of public funds . . . in aid of enterprises . . .
    1
    The expert measured “economic impact” as the value of all goods,
    services, and increased labor income to households produced as a result of
    the construction and operation of the HU campus for a five-year period.
    8
    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    actually engaged in private business” (citing 
    Day, 28 Ariz. at 473
    )). It
    makes no difference that HU would not have opened a campus in Peoria,
    and Arrowhead would not have renovated and leased its building, absent
    public funding. The anticipated economic impact from the HU campus in
    the P83 district is irrelevant to Wistuber’s second-prong inquiry.
    ¶18           Relatedly, the City asserts that its expectation of receiving
    $206,630 in municipal tax revenue during the first five years of HU’s
    presence in Peoria is a direct benefit that constitutes value for Gift Clause
    purposes. A business’s obligation to pay taxes is independent of an
    economic development agreement. As with anticipated economic impact,
    fiscal impact is an indirect benefit that is irrelevant to our analysis. See
    
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 350
    ¶ 38 (rejecting argument that taxes generated from
    mixed-use development contributed to the value of the parking spaces
    provided to the public where the developer lacked any obligation “to
    produce a penny of tax revenue”).
    ¶19            The court of appeals majority alternately found sufficiently
    valuable consideration provided by HU and Arrowhead because: (1) HU
    had the obligation to spend at least $2.5 million to open its Peoria campus;
    (2) Arrowhead was obligated to make tenant improvements to its own
    building; (3) HU agreed to refrain from opening a campus in other Arizona
    cities for at least seven years; and (4) HU agreed to help the City with
    “economic development activities.” See Schires, 
    2020 WL 390671
    , at *5
    ¶ 23. We disagree.
    ¶20           The initial three reasons provide no value to the City except
    to generate an anticipated positive economic impact in Peoria, which we
    have explained is an irrelevant indirect benefit. And, although HU and
    Arrowhead’s promises to invest in their own businesses—and in HU’s case
    to also forbear operating in other cities—may be sufficient consideration
    under contract law, they provide no bargained-for direct benefit to the City
    and are therefore insufficient under the Gift Clause. See 
    Turken, 223 Ariz. at 350
    ¶ 33.
    ¶21           As to the fourth reason, the record does not contain evidence
    that HU’s obligation to “participate in economic development activities
    with the City” holds any value, much less one approaching $2.6 million.
    The HU agreement does not define those “activities,” other than to state
    that they include “the development of customized work force development
    plans and programs for targeted industries sought by the City as part of its
    9
    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    business attraction efforts,” and “participation in meetings with business
    prospects, the creation of custom training programs to meet workforce
    development needs, and marketing activities.” But the HU agreement
    does not define the duration of this commitment, how many meetings must
    be attended, what developing plans and programs entails or how many
    programs HU must prepare, or what is meant by “marketing activities.”
    Also, HU does not guarantee any economic return for its efforts, nor are the
    City’s payments to HU triggered by performance of this obligation. In
    short, this contract term may be too indefinite to enforce, much less value.
    See Savoca Masonry Co. v. Homes & Son Constr. Co., 
    112 Ariz. 392
    , 394 (1975)
    (“It is elementary that for an enforceable contract to exist there must be . . .
    sufficient specification of terms so that the obligations involved can be
    ascertained.”). The City argues that the inability to quantify the fair
    market value of this obligation means Taxpayers did not meet their burden
    of proof. But the City may not avoid scrutiny of a contractual obligation’s
    value by providing insufficient detail to permit valuation.
    ¶22           Regardless, Taxpayers’ motion for summary judgment
    presented its expert’s opinion that the City received no value from its
    agreements with HU and Arrowhead, which necessarily includes the
    obligation to participate in economic development activities. The City
    countered this evidence only with a valuation based on economic impact,
    which its expert said was the appropriate way to calculate the agreements’
    value to the City, and provided no evidence of tangible free-standing value
    for HU’s promise to participate in economic development activities. On
    this record, Taxpayers satisfied their burden to show that the City’s
    payments to HU and Arrowhead far exceeded the value of that obligation.
    ¶23           Notably, the court of appeals gave deference to the City’s
    determination that it would receive “an equitable or proportional economic
    return” in exchange for its payments. Schires, 
    2020 WL 390671
    , at *5 ¶ 23.
    We recognize that in Cheatham, this Court stated that “courts must give due
    deference to the decisions of elected officials” in applying the second 
    prong. 240 Ariz. at 322
    ¶ 35. We now disapprove that statement. The Court
    cited no authority for its position. See
    id. Earlier in the
    opinion, it cited
    Wistuber’s statement that in applying the two-prong test, courts “must give
    appropriate deference to the findings of the governmental body.”
    Id. at 318 ¶ 10
    (quoting 
    Wistuber, 141 Ariz. at 349
    ). But deferring to the public
    entity under the second prong is not “appropriate,” as the inquiry is an
    objective one and does not involve subjective policy decisions. Cf. 
    Macia, 30 Ariz. at 226
    (“The question of what is a public purpose is a changing
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    DARCIE SCHIRES, ET AL. V. CATHY CARLAT, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    question, changing to suit industrial inventions and developments and to
    meet new social conditions.”). In deciding the sufficiency of consideration
    under the second prong, courts should not give deference to the public
    entity’s assessment of value but should instead identify the fair market
    value of the benefit provided to the entity and then determine
    proportionality.
    ¶24           In sum, although economic development activities can fulfill
    a public purpose, the public entity must receive a bargained-for benefit as
    part of the private party’s performance, and the payment of public funds
    must not be grossly disproportionate to the fair market value of that benefit.
    Here, the City’s payments to HU and Arrowhead did not satisfy Wistuber’s
    second prong, and the City therefore violated the Gift Clause.
    C. Attorney fees
    ¶25            Taxpayers request an award of attorney fees under the private
    attorney general doctrine, which authorizes fees for “a party who has
    vindicated a right that: (1) benefits a large number of people; (2) requires
    private enforcement; and (3) is of societal importance.” Cave Creek Unified
    Sch. Dist. v. Ducey, 
    233 Ariz. 1
    , 8 ¶ 26 (2013). The City has not objected to
    this request. In the exercise of our discretion, we grant the request, subject
    to Taxpayers’ compliance with ARCAP 21(b).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶26          We reverse the trial court’s judgment in favor of the City and
    remand to that court with directions to enter summary judgment in favor
    of Taxpayers. We vacate the court of appeals decision.
    11