cheatham/huey v. Plea ( 2015 )


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  •                               IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    WILLIAM R. CHEATHAM and MARCUS HUEY, Plaintiffs/Appellees,
    v.
    SAL DICICCIO in his official capacity as a member of the Phoenix City
    Council; CITY OF PHOENIX; PHOENIX LAW ENFORCEMENT
    ASSOCIATION, Defendants/Appellants,
    _________________________________
    THOMAS COX; VICTOR ESCOTO; RICHARD V. HARTSON;
    VIVIAN REQUE; and DAVID K. WILSON, Intervenors/Appellants.
    _________________________________
    WILLIAM R. CHEATHAM and MARCUS HUEY,
    Plaintiffs/Appellees,
    v.
    PHOENIX LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSOCIATION,
    Defendant/Appellant.
    Nos. 1 CA-CV 13-0364; 1 CA-CV 14-0135
    Consolidated
    FILED 8-11-2015
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. CV2011-021634
    The Honorable Katherine M. Cooper, Judge
    AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART
    COUNSEL
    Scharf-Norton Center for Constitutional Litigation
    at the Goldwater Institute, Phoenix
    By Clint Bolick, Jonathan Matthew Riches
    Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellees
    Sherman & Howard, LLC, Phoenix
    By John Alan Doran, Lori Wright Keffer, Matthew A. Hesketh
    Counsel for Defendants/Appellants
    Napier, Coury & Baillie, PC, Phoenix
    By Michael Napier, Kathryn R.E Baillie
    Counsel for Defendants/Appellants Phoenix Law Enforcement Association
    Judicial Watch, Inc., Washington, DC
    By Paul J. Orfanedes, Chris Fedeli
    Counsel for Defendants/Appellants
    Gomez & Petitti, PC, Phoenix
    By David F. Gomez, Michael J. Petitti Jr.
    Counsel for Intervenors/Appellants
    OPINION
    Judge Randall M. Howe delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Samuel A. Thumma and Judge John C. Gemmill joined.
    H O W E, Judge:
    ¶1            The City of Phoenix (“City”) and the intervenor police officers
    and the Phoenix Law Enforcement Association (collectively, “PLEA”)
    appeal the trial court’s order enjoining enforcement of “release time”
    provisions of the 2012–14 Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”)
    between the City and PLEA. Under this agreement, the City paid PLEA
    approximately $1.7 million in release time, which is time police officers are
    released from police duties for the City to allow them to perform PLEA
    activities and business. The City and PLEA argue that the trial court erred
    by finding the release time provisions violated the Arizona Constitution’s
    Gift Clause. Because the release time provisions do not require PLEA to
    perform any specific duties, however, any benefit the City received from
    the release time was grossly disproportionate to the City’s $1.7 million
    2
    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    payments to PLEA. Accordingly, neither the City nor PLEA has shown that
    the trial court erred in holding that the release time provisions violated the
    Gift Clause. For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s injunction of the
    2012–14 MOU release time provisions and prohibition of the City and PLEA
    from having release time provisions in their MOUs, unless mandatory
    language obligates PLEA to perform specific duties in exchange for the
    release time. We vacate the trial court’s other requirements in that order,
    however, because they are not properly part of the consideration analysis.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2           The City of Phoenix’s employees are divided into various
    units, with Unit 4 consisting of 2,500 police officers below the rank of
    sergeant. PLEA is a labor organization that represents the police officers of
    Unit 4. Of Unit 4’s 2,500 members, 2,150—nearly ninety percent—are PLEA
    members. Among other things, PLEA advocates for its members by
    negotiating contracts with the City and representing members in
    administrative, civil, and criminal proceedings.
    ¶3            Every other year, the City and PLEA negotiate a new MOU.
    MOUs govern the officers’ wages, hours, and other conditions of
    employment. See PHOENIX, ARIZ., CODE art. XVII, §§ 2–209, –210(11), –214,
    –215, –218 (1976). A complete MOU is submitted to the Phoenix City
    Council for approval. See id. §§ 2–210(12), –215(C). Every MOU since
    1977—when the arrangement began—has included provisions for “release
    time,” which is “the practice of relieving police officers from police duties
    to perform PLEA activities and conduct PLEA business.” The 2010–12 MOU
    prescribed four categories of release time. The first category—provided in
    § 1.3.G and Q—authorized six full-time officers to receive full pay and
    benefits with 160 hours of overtime per year. The second category—
    provided in § 1.3.G—allocated to other officers a bank of 1,583 release time
    hours per year for “legitimate association business,” which includes
    preparation for negotiations with the City. The third category—provided in
    § 1.3.K—allotted 15 days of paid leave per year for officers to attend PLEA
    seminars, lectures, and conventions. The final category—provided in
    § 1.3.I.6—authorized officers to serve as legislative representatives who
    received 500 release time hours per year to represent PLEA.
    ¶4           In 2011, William R. Cheatham and Marcus Huey (collectively,
    “Cheatham”) sued the City, challenging the 2010–12 MOU release time
    provisions, section 1.3.G, K, and Q, and seeking injunctive and declaratory
    relief. Cheatham argued that the release time provisions were
    unconstitutional under the Gift Clause. The clause is violated if, when the
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    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    government contracts with a private entity to expend funds, the funds are
    not used for a public purpose or the government’s expenditure is “grossly
    disproportionate” to what it receives in return. Turken v. Gordon, 
    223 Ariz. 342
    , 345 ¶ 7, 
    224 P.2d 158
    , 161 (2010).
    ¶5            In June 2012, after an evidentiary hearing on Cheatham’s
    application for preliminary injunction, the trial court concluded as a matter
    of law that “at least some applications of release time [were] not for a public
    purpose,” such as negotiating contracts for members, lobbying for
    favorable legislation, and attending PLEA functions. The court also
    concluded that PLEA did not provide adequate consideration for the
    benefit it received under the agreement because it was not required to
    “perform specific service or give anything in return” for the release time. In
    doing so, the court found as fact that the “MOU [did] not obligate PLEA to
    provide any services to the City in exchange for the compensation and
    benefits the City [gave] to PLEA for release time.” The court therefore
    preliminarily enjoined the 2010–12 MOU release time provisions.
    ¶6            A few weeks later, the 2010–12 MOU expired, and the
    2012–14 MOU became effective. The 2012–14 MOU largely authorized the
    same release provisions as those contested in the 2010–12 MOU, with
    certain changes. First, the allocated overtime hours for the six full-time
    officers increased from 160 to 960 hours. Second, the bank of release time
    for “legitimate association business” increased from 1,583 to 1,859 hours.
    Third, the MOU provided an unspecified bank of paid leave time for
    officers designated as association representatives to attend meetings and
    hearings without losing pay or benefits. Time used for any other purposes,
    however, had to be subtracted from the 1,859 release time hours. The
    amount the City paid for the release time provisions in the 2012–14 MOU
    was approximately $1.7 million.
    ¶7            Cheatham filed an amended complaint challenging the 2012–
    14 MOU release time provisions, section 1-3.B, C, and Q.1 After another
    evidentiary hearing, the trial court concluded that these provisions of the
    2012–14 MOU violated the Gift Clause. The court determined that release
    time did not advance a public purpose. As relevant here, the court also
    determined that the exchange lacked consideration, based on its factual
    findings that the MOU did “not obligate PLEA to provide any services to
    1      In the 2012–14 MOU, section 1-3.B provided for the six full-time
    release positions, PLEA representatives, and a bank of 1,859 hours of release
    time; section 1-3.C provided for the legislative representatives; and section
    1-3.Q provided for the full-time release officers’ 960 hours of overtime.
    4
    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    the City in exchange for the compensation and benefits the City [gave] to
    PLEA for the release time” and did not “obligate[] PLEA to perform any of
    the ‘examples’ [listed in the MOU] or do anything in exchange for release
    time with the possible exception of Section 1-3.Q.” Consequently, the court
    preliminarily enjoined the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions.
    ¶8             In January 2014, the trial court held a bench trial on
    Cheatham’s request to permanently enjoin the 2012–14 MOU release time
    provisions. The City and PLEA argued that the provisions should not be
    analyzed under the Gift Clause because release time was a benefit—part of
    the officers’ compensation package—not a payment or subsidy. The court
    rejected that argument because: (1) the MOU did not classify release time
    as compensation; (2) compensation was a mandatory subject of bargaining
    in the MOUs, whereas release time was not; (3) the City did not treat release
    time as compensation; and (4) city funds for release time were designated
    for PLEA, not the officers.
    ¶9             Incorporating its preliminary injunction orders, the trial court
    concluded that the release time provisions violated the Gift Clause. The
    court again determined that the provisions did not serve a public purpose.
    Noting that “release time is permissible if the duties imposed are
    substantial and the cost is modest,” the court then determined that PLEA
    did not provide adequate consideration for the City’s payment for release
    time because: (1) the 2012–14 MOU imposed no duties on PLEA; (2) the City
    had no control over how the release time would be used; and (3) the City
    had no system to evaluate the costs versus the benefit of release time.
    Further, the court reasoned that the benefits PLEA identified—promising
    not to strike, promoting “cooperation, better communication, labor peace,
    and good relations”; being “available for stand-by, call-out, and critical
    incidents”; and representing officers in disciplinary and grievance
    proceedings—were either indirect benefits or preexisting legal obligations
    that could not constitute consideration.2
    2      The trial court also rejected the City and PLEA’s argument that the
    Gift Clause analysis required Cheatham to show that the City Council
    abused its discretion in approving the 2012–14 MOU, determining that no
    such finding was necessary. The court noted, however, that even if such a
    finding was necessary, the City abused its discretion because it approved
    the MOU without (1) knowing the cost of the release time; (2) requiring
    PLEA to keep written records of its use of release time; and
    (3) implementing a system to evaluate the cost and benefit of release time.
    5
    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶10            Based on these factual findings and conclusions of law, the
    trial court permanently enjoined the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions.
    It also permanently enjoined the City and PLEA from entering into future
    MOUs or agreements with release time, unless the MOU or agreement
    provided a public benefit in obligatory language, required PLEA to
    reimburse the City for release time that did not directly benefit the City,
    implemented an accountability system for the use of release time, instituted
    a cost/benefit evaluation mechanism for release time, and prohibited using
    release time for lobbying activities.
    ¶11           The City and PLEA timely appealed. We consolidated the
    appeal with an earlier appeal from the preliminary injunction of the 2012–
    14 MOU. Because the court subsequently granted the permanent injunction,
    the preliminary injunction is moot. See Grupo Mexicano de Desarrollo S.A. v.
    Alliance Bond Fund, Inc., 
    527 U.S. 308
    , 314 (1999) (“[A]n appeal from the
    grant of a preliminary injunction becomes moot when the trial court enters
    a permanent injunction, because the former merges into the latter.”).
    Accordingly, this opinion only addresses whether the trial court correctly
    granted the permanent injunction.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶12           The City and PLEA argue that the trial court erred because
    the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions had a public purpose of
    developing a harmonious and cooperative relationship between the City
    and its employees and because Cheatham did not show that the City
    received consideration that was grossly disproportionate to its
    expenditure.3 Although the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions are moot
    due to the passage of time, we will nonetheless address the constitutionality
    of the provisions because of the breadth of the trial court’s permanent
    injunction and the issue is clearly capable of repetition—as this case
    demonstrates.
    3      PLEA contends initially that the Gift Clause is inapplicable because
    release time is a benefit that is part of the police officers’ compensation
    package. We reject this argument—as did the trial court—because release
    time is not part of the compensation package paid to each officer. Because
    release time requires the City to expend money on officers who work under
    the direction of a private entity, the propriety of the release time provisions
    is properly resolved under the Gift Clause.
    6
    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶13            We review the granting of a permanent injunction for an
    abuse of discretion. Kromko v. City of Tucson, 
    202 Ariz. 499
    , 501 ¶ 4, 
    47 P.3d 1137
    , 1139 (App. 2002). We defer to the trial court’s factual findings absent
    clear error, Clark v. Renaissance West, LLC, 
    232 Ariz. 510
    , 515 ¶ 21, 
    307 P.3d 77
    , 82 (App. 2013), but review de novo the interpretation and application of
    constitutional provisions, Ross v. Bennett, 
    228 Ariz. 174
    , 176 ¶ 6, 
    265 P.3d 356
    , 358 (2011). As applicable here, we presume that the governmental
    enactment is constitutional and will uphold it unless it clearly is not. See
    Cave Creek Unified School Dist. v. Ducey, 
    233 Ariz. 1
    , 5 ¶ 11, 
    308 P.3d 1152
    ,
    1156 (2013). A party challenging the enactment has the burden of
    establishing its unconstitutionality. Eastin v. Broomfield, 
    116 Ariz. 576
    , 580,
    
    570 P.2d 744
    , 748 (1977).
    1. The Gift Clause
    ¶14            Along with other prohibitions, 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.
    ARIZ. CONST. art. IX, § 7. The Gift Clause “was designed primarily to
    prevent the use of public funds raised by general taxation in aid of
    enterprises apparently devoted to quasi public purposes, but actually
    engaged in private business.” Turken, 223 Ariz. at 346 ¶ 10, 224 P.3d at 162
    (quoting Day v. Buckeye Water Conservation & Drainage Dist., 
    28 Ariz. 466
    ,
    473, 
    237 P. 636
    , 638 (1925)). Consistent with its design, Gift Clause cases
    generally involve real property or rights that can be and are readily valued
    in the marketplace. See, e.g., id. at 345, 224 P.3d at 161 (parking garage
    spaces); Arizona Ctr. for Law in Pub. Interest v. Hassell, 
    172 Ariz. 356
    , 361, 366,
    
    837 P.2d 158
    , 163, 168 (App. 1991) (interest in riverbed land); Defenders of
    Wildlife v. Hull, 
    199 Ariz. 411
    , 415, 
    18 P.3d 722
    , 726 (App. 2001) (same);
    Kromko v. Ariz. Bd. of Regents, 
    149 Ariz. 319
    , 322, 
    718 P.2d 478
    , 481 (1986)
    (hospital and leased underlying land). The Gift Clause “represents the
    reaction of public opinion to the orgies of extravagant dissipation of public
    funds by counties, townships, cities, and towns in aid of the construction of
    railways, canals, and other like undertakings during the half century
    proceeding 1880.” Day, 
    28 Ariz. at 473
    , 
    237 P. at 638
     (quoting Thaanum v.
    Bynum Irrigation Dist., 
    232 P. 528
    , 530 (Mont. 1925)).
    ¶15          Gift Clause jurisprudence has focused on two general
    purposes of the clause: (1) avoiding the “depletion of the public treasury or
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    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    inflation of public debt by engagement in non-public enterprise” and
    (2) ensuring that public funds are not used to foster or promote the purely
    “private or personal interest of any individual.” Kromko, 
    149 Ariz. at
    320–
    21, 
    718 P.2d at
    479–80 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The
    Arizona Supreme Court has developed a two-part test from these
    principles: the government may not provide public funds to a private entity
    unless (1) the expenditure is used for a public purpose and (2) the
    consideration received by the government is not “grossly disproportionate”
    to the amount paid to the private entity. Turken, 223 Ariz. at 345, 351 ¶¶ 7,
    41, 224 P.3d at 161, 167. To comply with the Gift Clause, the expenditure
    must pass both prongs of this two-part test. Id. at 348 ¶ 22, 224 P.3d at 164.
    ¶16           In resolving whether the release time provisions violate the
    Gift Clause, we do not need to determine whether the expenditure for
    release time serves a public purpose because our resolution of the
    consideration prong is dispositive. As discussed below, assuming a proper
    public purpose, neither the City nor PLEA has shown that the trial court
    erred in finding that the City’s expenditure for the release time was grossly
    disproportionate to what it received in return, given the lack of obligation
    imposed on PLEA in the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions.
    ¶17           The government receives adequate consideration if it does not
    pay a “grossly disproportionate” amount for what it receives in return.4 See
    generally Turken, 223 Ariz. at 349–52 ¶¶ 30–49, 224 P.3d at 165–68.
    Consideration “has a settled meaning in contract law. . . . [It] is what one
    party to a contract obligates itself to do (or to forbear from doing) in return
    for the promise of the other contracting party.” Id. at 349 ¶ 31, 224 P.3d at
    165. Courts do not ordinarily examine the proportionality of consideration
    between parties contracting at arm’s length. Id. at ¶ 32. Analysis of
    consideration under the Gift Clause, however, differs in that it focuses on
    the adequacy of consideration “because paying far too much for something
    4      Contrary to the trial court’s analysis, Kromko and Hassell do not
    support the notions that the consideration analysis also requires examining
    how the government controls the resources that are used and whether the
    government has a mechanism to evaluate the costs versus benefits,
    respectively. See generally Kromko, 
    149 Ariz. at
    320–21, 718 P.3d at 479–80
    (discussing consideration, but not holding that retention of control over the
    use of government funds factored into the consideration analysis); Hassell,
    172 Ariz. at 368–69, 837 P.2d at 170–71 (discussing consideration, but not
    holding that the general Gift Clause analysis—involving cases not within
    the purview of the Public Trust Doctrine—required conducting a line-item,
    cost-benefit analysis).
    8
    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    effectively creates a subsidy from the public to the seller.” Id. at 350 ¶¶ 32–
    33, 224 P.3d at 166. The private entity must provide the government with
    bargained-for consideration focusing on the “objective fair market value”
    of what the private party has promised to provide in return for the public
    funds expended. See id. The sufficiency of such consideration must be
    judged at the time of the transaction. See id. at ¶¶ 32–39 (treating
    consideration as part of the bargaining process).
    ¶18            In addressing the adequacy of consideration under the Gift
    Clause, we analyze whether a contract obligates a private entity to perform
    specific duties in exchange for the expenditure. In Wistuber v. Paradise Valley
    Unified School District, the Arizona Supreme Court upheld a release time
    provision, as relevant here, where the contract (a collective bargaining
    agreement) expressly obligated a teacher’s association president to perform
    specific duties in relation to the school district. 
    141 Ariz. 346
    , 
    687 P.2d 354
    (1984). In the contract, the district released the association’s president from
    teaching duties, but continued to pay a portion of her salary in return for
    her performing activities and duties inuring to the benefit of the district. 
    Id. at 348
    , 
    687 P.2d at 356
    . The contract expressly stated that the association
    president “agrees [with the District] to” undertake ten specific, quantifiable,
    and verifiable obligations and specified the amount of time in hours she
    was required to spend on district, as opposed to union, work. 
    Id.
     at 348 n.3,
    
    687 P.2d at
    356 n.3. Although acknowledging many of the president’s
    obligations were duties that “she might have performed in any event” as
    association president, 
    id.
     at 349–50, 
    687 P.2d at
    357–58, the Court
    nonetheless found that the consideration was not grossly disproportionate
    to the expenditure, 
    id. at 350
    , 
    687 P.2d at 358
    .
    ¶19           As noted more recently in Turken, the basis for that conclusion
    in Wistuber was that “the duties imposed on the union president under the
    challenged agreement were ‘substantial, and the relatively modest sums
    required to be paid by the District not so disproportionate as to invoke the
    constitutional prohibition’” of the Gift Clause. Turken, 223 Ariz. at 347 ¶ 18,
    224 P.3d at 163 (quoting Wistuber, 
    141 Ariz. at 350
    , 
    687 P.2d at 358
    ). In
    Turken, the Arizona Supreme Court made plain that the proper focus in
    assessing the adequacy of consideration is what the private entity “has
    promised to provide in return” for payments by the government. 
    Id.
     at 350
    ¶ 35, 224 P.3d at 166. Accordingly, in Turken, the Court rejected the
    argument that indirect benefits, such as projected sales tax revenue,
    constituted adequate consideration. Id. at ¶ 38. The contract there did not
    obligate the developer to produce the tax revenue for the City’s benefit. Id.
    The only benefit the City objectively bargained for was exclusive use of 200
    parking spaces, of 3,180 total. Id. at 351 ¶ 42, 224 P.3d at 167. The Court
    9
    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    observed—because the trial court did not separately address the value of
    the parking spaces—that $97.4 million was “quite likely” a grossly
    disproportionate amount to pay for the benefit of only 200 parking spaces.
    Id. at ¶ 43.
    ¶20           As applied, the question is whether the trial court erred in
    determining that the City’s payment to PLEA—$1.7 million over the course
    of two years for release time—was grossly disproportionate to what the
    2012–14 MOU obligated PLEA to provide to the City in return—staffing
    PLEA with police officers to perform labor-relations functions. Although
    listing examples of uses for release time, the 2012–14 MOU release time
    provisions do not obligate PLEA to perform any specific duty or give
    anything in return for the release time, meaning the City receives no
    consideration “for Wistuber purposes” for its expenditure. Id. at ¶ 41. In
    other words, the City does not receive a staffed union in exchange for the
    release time. Unlike the detailed, mandatory contractual provisions upheld
    in Wistuber that specified in an enforceable manner what the association
    president was required to do, the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions do
    not require that officers in the full-time release positions perform any
    specific duties. Instead, the provisions provide examples about what
    release hours may be used for, see 2012–14 MOU § 1-3.B, B.3, and what
    PLEA representatives may do, see id. § 1-3.B.2.1. Unlike in Wistuber, no
    enforceable duties are specified for such efforts in the 2012–14 MOU.
    ¶21             One possible exception is § 1-3.Q, which states that the “full-
    time release positions agree to participate” in unspecified “citywide task
    committees” and in exchange “the City agrees to provide” a bank of 960
    hours of overtime. That provision, however, is located in the portion of the
    2012–14 MOU defining PLEA’s rights, not its obligations or duties. See
    generally id. § 1.3. Neither the City nor PLEA has shown how a declaration
    of PLEA’s rights properly could be used to define PLEA’s duties. Nor does
    the delineation of the City’s rights in the 2012–14 MOU specify obligations
    or duties about the release time provisions or even mention the release time
    provisions. Regardless, for the full-time release positions, the 2012–14 MOU
    simply provides a list of “[e]xamples of work performed by the release
    positions,” see id. § 1-3.B, with no language limiting the use of release time
    to these “examples” and no binding contractual language attached to these
    examples, such as “shall,” “must,” or “promises,” otherwise obligating
    PLEA to perform them in exchange for the release time.
    ¶22          The 2012–14 MOU terms describing the PLEA
    representatives’ duties also are permissive and non-binding. They state that
    PLEA “may designate up to forty-two (42)” representatives, id. § 1-3.B.2
    10
    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    (emphasis added), and “[u]p to two PLEA representatives may . . . attend”
    meetings and hearings and “may attend hearings with the department
    representative,” id. § 1-3.B.2 (emphasis added). Like the other release
    positions, the 2012–14 MOU includes only “[e]xamples of how these hours
    are used by [PLEA],” with no binding contractual language for the bank of
    release hours. See id. § 1-3.B.3. Finally, the 2012–14 MOU assigns no duties
    to the legislative representative. See id. § 1-3.C. Consequently, the record
    supports the trial court’s findings, and neither the City nor PLEA has shown
    that the court’s findings are erroneous. See In re U.S. Currency in the Amount
    of $2,390, 
    229 Ariz. 514
    , 516 ¶ 5, 
    277 P.3d 219
    , 221 (App. 2012) (providing
    that an appellate court will not disturb the trial court’s factual findings
    unless they are clearly erroneous). Accordingly, the trial court correctly
    enjoined § 1-3.B, C, and Q of the 2012–14 MOU after finding that those
    release time provisions did not obligate PLEA to provide any specific duty
    in exchange for the release time.
    ¶23            The City and PLEA counter that the trial court erred because
    it failed to consider eleven other “direct, tangible promises made by PLEA
    in the 2012–14 MOU.” These provisions, however, do not obligate PLEA to
    perform any duties in exchange for the release time. For example, PLEA has
    agreed that it “will have two (2) PLEA positions . . . on continuous paid
    stand-by,” 2012–14 MOU § 1-3.N, and that it “will have the most readily
    available unit” representative available in situations where a unit member
    requests individual representation, id. § 1-4.B.1. But these and other
    provisions the City and PLEA rely on are obligations unique to PLEA as an
    organization; they are not duties PLEA has obligated itself to perform to the
    City in a bargained-for exchange for the release time. In fact, nothing in the
    2012–14 MOU states that these provisions apply to the categories of release
    time at issue.
    ¶24            To further support their argument, the City and PLEA rely on
    the City’s 37-year history of choosing to use release time to improve
    employer-employee relations and provide for an enduring framework for
    addressing employer-employee concerns. At the evidentiary hearing before
    the trial court, they presented evidence that release time officers viewed the
    permissive and non-binding aspects of the MOU discussed above as
    obligations and accordingly used the release time to provide representation
    and protect officers’ rights and interests in the employer-employee
    relationship. But the City and PLEA have not shown that such course of
    dealing evidence can be used to establish consideration “for Wistuber
    purposes” or contradict express contract terms for such purposes. Turken,
    223 Ariz. at 351 ¶ 41, 224 P.3d. at 167; see also Keith Equipment Co. v. Casa
    Grande Cotton Finance Co., 
    187 Ariz. 259
    , 262, 
    928 P.2d 683
    , 686 (App. 1996)
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    CHEATHAM/HUEY v. DICICCIO
    Opinion of the Court
    (noting “[c]ourse of dealing does not . . . create a contract”) (citing cases).
    Here, the record supports the trial court’s finding that the express terms of
    the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions do not obligate PLEA to perform
    any duties in exchange for the release time.
    ¶25           On the record presented—including the unique aspects of the
    2012–14 MOU described above—the City and PLEA have not shown that
    the trial court erred in finding that the City’s expenditure for the release
    time was grossly disproportionate to what it received in return, given the
    lack of obligation imposed on PLEA in the 2012–14 MOU release time
    provisions. Because of the lack of such obligations on PLEA in the 2012–14
    MOU, we need not address whether, if the obligations existed, they would
    be constitutional. See State v. Rios, 
    225 Ariz. 292
    , 296 ¶ 12, 
    237 P.3d 1052
    ,
    1056 (App. 2010) (“To the extent possible, [the court avoids] deciding
    constitutional issues if the case can be resolved on non-constitutional
    grounds.”). We leave the constitutionality of such an MOU or other release
    time agreement for another day.
    2. Attorneys’ Fees and Costs on Appeal
    ¶26           Cheatham requests an award of costs pursuant to A.R.S.
    § 12–341 and attorneys’ fees pursuant to the “private attorney general
    doctrine.” See Hassell, 172 Ariz. at 371, 837 P.2d at 173. In our discretion, we
    deny Cheatham’s request for attorneys’ fees on appeal. Cheatham is,
    however, awarded taxable costs on appeal contingent upon compliance
    with Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure 21.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶27           For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s order to
    the extent that it enjoins the 2012–14 MOU release time provisions and to
    the extent that it enjoins the City and PLEA from entering into future MOUs
    or agreements with release time, unless they imposed upon PLEA binding
    obligations. We vacate the rest of the court’s order.
    :RT
    12