Mallavarapu v. City of Cedar Falls ( 2020 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 19-1792
    Filed December 16, 2020
    RAVINDRA MALLAVARAPU, MARK HANNASCH, CHAD BENSON, DANAN
    DOU, SCOTT MILLER, MARK DEGROOTE, and ZIFAN JU,
    Plaintiff-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
    vs.
    CITY OF CEDAR FALLS,
    Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,
    and
    THUNDER RIDGE WEST OWNERS ASSOCIATION,
    Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
    _______________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, Bradley J.
    Harris, Judge.
    The homeowners appeal, while the city and a business owners association
    cross-appeal, an order denying specific performance of a storm water drainage
    and detention easement agreement. AFFIRMED.
    Brandon M. Schwartz of Schwartz Law Firm, Oakdale, Minnesota, for
    appellants/cross-appellees.
    Samuel C. Anderson of Swisher & Cohrt, P.L.C., Waterloo, for the city,
    appellee/cross-appellant.
    Christopher S. Wendland of Clark, Butler, Walsh & Hamann, Waterloo, for
    the business owners association, appellee/cross-appellants.
    Heard by Doyle, P.J., and Tabor and Ahlers, JJ.
    2
    TABOR, Judge.
    Calling themselves the “pond scum neighbors,” seven homeowners asked
    the Ridges Park Homeowners Association for help in improving the water quality
    in the wet detention basin abutting their backyards.        In August 2017, the
    homeowners association contacted the City of Cedar Falls to flag the “serious
    problem” with stagnant, shallow water and algae in the basin. When the city took
    no action, the homeowners petitioned for specific performance of the maintenance
    provisions in a 1999 amendment to a 1997 storm water drainage and detention
    easement between the city and Thunder Ridge West Owners Association.1 The
    homeowners also relied on a 1999 recreation easement entered into by Thunder
    Ridge West and Ridges Park. The homeowners demanded that the city and
    Thunder Ridge West remove silt in the water and regrade the detention basin.
    The city and Thunder Ridge West challenged the homeowners’ standing to
    make those demands.2 In rejecting their standing challenge, the district court
    found the homeowners were “incidental third-party beneficiaries” of the easement
    agreements. But the court ultimately denied the homeowners’ demand for specific
    performance, finding the city engineer had sole discretion to determine whether
    the detention basin needed maintenance work.
    Like the district court, we reject the remedy of specific performance, but for
    a different reason. The homeowners did not have standing to bring this action. As
    1 We will refer to the Ridges Park Home Owner Association as Ridges Park and
    the business owners association as Thunder Ridge West.
    2 Despite repeatedly challenging the homeowners’ standing in the district court,
    Thunder Ridge West did not raise this issue on appeal. We thus rely on the city’s
    arguments made in its cross-appellant’s brief.
    3
    “incidental beneficiaries,” the homeowners cannot claim any right to performance
    under the storm water easement agreement between the city and Thunder Ridge
    West or under the recreational easement agreement between Thunder Ridge West
    and Ridges Park. See Khabbaz v. Swartz, 
    319 N.W.2d 279
    , 285 (Iowa 1982).
    Rather, the homeowners had the burden to show that the city and Thunder Ridge
    West created the storm water easement with the intent to expressly benefit the
    homeowners. Because the homeowners did not prove they suffered a harm that
    coincides with the intent of the contracting parties, they have no basis to seek
    specific performance under the easement agreements. Finding the standing issue
    dispositive, we need not address the remaining claims of either side on appeal.3
    I.     Facts and Prior Proceedings
    This case traces back to a 1997 storm water easement agreement between
    the city and Thunder Ridge L.P., a Nebraska limited partnership planning to
    develop a five-lot commercial subdivision in Cedar Falls. Under that agreement,
    Thunder Ridge L.P. obtained a perpetual easement to construct and maintain a
    storm water detention and drainage facility for the benefit of those five business
    property owners.4 After an amendment in 1999,5 the duties under the easement
    3 In their appellant’s brief, the homeowners claim the district court “impermissibly
    rewrote” the 1999 amendment, a 2010 city ordinance on storm water control, and
    a related storm water management manual. As a second issue, the homeowners
    argue the city cannot prevail because it failed to offer testimony from the city
    engineer. In its cross-appeal, Thunder Ridge West claims the district court erred
    in giving the 2010 ordinance retroactive effect. We decline to reach these issues.
    4 Two years later, the president of Thunder Ridge L.P. established Thunder Ridge
    West, an Iowa nonprofit corporation, to assume its obligations under the storm
    water easement agreement.
    5 For clarity, we will refer to the 1997 easement agreement and 1999 amendment
    collectively as the storm water easement agreement.
    4
    agreement included, but were not limited to: installation, maintenance, repair,
    reconstruction, and replacement of the drainage facility in compliance with city
    standards.   According to engineering plans from that time, the city approved
    construction of a wet detention basin with a permanent pond feature.
    Also in 1999, Ridges Development L.P.,6 a residential housing developer,
    conveyed two tracts of land to Thunder Ridge West “for the primary purpose of use
    as a storm water and surface water drainage and detention facility.” As a condition
    to transfer, Ridges Development reserved to itself a secondary easement over the
    property “for recreation and beautification purposes.” In a recreation easement
    between Thunder Ridge West and Ridges Park, the parties agreed to share the
    property for both recreational and storm water detention purposes. 7 But when
    weighing the two interests, the parties agreed the property’s “dominant purpose”
    was for the storm water detention and drainage facility.
    At the same time, four of the five business property owners in the
    subdivision and a nearby Fareway Store became members of Thunder Ridge
    West. As the “benefited estate” of the storm water easement agreement, each
    6 Ridges Development (not to be confused with the Ridges Park Homeowners
    Association) is a Nebraska-based limited partnership that owned tract A and
    tract B in Ridges Third Addition to Cedar Falls.
    7 In this agreement, Thunder Ridge West granted a subservient easement to
    Ridges Park “for recreation and beautification purposes.” In consideration of the
    recreation easement, Ridges Park promised to indemnify Thunder Ridge West for
    “any claim or loss arising by or through [Ridges Park] or by anyone in or upon the
    real estate for recreational purposes, and from any claim for loss of use as a
    recreational area.” In the district court, Thunder Ridge West filed a third-party
    complaint against Ridges Park based on the indemnification clause, contending
    the homeowners’ claims related to their loss of recreational use. In its October
    2019 order, the court dismissed the third-party complaint in its entirety. Because
    no one challenged that dismissal, Ridges Park is not a party on appeal.
    5
    member agreed to cover 10% of the maintenance and repair costs of the detention
    basin. And as easement owner, Thunder Ridge West agreed to take on the
    remaining 50% of the costs. Unless later modified, that allocation of maintenance
    liability was “binding upon the parties and their respective successors, grantees
    and assigns.” Included in the storm water easement agreement was the following
    maintenance provision:
    The owners of all of the properties which comprise the
    Benefited Estate agree to install, construct, maintain, repair,
    reconstruct and replace the storm water detention and control facility
    on the Servient Estate at their expense. Said construction and
    maintenance shall in all respects be in accordance with
    specifications as determined by the City Engineer of the City of
    Cedar Falls, Iowa, and shall include, without limitation, removal of
    trees and brush, dredging of silt from the pond, mowing of weeds,
    repairing banks and slopes of the detention basin, maintenance,
    repair, reconstruction and replacement of the storm water detention
    structures, spillways, and piping, and any other acts necessary to
    maintain said off-site storm water detention area to the standards
    determined by the Office of the City Engineer . . . and in compliance
    with the storm water detention provisions of the Code of Ordinances
    of the City of Cedar Falls, Iowa.
    If Thunder Ridge West did not maintain the detention basin under the standards
    set forth, the city reserved the right to enforce the maintenance obligations. The
    enforcement provision stated:
    In consideration of the granting of the perpetual easement for
    off-site storm water drainage and detention . . . the owners of the
    Benefited Estate . . . hereby perpetually agree to perform the
    maintenance responsibilities of the Storm Water Drainage and
    Detention Easement Agreement and of this Amendment . . . . In the
    event that the owners of the Benefited Estate should fail, refuse, or
    neglect to perform the obligations imposed herein, the owners . . .
    agree that the City may install said improvements, perform said
    maintenance and assess the total costs thereof as a lien against the
    Benefited Estate.
    (Emphasis added).
    6
    Against that backdrop, the city hired an engineering firm to design a wet
    detention basin that could serve the dual purposes under the easement
    agreements. As constructed, the drainage facility also contains a permanent pond
    feature that is used for recreational and aesthetic purposes. According to Chase
    Schrage, the city’s public works director, the actual detention basin is an area
    above the surface level of the pond. There, two 18-inch concrete pipes release
    water overflow from the detention basin into a private lake, which eventually
    discharges into the Cedar River. Based on this design, Schrage testified the
    drainage function would not interfere with the pond feature unless there was a
    defect in the construction itself.
    The seven homeowners bringing this action live in the neighborhood
    bordering the detention basin. For some, the water feature was a major factor in
    their purchasing decision. Since moving into the neighborhood, the homeowners
    used the pond for various recreational purposes, including fishing, paddle boating,
    and taking scenic strolls around the shore. As one homeowner described it, the
    condition of the pond was “immaculate” when they purchased their homes in the
    late 2000s. But over time, the water quality diminished. For instance, algae and
    vegetation growth spiked, silt built up, and the water emitted unpleasant smells.
    The water level also decreased substantially, making the pond less visually
    appealing.
    Given those concerns, the homeowners hired an engineering firm in June
    2017 to investigate the detention basin. The firm, Shive-Hattery, Inc., obtained
    copies of the construction plans from 1999 as a point of comparison.           The
    investigation revealed the pond’s water level was about “40% of its original design
    7
    volume.” Those “shallow depths” made the pond unfit for recreational purposes,
    according to the Shive-Hattery report. The report’s author, Ervin Mussman, opined
    that the degradation of the water quality made the pond “almost a nuisance” as it
    continued to silt in. Finding silt to be the main culprit, Shive-Hattery recommended
    “the pond should be drained, the accumulated sediment removed, and the pond
    bottom and sides restored to the original design cross sections.” The firm also
    “estimated that approximately 14,000-15,000 cubic yards of material would need
    to be removed.”
    Based on those recommendations, homeowner Mark Hannasch, a member
    of Ridges Park, sent a letter to the city administrator that August, requesting “action
    be taken to enforce the city’s existing agreement regarding the wet detention
    basin.” Raising both “significant health risk” and “recreational use” concerns,
    Hannasch asked the city to ensure Thunder Ridge West performed the
    maintenance work required under the storm water easement agreement.                 In
    making that request, he asserted: “Paragraph 6 of the November 8, 1999
    Amendment . . . clearly provides that the property owner is responsible for
    maintenance of the detention pond including dredging of silt.”
    Because the city took no action, in December the homeowners petitioned
    the city and Thunder Ridge West for specific performance of their maintenance
    requests. In resistance, the city raised an affirmative defense that the homeowners
    failed to state a claim for which relief could be granted. For its part, Thunder Ridge
    West added the affirmative defense that the homeowners were “not in contractual
    privity with Defendant and thus [were] not real parties in interest.”
    8
    As the case proceeded, the city and Thunder Ridge West moved to exclude
    evidence of a city ordinance enacted in 2010 and a storm water management
    manual from 2009. The city argued those exhibits would be irrelevant because the
    ordinance and manual “were created at least ten years after the construction of the
    storm water retention basin at issue.”
    At the start of the two-day trial, the district court allowed counsel to make
    standing objections on the record because it had not yet ruled on various motions
    in limine. The parties raised two main objections. First, the city challenged all
    testimony concerning the recreation easement, contending the litigation had
    nothing to do with the homeowners’ recreational use of the pond. In the same
    vein, the city contended the homeowners lacked standing because, aside from the
    recreation easement, the homeowners had no interest in the detention basin. In
    opposition, the homeowners argued the recreation easement was relevant
    because it established their standing to bring the action.
    Second, Thunder Ridge West challenged all testimony regarding the 2010
    ordinance and 2009 manual.               The city adopted the ordinance, titled
    “Post-Construction Stormwater Control,” under a federally mandated permit
    program regulating discharge of storm water runoff. Thunder Ridge West argued
    it would be improper to scrutinize the homeowners’ claim for specific performance
    under an ordinance that generally did not apply to pre-existing detention basins.8
    8 A city ordinance governing storm water detention standards did exist in 1999.
    But the city did not locate it until the second day of trial. Claiming unfair surprise,
    the homeowners’ counsel objected to admission of the 1999 ordinance and
    testimony discussing it. The court agreed and excluded any reference to that
    ordinance. But it did allow testimony relating to common practices and standards
    well-known to city engineers on detention basins.
    9
    The court revisited those two preliminary issues in its final ruling. As to
    standing, the court acknowledged the homeowners were not parties to any
    easement agreement. But the court decided the homeowners were entitled to
    relief as “incidental beneficiaries,” finding they had “obviously obtained a benefit
    from the easements.”      As to the 2010 ordinance, the court sided with the
    homeowners again, determining the ordinance applied retroactively to remedy
    threats to public safety. Despite handing them victories on those preliminary
    issues, the court denied the homeowners relief. The court held: “The city engineer
    has exercised the discretion given to him and determined that additional
    maintenance on the detention basin is not required.”
    The homeowners appealed and the city and Thunder Ridge West
    cross-appealed from the rulings adverse to their positions at the trial.
    II.    Scope and Standards of Review
    We generally review de novo an action for specific performance of a
    contract. Iowa R. App. P. 6.907; H & W Motor Exp. v. Christ, 
    516 N.W.2d 912
    ,
    913–14 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994) (explaining specific performance is an equitable
    remedy that “rests in the sound discretion of the court”).        But because the
    homeowners brought their contract action at law, we review for correction of legal
    error. See RPC Liquidation v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 
    717 N.W.2d 317
    , 319 (Iowa
    2006). Under this review, we are bound by the district court’s “well-supported
    findings of fact, but [we] are not bound by the legal conclusions.” Am. Family Mut.
    Ins. Co. v. Peterson, 
    679 N.W.2d 571
    , 575 (Iowa 2004).             We also review
    determinations of standing for errors at law.       See Dickey v. Iowa Ethics &
    Campaign Disclosure Bd., 
    943 N.W.2d 34
    , 37 (Iowa 2020).
    10
    III.   Third-Party Beneficiaries Under Easement Agreements
    We start with the threshold issue raised in the city’s cross-appeal: Do the
    homeowners have standing to enforce the maintenance obligations under the
    storm water easement agreement? The city says no, arguing the homeowners
    cannot enforce a contract to which they are neither parties nor intended third-party
    beneficiaries. According to the city, the homeowners are, at most, incidental
    beneficiaries with no real interest in the easement agreement. On that point, the
    city argues: “Merely abutting the basin is not sufficient to confer third-party
    beneficiary status upon the homeowners even with the assumption that they
    enjoyed some benefit.”
    To counter, the homeowners contend they have standing as third-party
    beneficiaries, claiming “the very purpose” of the detention basin is to protect their
    properties from flooding and water quality concerns. They argue they should be
    able to enforce the easement agreement because they are the individuals
    “immediately impacted by the lack of contractually required maintenance.”
    Our analysis begins with the framework in section 302 of the Restatement
    (Second) of Contracts (Am. Law Inst. 1981). Our supreme court adopted this
    approach in Midwest Dredging Co. v. McAninch Corp., 
    424 N.W.2d 216
    , 224 (Iowa
    1988), applying section 302 to all third-party beneficiary cases. That section
    provides:
    (1) Unless otherwise agreed between promisor and promisee, a
    beneficiary of a promise is an intended beneficiary if recognition
    of a right to performance in the beneficiary is appropriate to
    effectuate the intention of the parties and either
    (a) the performance of the promise will satisfy an obligation of the
    promisee to pay money to the beneficiary; or
    11
    (b) the circumstances indicate that the promisee intends to give
    the beneficiary the benefit of the promised performance.
    (2) An incidental beneficiary is a beneficiary who is not an intended
    beneficiary.
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 302. Section 302 distinguishes between
    “incidental” and “intended” beneficiaries. Id. § 302 cmt. a. The key difference
    between an incidental beneficiary and an intended beneficiary is the duty owed to
    the third party by the contracting parties. Id. § 302 cmt. e (“Performance of a
    contract will often benefit a third person. But unless the third person is an intended
    beneficiary as here defined, no duty to him is created.” (emphasis added)).
    Sometimes termed the “intent to benefit” test, the main consideration under the
    Restatement (Second) approach “is whether the contract manifests an intent to
    benefit a third party.” Midwest Dredging Co., 
    424 N.W.2d at 224
    . In section 302
    cases, “the intent of the promisee is generally considered controlling.” 
    Id.
     (citations
    omitted). “In determining such intent, we look to the language of the contract and
    to the circumstances surrounding it.” RPC Liquidation, 
    717 N.W.2d at 320
    .
    Applying these principles, we find the district court mistakenly held the
    homeowners      had    standing    as   “incidental”   beneficiaries.     The    court
    stated: “Plaintiffs are not parties to either [the storm water detention or recreation]
    easement agreements but as landowners abutting the storm water drainage and
    detention facility at issue in this matter, they have obviously obtained a benefit from
    the easements . . . .” The court then cited section 133 of the Restatement (First)
    of Contracts as supporting authority. That citation is not the main problem. While
    our supreme court follows the Restatement (Second) approach in third-party
    beneficiary cases, it has not wholly abandoned the rationale of the Restatement
    12
    (First). See Midwest Dredging Co., 
    424 N.W.2d at 224
     (finding prior Restatement
    framework “still instructional” because section 302 and section 133 approaches
    “were substantially compatible”). Both Restatements focus on the intent of the
    contracting parties, rather than the benefit received.      Thus the district court
    overlooked the importance of “intent” in its analysis.
    On appeal, the parties agree that standing exists only for intended
    beneficiaries. Khabbaz, 
    319 N.W.2d at 284
     (“[I]n order to have standing to assert
    a breach a contract, a party not privy to such contract must be regarded as a direct
    beneficiary to the contract, and not as an incidental beneficiary.” (alteration in
    original) (quoting Peter Kiewit Son’s Co. v. Iowa S. Utils. Co., 
    355 F. Supp. 376
    ,
    392 (S.D. Iowa 1973))). So the homeowners’ standing boils down to this question:
    Are they the intended third-party beneficiaries of the storm water easement
    agreement who can compel performance of the contracting parties?
    In urging the contracting parties did not intend to provide a benefit to these
    homeowners, the city relies on Uhl v. City of Sioux City, 
    490 N.W.2d 69
     (Iowa Ct.
    App. 1992). The Uhls owned a farm bisected by a highway bypass project. 
    Id. at 71
    . Because the bypass would cut off access to the highway, the city and state
    highway commission executed an agreement requiring the city to construct a local
    road under the highway “between Stations 614 and 635” within five years of
    completion of the project. 
    Id.
     The agreement did not specify who would benefit
    from that road. But the Uhls’ land stretched from Station 624 to Station 635, so
    they anticipated benefitting from the promised road. 
    Id.
     When the city took no
    steps to construct the road, the Uhls sued the city and highway commission for
    13
    damages, claiming they were “the intended third-party beneficiaries to the written
    agreement.” 
    Id.
    This court rejected that claim. We held the Uhls did not “carry the burden
    of showing the agreement was made for their express benefit” by merely owning
    property surrounding the planned location of the promised road.          
    Id. at 73
    .
    Examining the agreement itself, we explained: “There is no language . . . which
    can be construed to reasonably show an intent on the part of the [highway
    commission] and the City to confer a direct benefit to them.”        Because “the
    agreement was reached with the intent to benefit the general public, not a specific
    landowner,” we determined “that at most the Uhls [were] incidental beneficiaries.”
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    Like the Uhls, the homeowners here have not met their burden to show that
    the city and Thunder Ridge West entered the storm water easement agreement
    for their express benefit. See Khabbaz, 
    319 N.W.2d at 285
    . No language in the
    storm water easement agreement manifests an intent that people who own houses
    abutting the wet basin obtain a legal right to enforce the maintenance provisions.
    Rather, the city and Thunder Ridge West reached the easement agreement for the
    benefit of the general public that could be affected by “the water runoff from said
    shopping center development,” not for any specific landowners. See Uhl, 
    490 N.W.2d at 73
    .
    We also recognize that the intent of the promisee generally controls. See
    Midwest Dredging Co., 
    424 N.W.2d at 224
    . As promisee under the storm water
    easement agreement, the city did not evince an intent that Thunder Ridge West
    would maintain the water quality in the storm water detention basin in line with the
    14
    expectation of the neighboring homeowners. Rather, the record shows that at the
    time of contracting, the city and Thunder Ridge West worried about localized
    flooding caused by uncontrolled storm water runoff. Contrary to the homeowners’
    claims, nothing in the easement agreement suggests the city “directly or primarily”
    intended to protect Ridges Park homeowners when it contracted with Thunder
    Ridge West to construct and maintain a detention basin. Olney v. Hutt, 
    105 N.W.2d 515
    , 518 (Iowa 1960). The homeowners claim they are “in immediate health
    danger due to the blue-green algae” in the pond and their “property values have
    been negatively impacted.” But harms of that nature fall outside the scope of the
    storm water easement agreement.
    In their reply brief, the homeowners argue because they are the intended
    beneficiaries of the recreation easement as members of Ridges Park, they must
    also be the intended beneficiaries of the storm water easement agreement.
    Similarly in the district court proceedings, the homeowners relied solely on the
    recreation easement to establish standing. But during oral argument on appeal,
    the homeowners contended the storm water easement agreement alone conferred
    their status as intended third-party beneficiaries.
    Despite the homeowners’ contentions, we find neither the storm water
    detention easement nor the recreation easement confers them standing.
    Throughout the trial, the homeowners insisted their claims were unrelated to
    recreation or beautification purposes.        Because the express benefit in the
    recreation easement serves only those purposes, the homeowners cannot
    piggyback on that agreement between Thunder Ridge West and Ridges Park to
    obtain the right to enforce the maintenance provisions in the separate storm water
    15
    easement agreement. And as we have determined, the storm water easement
    agreement on its own reflects no intent to confer an express benefit to these
    homeowners.
    In reaching our determination, we do not rule out the prospect that under
    different circumstances a third party might have standing to enforce the storm
    water easement agreement. For example, illustration 10 under section 302 of the
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts provides:
    A, the operator of a chicken processing and fertilizer plant,
    contracts with B, a municipality, to use B’s sewage system. With the
    purpose of preventing harm to landowners downstream from its
    system, B obtains from A a promise to remove specified types of
    waste from its deposits in the system. C, a downstream landowner,
    is an intended beneficiary under Subsection (1)(b).
    Our decision today leaves open the possibility that certain landowners could seek
    enforcement of the maintenance obligations if the harm they suffered is the actual
    harm anticipated under the easement agreement. In other words, because the
    primary purpose of the storm water easement is to avoid localized flooding events,
    an action brought by a homeowner involving a flooding incident would present a
    closer case.   But because the homeowners here did not suffer the harm
    contemplated by the city and Thunder Ridge West in creating the easement in
    1997, they do not fall into the category of intended third-party beneficiaries. We
    thus find the homeowners did not have standing to seek specific performance. We
    affirm the district court’s ruling on that basis and do not reach the other issues
    raised on appeal and cross-appeal.
    AFFIRMED.