Green Valley Special Util Dist v. City of Cibolo , 866 F.3d 339 ( 2017 )


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  •     Case: 16-51282   Document: 00514100024     Page: 1   Date Filed: 08/02/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    No. 16-51282
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    August 2, 2017
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    GREEN VALLEY SPECIAL UTILITY DISTRICT,
    Plaintiff–Appellant,
    versus
    CITY OF CIBOLO, TEXAS,
    Defendant–Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
    JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
    Green Valley Special Utility District (“Green Valley”) seeks an injunc-
    tion, claiming that 7 U.S.C. § 1926(b) prohibits the City of Cibolo from en-
    croaching on its sewer service. Because the district court’s interpretation is
    inconsistent with the statute’s plain language, we reverse and remand its dis-
    missal of the complaint.
    Case: 16-51282          Document: 00514100024            Page: 2     Date Filed: 08/02/2017
    No. 16-51282
    I.
    The Public Utility Commission of Texas (“PUC”) issues certificates of
    convenience and necessity (“CCNs”), which give holders the exclusive right to
    provide water or sewer service within particular service areas. 1 Green Valley
    is a special utility district 2 with a service area encompassing parts of Guada-
    lupe, Comal, and Bexar Counties. Green Valley holds two CCNs: one for water
    service and one for sewer service. In 2003, Green Valley obtained a $584,000
    loan from the United States to fund its water service.                        That loan, which
    remains outstanding, is secured by Green Valley’s water utility revenues.
    The city is a municipality located in Guadalupe and Bexar Counties. In
    March 2016, it applied for a CCN to provide sewer service to all of Cibolo,
    including portions within Green Valley’s service area. Granting the applica-
    tion would require the PUC to strip Green Valley of the right to provide sewer
    service to those areas of Cibolo currently within Green Valley’s service area.
    The application is for sewer service only; if granted, it would not disturb Green
    Valley’s water service.
    Section 1926 is the statute governing the U.S. Department of Agricul-
    ture’s water and sewer utility loan program. Green Valley claims that the
    application violates § 1926(b), which prohibits municipalities from encroaching
    on services provided by utilities with outstanding loans:
    The service provided or made available through any such association
    shall not be curtailed or limited by inclusion of the area served by such
    association within the boundaries of any municipal corporation or other
    public body, or by the granting of any private franchise for similar ser-
    vice within such area during the term of such loan; nor shall the hap-
    pening of any such event be the basis of requiring such association to
    1 See TEX. WATER CODE § 13.242(a) (setting forth the general requirement that utili-
    ties obtain CCNs before providing water or sewer service).
    2   See 
    id. § 65.011
    (providing for the creation of special utility districts).
    2
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    secure any franchise, license, or permit as a condition to continuing to
    serve the area served by the association at the time of the occurrence of
    such event.
    § 1926(b).
    In May 2016, Green Valley sued for injunctive and declaratory relief,
    alleging that § 1926(b) protects both its sewer and water service from munici-
    pal encroachment. The city moved to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(6), claiming that § 1926(b)’s protection extends only to services
    secured by an association’s federal loan—in this case, only Green Valley’s
    water service. The district court dismissed though rejecting the city’s inter-
    pretation of the statute. It found that Ҥ 1926(b) protects only the service for
    which the loan was made—the funded service—regardless of what secures the
    loan.” The court gave Green Valley an opportunity to amend its complaint to
    specify which of its services are funded by federal loan proceeds.
    In August 2016, Green Valley filed an amended complaint in which it
    explained that the federal loan funded only its water service and elaborated on
    its earlier theories for why § 1926(b) should be interpreted to prohibit munici-
    palities from encroaching on any services made available by federally indebted
    utilities. The city filed a second motion to dismiss, which the court granted.
    II.
    This is a tight question of statutory interpretation. Section 1926(b) pro-
    hibits the curtailment or limitation of “[t]he service provided or made available
    through any such association.” § 1926(b). Where a CCN imposes a duty on a
    utility to provide a service, that utility has “provided or made available” that
    service under § 1926(b), 3 and both sides agree that Green Valley qualifies as
    3  N. Alamo Water Supply Corp. v. City of San Juan, 
    90 F.3d 910
    , 915–16 (5th Cir.
    1996) (per curiam).
    3
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    an “association.” The dispute is over the meaning of “service,” which the stat-
    ute does not define. Green Valley claims that § 1926(b)’s protection extends to
    any service made available by a federally indebted utility. The district court
    decided, to the contrary, that § 1926(b) applies only to services that are funded
    by federal loans. We have never considered a case with these facts, though we
    have held that § 1926(b) “should be liberally interpreted to protect [federally]
    indebted rural water associations from municipal encroachment.” 4 The only
    circuit that has considered this issue found that § 1926(b) applies only to “the
    type of service financed by the qualifying federal loan.” 5
    “When interpreting statutes, we begin with the plain language used by
    the drafters.” 6 The plain language of § 1926(b) is dispositive.
    The statute refers to “[t]he service provided or made available through
    any such association.” The parties urge us to read “service” in one of the fol-
    lowing three ways: (1) as a noun that refers to a combined water-and-sewer
    service; (2) as a noun that refers to a specific service—either a water service or
    a sewer service—made available by a federally indebted utility; or (3) as a noun
    that refers to a specific service made available by a federally indebted utility
    and financed through the federal loan program. Green Valley favors the first
    two readings; the city, the district court, and the Eighth Circuit adopt the third.
    The trouble with the third reading is that the statute does not include any
    language limiting “service” to those services that have received federal
    4   
    Id. at 915.
           5 See Pub. Water Supply Dist. No. 3 v. City of Lebanon, 
    605 F.3d 511
    , 520 (8th Cir.
    2010). The court did not clarify what it meant by “financed,” explaining that “we need not
    decide whether it is the type of service which provides the collateral for the loan or the type
    of service for which the loan was made that is entitled to protection.” See 
    id. at 520
    n.9.
    6 United States v. Uvalle-Patricio, 
    478 F.3d 699
    , 703 (5th Cir. 2007) (quoting United
    States v. Williams, 
    400 F.3d 277
    , 281 n.2 (5th Cir. 2005)).
    4
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    financing. The statute refers just to “[t]he service.” See § 1926(b).
    Under either of the first two readings, Green Valley wins. If “service”
    encompasses what Green Valley describes as its “integrated” water-and-sewer
    service, then § 1926(b) protects its sewer service from municipal encroach-
    ment. 7 If “service” refers to a specific service made available by a federally
    indebted utility, it must encompass Green Valley’s sewer service, which is a
    “service provided or made available” by a federally indebted utility.
    The city claims that Congress’s use of the definite article “the” before
    “service,” combined with the use of the singular form of the noun, implies that
    the statute is referring to a specific service—the service “provided or made
    available by the federal debt.” 8 We disagree.
    The presence of a definite article can affect a statute’s meaning. 9 But,
    for two reasons, Congress’s use of “the” in § 1926(b) is not decisive. First, it is
    consistent with “service” referring to an integrated water-and-sewer service.
    Second, if “service” refers to a specific service, it must be possible to read it as
    referring to more than one service. Otherwise, if an association received fed-
    eral loans for both its water and sewer service, only one of them would be able
    to receive § 1926(b)’s protection. If “service” refers to a specific service but can
    be used iteratively, then both Green Valley’s water and sewer service can be
    examples of “[t]he service made available through any such association.” Thus,
    the use of “the” in § 1926(b) is consistent with all three readings of “service.”
    7 Green Valley notes that its water and sewer services share employees, a board of
    directors, a general manager, and an operating account.
    8The city’s claims track the Eighth Circuit’s reasoning in Public Water 
    Supply, 605 F.3d at 519
    –21.
    9 See, e.g., Brooks v. Zabka, 
    168 Colo. 265
    , 269 (1969) (“It is a rule of law well estab-
    lished that the definite article ‘the’ particularizes the subject which it precedes. It is a word
    of limitation as opposed to the indefinite or generalizing force of ‘a’ or ‘an.’”).
    5
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    Congress used both “service” and “services” throughout § 1926. The city
    claims that if Congress wanted to safeguard all services made available by a
    federally indebted utility, it would have used “services,” not “service,” in
    § 1926(b). But though “each part or section of a statute should be construed in
    connection with every other part or section to produce a harmonious whole,” 10
    it is not evident what conclusions we can draw from Congress’s various uses of
    “service” and “services” in § 1926. The statute uses “service” seven times out-
    side § 1926(b): three times as part of a proper noun, 11 twice as a verb (“service
    the loan”), 12 once as an apparently countable noun, 13 and once as an apparently
    uncountable noun. 14 The statute refers to “services” four times, but none of
    those references is obviously describing water or sewer services: The word is
    used twice to refer to broadband services, 15 once to refer to “small-scale exten-
    sion services” for water and sewer projects, 16 and once to refer to “services . . .
    of local governments and local economic development organizations.” 17 None
    of this sheds much light on the meaning of “service” in § 1926(b).
    The city points out that § 1926(b) prohibits “the granting of any private
    franchise for similar service within such area during the term of such loan.”
    § 1926(b) (emphasis added). It urges the court to read that prohibition in
    10   
    Uvalle-Patricio, 478 F.3d at 703
    (quoting 
    Williams, 400 F.3d at 281
    n.2).
    11See 7 U.S.C. § 1926(a)(9) (“Public Health Service Act”); 
    id. § 1926(a)(13)
    (“Soil Con-
    servation Service”); 
    id. § 1926(a)(22)(A)(ii)
    (“Rural Utilities Service”).
    12   See 
    id. § 1926(a)(24)(B)(i);
    id. § 1926(a)(24)(B)(ii).
    
           13   See 
    id. § 1926(a)(20)(E)
    (“local broadband service”).
    14 See 
    id. § 1926(a)(4)(B)
    (defining “project” to “include facilities providing central ser-
    vice or facilities serving individual properties, or both.”).
    15See 
    id. § 1926(a)(20)(E)
    (referring to “common carrier facilities and services” and
    “affordable broadband services”).
    16   See 
    id. § 1926(a)(2)(B)(i)(II).
           17   See 
    id. § 1926(a)(23)(A).
                                                       6
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    tandem with the prohibition on municipal encroachment on federally indebted
    utilities’ service areas. The city claims that “similar service” should be under-
    stood to refer to a similar variety of a specific service—that is, a water service
    is similar to another water service, and a sewer service is similar to another
    sewer service—and claims that the “similar service” requirement must apply
    to municipalities as well as to private entities. But that logic assumes that
    “service” refers to the federally financed service. If “service” refers to any ser-
    vice made available by a federally indebted utility, then “similar service” refers
    to any services that are similar to those provided by the utility.
    Section 1926(b) has two purposes: “(1) to encourage rural water develop-
    ment by expanding the number of potential users of such systems, thereby
    decreasing the per-user cost, and (2) to safeguard the viability and financial
    security of such associations . . . by protecting them from the expansion of
    nearby cities and towns.” 18 Green Valley’s interpretation is consistent with
    those purposes. A utility that is protected from municipal encroachment will
    be able to achieve greater economies of scale, thereby decreasing its per-user
    costs, and will be less vulnerable to financial disruptions than would a utility
    that is not protected from municipal encroachment.
    It is possible that Congress intended to limit § 1926(b)’s protection to
    services directly financed by a federal loan. Such a policy would provide feder-
    ally indebted utilities with substantial benefits while, at the same time, allow-
    ing other service providers to compete with federally indebted utilities in the
    provision of non-federally financed services. But § 1926(b)’s plain language
    does not limit the statute’s protection to services that have received federal
    financing.
    18   N. 
    Alamo, 90 F.3d at 915
    .
    7
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    III.
    We decline the city’s invitation to read adjectives into § 1926(b). The
    judgment of dismissal is REVERSED and REMANDED. 19
    19 Because both of the readings of “service” that Green Valley favors are consistent
    with the plain language of the statute, we do not decide which one to adopt.
    8