Case Title: Dumfries-Triangle Rescue Squad v. Board of Supervisors

Citation: 

Docket Number: 191000

State: virginia

Court: Virginia Supreme Court

Date: 2020-10-22T00:00:00Z

Document:
PRESENT:  All the Justices 
 
DUMFRIES-TRIANGLE RESCUE 
SQUAD, INCORPORATED 
 
 
 
OPINION BY 
v.  Record No. 191000 
JUSTICE CLEO E. POWELL 
 
 
 
 OCTOBER 22, 2020 
BOARD OF COUNTY SUPERVISORS 
OF PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY 
 
 
 
 
 
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY 
Steven S. Smith, Judge 
 
 
In this appeal, we consider whether the Board of County Supervisors of Prince William 
County, Virginia (the “Board”) had the authority to dissolve the corporate status of Dumfries-
Triangle Rescue Squad, Incorporated (“DTRS”).  For the following reasons, we will reverse the 
judgment of the Circuit Court of Prince William County (“circuit court”). 
I.  BACKGROUND 
 
DTRS was registered with the State Corporation Commission (“SCC”) in 1959 as a 
Virginia non-stock corporation under “the provisions of Chapter 2 of Title 13.1.”  The articles of 
incorporation list the purposes of DTRS: “[t]o assist in the saving of life, administer first aid and 
teach methods of safety.” 
 
DTRS is the fee simple owner of real property (the “Graham Park Property”), valued at 
$1,625,100 on a 2018 tax assessment, from which it operated its emergency medical services 
(“EMS”) station.  The Graham Park Property was originally four separate parcels of land 
accumulated by DTRS from 1969 through 1984.  Upon the purchase of the fourth parcel, DTRS 
filed an Owner’s Consolidation and Dedication on October 27, 1984, creating a unified 2.6805-
 
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acre parcel.  The Graham Park Property includes the real property, the EMS station and other 
accessory structures. 
 
Over the years since its incorporation, DTRS entered into various contracts with the 
Board to provide emergency medical services for Prince William County.  The record, however, 
does not disclose when DTRS began contracting with the Board.  Pursuant to the August 27, 
2009 contract, DTRS agreed to provide fire and/or rescue services in compliance with all 
applicable regulations in exchange for receiving public funds. 
 
On August 1, 2017, the Board established the Prince William County Fire and Rescue 
System.  In October 2017 and January 2018, the Board adopted resolutions numbered 17-526 
and 18-049 (the “resolutions”) terminating their 2009 agreement with DTRS and dissolving the 
corporate status of DTRS.  The Board cited Code §§ 27-101 and 32.1-111.4:7(D) as 
authorization for its ability to dissolve DTRS.2 
 
In July 2018, the Board filed a complaint for declaratory judgment against DTRS 
asserting that the Board had the authority to dissolve DTRS’s corporate status under Code 
§ 32.1-111.4:7(D).  The Board asked the circuit court to issue temporary and permanent 
injunctions enforcing the resolutions against DTRS.  The Board also requested that the circuit 
court appoint a receiver to liquidate and distribute DTRS’s remaining corporate assets and to 
 
 
1 The parties later stipulated that “DTRS has never been a ‘fire company’ or ‘fire 
department’ as that term is used” in Code § 27-10. 
 
 
2 Since October 2017, DTRS has allowed the County Fire and Rescue System to use the 
Graham Park Property, for free, to provide services to the County until the dispute between 
DTRS and the Board is resolved. 
 
 
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wind up its affairs, specifically requesting the liquidation and/or distribution of the Graham Park 
Property and its buildings.3 
 
DTRS filed a demurrer and plea in bar arguing that the complaint failed to state a claim 
against DTRS and was barred because the Board did not have the power to dissolve a private 
nonstock corporation and assume ownership of its real property.  The Board continued to argue 
that it did have the power to dissolve DTRS under Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D).  The circuit court 
held a hearing and overruled the demurrer, finding that the Board “ha[d] plenary power to” 
dissolve the “corporate entity itself.”  Specifically, the court entered an order overruling the 
demurrer stating, 
pursuant to [Code] § 32.1-111.4:7(D), [the Board] has the plenary 
power to dissolve the corporate existence of a volunteer emergency 
medical services agency or rescue squad, incorporated pursuant to 
Chapter 10 of Title 13.1, Va. Code Ann., which operates under the 
authority of the Board, pursuant to [Code] § 32.1-111.4:7. 
 
The Board filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that it had the statutory 
authority under Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) to dissolve DTRS and wind up its corporate affairs.  The 
circuit court held a hearing regarding the motion for summary judgment and DTRS’s plea in bar.  
During the hearing, the Board argued that Hanshaw v. Day, 202 Va. 818 (1961), stands for the 
proposition that the Board can exercise its police powers to distribute DTRS’s assets “so as to 
insure their continued use for public and civic purposes.”  DTRS argued that because the Board 
had no authority to dissolve the corporate status of DTRS, it therefore had no authority to 
distribute DTRS’s property and assets. 
 
The circuit court denied the plea in bar, stating that DTRS’s “very existence is at the 
whim if you will of the County, but then they have the authority as well to assume or to force 
 
 
3 DTRS had previously transferred some of its assets representing the totality of its 
personal property to the County. 
 
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this dissolution.”  The court entered a permanent injunction, finding that Code § 13.1-907(A)(3)4 
applied due to the “eleemosynary as well as benevolent” purposes of DTRS and its assets. 
 
The final order reflects the circuit court’s determination that DTRS constituted an “EMS 
agency, incorporated pursuant to Article 13 of Title 13.1, Va. Code Ann.,” which “entered into 
an agreement with the Board” to provide EMS services.  The court also found that DTRS was a 
non-governmental “EMS agency” due to 
its long term service as an arm of the Board and a member of the 
fire and rescue system, created by ordinance of the Board, and its 
long standing contractual relationship with the Board, under which 
it has submitted itself to the authority of the Board in exchange for 
receiving public funds for its operation. 
The court further held that DTRS was “subject to the control and management of the Board 
pursuant to [Code] § 32.1-111.4:7.”  The circuit court determined that because DTRS was “[a] 
non-stock corporation set up to provide rescue services to the public under the laws of Virginia 
[it] cannot exist without the approval of the Board . . . [and] was, therefore, subject to the 
corporate dissolution authority of the Board pursuant to [Code] § 32.1-111.4:7(D).”  The circuit 
court appointed a receiver, pursuant to Code § 13.1-910, to wind up DTRS’s corporate affairs as 
 
 
4 Code § 13.1-907(A)(3) provides: 
 
A. The assets of a corporation in the process of dissolution shall be 
applied and distributed as follows: . . . .  3. Assets received and 
held by the corporation subject to limitations permitting their use 
only for charitable, religious, eleemosynary, benevolent, 
educational or similar purposes, but not held upon a condition 
requiring return, transfer or conveyance by reason of the 
dissolution, shall be transferred or conveyed to one or more 
domestic or foreign corporations, societies or organizations 
engaged in activities substantially similar to those of the dissolving 
corporation, pursuant to a plan of distribution adopted as provided 
in this Act or as a court may direct[.] 
 
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requested by the Board.  DTRS’s motion to stay execution of the final order pending appeal was 
denied by the circuit court. 
 
DTRS appealed to this Court and moved to stay execution of the final order.  The Court 
granted the motion to stay execution of the final order and awarded DTRS this appeal. 
II.  ANALYSIS 
 
On appeal, DTRS argues that the Board lacked the authority to dissolve DTRS’s 
corporate status under Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) because it was incorporated under Title 13.1 and 
not Title 32.1.  The Board argues the opposite, asserting that Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) does give 
them the power to dissolve DTRS because it was an EMS agency. 
 
“Whether a municipality has the power to act is a question of law we review de novo.”  
Bragg Hill Corp. v. City of Fredericksburg, 297 Va. 566, 578 (2019).  “The Dillon Rule of strict 
construction controls our determination of the powers of local governing bodies.”  Id. (quoting 
Marble Techs., Inc. v. Hampton, 279 Va. 409, 417 (2010) (citation and internal quotation marks 
omitted)).  We have consistently applied Dillon’s Rule, which provides that local governing 
bodies, like the Board, “have only those powers that are (1) expressly granted by the General 
Assembly, (2) ‘necessarily or fairly implied’ from those express powers, and (3) ‘essential to the 
declared objects and purposes’ of the municipality.”  Id. (quoting Chesapeake v. Gardner 
Enters., 253 Va. 243, 246 (1997)).  “If there is a reasonable doubt whether legislative power 
exists, the doubt must be resolved against the local governing body.”  Board of Supervisors v. 
Reed’s Landing Corp., 250 Va. 397, 400 (1995). 
 
“In applying the Dillon Rule, we first examine the plain terms of the legislative 
enactment to determine whether the General Assembly expressly granted a particular power to 
the municipal corporation.”  Marble Techs., Inc., 279 Va. at 418.  “If the power is not expressly 
 
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granted, we then ‘determine whether the power . . . is necessarily or fairly implied from the 
powers expressly granted by the statute.’” Id. (quoting Gardner Enters., 253 Va. at 247).  “When 
the language of a statute is unambiguous, we are bound by the plain meaning of that language.”  
Conyers v. Martial Arts World of Richmond, Inc., 273 Va. 96, 104 (2007). 
 
Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) provides: 
An emergency medical services agency established pursuant to 
this section may be dissolved when the local governing body of the 
county, city, or town in which the emergency medical services 
agency is located determines that the emergency medical services 
agency has failed, for three months successively, to have or keep in 
good and serviceable condition emergency medical services 
vehicles and equipment and other proper implements, or when the 
governing body of the county, city, or town for any reason deems it 
advisable. 
(Emphasis added.)  Based on the plain language of Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D), a local governing 
body, like the Board, may only dissolve an emergency medical services agency if it was 
“established pursuant to” that section.  DTRS was not “established pursuant to” Code 
§ 32.1-111.4:7.  Rather, pursuant to its Articles of Incorporation, it was established under Title 
13.1 as a private, nonstock corporation.  Indeed, it could not have been “established pursuant to” 
Code § 32.1-111.4:7 because DTRS existed as a corporation registered with the SCC since 1959, 
well prior to the enactment of Code § 32.1-111.4:7.  Moreover, after the Board severed its 
contractual relationship with DTRS, DTRS continued as a private, nonstock corporation, in good 
standing with the SCC.  Because DTRS was not incorporated pursuant to Code § 32.1-111.4:7, 
the Board could not rely on that authority to dissolve its corporate status.5 
 
 
5 While the Board bases its entire argument on the premise that Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) 
allowed it to dissolve the corporate status of DTRS, we also note that nothing in the provisions of 
Title 13.1 granted the Board the express or implied power to dissolve the corporate status of 
DTRS. 
 
 
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In addition to not being established pursuant to that Code section, as it is incorporated, 
DTRS is not the type of entity that is subject to dissolution under that section.  Code 
§ 32.1-111.4:7(D) expressly provides for the dissolution of an emergency medical services 
agency.  An “emergency medical services agency” or “EMS agency” is defined as 
any person engaged in the business, service, or regular activity, 
whether for profit or not, of rendering immediate medical care and 
providing transportation to persons who are sick, injured, 
wounded, or otherwise incapacitated or helpless and that holds a 
valid license as an emergency medical services agency issued by 
the Commissioner in accordance with § 32.1-111.6. 
Code § 32.1-111.1.  DTRS was not just an emergency medical services agency.  Under its 
Articles of Incorporation, in addition to providing emergency medical services, it was established 
to also “teach methods of safety.”  The only service entered into “pursuant to” Code 
§ 32.1-111.4:7(D) and therefore regulated by the Board was its provision of emergency medical 
services for the citizens of Prince William County.  Because DTRS’s relationship with the Board 
was limited to the provision of emergency medical services to the citizens of Prince William 
County, that was the only aspect of its operations that the Board could dissolve.  Therefore, the 
Board had no express authority to dissolve DTRS’s corporate status. 
 
Nor do we find that the Board’s authority to dissolve DTRS’s corporate status was 
necessarily implied.  “A necessary implication is ‘[a]n implication so strong in its probability 
that anything to the contrary would be unreasonable.’”  Cuccinelli v. Rector, 283 Va. 420, 429 
(2012) (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 822 (9th ed. 2009)).  “[T]he doctrine of implied powers 
should never be applied to create a power that does not exist or to expand an existing power 
beyond rational limits.”  Commonwealth v. Board of Arlington County, 217 Va. 558, 577 (1977).  
Here, the plain language of the statute – referring to entities “established pursuant to this  
 
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section” – is so strong as to preclude the Board’s claimed authority by necessary implication.  
Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) retains its logical and practical significance and effect even when it is 
recognized that its plain meaning and implications do not authorize the Board to dissolve the 
corporate status of an entity that pre-existed the very statute upon which the Board relies and 
which is incorporated to perform other functions in addition to the one authorized by the Board.  
We therefore do not find that the authority to dissolve the corporate status of DTRS exists by 
necessary implication. 
 
We emphasize, however, that the Board’s lack of authority to dissolve DTRS’s corporate 
status does not affect the Board’s power to cease contracting with DTRS for emergency medical 
services.  Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) allows the Board to freely dissolve its contractual relationship 
with DTRS regarding emergency medical services.  It remains true, however, that Code 
§ 32.1-111.4:7(D) does not expressly or impliedly authorize the Board to dissolve the corporate 
status of DTRS as it was not “established pursuant to” that Code section. 
 
Nevertheless, the Board argues that it had the power to dissolve DTRS under Code 
§ 32.1-111.4:7(D) because DTRS was organized “consistent with” that Code section and the 
General Assembly may regulate corporate functions through legislation, as we held in Hanshaw 
v. Day, 202 Va. 818 (1961).  The Board is correct that Hanshaw stands for the proposition that 
the General Assembly can adopt legislation that “under its police power, [] supervise[s], 
regulate[s] and limit[s] the exercise of corporate functions by appropriate legislative changes.”  
Hanshaw, 202 Va. at 823.  The principle announced in Hanshaw, however, does not come into 
play in this case for the simple reason that the statute at issue does not apply to DTRS.  Even if 
DTRS was organized “consistent with” Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) as stated by the Board, it was 
clearly not “established pursuant to” Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D).  We cannot conflate the phrase 
 
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“established pursuant to” as used by the General Assembly with “organized consistent with” as 
alleged by the Board.  “Where the legislature has used words of a plain and definite import the 
courts cannot put upon them a construction which amounts to holding the legislature did not 
mean what it has actually expressed.” Barr v. Town & Country Props., Inc., 240 Va. 292, 295 
(1990).6 
 
Finally, the Board also relies on three circuit court cases:  Fortsmouth Vol. Fire Dep’t v. 
Warren County, 49 Va. Cir. 377 (Warren Cir. Ct. 1999); American Fire Equipment Inc. v. 
Widewater Fire & Rescue Services, 74 Va. Cir. 101 (Stafford Cir. Ct. 2007); and Board of 
County Supervisors v. Shenandoah Farms Vol. Fire Dep’t, Inc., No. CL 002447 (Clarke Cir. Ct. 
2013) (orders granting a temporary injunction and declaratory judgment), to support its argument 
that the circuit court was correct in finding that the local governing body had plenary power over 
DTRS because it contracted with the County.  We are not bound by these circuit court opinions, 
nor do we find these decisions persuasive.  Each of these cases involved a locality dissolving a 
local fire company under Code § 27-107 which provides several reasons for a local governing 
 
 
6 Having found that DTRS was not dissolved, we need not reach the issue of how 
DTRS’s remaining corporate assets, specifically, the Graham Park Property, should be 
distributed. 
 
 
7 Code § 27-10 provides: 
Whenever the fire department of the county, city, or town to which 
any fire company belongs ascertains that such company has failed, 
for three months successively, to consist of 20 effective members, 
or ascertains that it has failed for the like period to have or keep in 
good and serviceable condition an engine, hose, and equipment 
and other proper implements, or the governing body of the county, 
city, or town for any reason deems it advisable, such governing 
body may dissolve the fire company. 
 
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body to dissolve a fire department.  Code § 27-10 does not contain any language limiting the 
local governing body’s actions to only fire departments created pursuant to that Code section.  
Compare the provisions of Code § 27-10 and its lack of any limiting language with Code 
§ 32.1-111.4:7(D), where the General Assembly chose to include the phrase “established 
pursuant to this section” when addressing dissolution of an EMS agency by the local governing 
body. “We . . . presume the legislature chose, with care, the words it used when it enacted the 
relevant statute[s].”  Zinone v. Lee’s Crossing Homeowners Ass’n, 282 Va. 330, 337 (2011) 
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).  Clearly, then, Code § 27-10 establishes that the 
General Assembly knows how to draft a statute such that it imposes no limit on a locality’s 
ability to dissolve an entity that provides emergency services to the locality.  The fact that the 
General Assembly instead used language imposing such a limit with respect to EMS agencies in 
Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) is indicative of its intent to achieve a different result. See, e.g., Halifax 
Corp. v. Wachovia Bank, 268 Va. 641, 654 (2004) (use of language in one enactment that is 
“[s]trikingly absent” from another “represents an unambiguous manifestation of a contrary 
intention” in that enactment); Oraee v. Breeding, 270 Va. 488, 508 (2005) (same). 
 
Accordingly, we hold that the circuit court erred in finding that the Board could dissolve 
the corporate status of DTRS pursuant to Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D) since DTRS is not an agency 
“established pursuant to” that Code section. 
III.  CONCLUSION 
 
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the judgment of the circuit court based upon 
the erroneous legal conclusion that the Board had the power to dissolve the corporate status of 
DTRS pursuant to Code § 32.1-111.4:7(D).  The circuit court therefore erred as a matter of law 
 
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by granting summary judgment, declaratory judgment, issuing a permanent injunction, and in 
appointing a receiver to wind up the corporate affairs of DTRS. 
Reversed and final judgment.