Court Opinion

ID: 892413
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-05 18:38:39.232413+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:08:21.023039
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2010-NMCA-038

Filing Date: March 25, 2010

Docket No. 28,227

VILLAGE OF ANGEL FIRE,
a municipality of the State of
New Mexico,

       Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
OF COLFAX COUNTY, a county of the
State of New Mexico,

       Defendant-Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COLFAX COUNTY
Eugenio S. Mathis, District Judge

Canepa & Vidal, P.A.
Joseph F. Canepa
Patricia J. Turner
Santa Fe, NM

for Appellant

Robin C. Blair
Raton, NM

for Appellee

                                       OPINION

KENNEDY, Judge.

{1}    This case results from the disintegration of an agreement between the Village of
Angel Fire (Village) and the Board of County Commissioners of Colfax County (County).
In 2001, the parties executed a Joint Powers Agreement (JPA) in which the Village promised

                                            1
to collect the trash of certain county residents in consideration for the sum of $50,000, paid
semi-annually in payments of $25,000 each. The County made scheduled payments until
around July 15, 2004. After it stopped making payments, the Village states, the County
made no further payments but repeatedly promised it would as it restructured its finances.
Based on these representations, the Village claims that it refrained from filing suit and
continued to collect garbage for the County.

{2}     On April 10, 2007, the Village filed a complaint against the County in which it made
claims for breach of contract, equitable estoppel, and quantum meruit, each based on the
JPA. Upon being sued, the County argued that the Village’s claims were barred by the
statute of limitations prescribed by NMSA 1978, Section 37-1-23(B) (1976). On that basis,
the district court granted the County’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. The Village
appeals, and we affirm.

{3}     The Village also claimed in its complaint that the County should be estopped from
asserting the statute of limitations. The Village alleges that the County strung them along
with no intention of paying for garbage service and that the County had itself engineered a
defect in the contract. Alternatively, the Village argued the right to payment in quantum
meruit. On appeal, the Village claims that the JPA creates an installment contract that
essentially provides a right to sue after any number of payments were missed.

{4}     After reviewing the pleadings and the district court’s order, we make the following
holdings. First, the Village did not argue with sufficient specificity below its assertion that
the JPA was an installment contract for which the statute of limitations re-starts each time
an installment goes unpaid. As a result, that argument is not preserved for our review, and
we hold that the statute of limitations began to run when the County first failed to pay. This
application of the statute of limitations prevents the Village’s contract claim even if we
assume the validity of the JPA. Second, the Village failed to establish a claim for equitable
estoppel. Last, sovereign immunity provides the County with an absolute barrier to suit in
quantum meruit. While fully recognizing that the County has received a great deal of
valuable trash removal for free in the face of the JPA, we nevertheless affirm the order of
the district court.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

{5}     We review judgments on the pleadings made pursuant to Rule 1-012(C) NMRA
according to the same standard as motions for failure to state a claim under Rule 1-012(B)(6)
NMRA. Dunn v. McFeeley, 1999-NMCA-084, ¶¶ 10-11, 127 N.M. 513, 984 P.2d 760; see,
e.g., Sanders v. Estate of Sanders, 1996-NMCA-102, ¶¶ 6-7, 122 N.M. 468, 927 P.2d 23.
We “accept as true all facts well pleaded and question only whether the plaintiffs might
prevail under any state of facts provable under the claim.” Garcia v. Rodey, Dickason,
Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A., 106 N.M. 757, 760, 750 P.2d 118, 121 (1988). All interpretations
of law made by the district court are subject to a de novo standard. Klinksiek v. Klinksiek,
2005-NMCA-008, ¶ 4, 136 N.M. 693, 104 P.3d 559 (filed 2004).

BACKGROUND

                                              2
{6}     The JPA provides, “the Village and County wish to enter into an agreement . . . for
the collection and disposal of refuse from real property located within the county
boundaries.” The Village promises to furnish “solid waste disposal” to the County in
consideration for “two installments of $25,000[] each; which installments shall be due and
payable commencing April 15, 2001[,] and continuing on July 15[] and April 15[] of each
year that this contract is in place.” Paragraph XV of the contract makes it “subject to the
approval of the secretary of the New Mexico Department of Finance and Administration”
(DFA) and indicates that the contract “shall not become valid and binding upon the parties
until approval of . . . [DFA] has been obtained.” Neither party disputes that the other is a
political subdivision of the state of New Mexico.

{7}      The agreement was executed by officials of both the County and the Village. On
April 3, 2001, the County sent a letter transmitting the JPA to the Village for signature,
indicating that it would get the agreement to DFA for its approval following the Village’s
executing the required signatures. DFA approval was never obtained, but the parties
performed on the contract until April 15, 2004, when the County ceased making payments
to the Village. The Village continued to collect the County’s garbage until after suit was
filed, another three years.

{8}     The Village’s complaint asked the district court to recognize the validity of the
contract and require the County to make all back payments. By failing to pay under the
terms of the contract, the County breached its obligations, and notwithstanding the contract’s
validity, the Village claimed that quantum meruit required the County to pay. As the
complaint stated, the County “has benefitted by the Village’s provision of refuse collection
and disposal system services,” and the County’s continued failure to pay is both inequitable
and unjust.

{9}     The Village’s complaint also asserted equitable estoppel. It claimed that the County
encouraged the Village to enter into the contract, that the County falsely told the Village it
was seeking the approval of DFA, and that the County falsely promised to pay unpaid
installments on the contract. These acts were done, the Village claimed, with the intent “to
receive the Village’s refuse collection and disposal system services for which the County did
not intend to pay the Village.” As a result of these representations, the Village stated that
it continued to perform under the contract and detrimentally changed its position.

{10} The County answered the complaint on May 16, 2007. It argued that it was the
Village that had failed to procure DFA approval and stated that, without it, the contract was
invalid. It also asserted sovereign immunity under Section 37-1-23 as a defense. That
section provides

       A.     Governmental entities are granted immunity from actions based on
       contract, except actions based on a valid written contract.

                                              3
       B.     Every claim permitted by this section shall be forever barred unless
       brought within two years from the time of accural.

The County also filed motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim and judgment on the
pleadings. Those motions likewise raised Section 37-1-23 as a defense and disputed the validity
of the contract.

{11} The district court heard the motions on October 30, 2007. The County repeated its
previous arguments, stating the contract was invalid and that the Village’s claims were barred
by both the statute of limitations and sovereign immunity. The Village reasserted the doctrine
of equitable estoppel and stated that its claim accrued under Section 37-1-23 at the moment the
County expressed doubt concerning the contract’s validity. The County disagreed. It argued
that the Village’s claim accrued, if at all, when the County stopped paying on the contract, at the
point of breach. Ruling from the bench, the district court denied the County’s motion to dismiss
for failure to state a claim and granted its motion for judgment on the pleadings. The court held
that under Section 37-1-23, the Village’s cause of action accrued, at the latest, in July 2004.
Even if the disputed JPA is presumed to be valid, the district court ruled that because a two-year
statute of limitations is absolute in this case, the Village’s cause of action was barred.

{12} The Village now appeals. It argues: first, that the statute of limitations accrued as to
each payment at the time each became due; second, that equitable estoppel should prevent the
County from asserting the statute of limitations as a defense; and third, that the County should
be required to pay regardless of the contract’s validity pursuant to the doctrine of quantum
meruit.

DISCUSSION

I.     The Statute of Limitations

{13} The Village claims that the district court incorrectly applied the statute of limitations to
its contract claim. It urges us to reverse for two reasons. First, the Village argues that because
the contract was one payable in installments, the statute of limitations accrued differently than
it would on a non-installment contract. Second, the Village argues that it relied on the County’s
continued promises to pay, and such reliance creates a case of equitable estoppel. Thus, the
Village contends that the County should be prohibited from asserting the statute of limitations
as a defense. We recognize that the parties disputed the validity of the JPA below. However,
in this appeal it is unnecessary for us to consider that issue. Even if we presume without
deciding that the JPA is valid, our conclusion concerning the district court’s application of the
statute of limitations is dispositive and requires affirmance. We likewise note that although the
JPA contains an arbitration clause, neither party invoked it below, and we therefore consider it
waived. See Wood v. Millers Nat’l Ins. Co., 96 N.M. 525, 527-28, 632 P.2d 1163, 1165-66
(1981) (holding that parties reach a “point of no return” and waive arbitration at the moment
they “invoke[] the court’s discretionary power, prior to demanding arbitration, on a question
other than . . . arbitration[]”).

                                              4
A.     Preservation of the Village’s Installment Contract Argument

{14} In its brief, the Village claims that its agreement with the County was an installment
contract. As such, the statute of limitations found in Section 37-1-23 accrued as to each payment
at the time each became due. The Village cites Tull v. City of Albuquerque, 120 N.M. 829, 830-
31, 907 P.2d 1010, 1011-12 (Ct. App. 1995), and Plaatje v. Plaatje, 95 N.M. 789, 790-91, 626
P.2d 1286, 1287-88 (1981), in support of this proposition. Those cases discuss differing
application of statutes of limitations on contracts involving installment payments as opposed to
others. Those cases also introduce discrete legal terms of art, namely a “continuing-wrong
theory” which tolls the statute each time an obligation goes unfulfilled, Tull, 120 N.M. at 830,
907 P.2d at 1011, and a “single-wrong approach” that applies to most other contracts and tolls
the statute of limitations beginning the first time an obligation goes unfulfilled. Id. at 830-31,
907 P.2d at 1011-12. Applying the installment/continuing-wrong theory to the facts of this case,
as the Village asserts, would result in “a new breach of contract . . . with each default in
payment” and would allow the Village to sue on any non-payment occurring within the two-year
statutory period. See § 37-1-23.

{15} We will not review arguments that were not preserved in the district court. Rio Grande
Kennel Club v. City of Albuquerque, 2008-NMCA-093, ¶ 31, 144 N.M. 636, 190 P.3d 1131.
This rule serves two purposes. First, it allows the district court an opportunity to cure errors,
thereby dispensing with the need for an appeal, and second, it creates a reviewable record.
Lopez v. Las Cruces Police Dep’t, 2006-NMCA-074, ¶ 6, 139 N.M. 730, 137 P.3d 670. In order
to properly preserve an issue, “it must appear that [the party] fairly invoked a ruling of the
[district] court on the same grounds argued in the appellate court.” Woolwine v. Furr’s, Inc., 106
N.M. 492, 496, 745 P.2d 717, 721 (Ct. App. 1987). In its briefs, the Village directs us to various
points in the record where it claims this issue was preserved. The Village argues that its
complaint, its response to the County’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, and its oral
statements before the district court were each sufficient to preserve the argument. After close
examination of each, we disagree.

{16} First, the assertions contained in the Village’s complaint are insufficient to preserve the
issue. The complaint never uses the phrase installment contract. Instead, it describes the
contract as one payable “in two equal payments . . . each year.” The contract was attached to
the Village’s complaint, and although that document does describe the County’s responsibilities
as “installments,” it is silent as to how non-payments should be treated or, specifically, how the
statute of limitations should be applied. Neither document presents the district court with an
opportunity to rule on this issue on the same grounds as presented here.

{17} Second, the Village’s response to the County’s motion for judgment on the pleadings,
though somewhat more specific, likewise fails to properly place the issue before the district
court. In it, the Village defends against the County’s statute of limitations argument and claims
“[t]hat the County did not timely pay one installment does not relieve the County of its
obligation to do so at any time for any reason, including not by the application of a limitations

                                              5
statute.” Such a general statement, without more, does not fulfill the Village’s obligation to
“fairly invoke[] a ruling of the [district] court on the same grounds argued” on appeal, Woolwine,
106 N.M. at 496, 745 P.2d at 721, especially because the Village never revisited this notion at
the hearing. Even if we could reliably say that this statement constitutes “the same grounds” as
the Village’s argument on appeal, the Village’s failure to raise it later, at the hearing, results in
a failure to “fairly invoke [] a ruling of the [district] court.” Id. As our Supreme Court has
stated, “[a] litigant . . . has a duty” to establish a record “of the proceedings he desires reviewed;
otherwise the correctness of such ruling cannot be questioned.” Barnett v. Cal M, Inc., 79 N.M.
553, 556, 445 P.2d 974, 977 (1968). Issues “not called to the attention of the [district]
court . . . cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.” Id. (citation omitted).

{18} The pertinent portion of the hearing begins during the County’s argument. The County
discusses the two-year statute of limitations and argues that it absolutely bars the Village’s
claim. When the County concludes, the district court asks the Village to respond. The Village
then stakes its argument to the theory of equitable estoppel and describes the promises made by
the County. At no point does the Village argue that an installment contract accrues differently
than another type of contract. Below, the Village argued that the contract, which had no ending
date, continued irrespective of the County’s failed payments and obligated the County until the
rights of the parties were adjudicated. The distinction between a continuing wrong and a single
wrong with continuing effects, as explained in Tull, 120 N.M. at 830, 907 P.2d at 1011, was
never mentioned. Neither did the Village advance any theory invoking, or even analogous to,
the one at issue in Plaatje, nor did it ever argue that installment contracts should be treated
differently. See 95 N.M. at 791, 626 P.2d at 1288. The word installment, used by the Village
in referring to a payment due under the JPA, is not associated with these legal distinctions, and
we hold that this argument, applying a different calculation of the statute of limitations for
installment payments, went unpreserved. The Village never discussed the theories of
“continuing wrong” versus “single wrong,” nor did it discuss Tull or Plaatje. A review of the
hearing makes clear that this argument was neither considered by the district court nor presented
on the same grounds as argued here. We hold that the statute of limitations began to run at the
time the first payment was missed by the County.

B.      Effect of Equitable Estoppel on the Statute of Limitations

{19} The Village’s second statute of limitations argument centers on a theory of equitable
estoppel. The Village claims that after becoming aware of the County’s failure to pay, it
refrained from filing suit against the County during the two-year statute of limitations period
because of its reliance on the County’s promises to provide “payment to cover payments in
default” and to “seek and acquire the approval of DFA.”

{20} As a result, the Village urges us to reverse the district court’s application of the statute
of limitations and remand in order to allow discovery of additional facts relevant to the issue of
equitable estoppel. Based on the facts asserted in the pleadings, we hold that the Village has
failed to establish a claim for equitable estoppel. And absent a new agreement, such a request
for forbearance from the County would not operate to toll the statute of limitations, because at

                                                6
the time the County made its alleged promises to the Village, it had already breached the
contract. Any mere promise of payment thereafter would not slow the inexorable march of the
statute. See, e.g., Wilson v. Black, 49 N.M. 309, 312, 163 P.2d 267, 270 (1945).

{21} To prevail on a claim of equitable estoppel, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant:
(1) concealed material facts, falsely represented material facts, or made representations of fact
different or inconsistent with later assertions in court; (2) had an intent or “expectation[] that
such conduct” would “be acted upon by the” plaintiff; and (3) possessed either actual or
constructive knowledge of the real facts. Lopez v. State, 1996-NMSC-071, ¶ 18, 122 N.M. 611,
930 P.2d 146. Next, the plaintiff must prove that it: (1) lacked both the knowledge and the
means of acquiring knowledge of the “truth as to the facts in question”; (2) relied on the
defendant’s conduct; and (3) acted upon that conduct in a way that prejudicially altered its
position. Id.; see Mem’l Med. Ctr., Inc. v. Tatsch Constr., Inc., 2000-NMSC-030, ¶ 9, 129 N.M.
677, 12 P.3d 431.

{22} The Village alleges that after the County ceased to make payments on the contract, the
County promised it would pay when it had no intention of doing so. We presume the truth of
this allegation. However, as mentioned above, no estoppel arises from the fact because at the
time any promise was made, the Village knew that the JPA was in breach for the County’s
failure to pay, and absent more, a mere request for forbearance will not block assertion of the
statute of limitations. Wilson, 49 N.M. at 312, 163 P.2d at 270. Certainly, Wilson recognizes
“that a promise to pay a debt . . . may be made in such a manner, and under such circumstances,
that if relied upon, it may” estop a defendant from asserting a statute of limitations defense. Id.
We suspect that the County may have acted so as to conceal facts or to make misrepresentations
of fact which it intended the Village to act upon. However, as noted below, the Village has not
sufficiently averred facts sufficient for a claim of equitable estoppel.

{23} The Village alleged that the County intentionally failed to have the JPA approved by
DFA, intending to later assert the invalidity of the contract owing to the lack of such approval.
However, Attachment B to the complaint consists of a letter dated April 3, 2001, in which the
County asks the Village to execute the original copies of JPA and return them to the County “so
[it] can be forwarded to DFA.” The letter continues, “A fully executed original will be sent to
the Village once DFA has approved the [JPA].” Later, the County asserted that the contract was
invalid for lack of DFA approval and that payments were made based on a “mistaken belief” that
the Village secured DFA approval. Taking the Village’s allegations as true under our standard
of review, we infer that the County was responsible for securing DFA approval for the JPA and
did not do so, later asserting that: (a) approval was not their responsibility to begin with, and
(b) that the JPA was void for the very lack of approval the County told the Village it would
obtain.

{24} We note that nowhere in the Village’s complaint is there an allegation that it complied
with the County’s April 3 letter. We also note that the copy of the JPA attached to the complaint
is conspicuously executed by representatives of both the Village and the County but lacks the
required DFA approval. The complaint does not allege that the Village sent the copies back for

                                              7
DFA approval, that the County represented falsely that approval was obtained, or that the
Village relied on such a representation. It is not alleged that the County sent back DFA-
approved copies to the Village as it stated it would. We thus consider it fair to believe that the
Village knew the JPA had not been approved from the very face of the copy it attached to its
complaint. Estoppel requires that a plaintiff lack both the “knowledge and . . . the means of
[acquiring] knowledge of the truth as to the facts in question,” and that the plaintiff prove
prejudicial reliance on the defendant’s conduct. Mem’l Med. Ctr., Inc., 2000-NMSC-030, ¶ 9
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). We cannot see that these elements are pled in
the complaint. We may never know if the County nefariously intended to acquire free garbage
pickup at the Village’s expense. We similarly do not know if the Village was led astray or
simply failed to return the executed documents to the County by oversight or inertia.
Nonetheless, the Village continued to provide services after payment stopped rather than
terminate services because the County promised to make good on the agreement. Unfortunately,
the inability to plead the elements of estoppel forecloses this claim, and the Village cannot
recover the value of those continued services. We are instructed to employ estoppel against a
government entity “where there is a shocking degree of aggravated and overreaching conduct
or where right and justice demand it.” Id., ¶ 10 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

{25} The actions of the County stringing along the Village and taking its services for free are
neither honest nor ethical. Perhaps the County might have followed up on DFA approval if the
Village had not responded, and perhaps the Village might have seen that DFA approval had not
been obtained as required in 2004 when the County breached the JPA. In the absence of
necessary facts, we cannot consider the County’s actions consistent with a mode of shocking,
aggravated, or overreaching conduct. Nor can we consider this a case deserving of our
discretion under the “right and justice” standard. Id. The asserted factual scenario does not
constitute “one of those exceptional circumstances in which estoppel can be used” against a state
actor. Id. ¶ 14. For this reason, we affirm the district court.

II.    Applicability of Quantum Meruit

{26} Finally, the Village argues that the County is liable in quantum meruit. The language
of Section 37-1-23(A) explicitly bars such a claim, stating “[g]overnmental entities are granted
immunity from actions based on contract, except actions based on a valid written contract.”
Hydro Conduit Corp. v. Kemble, 110 N.M. 173, 174, 793 P.2d 855, 856 (1990), illustrates the
principle. In that case, a sub-contractor on a state public works project brought suit against the
state in quantum meruit. The state asserted Section 37-1-23(A) as a defense, arguing that the
statute established its sovereign immunity to such claims. The district court dismissed the
supplier’s claim on that basis, and the supplier appealed. Hydro Conduit Corp., 110 N.M. at
174, 793 P.2d at 856. Our Supreme Court affirmed the dismissal and held that the Legislature
intended Section 37-1-23(A) “to reinstate . . . sovereign immunity” as a result of that doctrine’s
abolishment under prior case law. Hydro Conduit Corp., 110 N.M. at 177, 793 P.2d at 859. The
language of Section 37-1-23(B) provides an exception. It allows “claims based on valid written
contracts” to proceed. Hydro Conduit Corp., 110 N.M. at 177, 793 P.2d at 859. The supplier
argued that claims in quantum meruit are fundamentally different than those which sound in

                                              8
either tort or contract; and while the Supreme Court agreed, it held that Section 37-1-23(A) still
bars such a claim. “[E]ven though an action for [quantum meruit] is not based on contract in a
strict theoretical sense, it is so closely related to an action which is so based that the immunity
statute . . . should be construed to extend immunity to an unjust enrichment claim as well as to
a claim founded on a true, but unwritten, contract.” Hydro Conduit Corp., 110 N.M. at 179, 793
P.2d at 861 (emphasis in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, by operation of the
sovereign immunity statute, the Village’s claim in quantum meruit is barred. Under Section 37-
1-23, claims for contract and quantum meruit must stand and fall together.

{27} Nevertheless, the Village distinguishes these facts from those in Hydro. That case
involved a private litigant’s claim against the state, whereas this case involves the claim of one
sovereign state actor against another equally sovereign state actor. Thus, as the argument goes,
sovereign immunity is inapplicable. We are unpersuaded. The Village cites no case law to
support it, and we will not consider propositions unsupported by citation to authority. ITT Educ.
Servs., Inc. v. Taxation & Revenue Dep’t, 1998-NMCA-078, ¶ 10, 125 N.M. 244, 959 P.2d 969;
Wilburn v. Stewart, 110 N.M. 268, 272, 794 P.2d 1197, 1201 (1990) (“Issues raised in appellate
briefs that are unsupported by cited authority will not be reviewed . . . on appeal.”).

CONCLUSION

{28} Based on the foregoing analysis, we affirm the judgment on the pleadings granted to the
County by the district court.

{29}    IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                               _______________________________________
                                               RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge

WE CONCUR:

__________________________________
CYNTHIA A. FRY, Chief Judge

__________________________________
LINDA M. VANZI, Judge

Topic Index for Village of Angel Fire v. Colfax Co., No. 28,227

AE                     APPEAL AND ERROR
AE-PA                  Preservation of Issues for Appeal
AE-SR                  Standard of Review

CN                     CONTRACTS
CN-BR                  Breach

                                              9
CN-FC   Formation of Contract
CN-QM   Quantum Meruit
CN-SL   Statute of Limitations

CP      CIVIL PROCEDURE
CP-PE   Estoppel
CP-JT   Judgment on the Pleadings

GV      GOVERNMENT
GV-CU   Counties
GV-MU   Municipalities
GV-SI   Sovereign Immunity

                             10