68V BTR Holdings, LLC v. City of Fairhope

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedFebruary 14, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00430
StatusUnknown

This text of 68V BTR Holdings, LLC v. City of Fairhope (68V BTR Holdings, LLC v. City of Fairhope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
68V BTR Holdings, LLC v. City of Fairhope, (S.D. Ala. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

68V BTR HOLDINGS, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) CIVIL ACTION 22-0430-WS-B ) CITY OF FAIRHOPE, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

ORDER This matter is before the Court on the defendants’ motion to dismiss. (Doc. 9). The plaintiff has filed a response and the defendants a reply, (Docs. 17, 18), and the motion is ripe for resolution. After careful consideration, the Court concludes the motion is due to be granted in part and denied in part.

BACKGROUND According to the complaint, (Doc. 1), the plaintiff is the owner of two parcels of property. The defendants are the City of Fairhope (“the City”) and the City of Fairhope Planning Commission (“the Commission”). The plaintiff’s properties lie outside the corporate limits of the City but within its planning jurisdiction. The plaintiff sought approval from the Commission for development of its properties for multi-occupancy housing, but the Commission denied the plaintiff’s applications. The complaint asserts the following claims: Count I: “Invalidation of Defendants’ Arbitrary and Capricious Application Denials” Count II: Denial of Due Process Count III: Denial of Equal Protection Count IV: Equitable Estoppel Count V: Misrepresentation (Doc. 1 at 15-26). The defendants seek dismissal of all claims.

ALLEGATIONS OF THE COMPLAINT According to the complaint, the plaintiff identified two parcels of land for development (“the Skyline property” and “the Gable property,” collectively, “the Properties”). In August 2021, before purchasing the Properties, the plaintiff’s representatives met with City staff to discuss development of the Properties as multi- occupancy complexes. The City’s representatives told the plaintiff’s representatives that if the projects “checked all the boxes,” the projects would be approved. In reliance on this statement, the plaintiff purchased the Properties in late 2021 for approximately $1.7 million. In further reliance on the statement, the plaintiff engaged third parties to provide plans and studies. Two of the third parties conducted a community meeting, after which the projects for the Properties’ development (“the Projects”) became a topic of dissent among community residents, due primarily to the perception that the price point for units would be too low to exclude lower-income tenants. (Doc. 1 at 6-7). In December 2021, the City enacted an ordinance establishing a moratorium on the acceptance and consideration of multiple occupancy projects outside the City’s corporate limits but within its planning jurisdiction. The Projects were not subject to the moratorium and, at a February 7, 2022 meeting, one Commission member expressed anger over this situation. Another member suggested the Commission could “just deny” the plaintiff’s applications and fabricate reasons for the denial. The City’s attorney advised the Commission that a denial of a pending application would force the applicant to re-apply under more restrictive, post-moratorium criteria. (Doc. 1 at 8-9). The Commission became aware of residents’ dissent regarding the Projects. The Commission began creating new and evolving requirements and obligations and demanding new, unclear items applicable only to the Projects. These demands were unreasonable, couched in the City’s nebulous interpretation of its land development code, and the Commission made remarks regarding the scale and character of the Projects as being inconsistent with surrounding areas – which comments reflected an improper attempt to enforce zoning ordinances on unzoned property. Nevertheless, the plaintiff did everything asked of it, including expanding the amount of greenspace and materially revising the engineering and design of the Projects. (Doc. 1 at 9-11). On February 10, 2022, representatives of the plaintiff met with the City’s mayor to discuss the Skyline project and issues raised by the Commission. The mayor assured the plaintiff that the developments would be approved if the plaintiff checked all the boxes. Based on feedback from this meeting, the plaintiff reduced the number of units at both Properties. (Doc. 1 at 9-10). In the spring of 2022, Commission staff issued a recommendation that the Skyline Project be approved. The staff report noted that land uses with similar densities exist nearby, including some with City zoning, and it concluded that staff could not recommend denial based solely on location. The staff report also contained a third-party professional drainage report, which determined the proposed detention pond was adequate for 100-year storm events. The Commission unanimously denied the Skyline application, citing concerns about drainage, traffic, congestion, and safety. The stated reasons directly contradicted the staff report. A Commission member later acknowledged on tape these were pretextual reasons and stated that the Commission simply did not want the specific complexes the plaintiff sought to build, that the Commission had no issue with other nearby apartment complexes because they were nicer and more expensive to rent, and that the plaintiff would not sue over the denial of the applications because its owner lives in Daphne and also owns a builder, so that “pushing the envelope too much would be really bad for his business.” (Doc. 1 at 2-4, 11-12, 13-14). In the spring of 2022, Commission staff issued a recommendation that the Gable Project be denied because it did not meet greenspace requirements of the City’s subdivision regulations, because its scale and character were inconsistent with the surrounding area, and because there were drainage issues. The greenspace regulations do not apply to single-owner multi-occupancy projects, and regulating land use based on criteria such as the character of surrounding land constitutes unauthorized zoning action. Nor does such a process involve clearly drawn standards that can be uniformly applied and that provide reasonable notice to applicants of the requirements with which they must comply. The drainage concerns were unfounded because the third-party engineer concluded that the drainage design met the minimum development standards. After dissident residents hired another engineer, who fabricated issues with the Projects’ water- flow, the Commission relied on the concocted issues. The Commission denied the Gable application based on fabricated pretexts. As referenced above, a Commission member later acknowledged that the reasons given for the denial were pretextual. (Doc. 1 at 12- 14).

DISCUSSION To survive dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), a complaint must first satisfy the pleading requirements of Rule 8(a)(2). Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007). “A pleading that states a claim for relief must contain … a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief ….” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2). Rule 8 establishes a regime of “notice pleading.” Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A., 534 U.S. 506, 512, 513-14 (2002). It does not, however, eliminate all pleading requirements. First, the complaint must address all the elements that must be shown in order to support recovery under one or more causes of action. “At a minimum, notice pleading requires that a complaint contain inferential allegations from which we can identify each of the material elements necessary to sustain a recovery under some viable legal theory.” Wilchombe v. TeeVee Toons, Inc., 555 F.3d 949, 960 (11th Cir. 2009) (emphasis and internal quotes omitted).

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Bluebook (online)
68V BTR Holdings, LLC v. City of Fairhope, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/68v-btr-holdings-llc-v-city-of-fairhope-alsd-2023.