AllEnergy Corporation v. Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee

2017 WI 52, 895 N.W.2d 368, 375 Wis. 2d 329, 2017 WL 2349200, 2017 Wisc. LEXIS 299
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 2017
Docket2015AP000491
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2017 WI 52 (AllEnergy Corporation v. Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AllEnergy Corporation v. Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee, 2017 WI 52, 895 N.W.2d 368, 375 Wis. 2d 329, 2017 WL 2349200, 2017 Wisc. LEXIS 299 (Wis. 2017).

Opinions

¶ 1.

SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, J.1

This is a review of an unpublished decision of the court of appeals affirming an order of the circuit court for Trempealeau County, La Crosse County Circuit Court Judge Elliott M. Levine, presiding.2 The order of the circuit court affirmed the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee's denial of the conditional use permit application for non-metallic mineral mining submitted by AllEnergy Corporation and All-[338]*338Energy Silica, Arcadia, LLC (collectively AllEnergy). The non-metallic mineral mining in the instant case is mining, processing and transporting silica sand used in hydraulic fracturing (fracking).

f 2. Naming the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee as respondent, AllEn-ergy sought certiorari review in the circuit court of the denial of its application for a conditional use permit; appealed the order of the circuit court to the court of appeals; and then sought review of the decision of the court of appeals in this court.3

¶ 3. The issues presented in AllEnergy's brief and addressed by the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee's brief are the following:

I. Did the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee, an appointed body without the power to legislate, exceed its jurisdiction by denying a conditional use permit based on broad legislative concerns over the public health, safety, and welfare?
II. Did substantial evidence in the administrative record support the denial of a conditional use permit for non-metallic mining?
III. Should the court adopt a new doctrine that a conditional use permit applicant is entitled to the permit where (A) all ordinance conditions and standards are met and (B) additional conditions [339]*339can be adopted that address potentially-adverse impacts from the use?4

¶ 4. AllEnergy's statement of the third issue is premised on AllEnergy's argument that AllEnergy satisfied, as a matter of law, all the specific conditions in the ordinance and that the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee cannot require AllEn-ergy to satisfy "subjective," "generalized" conditions and standards in the ordinance.

[340]*340¶ 5. Before we address each issue in turn, we briefly state the certiorari standard of review to provide context for the issues and our decision.

¶ 6. The first two issues stated above relate to certiorari review of the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee's decision denying AllEn-ergy a conditional use permit.5 A person aggrieved by the denial of a conditional use permit may commence an action seeking the remedy available by certiorari. Wis. Stat. § 59.694(10) (2013-14).6

¶ 7. In the instant certiorari review, the decision of the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee is accorded a presumption of correctness and validity.7 Certiorari review is limited to whether the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee:

[341]*3411. Kept within its jurisdiction;
2. Proceeded on a correct theory of law;
3. Acted in an arbitrary, oppressive, or unreasonable manner that represented its will and not its judgment; and
4. Might reasonably , make the order or determination in question based on evidence.8

¶ 8. AllEnergy's focus—and therefore our focus and that of the circuit court and court of appeals—is on the first and fourth inquiries on certiorari review. Nevertheless, we recognize that AllEnergy sometimes seems to fuse its arguments on the first and fourth inquiries in a certiorari review with the third inquiry, namely whether the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee acted in an arbitrary, oppressive, or unreasonable manner that represented its will, not its judgment. Our discussion of the first and fourth inquiries demonstrates that the determination of the Committee was not arbitrary, oppressive, or unreasonable: The Committee addressed AllEnergy's arguments; the Committee addressed the provisions of the county's ordinance and its decision was the result of deliberation and judgment exercised within the range of discretion accorded it in the ordinance; and [342]*342the Committee's determination was reasonable, had a rational basis, and was supported by substantial evidence.9

¶ 9. On certiorari, this court reviews the record of the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee, rather than the judgment or findings of the circuit court or the decision of the court of appeals.10 We have undertaken an independent review of the Committee's record but have benefitted from the court of appeals' comprehensive review.

f 10. For the reasons set forth, we conclude as follows:

I. The Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee applied the factors and consider[343]*343ations set forth in the applicable ordinance and thus kept within its jurisdiction in denying a conditional use permit to AllEnergy.
II. There is substantial evidence in the record to support the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee's decision denying AllEner-gy's application for a conditional use permit.
III. The court will not overturn settled law governing review of a grant or denial of a conditional use permit. The court does not adopt the new legal doctrine urged by AllEnergy, namely that an applicant for a conditional use permit is entitled to the permit for a conditional use when it meets the specific conditions set forth in the ordinance and any additional conditions set forth, and that an applicant cannot be required to meet other conditions and standards in the ordinance.

¶ 11. Part I describes the proposed project for which AllEnergy sought a conditional use permit. In Parts II, III, and IV, we address each issue stated above. Issues I and II require a fact-intensive analysis to determine whether the Trempealeau County Environment & Land Use Committee kept within its jurisdiction and whether substantial evidence exists to support the Committee's denial of AllEnergy's application for a conditional use permit; the facts are set forth in Parts II and III.

I—I

¶ 12. Trempealeau County is home to several frac sand mines. Trempealeau County's rolling and bucolic hills hide vast reserves of silica sand. Silica sand is often called "frac sand," in reference to the [344]*344material's use as a proppant in hydraulic fracturing, that is, in "fracking." Fracking is a process used to extract previously inaccessible buried reserves of oil and natural gas. The process involves drilling an oil or natural gas well and using explosives to create cracks or fissures in the rock or subsurface material.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 WI 52, 895 N.W.2d 368, 375 Wis. 2d 329, 2017 WL 2349200, 2017 Wisc. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allenergy-corporation-v-trempealeau-county-environment-land-use-wis-2017.