Ashcel Companies, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation v. County of Dodge

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 5, 2024
Docketa240056
StatusPublished

This text of Ashcel Companies, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation v. County of Dodge (Ashcel Companies, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation v. County of Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ashcel Companies, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation v. County of Dodge, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A24-0056

Ashcel Companies, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation, Respondent,

vs.

County of Dodge, Appellant.

Filed August 5, 2024 Certified question answered in the affirmative Bratvold, Judge

Dodge County District Court File No. 20-CV-21-453

Chad D. Lemmons, Kelly & Lemmons, PA, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent)

Jay T. Squires, Alexander P. Halladay, Squires, Waldspurger & Mace, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Bratvold, Presiding Judge; Segal, Chief Judge; and

Slieter, Judge.

SYLLABUS

Under Minn. Stat. § 282.03 (2022), a county may attach a condition to the sale of a

tax-forfeited property requiring the buyer to demolish a building or structure on the

property.

OPINION

BRATVOLD, Judge

This case arises from the sale of a tax-forfeited property by appellant Dodge County

(the county) to respondent Ashcel Companies Inc. (Ashcel). As a condition of the sale, the county required the buyer to demolish “all buildings” on the tax-forfeited property, which

is located in Kasson (the Kasson property). After purchasing the Kasson property, Ashcel

requested permission from the county for Ashcel’s president to occupy the house on the

property and for Ashcel to be relieved of the condition that it demolish all buildings. The

county denied Ashcel’s request, and Ashcel petitioned for a writ of mandamus.

The district court denied the county’s motion for summary judgment and certified

the following question: “Whether counties have the authority to impose a condition

requiring demolition of pre-existing structures as a part of a tax-forfeiture sale.” We first

determine that the certified question is important and doubtful. We then answer the

certified question in the affirmative and conclude that Minn. Stat. § 282.03 authorizes a

county to require the buyer of a tax-forfeited property to demolish a building or structure

on the property as a condition of the sale.

FACTS

The following summarizes the undisputed facts as determined by the district court

and supplemented by the record when helpful to the issue on appeal.

In May 2017, the board of commissioners for the county (the county board)

authorized a public sale of the Kasson property, a tax-forfeited parcel located on 230th

Avenue. The Kasson property included a single-family home. County employees inspected

the Kasson property and observed that the house was “in poor condition” and “all building

components” were “in a questionable state of repair.” The county employees also observed

that “there appeared to be no functional and legal well and septic system on the property

2 that would serve residential use.” The county board “determined the public interest was

best served by [the] removal” of the house.

On May 17 and 24, the county published a “notice of public sale of tax-forfeited

lands” in the newspaper. The Kasson property was listed along with other properties in a

table, which stated across the top, “Please note the conditions of sale at the bottom of this

table.” The conditions of sale for the Kasson property stated, “All buildings including the

mobile home and the septic system must be demolished.” The notice also specified the

time, date, and location of the sale. Ashcel’s president, Patrick Brown, visited the Kasson

property before the auction and then appeared at the auction on Ashcel’s behalf. On

June 14, Ashcel purchased the Kasson property at the public auction. On June 30, the

Minnesota Department of Revenue conveyed the Kasson property to Ashcel via a written

“Conveyance of Forfeited Lands.” The conveyance listed no conditions of sale.

Over three years later, on August 25, 2020, Brown appeared before the county board

on behalf of Ashcel to request permission for Brown “to occupy the home” on the Kasson

property rather than demolish it. The county board discussed the Kasson property’s well

and septic-system issues with Brown.

On September 8, 2020, Brown again appeared at a county-board meeting to report

that it was not “an issue to put in a new well” but that he “would need to determine where

the septic [system] is going” before drilling the well. Brown again “requested authorization

to proceed with occupying” the house on the Kasson property. The county board denied

Ashcel’s request for Brown to occupy the house and informed Brown that “the house needs

to come down.”

3 On July 6, 2021, Ashcel petitioned the district court for a writ of mandamus

directing the county “to issue to [Ashcel] a permit for construction of an onsite sewage

treatment system.” Ashcel alleged that the county “refused to issue said permit,” thereby

preventing Ashcel from occupying the home on the Kasson property. The district court

issued an order for a writ of mandamus compelling the county to “issue a permit as applied

for by” Ashcel or file an answer within 20 days of service of the order.

The county filed an answer and counterclaim, requesting that the district court

compel Ashcel to “remove the residential structure from the . . . [Kasson] property as

required by the condition of conveyance of the property.” Ashcel answered the

counterclaim, conceding that it “failed to demolish the structure” on the Kasson property

but denying that it had “any obligation to do so.” The case was set for trial.

The county filed a motion in limine to exclude evidence “regarding the condition of

the residential structure on the [Kasson] property . . . or the suitability or design of the

septic system to serve the pre-existing residential structure.” The county’s accompanying

memorandum argued that such evidence was “not relevant to the fundamental issue in this

case—the validity of the . . . demolition condition of sale.” Ashcel opposed the county’s

motion.

After a discussion with the district court, the parties conferred and agreed that

(1) “the county’s in limine motion will be put in abeyance”; (2) “the parties will bring

cross-motions for summary judgment”; and (3) Ashcel “will amend its petition to reflect

the fact [that] what is sought is an order directing a septic site evaluation of the [Kasson]

property, not issuance of a septic permit.” The district court approved these stipulations.

4 Ashcel then amended its petition for a writ of mandamus, seeking “an order directing the

County of Dodge to meet with a representative of [Ashcel] at the [Kasson] property and

conduct an on-site soil verification.”

Both parties moved for summary judgment. Ashcel argued that the county did not

“have the statutory authority to require the correction or removal of hazardous structures”

as a condition of the sale of a tax-forfeited property. The county argued that “the conditions

of sale are valid” because “Minn. Stat. § 282.03 specifically authorizes a county to place

conditions of sale on a tax-forfeited property.”

The district court granted in part and denied in part the parties’ motions for summary

judgment. The district court denied the county’s request to compel Ashcel to demolish the

house on the Kasson property in accordance with the condition of sale. The district court

relied on two statutes. First, the district court cited Minn. Stat. § 282.04, subd. 2(e) (2022),

and stated that it “allows for the county to demolish the structure while the county is in

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Ashcel Companies, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation v. County of Dodge, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashcel-companies-inc-a-minnesota-corporation-v-county-of-dodge-minnctapp-2024.