Bauss v. Plymouth Township

233 F. App'x 490
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 2007
Docket05-2277
StatusUnpublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 233 F. App'x 490 (Bauss v. Plymouth Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bauss v. Plymouth Township, 233 F. App'x 490 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

GWIN, District Judge:

Plaintiff-Appellant Frank Anthony Bauss (“Bauss”) appeals an order of the district court granting summary judgment to Defendants-Appellees Plymouth Township (“Township”) and McKenna Associates, Inc. (“McKenna”), the Township’s land use consultant. In this action, Bauss challenges the Township’s master plan amendment process on due process grounds. Bauss, a real estate developer and landowner, says the Township’s Planning Commission impaired his property interest when it approved a correction to the Township’s Future Land Use Map.

In making his claim, Plaintiff-Appellant mistakenly conflates the nature of master planning with that of zoning and, in doing so, misunderstands the process due to him. Based on this misunderstanding, Bauss argues that the Township and McKenna eonspired to deprive him of his due process rights when they failed to give him personal notice of a public hearing and, further, intentionally inflicted emotional distress upon him.

Bauss does not have a cognizable constitutional property interest in the Township’s master planning process. Further, upon review of the relevant Michigan law, we conclude that the Township’s March 25, 2004 and April 15, 2004 notices in the Plymouth Observer withstand Bauss’s due process challenge. Absent Bauss’s showing of a constitutional deprivation, we also conclude that Bauss fails to demonstrate that the Township or McKenna conspired to intentionally deny him of any of his constitutional rights or intentionally caused him emotional distress. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Defendants-Appellees.

I. Background

Master planning and zoning have different purposes and effects. Communities undertake both activities to control and direct development and land use within their jurisdiction. However, only zoning directly controls the use of property within a community. Master planning, while often encouraged by local law, does not directly affect landowners’ rights to develop or use their land. In contrast to zoning, master plans provide non-binding aspirational “roadmaps” for future development.

In this case, the Plymouth Township’s Planning Commission, an administrative body appointed by the Township Board, oversaw the community’s master planning process, including the formulation and revision of the Township’s master plan. The *492 Planning Commission also recommended action on re-zoning applications to the Township Board, which has legislative authority to grant a re-zoning request and change the community’s zoning laws.

The Plymouth Township Board has adopted zoning laws that regulate the community’s development density and land use. Relevant to this appeal, the Township’s zoning classifications include R-l-H (single-family residential), R-l-S (single-family suburban), and R-2-A (multiple-family residential). The zoning classification R-l-H (single-family residential) allows for the development of two single-family homes per acre; R-l-S (single-family suburban) allows for the development of 0.8 to three single-family homes per acre; and, R-2-A (multiple-family residential) allows for the development of six to eight multiple-family dwelling units per acre.

In 1978, Frank Anthony Bauss bought a five-acre parcel of vacant land at 46410 Ann Arbor Trail, Plymouth Township, Michigan (“Ann Arbor Trail Property”). At the time of Bauss’s purchase, the Township zoned the property R-l-H (single-family residential). The R-l-H (single-family residential) zoning classification permitted Bauss to develop ten single-family residential homes on the parcel. In 1978, the Township’s master plan recommended the planned future use of Bauss’s property as suitable for low-density residential development (“1978 Plan”). This aspirational future use, if approved, adopted, and enacted by the Township Board, would allow Bauss to develop 0.8 to three single-family homes per acre.

In 1993, the Township’s Planning Commission undertook a public planning process that resulted in the Township Board adopting a new master plan (the “1993 Plan”). During this process, a drafting error resulted in the Ann Arbor Trail Property being mislabeled as R-2-A (multiple-family residential) on the 1993 Plan’s Future Land Use Map. The error changed the Master Plan’s map, but did not change the legal zoning classification status of Bauss’s property, which continued to be zoned as R-l-H (single-family residential).

In 1997, Bauss filed an application to rezone his property from R-l-H (single-family residential) to R-l-S (single-family suburban) (“1997 Application”). After public notice and a hearing, the Planning Commission recommended that the Township Board grant Bauss’s 1997 Application. The Board, however, tabled Bauss’s 1997 Application because Bauss had not paid the Township for maintenance performed by the Township on the Ann Arbor Trail Property. For unknown reasons, Bauss did not protest the Board’s decision to table the 1997 Application. On October 31, 2000, the Township closed Bauss’s file for lack of action.

In late 2000, Bauss approached the Township about developing the land and discovered that his 1997 re-zoning application had not been approved. Bauss then presented his 1997 Application at a September 17, 2003 public hearing of the Planning Commission. However, based upon the drafting error in the 1993 Plan’s Future Land Use Map, the hearing’s participants mistakenly referred to Bauss’s property as being zoned as “high-density residential.” After hearing that the Master Plan arguably supported higher density development, Bauss withdrew his 1997 Application and, on September 24, 2003, filed a new application requesting that the Township Board re-zone his property from R-l-H (single-family residential) to R-2A (multiple-family residential) (“2003 Application”).

Upon receiving Bauss’s 2003 Application, the Township and McKenna began to *493 explore the mislabeling of the Ann Arbor Trail Property on the 1993 Future Land Use Map. On September 29, 2003, the Township’s Director of Public Services wrote to the Planning Commission’s Chairperson, Township’s Community Development Director, Township’s attorney, and McKenna requesting their assistance in investigating how the designation of Bauss’s property had changed from R-l-H (single-family residential) in the 1978 Plan to R-2-A (multi-family residential) on the 1993 Plan’s Future Land Use Map. The Director copied Bauss on the letter that read, in pertinent part:

I have had an opportunity to review the record regarding the Bauss rezoning. This includes the 1997 [Application] and [the 2003 Application] ... In each case reference was made to the subject property being master planned for residential high density, 6-10 dwelling units per acre.
After reviewing this matter and looking at a number of maps, it appears to me that there may have been a drafting error in regards to the subject property. Based on my review, it appears to me the residential high density classification for the adjacent condominiums was inadvertently carried to the abutting existing subdivision by the draftperson. This action would have inadvertently included the Bauss property into this classification. This action can be clarified quite quickly.

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233 F. App'x 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauss-v-plymouth-township-ca6-2007.