Billy Graham Evangelistic Ass'n v. City of Minneapolis

653 N.W.2d 638, 2002 Minn. App. LEXIS 1154, 2002 WL 31255572
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 8, 2002
DocketC1-01-2127
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 653 N.W.2d 638 (Billy Graham Evangelistic Ass'n v. City of Minneapolis) 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.

Bluebook
Billy Graham Evangelistic Ass'n v. City of Minneapolis, 653 N.W.2d 638, 2002 Minn. App. LEXIS 1154, 2002 WL 31255572 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

G. BARRY ANDERSON, Judge.

Relator Billy Graham Evangelistic Association owns several properties in the Harmon Place area of Minneapolis. The Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission recommended, and the Minneapolis City Council approved, a historic district that includes a number of realtor’s properties. By writ of certiorari, relator challenges the city’s designation. Because we conclude the city’s designation of the Harmon Place Historic District was arbitrary and capricious, we reverse.

FACTS

In November 2001, the Heritage Preservation Commission (commission) of the City of Minneapolis (city) directed the city’s planning department to begin a study to determine whether the Harmon Place area of the city should be designated as a historic district. 1 The planning department hired Carol Zellie of Landscape *640 Research to prepare a designation study. (Zellie Report). 2

The Zellie Report found that the Harmon Place area met the designation criteria in the Minneapolis code of ordinances and proposed a Harmon Place Historic District (HPHD). The Zellie Report concluded that the HPHD would meet two separate criteria for designation as a historic district. First, the report stated that HPHD would qualify for designation as a historic district because, [t]he property is associated with significant events or with periods that exemplify broad patterns of cultural, political, economic or social history. 3 The report concluded that,

Harmon Place and the adjacent blocks of Hennepin Avenue were the heart of the Minneapolis automotive district for over fifty years, and twenty-two of the twenty-six contributing properties are auto-related. The buildings along Harmon Place and Hennepin Avenue include many of the city’s best remaining examples of a vital industry that engaged thousands of entrepreneurs, workers and customers. The twenty-two contributing buildings, most with good exterior integrity, reflect the roller-coaster progress of the early automotive industry and the twentieth-century economy as both evolved at the edge of downtown Minneapolis.

Second, the Zellie Report found that the HPHD would also qualify as a historic district because [t]he property embodies the distinctive characteristics of an architectural or engineering type or style, or method of construction. 4 The report found this criteria had been met because: (1) there was a specific building type addressed in the HPHD; (2) certain apartment buildings reflected early twentieth-century design long associated with Harmon Place; and (3) the historic district boundaries reflect the general edges and sense of place long associated with the core of the city’s automotive district.

But the Zellie Report also recognized that, within the district, there were sixteen (out of the proposed forty-two) non-contributing properties. In other words, some properties had little connection to the historical significance of the HPHD “due to their construction before or after the district’s period of significance or the extent of exterior alterations.”

After Zellie completed her report, the city planning department sent a letter to Harmon-area property owners explaining that a consultant’s report had been completed and that anyone could receive a copy of the report. The letter also emphasized that a historic district had been proposed and that a public hearing would be held in August 2001. On May 15, 2001, Zellie presented her report to the commission. The commission appears to have directed the city planning commission to continue with the designation process.

The city-planning director then sent the Zellie Report to the State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO) for comment. 5 On July 11, 2001, the SHPO concluded that *641 the HPHD “is eligible for local designation under Designation Criteria 1 and 4.”

The city planning commission then began to review the proposed designation. 6 City planning staff recommended the city planning commission adopt the staffs findings, which included the finding that the HPHD was'qualified for designation as a historic district. On August 6, 2001, the city planning commission adopted the staffs findings and sent its recommendation to the commission.

But before the commission held a meeting, the planning department staff submitted a second report. It appears that this second report responded to criticism regarding the originally proposed district. The second report recommended markedly different boundaries for the HPHD, including the exclusion of certain properties facing Hennepin Avenue and the exclusion of a larger block, which includes the Minneapolis Community College. The second staff report documents the city council’s approval of the University of St. Thomas’s appeal, which allowed the university to demolish several buildings in the originally proposed HPHD.

On September 25, 2001, the commission held a special meeting and public hearing. 7 The hearing, in large part, addressed the designation of the HPHD. In response to the Zellie Report, Charlene Roise, a consultant hired by relator, offered the commission a reassessment of the proposed HPHD. Roise recommended that the commission reconsider the boundaries of the HPHD, arguing that several factors seriously undermined the integrity of the proposed district, including: (1) the inclusion of the larger block that included the Minneapolis Community College was an error because those buildings lack “the functional connection of Harmon Place or any visual connection”; (2) the northeast section of the HPHD was problematic because of non-contributing properties and vacant lots; and (3) the inclusion of certain apartment buildings was not appropriate because those buildings had nothing to do with the development of the automotive industry. Roise suggested new boundaries that were smaller than those suggested by the planning department’s second staff report.

After Roise’s presentation, several community members spoke against the proposed designation. Residents and building owners complained about the restrictions created by historic designation and about lack of notice regarding the designation process. The commission moved to designate the district but the motion failed due to a tie vote among the commissioners. The commission continued the proposed designation to October 16, 2001, its next scheduled business meeting.

At the next meeting, the commission accepted the planning department staffs recommended boundaries in its second report, but one commissioner sought to include two buildings facing Hennepin Avenue designated as buildings 23 and 25. A planning department staff member present explained that the buildings could not be designated individually. The commission then adopted its own version of the proposed HPHD and included buildings 21 through 25 in the HPHD.

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Related

CEMETERY v. City of Roseville
689 N.W.2d 254 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2004)
Billy Graham Evangelistic Ass'n v. City of Minneapolis
667 N.W.2d 117 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2003)
Heidtke v. Zimmerman Seed
653 N.W.2d 638 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
653 N.W.2d 638, 2002 Minn. App. LEXIS 1154, 2002 WL 31255572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billy-graham-evangelistic-assn-v-city-of-minneapolis-minnctapp-2002.