Blaha v. Board of Ada County Commissioners

9 P.3d 1236, 134 Idaho 770, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 91
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 2000
Docket25264
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 P.3d 1236 (Blaha v. Board of Ada County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaha v. Board of Ada County Commissioners, 9 P.3d 1236, 134 Idaho 770, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 91 (Idaho 2000).

Opinion

WALTERS, Justice.

NATURE OF THE CASE

This is an appeal from a decision by the Board of Ada County Commissioners approving the final plat for the Buckwheat Acres Subdivision. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the Board’s decision.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Garth and Pat Wilde and E. Charles and Vella Palmer are the owners of a forty-acre parcel located in the Area of Eagle City Impact that they proposed to subdivide into eight, five-acre residential lots to be known as Buckwheat Acres Subdivision. They submitted an application for subdivision approval to the Ada County Development Services, which was transmitted to the City of Eagle for action. The Eagle City Planning and Zoning Commission duly scheduled the application for consideration at its next regular session. The Commission voted to approve the transmittal with six specified conditions of approval, including compliance with the Eagle City Code standards for private streets. The matter was then scheduled for consideration by the Eagle City Council at its upcoming regular meeting. The minutes of the Council meeting of June 23, 1996, indicate that the Council moved to approve the preliminary plat of the subdivision located outside the limits of the City of Eagle but within the area of city impact.

The Ada County Board of Commissioners held a public hearing on the preliminary plat of the Buckwheat Acres Subdivision on September 25, 1996. The matter was continued to October 9, 1996, at which time the Board voted to approve the proposed findings and conclusions and the conditions of approval that had been attached to the preliminary plat application by the City. Following the order approving the preliminary plat, Robert F. and Ruth L. Blaha, neighbors and opponents of the proposed subdivision and private access road, filed a petition with the district court for judicial review of the Board’s preliminary approval.

In a regular session held May 13,1997, the Eagle City Council voted to approve the final plat and to recommend to Ada County that the plat of the Buckwheat Acres Subdivision be approved based upon the Eagle City Code. The City attached several conditions to its final approval, including but not limited to (1) compliance with the requirements of the Ada County Highway District (ACHD) and (2) a recommendation that Ada County approve a variance of Eagle City Code § 9-3-2-3:F, which would allow Holl Drive at the intersection with Valli-Hi Lane to remain at its current grade. The Blahas filed a petition with the district court for judicial review of the final plat approval by the Eagle City Council.

Aware of these conditions, and upon the knowledge that the ACHD would be requiring improvements to that intersection prior to platting, 1 Wilde and Palmer applied to Ada County for two variances concerning the subdivision. They sought a variance from the design requirements regarding road grades for the intersection of Valli-Hi Lane, the private road, and Holl Drive, the public road, which would serve the subdivision. They also sought a variance from the twenty-four-foot road width required by the Eagle City Code as it existed at the time of the original application to extend Valli-Hi Lane to allow a twenty-foot paved road width, consistent with the current Eagle City Code provision and Ada County Code § 8-13-3A-6. Specifically, the owners’ application requested approval of. a variance from Eagle City Code § 9-3-2-5:B2, regarding private streets, and from Policies 7204.11.1, 7204.11.3 and 7204.11.7 of the ACHD Development Policy *773 Manual, regarding intersection design standards. 2

The Board held a public hearing with respect to the variances, on January 7,1998, at which the Blahas’ counsel testified in opposition to the variances, arguing that the standards of the Eagle City Code governing private streets and intersections were being ignored. Thereafter, the Board issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The Board found that access to the parcel proposed for development was by way of an existing private road which intersected the public road at a vertical curve exceeding current ACHD policy. The Board then determined that strict enforcement of ACHD policies would require extensive realignment and reconstruction of the public road, which was unreasonable and would create an undue hardship on the applicants not justified by a development generating only eighty vehicle trips per day. Because the ACHD had certified compliance with the standards outlined in its policy manual, as evidenced by a letter from Dave Szplett to E.C. Palmer dated November 7, 1996, the Board granted the variance with respect to the intersection design requirements.

With respect to the private road, the Board found that the proposal substantially complied with Eagle City Code § 9-3-2-5:B construction and design standards. The Board found that a twenty-foot road width would act to keep vehicle speeds low, safely accommodate the expected daily trips, and be more desirable than a twenty-four-foot road width, given the rural setting and low density of the proposed development. The Board noted that a twenty-foot road width satisfied the Ada County Code and concluded, in granting the variance, that the public interest would not be served by requiring the road to be paved to a width of twenty-four feet.

The Blahas petitioned the district court for judicial review of the Board’s January 22, 1998, decision with regard to the variances. The Blahas also filed a petition for review and a subsequent amended petition for review from the Board’s final subdivision plat approval dated March 28,1998. The various petitions for review filed by the Blahas regarding the Eagle City Council’s final plat approval, the Ada County Board of Commissioners’ granting of the variances and the Board’s final plat approval were then consolidated by order of the district court.

In a decision issued December 12, 1998, 3 the district court affirmed the Board’s action, holding that there was no reason to require the County to impose greater standards in the area than those required by the ACHD, whose standards established the appropriate method for analyzing the intersection and street design. The Blahas have appealed from the decision of the district court, raising challenges to the Board’s authority to grant the variances and to its application of the relevant county and city codes in approving the final subdivision plat.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The Local Land Use Planning Act (LLUPA) 4 allows an “affected person aggrieved by a decision” to seek judicial review as provided in the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), I.C. §§ 67-5201 through -5292. I.C. § 67-6521(l)(d). An “affected person” as defined by the LLUPA is “one having an interest in real property which may be adversely affected by the issuance or denial of a permit authorizing the development.” I.C. § 67-6521(1)(a).

Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 84(a) provides for the district court’s judicial review of actions of a local government or its officers or units. Judicial review shall be heard by the district court on the record before the agency. I.R.C.P. 84(b); I.R.C.P. 84(j).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 P.3d 1236, 134 Idaho 770, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaha-v-board-of-ada-county-commissioners-idaho-2000.