Bluffdale Mountain Homes, LC v. Bluffdale City

2007 UT 57, 167 P.3d 1016, 582 Utah Adv. Rep. 41, 2007 Utah LEXIS 138, 2007 WL 2067848
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 2007
Docket20060295
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2007 UT 57 (Bluffdale Mountain Homes, LC v. Bluffdale City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bluffdale Mountain Homes, LC v. Bluffdale City, 2007 UT 57, 167 P.3d 1016, 582 Utah Adv. Rep. 41, 2007 Utah LEXIS 138, 2007 WL 2067848 (Utah 2007).

Opinion

DURRANT, Justice:

INTRODUCTION

T1 Several property owners, including the plaintiffs in this case, filed a request for disconnection with Bluffdale City ("Bluffdale" or "the City"). Bluffdale denied this request, and thereafter the property owners filed a disconnection petition with the Third District Court. After a four-day trial, the district court determined that the property owners had met their burden of proving the statutory requirements for disconnection. Bluffdale now appeals this decision.

[ 2 Upon review of the district court's factual findings and legal conclusions, we affirm the district court's decision granting the disconnection.

BACKGROUND

13 This disconnection dispute involves a long and complex factual and procedural history. We note that the district court's opinion in this case was particularly thorough and well reasoned; therefore, we incorporate herein, largely verbatim, those facts from the district court's recitation of the facts that are most relevant to our disposition of the case.

I. HISTORY OF THE DISPUTE

1 4 In the 1980s, the entity now known as South Farm LLC ("South Farm") purchased a large, contiguous tract of property for investment and development; one-half of the property was located in unineorporated Salt Lake County ("the County") and one-half was located in Bluffdale City. South Farm originally sought to have this entire property annexed into Riverton City so that it could be developed as a consistent whole. But Bluffdale objected and ultimately denied the annexation.

T5 South Farm applied to the County to begin development of the unincorporated portion of its property located outside of Bluffdale This process included public meetings with neighboring communities. In August 1999, over Bluffdale's objections, the County approved a general plan of development for the property. The property was ultimately incorporated into the City of Her-riman, however. Since then, the property has been largely developed and is currently known as "Rosecrest," which includes approximately eighteen subdivisions and two thousand residential units. By all accounts, the Rosecrest development has been an attractive and successful mixed-use, development, representing high standards of land-use planning. ~

T6 The Bluffdale portion of the South Farm property has not proceeded as smoothly toward development. In October 1997, Don Wallace, a managing member of South *1022 Farm, appeared at a public meeting to answer questions regarding South Farm's plans for its property in Bluffdale. South Farm desired a similar mixed-use development to the one it had established in neighboring Rosecrest. Bluffdale had long sought, however, to limit residential and mixed-use density, preferring lot sizes of one to five acres for residential homes. Indeed, many Bluff-dale citizens opposed South Farm's plans, both during and after the meeting, and up until May 2002, Bluffdale officials dissuaded South Farm from presenting any development plans with respect to its property.

7 Nevertheless, Bluffdale also recognized the need for long-range planning, given the inevitable development pressure it would face from the growth in the southern area of the County. Bluffdale prepared capital improvement plans, transportation plans, water plans, drainage plans, and other plans to establish the future look of the City. Bluff dale desired to have its future planning in order before it invested the necessary resources to consider a project of the scale intended by South Farm.

18 Given Bluffdale's limited resources, the planning process was time consuming. From South Farm's perspective, progress was excruciatingly slow. Indeed, many of Bluff dale's plans remained either unfinished or unadopted up to the time of trial. Bluffdale persuaded South Farm to hold off on filing any applications for an amendment to the City's General Plan that would allow development of the property. Bluffdale was working toward completion of its planning process; however, there were clearly elements within the City that were hostile to Rosecrest-like developments. The district court made note of "the reasonable inference that some foot-dragging was taking place-whether intentionally or as a result of the natural human tendency to defer consideration of issues that are likely to be contentious."

T9 During this slow planning process, Bluffdale encouraged South Farm to produce a Quality Growth Plan. In preparing this plan, South Farm held numerous public meetings with representatives of the City and other stakeholders. In September 2001, South Farm produced a draft of a Quality Growth Plan, and although never formally adopted by Bluffdale, it gave South Farm hope that a Rosecrest-like development was within reach. For example, the Quality Growth Plan approved recommended densities as high as 2.5 residences per acre throughout the South Farm property, provided that a thirty-five percent open space requirement was met. But the Quality Growth Plan was by no means an unequivocal endorsement of a Rosecrest-like development; the plan acknowledged Bluffdale's commitment to a "rural-like atmosphere" and a strong preference for developments with minimum lot sizes of one acre.

10 In the fall of 2001, Shane Jones, the City's engineer, approached Wallace for an easement across South Farm's property for a twelve-foot water line needed to service newly developed portions of the City. Before those discussions were complete, a contractor hired by the City trespassed on South Farm's property to begin work on the water line. Bluffdale urgently needed the water line to address water pressure and fire protection issues in Gardner Estates and other new developments in the northern section of the City. In order to obtain the needed easement and resolve the trespass issue, Bluff-dale and South Farm discussed a trade of the easement for the adoption of planning policies that would allow South Farm to develop its property consistent with the existing Ro-seerest development. In the context of those discussions, during a Bluffdale City Council meeting, Greg Curtis, the City's attorney, advised the City Council that if they were not comfortable with the mixed-use Rosecrest development in Herriman, they should not vote for the proposed resolution. Furthermore, Curtis stated that if the City did not provide infrastructure for new development, property owners could make a compelling argument to disconnect.

11 On January 8, 2002, the Bluffdale City Council unanimously approved Resolution No.2002-05, which resolved the easement issue and provided the following statement of good faith:

[South Farm] has agreed to provide the requested easement without cost to the City, but in turn has requested a declara *1023 tion of intent from the City as to the general acceptability of [South Farm's] future development of [its] real property which lies in the City. [South Farm] is in the process of completing an existing master planned project, a mixed-use real estate development in the town of Herriman which is contiguous and immediately adjacent to [its] real property located in the City and is desirous to continue the development of its Bluffdale property with similar mixed uses, density, and transportation elements as existed in its existing master planned project in Herriman.

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Bluebook (online)
2007 UT 57, 167 P.3d 1016, 582 Utah Adv. Rep. 41, 2007 Utah LEXIS 138, 2007 WL 2067848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bluffdale-mountain-homes-lc-v-bluffdale-city-utah-2007.