Brookhill Development, Ltd. v. City of Waukesha

307 N.W.2d 242, 103 Wis. 2d 27, 1981 Wisc. LEXIS 2781
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1981
Docket80-398
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 307 N.W.2d 242 (Brookhill Development, Ltd. v. City of Waukesha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brookhill Development, Ltd. v. City of Waukesha, 307 N.W.2d 242, 103 Wis. 2d 27, 1981 Wisc. LEXIS 2781 (Wis. 1981).

Opinion

WILLIAM G. CALLOW, J.

The only issue before us on this review is whether a municipality, by ordinance, can impose conditions for subdivision plat approval upon a portion of a plat lying outside its extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction. The circuit court for Waukesha county, the Hon. Harold J. Wollenzien presiding, ruled it can and granted summary judgment in favor of the de *28 fendant-petitioner City of Waukesha. The court of appeals reversed. Brookhill Development, Ltd. v. City of Waukesha, 99 Wis. 2d 485, 299 N.W.2d 610 (Ct. App. 1980). We affirm the decision of the court of appeals.

I.

Sec. 23.10 of the City of Waukesha Subdivision and Platting Code requires subdivision developers to dedicate a portion of the subdivision land to the city for school purposes or to pay a fee in lieu of such dedication. Insofar as relevant to this review, the school land dedication ordinance provides:

“23.10(1)
“(b) Dedication of Sites. Within the jurisdiction as set forth in sec. 23.01 (2) and within the Waukesha Joint School District No. 1 located within such jurisdiction, the subdivider shall provide and dedicate to the Board of Education, through the City, adequate land to provide for schools and school site needs of the subdivision, as set forth in par. (c).”

The jurisdictional scope of this provision is established by sec. 23.01 (2) :

“(2) Jurisdiction. These regulations shall govern subdivisions within the City, and may be applied within the unincorporated area within 3 miles of the City over which the City has extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction.”

Brookhill Development, Ltd. (Brookhill), a developer, sought the city’s approval of a 104 lot subdivision plat located outside the city limits but partly within the city’s extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction 1 and wholly *29 within the Waukesha Joint School District. Because the proposed subdivision also lies partly within the extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction of the City of Brook-field, Brookhill sought and obtained plat approval from Brookfield.

The City of Waukesha (City), pursuant to sec. 23.10 of its Subdivision and Platting Code, imposed as a condition of plat approval that Brookhill pay the sum of $14,-560 in lieu of land dedication. That figure was calculated using the formula contained in sec. 23.10(1) (c), which requires the payment of the value of one acre of land for every 100 people who will live in the subdivision. Using the figure of 3.5 people per lot, multiplied by 104 lots, the total anticipated population of the subdivision was 364 people. At one acre’s value for every 100 people, the fee was to be the value of 3.64 acres or, at $4,000 per acre, $14,560. In short, the City calculated its fee based upon the entire 104 lots, including 100 lots which were not within its extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction or within the express jurisdictional scope of sec. 23.10. 2

*30 Brookhill paid the fee pursuant to an agreement with the City that the money would be held pending the outcome of Brookhill’s challenge to the legality of the fee. Brookhill then commenced an action in the circuit court seeking a declaration that the portion of the fee calculated on the 100 lots outside the City’s extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction was not authorized by law and should be returned to Brookhill. 3 In a second count Brookhill alleged that the fee was arbitrary and unreasonable in that it bore no reasonable relationship to the City’s obligation to provide schools to the subdivision.

On its first claim, Brookhill moved for summary judgment, and after a hearing on February 12, 1979, the court denied that motion and granted summary judgment in favor of the City instead, ruling that the City’s ordinance was validly enacted and that the fee was properly calculated upon the entire plat. In reaching this latter conclu *31 sion, the circuit court applied the provisions of sec. 236.-13(4), Stats. 4 Reasoning that under the statutes there is no authority for a city to approve only a part of a plat, and further noting that the City of Brookfield, the other municipality in whose extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction the plat lay, had no school land dedication ordinance, the court concluded that the City’s ordinance was the most restrictive and should be applied to the entire plat.

The court of appeals, while agreeing with the circuit court that the ordinance was valid, 5 held that the extraterritorial application of the ordinance was governed by secs. 236.10(2) and 66.32, Stats., 6 and that under those *32 provisions the fee should have been calculated only upon the four lots within the City’s extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction. The City petitioned this court for review of that decision.

In at least one respect, both the City and Brookhill agree as to the effect of secs. 236.10 (2) and 66.32, Stats., namely that in this case four lots 7 of the subdivision fall within the City’s extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction and 100 fall within the City of Brookfield’s, as defined by those two sections. Thus the question on this review is whether the City’s school land dedication ordinance can be applied to land beyond that jurisdiction. The City argues that it can and relies primarily upon sec. 236.13(4). This section applies the most restrictive requirement rule when the requirements of more than one governing body or agency conflict as to the same plat. Crucial to the City’s position is its perception that the platting statutes, found generally in Chapter 236, do not authorize the approval or rejection of a part of a plat. Because it is required by statute to approve or reject the whole plat, even though only a part of it is located within its extraterritorial plat approval jurisdiction, the City argues that sec. 236.13(4) provides the mechanism for determining whose plat approval requirements will apply to the whole plat.

(A)

We interpret the City’s position as suggesting that sec. 236.13(4), Stats., is a jurisdictional statute standing *33 as an exception to sec. 236.10(2). When the line of equidistant points drawn pursuant to secs.

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Bluebook (online)
307 N.W.2d 242, 103 Wis. 2d 27, 1981 Wisc. LEXIS 2781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookhill-development-ltd-v-city-of-waukesha-wis-1981.