Cabana v. Kenai Peninsula Borough

21 P.3d 833, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 49, 2001 WL 429125
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 2001
DocketS-9377, S-9497
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 P.3d 833 (Cabana v. Kenai Peninsula Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cabana v. Kenai Peninsula Borough, 21 P.3d 833, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 49, 2001 WL 429125 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

After Doris Cabana appealed the Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly's decision to classify a parcel of municipal land as light industrial, Superior Court Judge Harold Brown held that the Borough Assembly's decision was a legislative one and so dismissed Cabana's appeal on jurisdictional grounds." Judge Brown found that Cabana was a public interest litigant, however, and denied the Borough's motion for attorney's fees on this basis. Cabana appeals, arguing that the Borough Assembly's classification, like a small-scale rezoning, was subject to appeal as a quasi-judicial decision. The Borough cross-appeals the denial of its motion for attorney's fees. Because small-scale re-zonings are treated as legislative decisions under Alaska law, and because the evidence supports the superior court's finding that Cabana was a public interest litigant, we affirm Judge Brown's decisions.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Clif and Cheryl Shafer owned a twenty-acre parcel of land in Anchor Point (the "Shafer parcel"). Approximately half of the Shafer parcel was wetlands, and 64 of 105 parcels within a half-mile radius of the parcel were residentially developed. Shafer's attempts to use his parcel for gravel excavation were thwarted by his unwillingness, for financial reasons, to comply with an environmental review.

The Kenai Peninsula Borough owned a forty-acre parcel of land in Homer (the "Homer parcel"). The Homer parcel was adjacent to an asphalt plant, the Borough landfill, and a state Department of Transportation maintenance yard. Approximately one-third of the Homer parcel was wetlands, and only thirteen of the fifty-five parcels within a half-mile radius of the parcel were residentially developed.

Shafer approached the Borough and proposed an exchange of the Shafer parcel for the Homer parcel, intending to use the Homer parcel to store and process gravel to be sold to customers in the Homer area. Under the Kenai Peninsula Borough Code, land owned by the Borough must be classified before it can be exchanged. 1 The instrument conveying the land to a private party, in turn, must restrict the use of the land to the uses permitted under that classification. 2 When the classification or reclassification of land is initiated by a private party, the code requires the planning commission to hold a public hearing on the proposed classification, and also requires notice to be mailed to all landowners or leaseholders of land within a half-mile radius of the affected parcels. 3

The Borough asserts that it sent notice to all landowners and leaseholders of record within a half-mile radius of the Homer par *835 cel. Doris Cabana, however, alleges that she is an owner or leaseholder of property within a half-mile of the Homer parcel, but did not receive notice of the proposed classification. The Borough Planning Commission held a public hearing on the proposed classification, and eventually recommended a light industrial classification for the Homer parcel with a variance permitting material stockpiling and related activities.

The Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly then held a public hearing on the proposed classification. Despite some opposition to the classification and exchange, the Borough passed a resolution classifying the Homer parcel as light industrial. The Borough also passed an ordinance authorizing the exchange of the Homer parcel for the Shafer parcel.

Cabana, joined by Viola Jerrell and Naney Hillstrand (collectively "Cabana"), appealed both the Borough's resolution classifying the Homer parcel, and the Borough's ordinance exchanging the parcel, to the superior court. In the appeal, Cabana argued that the Borough had violated various procedural and statutory requirements relating to the classification and exchange of Borough property, and that the classification and exchange involved unlawful "spot zoning." Cabana later filed an original action in superior court challenging the resolution and ordinance on the same grounds.

The Borough moved to dismiss Cabana's appeal, arguing that legislative actions like the Borough's resolution and ordinance were properly challenged by means of an original action rather than an appeal. The superior court agreed, and dismissed Cabana's appeal for lack of jurisdiction on September 17, 1999. The superior court noted that its order dismissing Cabana's appeal was not intended to affect Cabana's original action in any way. On October 18, 1999, Cabana appealed the superior court's dismissal of her appeal.

On October 5, 1999, the Borough moved for an award of $1,317.90 in attorney's fees. In an order distributed on November 3, 1999, the superior court found that Cabana was a public interest litigant and denied the Borough's motion for attorney's fees. The Borough moved for reconsideration of that order, and the superior court denied the Borough's motion for reconsideration in an order distributed on November 80, 1999. The Borough filed its appeal of the superior court's denial of reconsideration of its motion for attorney's fees on December 80, 1999.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

In deciding questions of law, this court will "adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy. 4 This court reviews the superior court's determination of public interest litigant status and the award of attorney's fees only for abuse of discretion. 5

IV. DISCUSSION

A. The Classification of Municipal Land, like Small-Scale Resonings, Involves a Legislative Rather than Quasit-Ju-dicial Proceeding.

Cabana argues that the Borough Assembly's classification of the Homer parcel was a quasi-judicial proceeding, because the classification of a single parcel of municipal land is similar to a small-scale rezoning, and small-seale rezonings are quasi-judicial proceedings. 6 Cabana's argument must fail, however, not only because the classification of municipal land is unlike a small-scale rezoning, but because this court has previously held that small-scale rezonings are legislative-not quasi-judicial-proceedings.

As a general matter, "[wlhenever an entity which normally acts as a legislative body applies general policy to particular persons in their private capacities, instead of *836 passing on general policy or the rights of individuals in the abstract, it is functioning [in a quasi-judicial capacity). 7 The classification of municipal land is less likely to be a quasi-judicial proceeding than would be a small-scale rezoning, because classification of public land does not immediately and directly affect the rights of a particular, private landowner.

Courts in some other jurisdictions have held that small-seale rezonings should be treated as quasi-judicial proceedings. 8

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.3d 833, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 49, 2001 WL 429125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabana-v-kenai-peninsula-borough-alaska-2001.