Carter v. Greene County

765 S.W.2d 665, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 163, 1989 WL 9803
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1989
DocketNo. 15582
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 765 S.W.2d 665 (Carter v. Greene County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Greene County, 765 S.W.2d 665, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 163, 1989 WL 9803 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

GREENE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Helen F. Carter, appeals from the trial court’s judgment denying her relief on her two-count petition for declaratory judgment brought against defendants, Greene County, Missouri, and its county commissioners, H.C. Compton, Anna R. Mobley, and Kenneth R. Cantrell.

It is our opinion that the trial court had no jurisdiction to entertain the declaratory judgment action. Since it did not, the judgment that it entered is void.

In the first count of her second amended petition, Mrs. Carter requested a declaratory judgment that she was entitled to use real estate that she owned located in Greene County, Missouri, as a place to operate a commercial swimming and picnic facility, even though the land was situated in an area zoned A-l Agricultural by defendants, which zoning did not allow the operation of commercial swimming pools in such areas. The swimming pool and picnic facility operation had been designated as a legal nonconforming use of the land because the swimming pool and picnic area had been commercially operated prior to the enactment of the zoning law. Mrs. Carter also requested a declaration that Greene County’s agents and employees had “acted without or in excess of their authority attempting to eliminate the nonconforming use of [her] property and in denying [her] building permit application.” The requested building permit was to repair, restore, and construct improvements on the Carter property relating to its use as a commercial swimming and picnic facility. The application for the permit was denied by Robert Montileone, Director of the Greene County Planning and Zoning Department. At trial, Montileone stated the reason for denial was that the nonconforming use of the property had been abandoned through nonuse for a period of one year or more, and, therefore, no commercial use of the property was permitted because of its A-l Agricultural classification.

In the second count of her petition, Mrs. Carter alleged that the A-l zoning regulation with respect to her property and Greene County’s ratification of such by its denial of her request to rezone her property from A-l Agricultural to C-2 General Commercial, so that she could legally operate her swimming pool business, was arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable. Mrs. Carter requested a declaration to that effect, as well as a declaration that she was legally entitled to use her property as a commercial swimming and picnic facility.

In their answer, defendants asserted, in addition to denying plaintiff’s allegations, that the petition for declaratory judgment failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted “for the reason that Plaintiff has failed to comply with the statutory appeal procedures set forth in § 64.281(4), R.S.Mo. (1978) and § 536.110, R.S.Mo. (1978).”

The trial court, after hearing evidence, made written findings of fact and conclusions of law, and entered judgment in favor of defendants on both counts of Mrs. Carter’s petition. After making 22 specific findings of fact, the trial court concluded that the nonconforming use of the property had been abandoned through nonuse on two separate occasions, first after the 1976 season and again in 1984. It also concluded that the A-l Agricultural zoning of Mrs. Carter’s property was not arbitrary or unreasonable.

[667]*667There is nothing in the trial court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment, or anywhere else in the record, to show that the trial court ever considered defendants’ assertion raised in their answer to plaintiff’s second amended petition that declaratory judgment was not the proper remedy for an appeal from defendants’ actions and orders that plaintiff now questions.

In her brief filed here, Mrs. Carter claims Greene County had not been granted by the state the restrictive power it was using to “do away with [her] established use of her property,” that the county had no right “to establish a regulatory theory of abandonment in property not zoned residential,” that the county had not carried its burden of proof of proving abandonment of the nonconforming use, and that the county’s zoning of her property as A-l Agricultural was arbitrary and capricious. In their responding brief, defendants did not raise the issue that Mrs. Carter had not pursued her proper method of review, but confined themselves to refuting the arguments raised by Mrs. Carter in her brief.

This court, realizing that the validity of the declaratory judgment procedure might well be the dispositive issue in the appeal, ordered the filing of supplemental briefs addressing the question of whether a declaratory judgment action was the proper method for reviewing the actions and decisions of the county commission in this case. Those briefs have been filed and considered by the court, and the issue has been orally addressed by the attorneys for the parties. Our view of the issue is as follows.

Both counts of Mrs. Carter’s petition were based on complaints by Mrs. Carter regarding actions and decisions of the Greene County Commissioners and their agents in matters concerning Greene County’s zoning regulations, and their application of those regulations to her requests to have her property rezoned and to obtain a building permit. Greene County, Missouri is a class one county, and does not have a charter form of government. Statutes pertaining to zoning and planning in such counties are contained in §§ 64.211 to 64.-295, as amended. Section 64.281.4 provides that “[a]ny person aggrieved by any decision of the county board of zoning adjustment, or of the county court, or of any officer, department, board or bureau of the county,” may obtain judicial review of such decision by presenting “to the circuit court having jurisdiction in the county in which the property affected is located, a petition in the manner and form provided by section 586.110, RSMo.” The statutes pertaining to the review of administrative decisions, such as were made by the county commissioners and agents in this case, are contained in Chapter 536 of the Missouri Statutes. Section 536.110.1 provides that “[pjroceedings for review may be instituted by filing a petition in the circuit court of the county of proper venue within thirty days after the mailing or delivery of the notice of the agency’s final decision.” Section 536.130.1 provides that plaintiff has the burden of filing with the circuit court the record on which the administrative agency’s decision was based, which record shall consist of any one of the following:

(1) Such parts of the record, proceedings and evidence before the agency as the parties by written stipulation may agree upon;
(2) An agreed statement of the case, agreed to by all parties and approved as correct by the agency;
(3) A complete transcript of the entire record, proceedings and evidence before the agency. Evidence may be stated in either question and answer or narrative form. Documents may be abridged by omitting irrelevant and formal parts thereof. Any matter not essential to the decision of the questions presented by the petition may be omitted. The decision, order and findings of fact and conclusions of law shall in every case be included.

The scope of judicial review of the administrative decisions is set out in § 536.140, which reads as follows:

1. The court shall hear the case without a jury and, except as otherwise provided in subsection 4, shall hear it upon the petition and record filed as aforesaid.
[668]*6682.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
765 S.W.2d 665, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 163, 1989 WL 9803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-greene-county-moctapp-1989.