Chosen Consulting LLC v. Town Council of Highland, Indiana

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedAugust 1, 2022
Docket2:20-cv-00246
StatusUnknown

This text of Chosen Consulting LLC v. Town Council of Highland, Indiana (Chosen Consulting LLC v. Town Council of Highland, Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chosen Consulting LLC v. Town Council of Highland, Indiana, (N.D. Ind. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION CHOSEN CONSULTING, LLC, d/b/a ) CHOSEN HEALTHCARE, INDIANA ) ATC JV LLC, d/b/a HICKORY ) RECOVERY NETWORK, HIGHLAND ) RECOVERY LLC, d/b/a HICKORY ) TREATMENT CENTER AT HIGHLAND, ) CHOSEN HIGHLAND, LLC, and ) HICKORY HOUSE RECOVERY, LLC, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Cause No. 2:20-CV-246-PPS-JEM ) TOWN COUNCIL OF HIGHLAND, ) INDIANA, HIGHLAND MUNICIPAL ) PLAN COMMISSION, and TOWN OF ) HIGHLAND, INDIANA, ) ) Defendants. ) OPINION AND ORDER This action is a property dispute between a proposed sub-acute healthcare facility and the Town of Highland. Dating back to the 1970s, a property located in Highland was the site of Highland Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. This facility, which historically operated as a nursing home under the local zoning code, provided medical treatment to patients pursuant to a dual-certification as a nursing facility and skilled nursing facility. In 2019, Plaintiffs Chosen Consulting LLC, Chosen Highland, LLC, Hickory House Recovery, LLC, Highland Recovery LLC, and Indiana ATC JV LLC tried to transition the property to primarily serve patients suffering from addiction-related physical or mental ailments, including substance abuse disorders. (Unless context requires otherwise, for simplicity’s sake I will refer to the Plaintiffs in this opinion collectively as “Chosen.”) As part of this transition, Chosen gave up the facility’s dual-certification. To re-open as a drug treatment facility, Chosen must obtain

a new certification as a sub-acute facility from the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration (FSSA). Chosen has been unable to obtain certification as a sub-acute facility. It blames the logjam on the Town of Highland and its planning commission. Chosen alleges that Highland improperly withheld zoning approval of the new proposed use of the

property, which prevents them from obtaining sub-acute facility certification from FSSA. Thus, according to Chosen, it is stuck in a bureaucratic snarl — it can’t get certified by the FSSA without a letter from Highland noting compliance with local zoning laws, but Highland refuses to provide such a letter. In Count Two of its complaint, Chosen seeks a declaratory judgment that the property is correctly zoned for the new proposed use. Evidently, Chosen thinks that a declaration from me will satisfy

FSSA in lieu of a letter from the local zoning folks. In Count One, Chosen further asserts that Highland’s conduct was animated by prejudice against individuals suffering from drug addiction, and thus constitutes unlawful discrimination in violation of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. Highland seeks judgment on the pleadings. [DE 56.] As outlined more fully

below, I find that because Chosen failed to obtain a final decision from the local zoning authorities, the declaratory relief claim will be dismissed without prejudice. But because 2 Chosen plausibly alleges that Highland intentionally engaged in an unfair zoning approval process to preclude formal approval of the property’s new use, and did so because the proposed residents are substance abusers, the ADA claim will not be

dismissed at this stage. Background Plaintiffs are a mishmash of several interrelated LLCs operating in the medical services field. In summary, in April 2019, Chosen Highland, LLC acquired the property and took control of Highland Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. [DE 38, ¶ 12.] Chosen

Consulting LLC, operating as Chosen Healthcare, managed the facility for Chosen Highland until June 30, 2019. Id., ¶¶ 1, 11, 13. Indiana ATC JV LLC, operating as Hickory Recovery Network, also manages residential healthcare facilities in the State, including facilities providing treatment for drug-addiction and related ailments. Id., ¶ 2. When, in mid-2019, Plaintiffs opted to transition the use of the Property to focus on treating drug addiction and related ailments, Hickory Recovery Network was on deck

to manage the new proposed sub-acute treatment facility. See id. Hickory Recovery Network, in turn, delegated management of the proposed sub-acute facility to Highland Recovery LLC, which operates as the Hickory Treatment Center at Highland. Id., ¶ 3. Another Hickory entity, Hickory House Recovery, LLC, was tasked with obtaining the state certification required to open the facility for its new use. [DE 38, ¶ 5.] As I

mentioned earlier, unless context requires otherwise, I will simply refer to the Plaintiffs collectively as “Chosen.” 3 The Town of Highland is an Indiana municipality. [DE 38, ¶ 6; DE 40 at 2.] As pertains to zoning issues, the municipality acts through the Town Council of Highland, a body of elected officials empowered to adopt ordinances and resolutions on behalf of

that municipality [DE 38, ¶ 8, DE 40 at 3], and the Highland Municipal Plan Commission, a body of elected officials who assist in the administration of Highland’s local zoning code [DE 38, ¶ 7]. (For simplicity, I will refer to these parties collectively as “Defendants,” or “Highland.”) Chosen alleges that, since the 1970s, the Highland Nursing and Rehabilitation

Center operated as a nursing home under Section 18.05.250 of the Highland Municipal Code. Id., ¶¶ 16–17. It did so pursuant to a dual-certification from the State as a nursing facility and skilled nursing facility. Id. Although the property was located in a residential zoning district, a local ordinance approved its conditional use as a 40-bed nursing home. [DE 56-1 at 1; DE 56-1 at 2–3.] At some point over the next 50 years, Highland amended the Municipal Code to remove the nursing home as a conditional

use of the Property. [See generally DE 56-1 at 4–275 (Highland Municipal Code, September 13, 2021).] Instead, thereafter, the property operated as a “legal nonconforming use.” That’s zoning-speak for saying the nursing home was grandfathered in as a lawful use despite being located in a residential-zoned district. Section 18.05.250 of the Highland Municipal Code defines a nursing home as

An institution where infirm persons or the aged or children reside, where in-patient physician and nursing care may be provided to persons suffering from physical or mental ailments, where daily out-patient physician and nursing care 4 may be provided, and where administrative and staff offices and living quarters operating as an integral part of such institution may be provided. [DE 38, ¶ 15; DE 56-1 at 39.] Chosen claims that, as a component of services provided pursuant to its dual-certification, the nursing home historically provided occasional care to patients suffering from addiction-related physical or mental ailments, like substance abuse disorders. [DE 38, ¶ 14.] But in mid-2019, Chosen decided to shift its focus to primarily treating patients with drug-related ailments. In the process, it gave up the dual-certification of Highland Nursing and Rehabilitation Center as both a

nursing facility and skilled nursing facility, and sought to transition to a sub-acute facility under Indiana Code § 12-22-2 and a nursing home under Highland’s Municipal Code § 18.05.250. Id., ¶¶ 17–19. At the time, Chosen notified Highland about the transition plans and did not receive any push back. Id., ¶ 20. By the end of the summer, Chosen was ready to get the property certified as a sub-acute facility. But there was one last hurdle: FSSA informed Hickory House

Recovery, LLC (the entity seeking certification) that Chosen would need to “submit a letter from the Town of Highland stating that the proposed use as a sub-acute facility meets Highland zoning requirements.” See id., ¶¶ 21–24. Chosen went to the Highland Municipal Plan Commission and requested a letter confirming its understanding that the new proposed use remained consistent with the existing legal nonconforming use of

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Bluebook (online)
Chosen Consulting LLC v. Town Council of Highland, Indiana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chosen-consulting-llc-v-town-council-of-highland-indiana-innd-2022.