City of Grimes v. Polk County Board of Supervisors

495 N.W.2d 751, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 44, 1993 WL 38020
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 17, 1993
Docket91-1580
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 495 N.W.2d 751 (City of Grimes v. Polk County Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Grimes v. Polk County Board of Supervisors, 495 N.W.2d 751, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 44, 1993 WL 38020 (iowa 1993).

Opinion

SCHULTZ, Justice.

Acting pursuant to its zoning ordinances, the Polk County Board of Supervisors (Supervisors) approved the grant of a conditional use permit to the Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency (Agency) for the operation of a county compost facility. In a certiorari action, the City of Grimes (City) challenged the legality of the Supervisors’ action. Following trial, the *752 district court dismissed the action. We reverse.

The Agency operates sanitary landfills serving all the communities of Polk County (County). Since 1972, the Agency has owned a 160-acre tract of land located approximately two miles southwest of the City. In 1972, the Agency obtained a conditional use permit from the Polk County Zoning Commission (Commission) permitting the use of the tract as a solid waste landfill. This action was challenged and affirmed by our court. Town of Grimes v. Board of Adjustment, Polk County, 243 N.W.2d 625 (Iowa 1976). However, the Agency did not construct a landfill.on the tract.

In 1974, the City annexed the land around the Agency’s site and the road leading to it. The City passed an ordinance placing a seven-ton weight restriction on trucks using the road. Garbage trucks used by the Agency to transport waste exceed this weight. The Agency is challenging the validity of that ordinance in a companion appeal decided this date. See Des Moines Metro. Area Solid Waste Agency v. City of Grimes, 495 N.W.2d 746 (Iowa 1993).

In 1990, the Agency applied to the Commission for a conditional use permit which would allow the Agency to use the tract in question as a yard waste compost facility. Following a hearing, the Commission granted the permit. The City appealed the decision to the Supervisors and a hearing was granted. The Supervisors affirmed the grant of the permit subject to a traffic study of the road leading to the tract, and on the condition that “the agency be required with the concurrence of the City ... to pay for upgrading of the roadway caused by the use brought about by this conditional use permit.” This ruling is the subject of the certiorari action.

A writ of certiorari shall be granted where an inferior board exercising judicial functions is alleged to have acted illegally. Iowa R.Civ.P. 306. Certiorari is the appropriate means to review a board of supervisors’ zoning decision. Montgomery v. Bremer County Bd. of Supervisors, 299 N.W.2d 687, 692 (Iowa 1980).

An illegality is established if a board has not acted in accordance with a statute; if its decision was not supported by substantial evidence; or if its actions were unreasonable, arbitrary, or capricious. The plaintiff bears the burden to prove the illegality.

Norland v. Worth County Compensation Bd., 323 N.W.2d 251, 253 (Iowa 1982) (citations omitted). Our review of a district court certiorari ruling is for errors of law. Iowa R.App.P. 4.

The City urges that the Supervisors acted illegally by issuing the conditional use permit in violation of the County’s zoning ordinances. The City claims the Supervisors approved a conditional use permit in an area planned for residential development. The City also urges that the Supervisors failed to require the Agency to provide information required by the zoning ordinances in its application for the permit.

I. Future residential use. The site of the proposed compost facility is zoned by the county as an agricultural district. The area surrounding and adjacent to the proposed site is within the City’s limits and also is zoned for agricultural use. The City explains it has adopted a future-use plan that shows the surrounding and adjacent area to be zoned residential in the future and the use permit is incompatible with its future plans. The City maintains the Supervisors acted illegally in failing to follow ordinances which require consideration of proposed uses of adjoining property.

Under the County zoning ordinance, a disposal facility in an agricultural district is permitted upon approval of a conditional use permit. A conditional use permit is described under the zoning ordinance as:

Conditional uses are those uses which have some special impact or uniqueness such that their effect on the surrounding environment cannot be determined in advance of the use being proposed for a particular location. When such a use is proposed, a review by the Zoning Commission of the location, design, configu *753 ration, and impact will be conducted, comparing the proposed use to fixed standards. The review determines whether the proposed use should be permitted by weighing public need for, and benefit to be derived from the use against the local impact which it may cause. The review shall consider the proposal in terms of:
a. Existing zoning and land use in the vicinity of the use; and
b. planned and proposed public and private developments which may be adversely affected by the proposed use; and
c. whether and to what extent the proposed use, at the particular location for which it is suggested, is necessary or desirable to provide a development which in the interest of the public or which will contribute to the general welfare of the area or Polk County; and
d. whether and to what extent all steps possible have been taken by the developer to minimize any adverse effects of the proposed use on the immediate vicinity and on the public health, safety and welfare in general.
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Polk County Zoning Ordinance Division 4500. We recently observed:

the purpose of the special use permit is to bring flexibility to the rigid restrictions of a zoning ordinance, while at the same time controlling troublesome or somewhat incompatible uses by establishing, in advance, standards that admit the use only under certain conditions and standards that must be met.

Willett v. Cerro Gordo County Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 490 N.W.2d 556, 560 (Iowa 1992).

The ordinances have established standards that must be met before a conditional use permit can be granted. Polk County Zoning Ordinance section 4510 requires the Commission “specifically [find] the proposed conditional use appropriate in the location for which it is proposed.” It also requires the finding to be based on criteria that include consideration of adjacent property “as they now exist or as they may in the future be developed as a result ... of any other plan ... by ... other governmental agency having jurisdiction to guide growth and development.”

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Related

City of Johnston v. Christenson
718 N.W.2d 290 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2006)
Nash Finch Co. v. City Council of Cedar Rapids
672 N.W.2d 822 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2003)
Perkins v. Board of Supervisors
636 N.W.2d 58 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2001)
Fox v. Polk County Board of Supervisors
569 N.W.2d 503 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1997)
Little v. Winborn
518 N.W.2d 384 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1994)
Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency v. City of Grimes
495 N.W.2d 746 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
495 N.W.2d 751, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 44, 1993 WL 38020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-grimes-v-polk-county-board-of-supervisors-iowa-1993.