Compton Sand & Gravel Co v. Dryden Township

336 N.W.2d 810, 125 Mich. App. 383
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1983
DocketDocket 60858
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 336 N.W.2d 810 (Compton Sand & Gravel Co v. Dryden Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compton Sand & Gravel Co v. Dryden Township, 336 N.W.2d 810, 125 Mich. App. 383 (Mich. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Cynar, P.J.

Plaintiff appeals from the circuit court’s affirmance of the Township of Dryden’s denial of an application for a gravel mining permit. We affirm.

Plaintiff corporation applied for a permit to mine gravel in Dryden Township, located in La-peer County, Michigan, on 65 acres of land leased by plaintiff from George and Josephine Kovacs. Although the initial application requested a per *387 mit for 65 acres, plaintiff proposed to lease the land from Mr. and Mrs. Kovacs, who owned an additional 255 acres adjoining the site at issue.

The land is zoned for agricultural and residential use, but the zoning expressly permits applications for gravel mining. Plaintiff filed an application for gravel mining with the defendant township on June 27, 1978, pursuant to the applicable township zoning ordinance in effect on that date and the subsequent amendment thereof. The intervening defendants were joined as parties by stipulated order. They object to plaintiff’s application.

The intervening defendants are private residential landowners residing in the defendant township or in Almont Township, which lies to the immediate east of Dryden Township. All of their residences are contiguous to Hough Road, which both sides have treated as the "haul route” over which gravel would be transported from plaintiff’s proposed gravel pit for about four miles through Dryden and Almont Townships to M-53 (Van Dyke) which is the most accessible state trunk line highway. Hough Road is a 22-foot wide gravel road.

The circuit court granted the intervening defendants’ motion to join Lapeer County Road Commission (defendant road commission) as an additional party because of defendant road commission’s authority to grant or deny "a haul route permit” for the transportation of gravel from the proposed gravel pit using Hough Road (a county road).

Both before and after July 27, 1978, the date of plaintiff’s application, voluminous correspondence was transmitted between plaintiff and the defendant township and a number of public hearings took place concerning the proposed gravel pit. Reports and statements prepared by plaintiff and *388 its experts were received by the township, including a Draft Environmental Impact Statement.

While the proceedings on plaintiffs application were still pending before the defendant township, plaintiff commenced a civil action on July 12, 1979, in the circuit court complaining that the defendant township was not processing and deciding its application in a timely manner. Following a hearing on July 30, 1979, the circuit court ordered the defendant township to grant or reject plaintiff’s permit application within 90 days, with the decision to be supported by written reasons. The defendant township, complying with the circuit court order to make a ruling, denied the permit at an October 14, 1979, meeting, listing among its reasons a lack of information from plaintiff.

Following additional proceedings in the circuit court, plaintiff supplied additional information in further proceedings before the defendant township’s board and planning commission. Additional presentations of documents, studies and materials were made to the defendant township by all parties. After further consideration, the defendant township again denied plaintiffs application on May 13, 1980. Further proceedings were terminated before the defendant township’s board but continued in the circuit court.

On September 22, 1980, the circuit court granted plaintiffs motion to remand the matter to the township board for further presentation of evidence by plaintiff. On January 13, 1981, following further hearings, the defendant township again denied the application and stated its reasons for the denial.

After the January 13, 1981, denial of plaintiffs application by the defendant township, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint on February 18, *389 1981, seeking in Count I a writ of superintending control and in Count II and injunction against enforcement of certain allegedly unconstitutional provisions of the defendant township’s gravel mining ordinance. The circuit court observed that the record did not reveal that constitutional objections were asserted in the proceedings before the defendant township.

The minutes of the extensive proceedings before the defendant township’s planning commission and board from the year 1977 through January 13, 1981, were transmitted to the circuit court by stipulation of the parties. In addition, the record below also consisted of various reports, technical studies and critiques by experts for all parties and transcripts of the August 13, 1979, meeting of the defendant township’s planning commission and the defendant township’s board meetings on January 12 and 13, 1981.

Although no objections were raised about permitting the circuit court to consider any of the defendant township’s evidence, objections were raised in the circuit court by all parties as to the accuracy of various items of evidence presented at the township’s board meetings. Objections were also raised as to the conclusions and inferences drawn from the record below by the defendant township in its deliberations. The circuit court noted all the objections, and they were carefully considered by the circuit court. The circuit court also indicated that it had noted and considered, without objection by any party, the conducting and filing with the circuit court by all parties of extensive discovery which was referenced in pleadings, trial briefs and argument.

The circuit court issued a judgment affirming the defendant township’s denial of plaintiff’s appli *390 cation for a gravel mining permit and dismissing with prejudice plaintiff’s claims for superintending control and an injunction, having adjudged the same to be without merit. The circuit court issued detailed findings in support of its judgment, including:

1. The administrative hearings provided to plaintiff an opportunity to be heard, to present evidence, to challenge the evidence of the other parties and to conclude the proceeding with reasonable dispatch, thereby according due process to plaintiff.

2. The defendant township gave some legally insufficient reasons for denying approval, namely:

(a) nonapproval by the township attorney; and

(b) plaintiff’s site was not the "best”.

3. Other reasons advanced by the defendant township for denial of the application were supported by competent and material evidence upon the record, including by way of example and not by way of limitation:

(a) difficulties in policing presented on the record below by a police representative;

(b) reduction in property values as presented on the record below by Township Supervisor Fielhauer, based on his experience as the defendant township’s tax assessor;

(c) noise levels exceeding accepted standards as suggested also by plaintiff’s proofs; and

(d) failure of plaintiff to supply additional requested information.

4.

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Bluebook (online)
336 N.W.2d 810, 125 Mich. App. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compton-sand-gravel-co-v-dryden-township-michctapp-1983.