Concerned Citizens of Southeast Polk School District and Jessman Smith v. City Development Board of the State of Iowa

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 11, 2015
Docket14–1317
StatusPublished

This text of Concerned Citizens of Southeast Polk School District and Jessman Smith v. City Development Board of the State of Iowa (Concerned Citizens of Southeast Polk School District and Jessman Smith v. City Development Board of the State of Iowa) 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
Concerned Citizens of Southeast Polk School District and Jessman Smith v. City Development Board of the State of Iowa, (iowa 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 14–1317

Filed December 11, 2015

CONCERNED CITIZENS OF SOUTHEAST POLK SCHOOL DISTRICT and JESSMAN SMITH,

Appellants,

vs.

CITY DEVELOPMENT BOARD OF THE STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

and

CITY OF PLEASANT HILL, IOWA, Intervenor.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Dennis J.

Stovall, Judge.

A challenge to the timeliness of appeal from an order by the district

court affirming annexation of land by a city. APPEAL DISMISSED.

Gary D. Dickey of Dickey & Campbell Law Firm, PLC, Des Moines,

for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Matthew Oetker, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee. 2

CADY, Chief Justice.

In this appeal, we must decide if the time to file a notice of appeal

in an electronically filed case begins on the day the notice of filing is

electronically transmitted or the day the court order from which the

appeal is taken has been electronically filed. We conclude the notice of

appeal from a final judgment or order of the district court must be filed

within thirty days of the date the judgment or order was electronically

filed, not the date of the notice of filing. We conclude the notice of appeal

filed in this case was untimely. Consequently, we have no jurisdiction to

consider the case and dismiss the appeal.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Jessman Smith and a citizens group named Concerned Citizens of

Southeast Polk School District (collectively referred to as Concerned

Citizens) petitioned for judicial review of an agency action in district

court. Concerned Citizens sought review of a decision by the City

Development Board. The Board approved the annexation of land near

Southeast Polk High School by the City of Pleasant Hill. The City

annexed the land to pursue the development of an industrial warehouse.

The City intervened in the proceedings.

The district court affirmed the Board’s decision. It electronically

filed a written ruling with the clerk of court through the Electronic

Document Management System (EDMS) of the Iowa court system on

July 11, 2014. An electronic filing stamp was placed on the ruling. The

filing stamp read: “E-FILED 2014 JUL 11 2:45 PM POLK - CLERK OF

DISTRICT COURT.” On July 15, the electronic filing system transmitted

a notice of filing. This was done after the clerk of court approved the

filing, including the persons or entities designated to receive the notice.

The notice was transmitted to the registered user account of each 3

attorney representing the parties, as well as the attorney representing

the intervenor. The transmitted notice stated across the top in red

letters “*****IMPORTANT NOTICE – READ THIS INFORMATION *****

NOTICE OF ELECTRONIC FILING OR PRESENTATION [NEF].” The

notice clearly conveyed in a table format the case number, the judge, the

official time stamp, the court, case title, what document had been

submitted, and a designation of filed by or in behalf of. In this particular

case, the notice clearly identified the time of filing: “Official File Stamp:

07-11-2014:14:45:38.”

On August 12, Concerned Citizens filed a notice of appeal from the

district court decision. It also filed a motion for extension of time to

appeal. On August 18, the Board filed a motion to dismiss the appeal as

untimely filed. It also filed a resistance to the motion for extension. We

denied the motion for extension of time to appeal and ordered the parties

brief and submit the motion to dismiss as an issue on appeal.

On appeal, Concerned Citizens claims the annexation was

improper because the application was not entitled to a statutory

presumption of validity and the Board refused to consider the effects of

the proposed land use on the affected area. It also argues the appeal was

timely filed because the time to file an appeal from the decision of the

district court did not begin to run under the electronic filing process

until the notice of filing was transmitted to the parties.

We conclude the appeal was not timely filed. We dismiss the

appeal and do not review the other issues raised.

II. Motion to Dismiss Appeal.

When Iowa established its court system over 165 years ago, it

created a clerk of court to keep all original papers filed in all court

proceedings. See Iowa Code §§ 1560–1561 (1851) (providing all supreme 4

court opinions and dissents must be written and filed with the clerk of

court); id. § 1565 (providing each clerk of the supreme court “must keep

a complete register of all proceedings of the court”); id. § 1577 (requiring

each district court clerk “keep a record of the proceedings of the court”).

Today, the clerk of court remains the depository of court records, but the

means of transacting business in the courts has changed. See Iowa

Code § 602.8104(2) (2013) (specifying the record books the clerk shall

keep). In recent years, the Iowa court system has been transitioning into

an electronic process in which paper is no longer the medium used to file

documents and communications in court proceedings. The electronic

transition began in 2009 and was completed statewide in June 2015.

Polk County transitioned from paper to electronic transactions in civil

cases in February 2013. As a result, all documents in this case have

been electronically filed.

The change to electronic transmission of documents in the Iowa

court system has been accompanied by new rules to govern the new

process. Interim rules pertaining to the use of electronic filing were

adopted in January 2007 and have been periodically revised to

incorporate recommendations from court users and advisory groups.

These interim rules continue to govern the electronic process today and

remain the governing rules pending adoption of final rules. Generally,

the electronic filing rules sought to continue the court practices that

governed paper filing, not to change them. See Interim Iowa Ct. R.

16.308, http://www.iowacourts.gov(“eFiling” tab; then “overview”; then

“Chapter 16, Iowa Court Rules”) (last visited Dec. 4, 2015) (indicating an

electronic filing has the same force and effect as filings time stamped in a

nonelectronic manner once it receives an electronic file stamp). 5

Our rules of appellate procedure require a notice of appeal to “be

filed within 30 days after the filing of the final order or judgment.” Iowa

R. App. P. 6.101(1)(b). This rule captures the long-standing practice in

Iowa and remains the rule today. Consequently, the period of time to

appeal a judgment, order, or decree in Iowa commences on the date it

was properly entered with the clerk of court. Lau v. City of Oelwein, 336

N.W.2d 202, 204 (Iowa 1983) (holding the period of appeal from a small

claims case “would commence on the date the judgment is made final by

being properly entered”).

Once a judgment, order, or decree is properly entered with the

clerk, our rules have also historically required the clerk to “promptly mail

or deliver notice of such entry, or copy thereof, to each party appearing,

or to one of the party’s attorneys.” Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.453. This process is

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Concerned Citizens of Southeast Polk School District and Jessman Smith v. City Development Board of the State of Iowa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/concerned-citizens-of-southeast-polk-school-district-and-jessman-smith-v-iowa-2015.