County of Boone v. Seth Reynolds

573 S.W.3d 696
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 2019
DocketWD82353
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 573 S.W.3d 696 (County of Boone v. Seth Reynolds) 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
County of Boone v. Seth Reynolds, 573 S.W.3d 696 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

COUNTY OF BOONE, ) ) Respondent, ) ) WD82353 v. ) ) OPINION FILED: ) April 23, 2019 SETH REYNOLDS, ) ) Appellant. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Boone County, Missouri The Honorable Jodie C. Asel, Judge

Before Special Division: Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Presiding Judge, and Mark D. Pfeiffer and Gary D. Witt, Judges

Mr. Seth Reynolds (“Reynolds”) appeals from a civil contempt ruling of the Circuit Court

of Boone County, Missouri (“circuit court”), due to his failure to comply with the requirements

of a judgment of permanent injunction against him entered May 18, 2017, which called for the

removal of a building, fence, and satellite dish “all in violation of plaintiff Boone County’s

Ordinances and which all unlawfully encroach on the 25-foot setback area established by the

Boone County Zoning Regulations and upon [Boone County’s] right of way abutting North

Creasy Springs Road in front of [Reynolds’s] property.” Reynolds raises three points on appeal,

the first two arguing that the contempt ruling, which concluded that Reynolds was presently able to purge his contempt, was not supported by substantial evidence or, alternatively, was against

the weight of the evidence. In his third point on appeal, Reynolds argues that the circuit court’s

denial of his Rule 74.061 motion to correct the May 18, 2017 judgment was an erroneous

application of the law. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background2

Sometime before June 21, 2013, without first obtaining a building permit, Reynolds

began construction on a detached accessory building, near his home on Creasy Springs Road in

Boone County, Missouri. The accessory building sat approximately eighteen to twenty feet off

the edge of the paved road. After he had installed the footings and piers for the structure, his

builders expressed concern about the location of a nearby power line and its potential

interference with continued construction. Consequently, Reynolds contacted Boone Electric to

see about having the power line relocated. When a representative from Boone Electric showed

up, he advised Reynolds that, in order to obtain a permit to relocate the power line, Reynolds

first needed a building permit for the accessory building. Accordingly, Reynolds contacted

representatives of the County of Boone (“County”) and requested and received a building permit.

Four days after Reynolds received the building permit, Mr. Uriah Mach, a land-use

planner for County, sent Reynolds an email, advising Reynolds that the accessory building was

located too close to Creasy Springs Road and that Reynolds would need to apply to the Board of

Adjustment for a variance before proceeding any further. The structure both encroached on the

1 All rule references are to I MISSOURI COURT RULES – STATE (2018). 2 “We view the evidence and the reasonable inferences that may be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the judgment, disregarding evidence and inferences to the contrary.” Stander v. Szabados, 407 S.W.3d 73, 78 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013). Portions of the facts are quoted from the opinion in Reynolds’s appeal of the May 18, 2017 judgment entering a permanent injunction in favor of County, County of Boone v. Reynolds, 549 S.W.3d 24 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018), without further attribution.

2 public right-of-way for Creasy Springs Road and violated the twenty-five-foot building setback

requirement under zoning regulations.3

After not hearing back from Reynolds, Mach followed up the email with two letters,

dated July 9, 2013, and July 24, 2013. In both letters, Mach repeated the warnings contained in

his previous email to Reynolds. Reynolds ignored the letters and the corresponding warnings

contained therein and proceeded with the completion of the accessory building.

After completion of his building project, sometime in 2015, Reynolds finally applied for a

variance for the setback violations with the Board of Adjustment. The Board unanimously

declined Reynolds’s request. Thereafter, County demanded that Reynolds take action to bring

his property into compliance with both the right-of-way and the zoning regulations, but Reynolds

refused. County then filed a petition for permanent injunction against Reynolds, alleging that

Reynolds’s property “denied [County] the access to th[e] right-of-way . . . , together with the

land-use authority statutorily granted to [County] to establish, promulgate, and enforce zoning

regulations, thereby causing [County] irreparable harm,” and that Reynolds’s actions were

“perpetual, and so [County] has no adequate remedy at law.” County sought a permanent

injunction, “mandating that [Reynolds] comply with Boone County, Missouri zoning regulations,

and that he remove the accessory building, the fence, and the satellite dish from . . . the right of

way area, . . . the setback area, . . . [and] the area in front of the main building.”

At trial, the circuit court received testimony from Reynolds, Mach, and a surveyor

describing the location of the right-of-way boundaries, the setback boundary, and the location of

Reynold’s physical structures in violation of County’s zoning regulations and right-of-way.

After hearing the evidence, the circuit court found that

3 At trial, Reynolds stipulated that his garage, satellite dish, and privacy fence were all in violation of various zoning regulations and encroached on County’s right-of-way for Creasy Springs Road.

3 [Reynolds] has unlawfully constructed and maintains on his property an unlawful accessory building abutting North Creasy Springs Road, together with a fence and a satellite television receiver dish between that building and North Creasy Springs Road, all in violation of plaintiff Boone County’s Ordinances and which all unlawfully encroach on the 25-foot setback area established by the Boone County Zoning Regulations and upon the Plaintiff’s right of way abutting North Creasy Springs Road in front of that property.

The circuit court issued its judgment entering a permanent injunction (“Injunction Judgment”) on

May 18, 2017, requiring Reynolds to:

remove in its entirety that building, that fence, and that satellite receiver dish from the Boone County setback area and Boone County’s North Creasy Springs Road Right of Way within 60 days of the date of th[e] Judgment and . . . permanently restrained and enjoined [Reynolds] from building or maintaining any structures in that setback area or in that right of way in the future.

Reynolds appealed, this Court affirmed the Injunction Judgment in April of 2018, and the

Missouri Supreme Court denied transfer on July 3, 2018.

Thereafter, County filed a motion for contempt because Reynolds refused to remove the

physical structures that were ordered to be removed by the Injunction Judgment. The first

hearing on County’s motion for contempt was held September 17, 2018, and Reynolds testified

as to his efforts to comply with the Injunction Judgment. Reynolds claimed that he made

numerous phone calls to get demolition bids, but only one responded with a bid and Reynolds

claimed that the demolition bid was almost as much as he had spent on building the structures in

question and, aside from the exorbitant expense, they would not be able to begin any demolition

work for approximately six months. After hearing Reynolds’s representations, the circuit court

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573 S.W.3d 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-boone-v-seth-reynolds-moctapp-2019.