Davisco Foods International, Inc. v. Gooding County

118 P.3d 116, 141 Idaho 784, 2005 Ida. LEXIS 120
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 2005
Docket30744
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 118 P.3d 116 (Davisco Foods International, Inc. v. Gooding County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davisco Foods International, Inc. v. Gooding County, 118 P.3d 116, 141 Idaho 784, 2005 Ida. LEXIS 120 (Idaho 2005).

Opinions

SCHROEDER, Chief Justice.

Davisco Foods International, Inc. (Jerome Cheese) applied for a special use permit in order to build a Reclaimed Water Project in Gooding County. The Gooding County Planning and Zoning Commission (P & Z) unanimously voted to grant Jerome Cheese the special use permit. William and Gloria Archibald (Archibalds) appealed the decision to the Gooding County Board of Commissioners (Board) which reversed the P & Z’s decision. The district court affirmed the Board’s decision. This appeal followed.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Jerome Cheese operates a cheese and whey making facility in Jerome County, Idaho. Massive quantities of water are used in the facility to clean the food-handling equipment. Jerome Cheese lawfully discharges the wastewater into different streams. Some of the water is treated by the City of Jerome’s publicly owned treatment works (POTW). Some is released into an irrigation canal that empties into the Snake River. Some is used as crop supplements or animal feed.

The wastewater contains significant amounts of nitrates and phosphorous. Jerome Cheese wants to create a Reclaimed Water Project (Project) that would reduce the amount of these constituents in the water and allow storage of them for use as crop fertilizer. The Project would be located in Gooding County, seven miles from Jerome [786]*786Cheese’s plant. The wastewater would be transferred via a pipe to the Project site for treatment. The Project site is a 900-acre farm in Gooding County owned by Jerome Cheese. The Project constitutes an industrial use. The farm owned by Jerome Cheese in Gooding County is in an agricultural zone. A special use permit is required for the Project.

Around September 1, 2000, Jerome Cheese applied for a special use permit with the Gooding County P & Z. The P & Z unanimously voted against issuing the special use permit. Jerome Cheese appealed to the Board which remanded the matter to the P & Z. Jerome Cheese submitted a revised application for a special use permit to the P & Z which included additional evidence supporting the Project. During this process, the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (IDEQ) issued a final permit for the Project. On April 30, the P & Z voted 2-2 on Jerome Cheese’s revised application, resulting in a denial of the special use permit. Jerome Cheese appealed to the Board.

While on appeal, Jerome Cheese requested a mediation session pursuant to I.C. § 67-6510(1) of the Local Land Use Planning Act (LLUPA). The Board granted the request. Jerome Cheese, Gooding County officials and interested members of the public participated in the mediation which resulted in a declaratory ruling by the district court regarding the conduct of the mediation and the participation of County officials in the mediation. Following the mediation, Jerome Cheese withdrew its appeal to the Board and filed a third application for a special use permit with the P & Z. The P & Z unanimously approved the issuance of the permit.

On or about May 15, 2002, the Archibalds appealed the P & Z’s decision to grant the special use permit. The Archibalds own real property in Gooding County and live approximately 3.4 miles from the Project site. The Board voted 2-1 to reverse the decision of the P & Z and to deny the issuance of the special use permit. The Board failed to create a transcribable record of the meeting at which they deliberated and voted on the appeal. Jerome Cheese claimed that at the June 24 meeting Commissioner Elexpuru stated that she had “heard” things about the Project which were not in the record. In its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law dated July 22, the Board determined that it was not in the “best interest of the citizens of Gooding County” to locate the Project in an agricultural zone.

Jerome Cheese petitioned the district court for judicial review of the Board’s decision. Jerome Cheese alleged Commissioner Sauer was biased and had made statements to a local newspaper that he was against Jerome Cheese’s Project and that he would “fight against such a proposal.” The district court remanded the matter to the Board to create a transcribable record of the proceedings and to enable the Board to address the allegations of bias. On September 8, 2002, the Board unanimously voted to reverse the decision of the P & Z to approve the Project. The Board found that locating an industrial use in an agricultural zone was not in the best interest of Gooding County.

Jerome Cheese petitioned the district court for judicial review. On March 3, 2004, the district court issued its opinion upholding the decision of the Board to reverse the P & Z. The district court held that the Board properly followed its own ordinance and procedures, the Archibalds had standing to appeal, Commissioner Elexpuru was not required to recuse herself, and the issue of Commissioner Sauer’s alleged bias was moot. Jerome Cheese appealed to this Court.

II.

THE ARCHIBALDS HAVE STANDING TO APPEAL THE P & Z’s DECISION

Jerome Cheese contends that the Archibalds lack standing to appeal the P & Z’s decision, maintaining that the Archibalds are too distant from the Project to be impacted in any manner unique to them.

The Gooding County Zoning Ordinance Article X, Section K indicates who may appeal a decision of the P & Z. The section states that, “[t]he applicant or any affected person (one who has an interest in real property which may be adversely affected) who appeared in person or in writing before the Commission may appeal the decision of the Commission to the Board....”

The Archibalds participated in the proceedings before the P & Z. The question [787]*787is whether they have a property interest that “may be adversely affected” by Jerome Cheese’s Project. In their appeal from the P & Z decision the Archibalds stated that, “the odor from this sewage empoundment can cause irreparable economic damage to residential values. Beautiful properties can suddenly be unsellable just with a change in the wind direction.” The Archibalds also appeared before the Board in the August 11, 2003, hearing on the Special Use Permit application. Mr. Archibald stated that:

I know that if you make where I live an unpleasant place to live you’re going to devalue my property____You could devalue my property in lots of ways. And if you ruin the living conditions immediately adjacent to my property you’ve affected my property too. So where do you draw the line and where do you say an offensive odor is an offensive odor?

Jerome Cheese offered evidence that odors could not reach the Archibalds’ property. However, an engineering expert who testified on behalf of Jerome Cheese before the Board in its August 11, 2003, hearing testified that under certain circumstances the Archibalds may be able to smell odors from Jerome Cheese’s Project. The engineer stated that “our study indicates that if you made a big enough odor, yes, you could smell it at the Archibalds’ house. It would have to be a very big odor inconsistent with the design of the wastewater treatment plant. But, yes, that’s possible.” There is some evidence that if Jerome Cheese’s Project failed to adhere to the conditions imposed by the P & Z in issuing the special use permit, the Archibalds may be able to smell odors from the Project on their property. This is sufficient for the Board to determine that the Archibalds’ property interest “may be adversely affected” if the special use permit is granted.

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Davisco Foods International, Inc. v. Gooding County
118 P.3d 116 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
118 P.3d 116, 141 Idaho 784, 2005 Ida. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davisco-foods-international-inc-v-gooding-county-idaho-2005.