Denargo Market Neighbors Coalition v. Visser Real Estate Investments

956 P.2d 630, 1997 Colo. J. C.A.R. 2326, 1997 Colo. App. LEXIS 235, 1997 WL 671528
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 16, 1997
DocketNo. 96CA1612
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 956 P.2d 630 (Denargo Market Neighbors Coalition v. Visser Real Estate Investments) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denargo Market Neighbors Coalition v. Visser Real Estate Investments, 956 P.2d 630, 1997 Colo. J. C.A.R. 2326, 1997 Colo. App. LEXIS 235, 1997 WL 671528 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge CRISWELL.

In this C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4) action, plaintiffs, consisting of various neighborhood associations and property owners (Denargo group), appeal from the judgment affirming the approval by the Denver Board of Adjustment for Zoning Appeals (Board) of the issuance of a permit to the defendant Salvation Army to operate a homeless shelter in a building located at the Denargo Market in Denver. We reverse.

At all times relevant to this dispute, the Denver zoning ordinance, Denver Revised Municipal Code § 59-80(2)(e) l.e., provided that no more than two residential care (homeless shelter) uses could be located within a radius of 4,000 feet of each other.

In 1993, the Salvation Army applied for a zoning permit to operate a homeless shelter on the subject property. Such request was denied on the basis that there were already two homeless shelters, including one operated by the Sacred Heart Church (Sacred Heart House), within 4,000 feet of the pro[632]*632posed use. This denial was appealed to the Board, and a variance from the ordinance was requested, which was denied by the Board, and no judicial review of that decision was sought.

However, in October 1994, the Denver zoning administrator reclassified the use of Sacred Heart House from a homeless shelter to a “rooming and/or boarding house.” The Denargo group filed an appeal from this reclassification with the Board in November 1994.

Five days after this appeal was filed, the zoning administrator issued a permit allowing the Salvation Army to operate a homeless shelter on the subject property. The issuance of this permit was based upon the conclusion that there was then only one homeless shelter within the relevant area, the Sacred Heart House use no longer being considered to be such.

The Denargo group also appealed this latter action by the zoning administrator to the Board, but that appeal was held in abeyance, pending completion of the administrative and judicial review of the propriety of the reclassification of the use of the Sacred Heart House.

In April 1995, the Board invalidated the zoning administrator’s reclassification of Sacred Heart House. It concluded that the use of that property was not for a “rooming and/or boarding house” within the meaning of the ordinance. Although the zoning administrator sought judicial review of the Board’s reversal of her decision, the reviewing court affirmed the Board’s order. In doing so, the court determined that, in rejecting the zoning administrator’s determination that Sacred Heart House was operating a rooming and boarding house, the Board necessarily determined that the use was that of a homeless shelter. No further appeal was taken from this judicial declaration.

After this court decision respecting Sacred Heart House issued, the Denargo group’s appeal of the zoning administrator’s issuance of the permit to the Salvation Army was heard by the Board and denied. In its decision in this appeal, the Board recognized that Sacred Heart House’s classification as a rooming and boarding house had been declared invalid, both by the Board and in the later judicial proceedings, but it concluded that such invalidation did not “automatically” cause that property to “revert” to its previous classification, and it refused to determine, independently, the nature of the use of the Sacred Heart House.

As a result, the Denargo group initiated this C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4) proceeding for review of the Board’s ruling. The trial court also concluded that the previous use classification of Sacred Heart House was not reinstated upon invalidation of the zoning administrator’s reclassification, and it affirmed the Board’s ruling.

When reviewing a local agency’s quasi-judicial decision under C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4), a court must affirm, unless it concludes that the agency exceeded its jurisdiction or abused its discretion by acting arbitrarily or capriciously. Platte River Environmental Conservation Organization, Inc. v. National Hog Farms, Inc., 804 P.2d 290 (Colo.App. 1990).

Because the review of the agency’s decision is based solely on the administrative record, an appellate court is in the same position as a trial court, and it is required to apply the same standard of review. Hence, an appellate court is not bound by the determinations of the trial court in such an action. City of Colorado Springs v. Givan, 897 P.2d 753 (Colo.1995).

Here, the zoning administrator’s act of reclassifying the Sacred Heart House use as a rooming and boarding house was admittedly improper. And, it was declared to be so both by the Board and by the later judgment approving that determination. Further, by appealing that reclassification decision to the Board before the zoning administrator issued any permit to the Salvation Army, the De-nargo group gave notice of its claim that such reclassification was improper.

Hence, the issue presented to us is whether the invalidation of the reclassification of the Sacred Heart House use had the effect of invalidating the later permit issued to the Salvation Army. We conclude that it did.

[633]*633The zoning administrator and the other defendants, relying upon Spiker v. City of Lakewood, 198 Colo. 528, 603 P.2d 130 (1979), argue that, although the classification assigned to the Sacred Heart House use prior to the zoning administrator’s change in classification was that of a homeless shelter, such previous classification was not re-imposed upon that property when the change was declared invalid. Hence, they say, at the time of the Board’s decision upon the Salvation Army’s request for a permit, the Sacred Heart House use was not classified as a homeless shelter (which status would have prevented the issuance of the Salvation Army permit); it was, they argue, not classified for any use at that time.

In contrast, the Denargo group asserts that, upon the Board’s determination that the zoning administrator’s change in classification of the Sacred Heart House use was invalid, that decision necessarily caused its classification to revert to its former status as a homeless shelter, thereby precluding the issuance of another homeless shelter permit within a radius of 4,000 feet. Further, they assert that, pursuant to the terms of the Denver City Charter, their appeal of Sacred Heart House’s reclassification, which was filed before the zoning administrator issued her permit to the Salvation Army, stayed the effect of that reclassification, so that it was never subject to an effective use reclassification.

We agree with the Denargo group.

First, Spiker v. City of Lakewood, supra, has no' relevance to the issue presented to us here. There, an ordinance was adopted changing the authorized use of a parcel of ground, but providing that, unless certain actions were taken by the landowner within a specified period, the land would automatically revert to its former zoned status. No one contested the propriety of the rezoning itself; no issue was presented, therefore, as to what zoning the parcel would have borne had the rezoning been declared invalid.

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DENARGO MARKET NEIGHBORS v. Visser
956 P.2d 630 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1997)

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Bluebook (online)
956 P.2d 630, 1997 Colo. J. C.A.R. 2326, 1997 Colo. App. LEXIS 235, 1997 WL 671528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denargo-market-neighbors-coalition-v-visser-real-estate-investments-coloctapp-1997.