Dosmann v. AREA PLAN COM'N OF ST. JOSEPH COUNTY
This text of 312 N.E.2d 880 (Dosmann v. AREA PLAN COM'N OF ST. JOSEPH COUNTY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Joseph B. DOSMANN et al., Defendants-Appellants,
v.
AREA PLAN COMMISSION OF ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, Indiana, Defendant-Appellee, Midwest Turnkey Builders, Inc., Plaintiff-Appellee.
Court of Appeals of Indiana, Third District.
*881 F. Gerard Feeney, James E. Burke, Feeney & Stratigos, South Bend, for appellant.
Robert L. Miller, South Bend, for appellee Midwest Turnkey Builders, Inc.
David B. Weisman, South Bend, for appellee Area Plan Commission.
*882 HOFFMAN, Chief Judge.
The instant appeal arises from a declaratory judgment action brought by plaintiff-appellee Midwest Turnkey Builders, Inc. (Builder). Defendants-appellants Joseph B. Dosmann and others (Intervenors), property owners in an area adjacent to a proposed subdivison plat, remonstrated against the plat before the defendant-appellee Area Plan Commission of St. Joseph County (Commission), and sought and were granted the right to intervene in the declaratory judgment action to represent their interests in the matter.
All the parties were represented when the Commission considered the plat at two of its public hearings. During the second hearing, after consideration of the Builder's application for preliminary approval of the plat and the Intervenors' objections thereto, the Commission denied approval of the plat. The reasons given by the Commission for this denial were: that the plat would be detrimental to the value of surrounding property; that it would introduce additional public and low-rent housing into an area which already contained an adequate amount of such housing; and that the plat contained minor deviations from the technical requirements of the City of South Bend Subdivision Ordinance.
The Builder sought a judicial review of the first reason given by the Commission. In the pleading stage of that action, the Builder and the Commission moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment and this appeal followed.
The Intervenors have contended both in the trial court and on appeal that a declaratory judgment action was an improper procedure by which to seek appellate review of a decision of the Commission and, thus, the trial court was without jurisdiction to hear the case.
This contention is founded upon a construction of IC 1971, XX-X-X-XX, Ind. Ann. Stat. § 53-1060 and IC 1971, XX-X-X-XX, Ind. Ann. Stat. § 53-1061 (Burns 1964), which are part of the 1957 Indiana Area Planning Act (the 1957 Act), IC 1971, 18-7-4-1 et seq., Ind. Ann. Stat. § 53-1001 et seq. (Burns 1964).
IC 1971, XX-X-X-XX, supra, provides as follows:
"Adoption of ordinance Approval of plats and replats Certified copy of ordinance filed with county recorder Seal of commission Certificate. After an ordinance containing provisions for subdivision control and the approval of plats and replats has been adopted and a certified copy of the ordinance has been filed with the county recorder, the filing and recording of a plat shall be without legal effect unless it bears the seal of the commission, the approval of its officers, and has attached thereto a certificate that proper public notice of the hearing was published." (Emphasis supplied.)
"Plats and replats Approval Exclusive control of commission. After an ordinance containing provisions for subdivision control and the approval of plats and replats has been adopted and a certified copy of the ordinance filed with the county recorder, the commission shall have exclusive control over the approval of plats and replats.
"All other statutes relating to the subdivision of land and plats shall be of no force and effect in counties qualifying under this act [§§ 53-1001-53-1098]". (Emphasis supplied.)
The Intervenors assert that under these sections of the 1957 Act the filing of a copy of a county's subdivision control ordinance is a condition precedent to the Act having any effect within that county. Since the filing was not accomplished prior to the commencement of the case at bar, the Intervenors' reason, the 1957 Act was of no effect in St. Joseph County at that time and any appeal from the Commission's *883 action should have been brought by certiorari, as provided by IC 1971, 18-7-5-1 to XX-X-X-XX, Ind. Ann. Stat. § 53-701 to § 53-795 (Burns 1964 and Burns Cum.Supp. 1973), (the 1947 Act).
As the trial court readily recognized, this line of reasoning is somewhat problematical. This becomes apparent upon consideration of the purpose of the recordation requirements of IC 1971, XX-X-X-XX and XX-X-X-XX, supra, which are the crux of the Intervenors' argument.
As stated in Haverell Distributors v. Haverell Mfg. Corp. (1944), 115 Ind. App. 501, 58 N.E.2d 372 (transfer denied), the purpose of recordation or filing is to give notice and to prevent fraud. The active participation of the Intervenors in the proceedings before the Commission and their citation to the City of South Bend Subdivision Ordinance in those proceedings indicate that they have had an intimate actual knowledge of its provisions from the outset of this controversy. Furthermore, they allege no fraud in the application of such ordinance by the Commission or the trial court. Thus, to require recordation prior to the commencement of the proceeding of the Commission in order to render this ordinance effective as between these parties would not serve the purpose the Legislature intended by such recordation requirements.
The record thus discloses that, as between the parties to the instant case, there had been a substantial compliance with the filing requirements of IC 1971, XX-X-X-XX and XX-X-X-XX, supra, when the Commission considered the plat. Since no assertion has been made, nor does it appear from the record that the City of South Bend Subdivision Ordinance was improperly adopted, these sections, and all of the 1957 Act, must be deemed to have been fully in effect as to the parties to the instant case.
IC 1971, XX-X-X-XX, supra, provides, in part, that "[a]ll other statutes relating to the subdivision of land and plats shall be of no force and effect in counties qualifying under this act." The trial court correctly concluded that because there was compliance with, and thus qualification under the comprehensive scheme of the 1957 Act, the appeal procedures of the 1947 Act can be of no effect in the case at bar.
Our determination that the Legislature intended this result is strengthened by an examination of the exact wording of these two Acts. The 1947 Act provides that "[a] decision of the commission may be reviewed by certiorari * * *." See: IC 1971, XX-X-X-XX, Ind. Ann. Stat. § 53-755 (Burns 1964). The word "commission" as used in this provision is defined in the 1947 Act (IC 1971, 18-7-5-3, Ind. Ann. Stat. § 53-703 (Burns 1964)) as "a city plan commission or a county plan commission; * * *." However, the 1957 Act (IC 1971, 18-7-4-2, Ind. Ann. Stat. § 53-1002 (Burns 1964)), supra, defines "commission" as "an area plan commission." Thus, the "commissions" created by the 1957 Act were clearly not intended by the Legislature to be included under the appellate provisions of the 1947 Act.
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