Dowd Grain Co. v. County of Sarpy

291 Neb. 620
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 2015
DocketS-14-611
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 291 Neb. 620 (Dowd Grain Co. v. County of Sarpy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dowd Grain Co. v. County of Sarpy, 291 Neb. 620 (Neb. 2015).

Opinion

- 620 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 291 Nebraska R eports DOWD GRAIN CO. v. COUNTY OF SARPY Cite as 291 Neb. 620

Dowd Grain Company, Inc., a Nebraska corporation, appellant, v. County of Sarpy, a corporate body politic, appellee. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed August 14, 2015. No. S-14-611.

1. Constitutional Law: Ordinances. The constitutionality of an ordinance presents a question of law. 2. Judgments: Appeal and Error. An appellate court independently reviews questions of law decided by a lower court. 3. Zoning: Ordinances: Presumptions: Proof. The validity of a zoning ordinance will be presumed in the absence of clear and satisfactory evi- dence to the contrary. 4. Constitutional Law: Zoning: Ordinances: Proof. The burden of dem- onstrating a constitutional defect in a zoning ordinance rests with the challenger. 5. Municipal Corporations: Zoning: Ordinances: Proof. To successfully challenge the validity of a zoning ordinance, the party challenging must prove that the conditions imposed by the city in adopting the zoning ordinance were unreasonable, discriminatory, or arbitrary, and that the regulation bears no relationship to the purpose sought to be accom- plished by the ordinance. 6. Zoning: Legislature. Where the validity of the legislative classification for zoning purposes is fairly debatable, the legislative judgment must be allowed to control. 7. Special Legislation. The focus of the prohibition against special legisla- tion is the prevention of legislation which arbitrarily benefits or grants special favors to a specific class. A legislative act constitutes special legislation if it either (1) creates an arbitrary and unreasonable method of classification or (2) creates a permanently closed class. 8. ____. A special legislation analysis focuses on a legislative body’s purpose in creating a challenged class and asks if there is a substan- tial difference of circumstances to suggest the expediency of diverse legislation. - 621 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 291 Nebraska R eports DOWD GRAIN CO. v. COUNTY OF SARPY Cite as 291 Neb. 620

9. Constitutional Law: Statutes: Special Legislation. When the Legislature confers privileges on a class arbitrarily selected from many who are standing in the same relation to the privileges, without reason- able distinction or substantial difference, then the statute in question has resulted in the kind of improper discrimination prohibited by the Nebraska Constitution. 10. Special Legislation: Public Policy. To be valid, a legislative classifica- tion must rest upon some reason of public policy, some substantial dif- ference in circumstances, which would naturally suggest the justice or expediency of diverse legislation regarding the objects to be classified. 11. Special Legislation. The Legislature has the power to enact special legislation where the subject or matters sought to be remedied could not be properly remedied by a general law and where the Legislature has a reasonable basis for the enactment of the law. 12. ____. Legislative classifications must be real and not illusive; they can- not be based on distinctions without a substantial difference. The dis- tinctive treatment must bear some reasonable relation to the legitimate objectives and purposes of the legislative act. The question is always whether the things or persons classified by the act form by themselves a proper and legitimate class concerning the purpose of the act. 13. Special Legislation: Words and Phrases. A closed class is one that limits application of the law to a present condition, and leaves no room or opportunity for an increase in the numbers of the class by future growth or development. 14. Special Legislation. Generally, a class of property owners in a certain geographic area cannot form a closed class. 15. Statutes: Special Legislation. In determining whether a statute legiti- mately classifies, a court must consider the actual probability that others will come under the act’s operation. If the prospect is merely theoretical, and not probable, the act is special legislation.

Appeal from the District Court for Sarpy County: David K. A rterburn, Judge. Affirmed. Terry J. Grennan, of Cassem, Tierney, Adams, Gotch & Douglas, and Duane J. Dowd for appellant. L. Kenneth Polikov, Sarpy County Attorney, and Michael A. Smith for appellee. Heavican, C.J., Connolly, Stephan, Miller-Lerman, and Cassel, JJ. - 622 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 291 Nebraska R eports DOWD GRAIN CO. v. COUNTY OF SARPY Cite as 291 Neb. 620

Cassel, J. I. INTRODUCTION The County of Sarpy revised an overlay zoning ordinance to exempt properties platted before the effective date of the original ordinance. An owner of nonexempt property sought a judgment declaring the exemption unconstitutional as special legislation. The owner now appeals from a judgment for the county. Because the exemption did not create a closed class and its application was not arbitrary or unreasonable, we affirm the judgment.

II. BACKGROUND 1. M arch 9, 2004, Ordinance On March 9, 2004, the Sarpy County Board of Commissioners supplemented the Sarpy County zoning ordinances by adopting an overlay district zoning ordinance (overlay ordinance). In effect, the overlay ordinance imposed additional regulations on land along a specified road corridor. These regulations included design guidelines. The original overlay ordinance applied only to future devel- opments. It stated that “[t]he design guidelines are applicable for new development proposals within the area of application including plats, zoning changes or site plan review.” The Nebraska Court of Appeals considered a challenge to the applicability of the original overlay ordinance.1 The court held that building permits constituted “‘new develop- ment proposals’”2 under the plain language of the ordinance. The court further reasoned that an administrative replat and a site development plan filed after March 9, 2004, were new development proposals to which the design guidelines applied.

1 See Dowd Grain Co. v. County of Sarpy Bd. of Adj., No. A-06-681, 2008 WL 2511150 (Neb. App. June 24, 2008) (selected for posting to court Web site). 2 Id. at *4. - 623 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 291 Nebraska R eports DOWD GRAIN CO. v. COUNTY OF SARPY Cite as 291 Neb. 620

2. 2007 R evision In May 2007, the Sarpy County Board of Commissioners adopted a resolution amending the overlay ordinance. The revised ordinance contained a subsection designated “33.3 Project Application and Exceptions” (exemption), which stated that the overlay ordinance applied, in part, to the following: 33.3.1 Any new development requiring a building permit built on land within the boundaries of the HC Highway Corridor Overlay District after the effective date of this Ordinance, except any land that was platted prior to March 9, 2004; provided however, that land within the boundaries of the HC Highway Corridor Overlay District that was zoned other than agricultural prior to March 9, 2004[,] that was part of a Phased Development shall also be excepted. (a) Replats, lot line adjustments, and lot consolidations of such platted properties shall remain excepted. (b) Phased Developments shall m[e]an property that was, at a minimum, preliminary platted and at least a part of the property within the preliminary plat was final platted. Thus, under the exemption, any land platted prior to March 9, 2004, did not have to comply with the design guidelines con- tained in the overlay ordinance. 3. Pleadings Dowd Grain Company, Inc. (Dowd Grain), brought a declar- atory judgment action against the county, claiming that the exemption was unconstitutional. Dowd Grain alleged that it owned real property subject to the overlay ordinance but not qualifying for the exemption. It claimed that its property was similarly situated to the exempted property.

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Bluebook (online)
291 Neb. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowd-grain-co-v-county-of-sarpy-neb-2015.