Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center, Inc. v. Oneida County Board of Adjustment

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedNovember 19, 2019
Docket2018AP000940
StatusUnpublished

This text of Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center, Inc. v. Oneida County Board of Adjustment (Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center, Inc. v. Oneida County Board of Adjustment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center, Inc. v. Oneida County Board of Adjustment, (Wis. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. November 19, 2019 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2018AP940 Cir. Ct. No. 2013CV345

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT III

EAGLE COVE CAMP & CONFERENCE CENTER, INC., A WISCONSIN NON-STOCK CORPORATION, ARTHUR G. JAROS, JR., AS CO-TRUSTEE OF THE ARTHUR G. JAROS, SR. AND DAWN L. JAROS CHARITABLE TRUST, AND AS TRUSTEE OF THE ARTHUR G. JAROS, SR. DECLARATION OF TRUST, AND AS TRUSTEE OF THE DAWN L. JAROS DECLARATION OF TRUST, WESLEY A. JAROS, AS CO-TRUSTEE OF THE ARTHUR G. JAROS, SR. AND DAWN L. JAROS CHARITABLE TRUST AND RANDALL S. JAROS, AS CO-TRUSTEE OF THE ARTHUR G. JAROS, SR. AND DAWN L. JAROS CHARITABLE TRUST,

PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS-CROSS-RESPONDENTS,

V.

COUNTY OF ONEIDA,

DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT,

TOWN OF WOODBORO,

DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT-CROSS-APPELLANT,

ONEIDA COUNTY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT,

DEFENDANT. No. 2018AP940

APPEAL and CROSS-APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Oneida County: MICHAEL H. BLOOM, Judge. Affirmed in part; reversed in part and cause remanded with directions.

Before Stark, P.J., Hruz and Seidl, JJ.

¶1 HRUZ, J. Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center, Inc., and Arthur, Wesley, and Randall Jaros, as trustees of various family trusts (collectively, “Eagle Cove”), appeal an order dismissing their claims asserting various violations of their rights under the Wisconsin Constitution. These violations allegedly stem from Oneida County’s and the Oneida County Board of Adjustment’s refusal years ago to rezone certain real property on Squash Lake or to grant a conditional use permit on that property so that Eagle Cove could develop a year-round Bible camp.

¶2 Eagle Cove previously litigated numerous claims relating to these denials in federal court, including a claim for a violation of Eagle Cove’s religious liberties under article I, section 18 of the Wisconsin Constitution. The federal district court, exercising both federal question and supplemental jurisdiction, dismissed all of Eagle Cove’s civil claims on their merits, including its claim under the Wisconsin Constitution. The court declined, however, to take supplemental jurisdiction of a certiorari claim Eagle Cove had advanced against the board of adjustment, preferring to have that claim adjudicated in state court given the limited scope of certiorari review.

¶3 Eagle Cove subsequently commenced the present action, seeking not only certiorari review but also advancing a variety of civil claims under the Wisconsin Constitution. The circuit court dismissed the non-certiorari claims based upon its conclusion that claim preclusion applied, insofar as Eagle Cove

2 No. 2018AP940

brought or could have brought the civil claims as part of its federal action. Eagle Cove appeals this determination and the denial of its motion for reconsideration, in which it asserted that claim preclusion should not apply because of an intervening change in the case law governing one of its federal law claims.

¶4 We conclude the circuit court properly dismissed Eagle Cove’s non-certiorari claims and denied its motion for reconsideration. The parties in the federal action were the same as in this action, the federal litigation resulted in a judgment on the merits, and the claims in the two actions all arise out of the same transaction. Accordingly, Eagle Cove was required to bring all of its claims in that action. Further proceedings in state court are limited to Eagle Cove’s certiorari claim, which the district court dismissed without prejudice.

¶5 The Town of Woodboro cross-appeals, asserting Eagle Cove’s commencement and continuation of the state court action against it was frivolous. Applying WIS. STAT. § 895.044 (2017-18),1 we agree that Eagle Cove’s action against the Town was frivolous. Because Eagle Cove did not withdraw or correct the frivolous filings after being served with a motion for sanctions, we conclude the circuit court was required to award the Town damages consisting of the actual costs it incurred as a result of the frivolous action. We affirm the circuit court’s decision in all other respects, but we reverse on the issue of sanctions and remand the matter to the circuit court for a determination of damages.

1 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2017-18 version unless otherwise noted.

3 No. 2018AP940

BACKGROUND

¶6 The procedural history underlying this appeal is long, but an understanding of that history is necessary to our analysis of the arguments on appeal. In particular, that history directly informs our application of principles of claim preclusion.

¶7 The Jaros family has long owned real property on Squash Lake within the jurisdictions of the Town of Woodboro and Oneida County. 2 Eagle Cove desires to use that land to operate a year-round Bible camp that will serve, among others, youth with medical disabilities. The proposed camp includes a chapel, classrooms, boarding accommodations, food service facilities including a commercial kitchen and dining hall, and recreational amenities like a soccer field. According to Eagle Cove, the “majority of the Bible Camp’s activity will involve evangelism, worship, prayer, meditation, devotional Scripture reading, discipleship and role-modeling and Christian educational instruction.”

¶8 Under Oneida County’s zoning ordinance, a portion of the subject property is zoned as residential and farming (District 4) and the remainder is zoned as single-family residential (District 2). The Town has accepted and approved the County’s zoning ordinance as its own. It is undisputed that the zoning ordinance does not explicitly refer to a “Bible camp” or “religious camp” as an authorized use in these or any other districts.

2 The subject property consists of approximately 34 acres containing between 550 and 600 feet of shoreline. Two of the trusts involved in this litigation own an additional 24 acres of undeveloped land directly to the north of the subject property. This additional land is also intended to be used for the benefit of the proposed Bible camp.

4 No. 2018AP940

¶9 In 2005, Oneida County staff informed Arthur Jaros that recreational camps, religious or otherwise, are not allowable uses in areas zoned District 2 or District 4. Year-round recreational camps are permitted in Oneida County only on land that is either unzoned or zoned recreational (District 5) or general use (District 10). It is undisputed that none of those zoning designations exist within the Town.

¶10 Eagle Cove then submitted a petition to have the subject property rezoned as District 5. The Town’s plan commission and the Town board held proceedings on the petition throughout the first half of 2006 and made a formal recommendation that Oneida County deny the petition. The County’s zoning and planning committee, too, recommended that the petition be denied, and the Oneida County Board of Supervisors accepted the recommendations and denied the petition in August 2006.

¶11 Eagle Cove asserts that following the rezoning petition denial, it expended approximately $200,000 to prepare an application for a conditional use permit (CUP) that would allow for the use of the subject property as a Bible camp within the District 2 and District 4 classifications.3 Eagle Cove filed an original application in 2006 and an amended application in 2008, and the application was deemed complete in March 2009.

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Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center, Inc. v. Oneida County Board of Adjustment, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-cove-camp-conference-center-inc-v-oneida-county-board-of-wisctapp-2019.