ELEVATION OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, LLC v. CITY OF PIGEON FORGE, TENNESSEE

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 30, 2025
DocketE2024-01258-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of ELEVATION OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, LLC v. CITY OF PIGEON FORGE, TENNESSEE (ELEVATION OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, LLC v. CITY OF PIGEON FORGE, TENNESSEE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ELEVATION OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, LLC v. CITY OF PIGEON FORGE, TENNESSEE, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

05/30/2025 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE February 18, 2025 Session

ELEVATION OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, LLC v. CITY OF PIGEON FORGE, TENNESSEE

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Sevier County No. 23-11-252 James H. Ripley, Chancellor

No. E2024-01258-COA-R3-CV

The plaintiff, Elevation Outdoor Advertising, LLC (“Elevation”), submitted six applications for billboard sign permits to the defendant, the City of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee (“the City”), and all six were denied by the City’s Planning Commission. In this action, Elevation sought a judgment (1) declaring the City’s former sign regulation ordinance and temporary moratorium on sign permits void and unenforceable, (2) declaring the City’s new sign regulation ordinance inapplicable, and (3) compelling the City by injunction or writ of mandamus to issue permits for Elevation’s proposed signs. Upon the City’s motion to dismiss, the trial court dismissed Elevation’s complaint with prejudice. The trial court determined that the proper relief for Elevation would have been via common law certiorari review, for which Elevation had not met the procedural requirements of timeliness and filing under oath. Elevation has appealed. Upon careful review, we determine that Elevation’s complaint properly stated a claim for declaratory judgment rather than writ of certiorari. We therefore reverse the trial court’s dismissal of Elevation’s complaint and remand for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed; Case Remanded

THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and KRISTI M. DAVIS, J., joined.

Michael R. Franz, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Elevation Outdoor Advertising, LLC.

John T. Batson and Brian R. Bibb, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, City of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

On November 6, 2023, Elevation filed its complaint in the Sevier County Chancery Court (“trial court”), seeking “injunctive and declaratory relief,” as well as a writ of mandamus. Elevation had submitted four applications for billboard sign permits to the City on March 11, 2021, and had then supplemented those applications and added two more on March 15, 2021. On May 4, 2021, Elevation received six letters from the City’s Community Development Director notifying Elevation that the City’s Planning Commission (“the Planning Commission”) had denied all six applications. Elevation alleged in its complaint that the denials were improperly based on an ordinance containing a new set of sign regulations that had not been in effect when the applications were filed. When Elevation submitted its applications, a temporary ordinance had been in effect that proclaimed a moratorium on the issuance of new sign permits until a new ordinance could be enacted or sixty days had passed, whichever occurred first. In its complaint, Elevation specifically challenged the validity of the moratorium ordinance, claiming that it had been enacted in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated §§ 13-7-201, et seq. Elevation stated that it did not attempt to follow the administrative procedure of appealing its application denials to the City’s Board of Zoning Appeals (“the Zoning Board”) because the Zoning Board members were the same individuals as those serving on the Planning Commission. Elevation averred that an appeal to the Zoning Board would have been futile.

This case involves four city ordinances. The first is Section 14-405 (“Outdoor Billboards”) within Chapter 4 (“Outdoor Advertising Signs”) of Title 14 (“Zoning and Land Use Control”) of the City’s Municipal Code. The parties refer to Section 14-405, which was in effect in early 2021, as “the Billboard Code.” Elevation noted in its complaint that the same sign regulations were also located in the City’s Zoning Ordinance, which is the second ordinance at issue and is referred to by the parties as the “Former Sign Regulations.” Elevation averred that it had prepared its sign permit applications with the requirements of the Billboard Code and Former Sign Regulations in mind.

In 2017, a plaintiff had challenged the constitutionality of the Billboard Code in an unrelated lawsuit brought before the same trial court. See Reagan v. City of Pigeon Forge, Sevier Cnty. Chancery Ct. No. 17-4-115.1 On February 23, 2021, the trial court entered an order granting summary judgment in favor of the Reagan plaintiff upon finding the Billboard Code to be invalid because it had not been submitted to the Planning Commission prior to its enactment. The court determined that the Billboard Code was “clearly tantamount to a zoning ordinance” and therefore should have been submitted to and 1 Chancellor Telford E. Forgety, Jr., presided over the Reagan matter.

2 approved by the Planning Commission before going into effect. The court thereby found that the Billboard Code violated Tennessee Code Annotated §§ 13-7-201, et seq. See Cherokee Country Club, Inc. v. City of Knoxville, 152 S.W.3d 466, 471 (Tenn. 2004) (“[T]here is no doubt that the statutes reflect the legislative intent that all zoning plans and zoning amendments must be scrutinized by municipal planning commissions and the public prior to their enactment.”).2

Following the decision in Reagan, the City enacted the third ordinance at issue here, Ordinance No. 1105, imposing a temporary moratorium on the issuance of any new sign permits (“the Moratorium Ordinance”). The Moratorium Ordinance became effective upon its second reading before the City’s Board of Commissioners (“the City Commission”) on March 8, 2021, three days before Elevation had submitted the first four of its sign permit applications. Section 1 of the Moratorium Ordinance provided:

A moratorium upon the issuance of permits for new sign applications in the City of Pigeon Forge, in order to allow for the City to conduct a comprehensive study on sign management, shall be in effect for a period of sixty (60) days, from March 8, 2021 to May 7, 2021, unless the moratorium is terminated at an earlier time by the City adopting a new ordinance addressing how signs shall be regulated within the City.

In the instant complaint, Elevation asserted that the City had violated the procedural requirements of Tennessee Code Annotated §§ 13-7-201, et seq., by failing to (1) submit the Moratorium Ordinance to the City’s Planning Commission (“the Planning Commission”) for review, (2) conduct a public hearing, or (3) properly publish notice of the ordinance.

The City enacted the fourth ordinance involved here, Ordinance No. 1107, when it lifted the Moratorium Ordinance and passed a new sign ordinance (“the New Sign Regulations”). The New Sign Regulations were recommended for passage by the Planning Commission on March 2, 2021; passed on first reading before the City Commission on March 8, 2021; and passed on second and final reading before the City Commission on April 12, 2021. On appeal, the City maintains that the only portion of the New Sign Regulations affected by the Reagan decision was City Ordinance § 14-405, which now 2 Citing Thomas v. Bright, 937 F.3d 721 (6th Cir. 2019), the trial court in Reagan also found that the Billboard Code violated constitutional free speech rights because it “clearly differentiate[d] between on premises and off premises signs, and the differentiation [was] based on the content of the signs[.]” Thomas was subsequently abrogated by the United States Supreme Court. See City of Austin, Tex., v. Reagan Nat’l Adver.

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ELEVATION OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, LLC v. CITY OF PIGEON FORGE, TENNESSEE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elevation-outdoor-advertising-llc-v-city-of-pigeon-forge-tennessee-tennctapp-2025.