Essroc Cement Corp. v. Clark County Board of Zoning Appeals and Sierra Club

122 N.E.3d 881
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 18, 2019
DocketCourt of Appeals Case 10A04-1709-PL-2199
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 122 N.E.3d 881 (Essroc Cement Corp. v. Clark County Board of Zoning Appeals and Sierra Club) 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.

Bluebook
Essroc Cement Corp. v. Clark County Board of Zoning Appeals and Sierra Club, 122 N.E.3d 881 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

May, Judge.

[1] Essroc Cement Corporation ("Essroc") operates in Clark County, Indiana, on land zoned M2 for Heavy Industrial Use. To date, Essroc has always used coal to power its concrete production, but in the past decade Essroc began considering firing its concrete kiln with liquid waste derived fuels ("LWDF"). In December 2014, Essroc requested an informal determination from the Clark County Plan Commission ("the Plan Commission") about the permissibility of burning LWDF on land zoned M2. In late January 2015, the executive director of the Plan Commission gave Essroc a private letter indicating the burning of LWDF was permitted in an area zoned M2.

[2] However, seventeen months later, Plan Commission staff issued a second private letter to Essroc that revoked the first private letter and indicated Essroc would need to obtain a variance or re-zone its property to an M3 district if it wished to burn LWDF. Essroc appealed that second private letter to the Clark County Board of Zoning Appeals ("the CCBZA"). The CCBZA held a public hearing and determined Essroc's proposed use of LWDF is prohibited in an area zoned M2. As a result, to burn LWDF, Essroc would need either to rezone to M3, which is a Hazardous Waste Disposal District, or to petition for a use variance.

[3] Essroc petitioned the trial court to review that administrative determination. The trial court affirmed the CCBZA's decision. Essroc filed a motion to correct error, which the trial court granted in part and denied in part. Essroc now appeals to this court, raising numerous procedural and substantive issues 1 that we reorganize and restate as:

I. Does the Clark County Zoning Ordinance ("CCZO") permit the burning of *885 LWDF on land zoned M2 or only on land zoned M3?
II. Can Essroc nevertheless burn LWDF on its land zoned M2 because such burning is permitted as an "accessory use"?
III. Does Plan Commission staff have the authority to revoke a prior staff-issued, non-public, informal zoning determination letter by sending another staff-issued letter?
IV. If Plan Commission staff could revoke the initial staff determination, was Essroc entitled to notice and a public hearing before that revocation?
V. Is the CCBZA equitably estopped from requiring Essroc to rezone because Essroc had spent money in reliance on the Plan Commission's first determination letter?
VI. Should Finding 18, Finding 19, and Conclusion 7 be struck from the trial court's final order because the issue of whether the CCZO is preempted by federal law was not before the trial court?

We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History 2

[4] For over 100 years, Essroc has produced cement at its facility in Clark County, Indiana. To date, Essroc has fired its cement kiln using coal. However, Essroc wishes to begin firing its kiln with LWDF, which are an amalgam made of such liquids as household cleaning products, oils, nail polish, nail polish remover, perfume, paint, and ink. To burn LWDF, Essroc needs a permit from the Indiana Department of Environmental Management ("IDEM"), and to obtain that IDEM permit, Essroc needs a letter confirming it has CCBZA approval for converting from coal to LWDF.

[5] On December 19, 2014, Essroc's legal counsel sent a letter to the Plan Commission asking "for certification of zoning compliance from the Clark County Plan Commission and/or Plan Director":

This firm represents Essroc. Essroc's production facilities at Speed are located on approximately 3500 acres in the unincorporated territory of Clark County with the manufacturing and production of the facility within the M2 (Heavy Industrial) zoning district as shown on the Clark County Zone Map.
To date Essroc has fueled its production facilities primarily with coal. It proposes to begin supplementing its coal usage with alternative fuels. These materials would include solvents, paints, etc. They would be flammable (as required to create heat for the kiln), and would be accordingly designated as "hazardous" due to such flammability. The alternative fuel materials would be delivered by generators to Essroc's Logansport, Indiana, plant for blending. This plant already has a permit to burn alternative fuels, and therefore presently has all of the equipment in place as required to properly handle these materials.
After blending at the Logansport plant, the materials would be transported by truck to the Speed plant. Essroc already has one (1) tank in place that it has used for waste oils in the past. The only capital addition Essroc currently proposes to make would be the addition of a second tank to enable replacement of up to fifty percent (50%) of the coal it now uses. However, Essroc presently anticipates that it will likely achieve replacement of coal in the 25-30% range, but plans to seek IDEM permitting to allow up to the 50% replacement level. The addition *886 of this single tank is obviously a very small addition to Essroc's existing plant. Once the materials arrive at the Speed plant, they will be pumped into the existing and new tanks, and then pumped to the kiln utilizing existing equipment to use as a process fuel in manufacturing clinker, a work-in-process that ultimately becomes cement.
Enclosed are the materials that Essroc has provided to adjoining property owners as part of the environmental permitting process. Please not [sic] the graphic on page 4 illustrating the cement manufacturing process entitled "Cleaner Alternative Fuels Can Replace Coal". [sic] Again, the only change in Essroc's current production activities relates to the Alternative Fuel graphic on the right hand side of this page, as Essroc plans to replace a portion of the coal used in its kiln with such alternative fuels.
Essroc needs to demonstrate to IDEM that, if permitted, its plans will comply with all local zoning regulations. Permitted uses (g) ("concrete mixing", etc.), and (h) ("sand, gravel or aggregate wash production or processing") would appear to expressly permit the continued operation of Essroc's cement production facilities, regardless of whether alternative fuels are utilized as a supplement to coal. Essroc does not in any manner intend to construct or operate any facilities constituting a "landfill, waste transfer facilities, recycling facilities and related operations, or storage processing and recycling of hazardous materials" that would most likely require rezoning to M3 (Hazardous Waste Disposal District).

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Bluebook (online)
122 N.E.3d 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/essroc-cement-corp-v-clark-county-board-of-zoning-appeals-and-sierra-club-indctapp-2019.