Farmers for Fairness v. Kent County

940 A.2d 947, 2008 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18, 2008 WL 341307
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 5, 2008
DocketC.A. 2429-VCS
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 940 A.2d 947 (Farmers for Fairness v. Kent County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers for Fairness v. Kent County, 940 A.2d 947, 2008 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18, 2008 WL 341307 (Del. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

I. Introduction

In this case, the plaintiffs, a collection of organizations and individuals interested in protecting their ability to develop land in Kent County, are suing the defendants, Kent County, its Levy Court, and the Levy Court’s members (whom I will refer to collectively as “Kent County”), in an attempt to invalidate the “Bulk Utilities Ordinance.” The plaintiffs’ primary concern about the Bulk Utilities Ordinance is that it, if validly adopted, would limit the density of development on parcels of land outside Kent County’s designated “Growth Zone” by requiring, among other things, conditional use approval for community wastewater systems and that community wastewater systems serve entire community sewer basins rather than just individual subdivisions. But the present means by which they seek to achieve the invalidation of the Ordinance is to claim that the Ordinance, as finally adopted with amendments, had a title that did not fairly describe the subject matter that the Ordinance addressed. That problem, the *950 plaintiffs said, resulted in a violation of 9 Del. C. § 4110, the Delaware Code section addressing the procedures Kent County must use to adopt legislation. Relatedly, the plaintiffs argue that the Ordinance, as ultimately enacted, amended Kent County’s Zoning Code. In 9 Del. C. § 4911, the General Assembly sets forth additional procedural requirements that Kent County must use in amending its Zoning Code, requirements that were not met in the process used to adopt the Bulk Utilities Ordinance.

In this decision, I conclude that the title of the Bulk Utilities Ordinance satisfied the requirement in § 4110 that the title of a bill fairly identify the subject matter it addressed. Although the title contained some linguistic infelicity, the title clearly led any reasonable reader to understand that the bill would amend the pre-existing sections of the Kent County Code that regulated the type of wastewater systems that could be placed on land and where different types of such systems could be used. Moreover, the County gave notice of the subject matter of the bill to citizens in advance of key public hearings on the bill, notice that included the bill’s synopsis, a synopsis that provided clear notice that the bill, if enacted, would put into place important restrictions on the use of certain types of wastewater systems outside of the Growth Zone. That notice was clearly effective, as it is undisputed that affected landowners, including several of the plaintiffs, showed up at hearings to oppose the bill and suggest narrowing amendments. Therefore, I reject the plaintiffs’ attempt to invalidate the Bulk Utilities Ordinance on the ground that Kent County violated § 4110.

By contrast, I find that the Bulk Utilities Ordinance amended Kent County’s Zoning Code. Section § 4911 of Title 9 contains clear requirements for the procedures that must be used when Kent County amends its Zoning Code. Kent County did not follow those procedures. As a result, the portion of the Ordinance amending the Zoning Code is invalid and stricken. Because of the Ordinance’s sev-erability provision, I do not invalidate the entire Ordinance but only the portion of the Ordinance that amended the Zoning Code.

II. Factual Background

A. The Title Of The Bulk Utilities Ordinance

The Bulk Utilities Ordinance, which was designated Ordinance LC-05-20 at that time, was introduced by Kent County Levy Court Commissioner P. Brooks Banta on December 20, 2005. 1 The Bulk Utilities Ordinance was later enacted by the Kent County Levy Court on July 18, 2006 as Ordinance 06-24. 2 Despite the change in ordinance number, the title of the Bulk Utilities Ordinance remained the same throughout the entire process. That title states: “An Ordinance to amend Kent County Code, Vol. II, Chapter 187, Subdivision and Land Development, § 187-5. Definitions, to revise the definition of ‘Sanitary Sewage Disposal, Community’ and to add a definition for ‘Sanitary Sewage Disposal with Spray Irrigation ’, and § 187-53 Minimum Requirements.” 3 The portion of that title at issue in this case is “§ 187-53 Minimum Requirements.” 4 Because the title was infelicitously drafted, it is not perfectly clear which verb applies to *951 “ § 187-53 Minimum Requirements.” The plaintiffs, however, agree that when read in the context of the whole title that portion of the title indicates that the Ordinance includes amendments to § 187-53 Minimum Requirements. 5

The notice that Kent County published in advance of both the public hearing before the Regional Planning Commission on January 26, 2006 and the public hearing before the Levy Court on April 11, 2006 contained the title of the Ordinance and the synopsis at the end of the Ordinance. That synopsis plainly stated:

This Ordinance would establish siting and bulk standard requirements for utility infrastructure to be established within new residential developments in Kent County. This Ordinance would also establish an area outside of, and adjoining, the growth zone within which development could be permitted at a density of one (1) dwelling unit per acre with community wastewater treatment systems. This Ordinance would also have the effect of eliminating rapid infiltration wastewater treatment systems from the list of community wastewater system options within residential subdivisions. 6

B. The Pre-Existing § 187-53 Minimum Requirements

Because the title of the Bulk Utilities Ordinance references § 187-53, the scope of pre-existing § 187-53 plays an important role in understanding the title. Section 187-53 sets the “minimum requirements for the installation of improvements in subdivisions.” 7 Section 187-53 addresses a bevy of improvements, including things such as streets, water supply facilities, underground utilities, and sanitary sewage facilities. I have no difficulty in concluding, as a factual matter, that any interested citizen who saw the notices of the public hearings on the Bulk Utilities Ordinance was on notice that Kent County was planning to amend § 187-53 in a manner that would affect sanitary sewage disposal. That the Ordinance focused on sewage disposal was clear from the title’s references to sewage disposal definitions and the additional information in the notices describing its effect on community wastewater systems.

The subsection of pre-existing § 187-53 that dealt with sanitary sewage facilities contained detailed requirements for waste-water disposal. Among those requirements was that community on-site sewage treatment and disposal systems had to comply with all applicable requirements of the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (“DNREC”). 8

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
940 A.2d 947, 2008 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18, 2008 WL 341307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-for-fairness-v-kent-county-delch-2008.