Ford Leasing Development Co. v. Board of County Commissioners

528 P.2d 237, 186 Colo. 418, 1974 Colo. LEXIS 760
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 11, 1974
Docket26445
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 528 P.2d 237 (Ford Leasing Development Co. v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford Leasing Development Co. v. Board of County Commissioners, 528 P.2d 237, 186 Colo. 418, 1974 Colo. LEXIS 760 (Colo. 1974).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DAY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We will refer to plaintiff-appellant as Ford and the Board of County Commissioners of Jefferson County as the Board. The latter denied Ford’s application for rezoning. The district court upheld that decision. This appeal is from that judgment. We affirm.

I.

Ford’s predecessor in title filed an application for rezoning from A-2 (Agricultural Two District) to P-D (Planned Development District) for approximately 23 acres located at the southwest corner of West Hampden Avenue and South Wadsworth Boulevard in Jefferson County. Ford was to develop and occupy the land. The plan was submitted first to the Jefferson County (Jeffco) planning commission. It approved the proposed planned development, subject to 17 restrictive recommendations of which, according to the record, Ford complied with only five. The Board denied the change.

Pursuant to C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4), review was sought in district court. While the matter was still pending, Ford acquired title to the property and was substituted as plaintiff.

A two-pronged challenge to the Board’s action was launched in the district court. In the Rule 106 certiorari *423 proceeding, it was claimed that the Board was estopped to deny the application because Ford had complied with recommendations of the planning commission on which its approval was predicated. As a second string to this bow Ford claimed that the Board was arbitrary, capricious and showed an abuse of discretion. A second claim sought a declaratory judgment that the existing zoning as applied to the property was an unconstitutional confiscation.

Trial was held in two phases. On certiorari the lower court reviewed only the record at the hearing before the Board. The constitutional question was accorded a complete trial de novo. At its conclusion, the district court affirmed the Board and held the zoning ordinance constitutional.

II.

The subject property is zoned A-2 (agricultural). The area at the time of the original zoning was generally undeveloped. Medium and high density residences have since been built, as have restricted commercial businesses.

The most extensive land use in the area is the 300 acre Academy Office Park, a multi-complex commercial use. However, that entire area is protected by extremely strict covenants, voluntarily imposed by the builder, which last until the year 2000. They are designed specifically to preserve an open green space motif. The Jefferson County Comprehensive Future Land Use Plan recommends low density residential and light restricted commercial uses for the area.

The planned development submitted by the Ford application would be a concentrated commercial and medium to high density residential use. An auto dealership would cover about eight acres. It would be buffered from the surrounding community by townhouses, which would cover approximately 13.5 acres. The entire combination development would be artfully landscaped. Ford argued that a heavy commercial use, planned as it is to blend with the area, would not be out of place. The Board came to a different conclusion.

III.

We take up first the question of whether the Board is bound to grant the change. Ford cites Dillon Companies, Inc. *424 v. Boulder, 183 Colo. 117, 515 P.2d 627 (1973), for the proposition that the Board is estopped to deny its application for rezoning. We do not read Dillon as being that broad. In Dillon there were no findings of fact to support the city council’s decision. Dillon also pointed out that a planned development application must meet all standards, procedures and conditions of a planned development ordinance.

In addition to not implementing 12 of the planning commission’s recommendations, Ford did not strictly comply with the Jeffco ordinance. Section 39-B and section 39-C-l state in part that a planned development must be under unified control. The record reveals that Ford would handle the auto dealership and Broker House, which had a contract to purchase the residential site, would develop and sell the townhouses. That is separate, not unified, control.

Moreover, section 39-C-2 states in part that P-D parking, height, setback and area regulations shall be compatible with the surrounding development. The Board made a specific finding that the Ford proposal was “incompatible with the surrounding land uses at the present time.” See Moore v. City of Boulder, 29 Colo. App. 248, 484 P.2d 134 (1971).

Ford argues additionally that the Jeffco ordinance mandates final compliance regulations and contends that the Board having failed to impose any final regulations, there was nothing remaining to satisfy. The resulting conclusion advanced is that Ford has met the county conditions by default and under the Dillon rule became entitled to the rezoning.

Ford’s thesis would require that any planned development proposal must automatically be granted by the Board, leaving to it only the power to issue final regulations. Then — merely by compliance — the plan would pass, regardless of whether the Board wants the design. Such bootstrapping is clearly obnoxious to the essence of planned development zoning. Planned development is not a catch-all. It is not supposed to inject in a neighborhood a use which would otherwise not be allowed. It should not usurp the discretionary function of the Board. Since Ford’s application was denied no final regulations were necessary. This would be meaningless rhetoric, for there was nothing to comply with.

*425 At the conclusion of extensive hearings, Ford requested the Board to inform it of whatever additional requirements and regulations were necessary in order to approve the application. This the Board refused to do. To act otherwise would be patent contract zoning, a concept held illegal in most states as an ultra vires bargaining away of the police power. 1 R. Anderson, American Law of Zoning § § 8.20-1.

Thus, looking at the Jeffco statute as a whole, we cannot say that the rationale of Dillon applies in this case. The Board was not estopped to deny Ford its application for rezoning.

On the other phase of the certiorari review, Ford asserts that the district court erred in upholding the Board’s arbitrary and capricious denial of the requested rezoning.

In order for a court to set aside a decision of an administrative body on certiorari review, there must be no competent evidence to support the decision. Board of County Commissioners v. Simmons, 177 Colo. 347, 494 P.2d 85 (1972); Marker v. Colorado Springs, 138 Colo.

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Bluebook (online)
528 P.2d 237, 186 Colo. 418, 1974 Colo. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-leasing-development-co-v-board-of-county-commissioners-colo-1974.