Greenbriar Village, L.L.C. v. Mountain Brook, City

345 F.3d 1258, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 19346, 2003 WL 22145871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 18, 2003
Docket02-14294
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 345 F.3d 1258 (Greenbriar Village, L.L.C. v. Mountain Brook, City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenbriar Village, L.L.C. v. Mountain Brook, City, 345 F.3d 1258, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 19346, 2003 WL 22145871 (11th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In this case, a municipality issued a land disturbance permit for a residentially-zoned piece of property. The work to be accomplished under the permit was for the admitted purpose of developing the property commercially, that is, for a purpose inconsistent with the property’s zoning status at that time, and the permit did not contain an explicit expiration date. After years of litigation over the proper scope of the disturbance activity, and, correlatively, years of the property languishing in a terminally disturbed state, the municipality passed a revised ordinance that resulted in the permit’s revocation. The landowner *1260 claimed violations of his due process rights.

The question in this case, essentially, is whether constitutional due process was due. We find that substantive due process concerns are not implicated by the actions of the City in this case, and so affirm the district court’s decision for the City on that claim. We find, however, that the district court erred in recognizing a federally pro-tectable right as to Greenbriar, and, therefore, in holding that the City violated Greenbriar’s procedural due process rights.

I. BACKGROUND

The factual findings of the district court, following a bench trial, are essentially undisputed. The crucial portions of those findings follow. Greenbriar Village LLC (“Greenbriar”) owns a 10-acre piece of property' at the intersection of Green Valley Road and U.S. Highway 280 in the city of Mountain Brook, Alabama (the “City”). This property is zoned for residential use and has been so zoned since Greenbriar purchased the property in 1990.

Over the last decade, Greenbriar has repeatedly contended that the property is not suitable for residential use and has used all available avenues to attempt to convince the City to re-zone the property for commercial activity. In 1992, Greenbr-iar applied for and was denied re-zoning of the property for use as an office development. In 1997, Greenbriar filed a request for re-zoning, again denied, to support a proposed “Greenbriar Village” shopping center, which would include retail stores, a grocery store, and a gas station. Greenbr-iar brought suit to challenge this denial, but lost in the trial court and eventually abandoned appeal because of an inadequate transcript.

On 17 February 1998, Greenbriar applied to the City for a land disturbance permit (the “Permit”), which the City issued on 18 March 1998. The Permit seemed to authorize the clearing of a commercial site. It is uncontested that Greenbriar’s entire purpose for obtaining the Permit was to prepare for the eventuality of the property being re-zoned for commercial use. The Permit itself contained no expiration date, and the applicable ordinances at the time did not provide for automatic expiration. Greenbriar used the Permit to clear the property, remove accumulated garbage and, later, move trees and earth. Under the authority of the Permit, Greenbriar has stockpiled tons of rock and fill material on the property over the last several years. Greenbriar has never proffered a residential purpose for clearing the land, and the activity to date on the land does not seem in any way directed toward that end.

Though the Permit was issued for the clearing of a commercial site, the City’s attorney, upon realizing the disconnect, specifically informed Greenbriar that the Permit did not authorize any use contrary to the current zoning status of the property. The City’s attorney noted that it seemed incongruous for a landowner to apply for a disturbance permit when the purpose to which he wanted to put the property had not yet been approved, but he could find no reason under the zoning scheme to deny a permit for that reason.

In March 1999, Greenbriar applied yet again for re-zoning for commercial use, and this request was denied yet again in October 1999. Greenbriar again challenged this denial in state court. During the pendency of this action, the City ordered Greenbriar to stop work under the Permit, and Greenbriar challenged that order in a mandamus proceeding in state court. The state court found that the Permit authorized the clearing activity underway on Greenbriar’s property and directed the City to rescind the stop-work order immediately. Thus, from 1998 to 2001, *1261 Greenbriar used the Permit to conduct various land improvement projects on the property. It is uncontested that, even after three years, the property was in an unfinished state; no residential use had been advanced through the disturbance work, and no commercial use had been authorized by the City through re-zoning.

In September 2001, and in the context of the above contentiousness, the City passed Ordinance 1485, which is the crux of the alleged constitutional violations in this case. Subsection (k) of Ordinance 1485 provided that all permits issued before 12 July 1999 would expire automatically thirty days after the effective date of the ordinance. This portion of the ordinance allowed the City to start on a clean slate, with the end of fully enacting a more internally consistent permit system. Other portions of Ordinance 1485 amended the municipal code to require that any land disturbance work be done in anticipation of a currently-authorized use and to provide that all new permits would expire if work was suspended or abandoned or, at the outer limit, if two years had passed from issuance. The City admits that its experiences with Greenbriar were part of the impetus towards the passage of Ordinance 1485, and it is apparent that the changes accomplished by that Ordinance would serve to correct the inconsistencies that allowed Greenbriar to obtain a non-expiring land disturbance permit in anticipation of a non-conforming use in 1999. The district court specifically found that Greenbriar’s land disturbance Permit “demonstrated to the City the need for revision of the current ordinances.” Greenbriar Village, L.L.C. v. City of Mountain Brook, 202 F.Supp.2d 1279, 1286 (N.D.Ala.2002). Furthermore, the district court found that “Ordinance 1485 targeted Greenbriar and that the City designed Ordinance 1485 to accomplish what its stop-work order could not do — force Greenbriar to cease work on its property under its existing valid permit.” Id. After passage of the Ordinance, Greenbriar’s Permit was the only permit in Mountain Brook that both expired and could not be renewed under the terms of the new code.

Prior to the passage of Ordinance 1485, notice was sent to all of the contractors who held land disturbance permits, informing them of the upcoming council meeting in which the amendment would be discussed and adopted. 1 For Greenbriar’s Permit, notice was sent to Saiia Construction LLC, the contractor whose name appears on an increased bond for work on the property, filed in November 2002. The name of Saiia Construction appears nowhere on the land disturbance Permit itself. Rather, the only entity identified on the face of the Permit is Greenbriar. The district court concluded, based on evidence entered at trial, that “the City specifically chose not to send notice to Greenbriar of the proposed ordinance by the means customarily used.” Id. at 1287. All preceding notices and correspondence regarding the Greenbriar property had been sent by *1262

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345 F.3d 1258, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 19346, 2003 WL 22145871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenbriar-village-llc-v-mountain-brook-city-ca11-2003.