Hay v. City of Andover

436 N.W.2d 800, 1989 Minn. App. LEXIS 246, 1989 WL 17677
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 7, 1989
DocketC7-88-1213
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 436 N.W.2d 800 (Hay v. City of Andover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hay v. City of Andover, 436 N.W.2d 800, 1989 Minn. App. LEXIS 246, 1989 WL 17677 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID R. LESLIE, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment wherein the trial court denied appellants’, *802 Bruce Hay, et al. (Hay), claims for taking, violation of due process, violation of equal protection and violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The trial court held that appellants’ claim for damages was not ripe because appellants did not exhaust their administrative remedies. The trial court further held that appellants’ claims were barred by laches because the relief sought is now difficult or impossible to achieve. Appellants request this court to reverse and order injunctive relief and compensatory relief, claiming respondent’s, City of Andover (Andover), action was arbitrary, capricious and an unconstitutional denial of municipal sewer service to appellants’ proposed mobile home park development. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

FACTS

For over twenty years, Hay has owned approximately fifty acres of undeveloped land in Andover on the lower southwest comer of Round Lake. On April 17, 1970, Hay applied to the city’s predecessor, Grow Township, for a special use permit to develop a mobile home park. This permit was denied by Grow Township. The Minnesota Supreme Court in Hay v. Township of Grow, 296 Minn. 1, 206 N.W.2d 19 (1973), found that the township’s decision was arbitrary, discriminatory and unconstitutional and ordered that a special use permit be issued.

On August 19, 1974, the township complied with the supreme court’s order and issued a special use permit for the mobile home park. As a condition of the special use permit, Hay was required to pay for all sanitary sewer and water lines within the development. As a further condition, construction of the mobile home park was to commence within two years following the “availability of municipal sanitary sewer service” before the permit would be void. The original date of sewer service availability was to be determined by the township engineer.

Following the issuance of Hay’s special use permit, Andover adopted a comprehensive plan as required by the Metropolitan Council pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 473.858. This plan was adopted by Andover in 1980. In 1980, Hay’s property was placed in the Champlin Anoka Brooklyn Park interceptor (CAB) for which sewer service would not be available in Andover until 1990 through the year 2000, based on the need and development of the area. Most of west Andover was included in this interceptor. The eastern half of Andover was included in the Coon Rapids interceptor which then had sanitary sewer service available. Both of these interceptors and the subject property are included in the Metropolitan Urban Service Area (MUSA) which designates areas where the Metropolitan Council has planned for development and extension of sewer service.

The comprehensive plan of Andover was accepted by the Metropolitan Council after the city met Metropolitan Council’s requirement that there be a reduction in the area which would be connected to the sewer system in the pre-1990 decade. Accordingly, the city had to remove some property included in the Coon Rapids interceptor and place more property in the CAB interceptor area. The city’s comprehensive plan additionally announced a commitment to provide affordable cost housing in Andover.

At the request of Hay, the Andover city council considered connecting the subject property to the Coon Rapids system instead of CAB. The city engineer prepared a report in which he indicated that he did not recommend the change because the property could not be fully served by gravity, would require extra frost protection, would provide no lateral benefit, would cost approximately $100,000 and would require a change in the comprehensive plan.

The engineer’s report was considered at an April 21, 1981 meeting. Hay presented no contrary engineering information. The city denied Hay’s requested change based on the engineering report and for policy reasons. However, a resolution was sent to the Metropolitan Council informing the council of Hay’s request for immediate sewer service. While this request was sent to the Metropolitan Council, the city did not endorse Hay’s development plan.

*803 In response to a letter sent by Hay’s attorney, the Metropolitan Council stated that the subject property could be included within the Coon Rapids interceptor if it was feasible and prudent, and if the city reduced its other sewer acreage to be serviced by the Coon Rapids system. It was the Metropolitan Council’s position to allow the city itself to determine which acreage would be included within the Coon Rapids interceptor; the Metropolitan Council specified only the number of acres which could be included in the interceptor.

Since April 1981, there has been no formal application or petition made by appellants for sewer connection. This issue has not been before the city council since the April 21, 1981 meeting. However, Hay claims that he is still interested in having sewer service extended to his property and has stated this desire to officials of the city.

Over the past several years, the city has extended municipal sewer service to several other parcels of property outside the Coon Rapids interceptor. Currently, sewer pipe extends to within 1500 feet of appellants’ property.

Several properties have been included in the Coon Rapids interceptor which were not originally included in the area. Recently the MUSA was expanded to include a corridor to a school in the northeastern part of the city. The Metropolitan Council agreed to this extension without requiring acreage trading because of the importance of the school to the community. At trial, a Metropolitan Council witness noted that the same sort of community and planning benefits would be considered if the city had requested sewer for appellants’ property. The city has never requested an expansion of the Coon Rapids interceptor to accommodate Hay’s development.

This lawsuit was commenced on March 28, 1986, without prior demand for sewer service or presentation of engineering information to contradict facts presented in 1981. Since 1981, the city’s allocation of current sewer capacity in the Coon Rapids system has been almost entirely utilized.

At trial, Hay’s expert engineer testified that sewer service was, from a technical viewpoint, easily available to the property since it could be serviced by a simple gravity line. Appellants’ economic expert testified that damages Hay had sustained since the denial of the proposal to extend sewer service were approximately $1,328,000. The expert did not account for, nor was any deduction made for, amounts which might have been received from an alternative use of the real estate.

The trial court found that no taking could occur because there were at least four alternative uses for the subject property, and appellants failed to make reasonable use of their property. However, appellants contend that they are not arguing about the taking of the real estate, but they are arguing about the taking of the special use permit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
436 N.W.2d 800, 1989 Minn. App. LEXIS 246, 1989 WL 17677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hay-v-city-of-andover-minnctapp-1989.