Huttinga v. Pringle

668 P.2d 1068, 205 Mont. 482, 1983 Mont. LEXIS 793
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1983
Docket82-299
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 668 P.2d 1068 (Huttinga v. Pringle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huttinga v. Pringle, 668 P.2d 1068, 205 Mont. 482, 1983 Mont. LEXIS 793 (Mo. 1983).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE WEBER

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendants appeal from a judgment of the Eighteenth Judicial District Court, Gallatin County, granting a writ of mandamus to the plaintiffs directing Montana Department of Health and Environmental Sciences (DHES) to certify property described in a deed as not subject to sanitary restrictions, and directing the Clerk and Recorder of Gallatin County to record the deed. We reverse the judgment.

Following are the dispositive issues:

1. Did the Clerk and Recorder fail to perform a clear legal duty in refusing to file plaintiffs’ certificate of survey and to record their warranty deed?

2. Did the Gallatin County Health Department (GCHD) act as an agent of the DHES when it denied a county subsurface sewage disposal system permit to plaintiffs?

3. Did the DHES violate a clear legal duty to grant plaintiffs approval of their subdivision?

The key facts are contained in the uncontested findings of fact which include the following: In 1971 the plaintiffs [485]*485planned to purchase five acres of land from J. Huttinga, father of Richard, for the purpose of erecting a home for the plaintiffs. Notwithstanding that the five acres was not a subdivision under the laws of Montana in 1971, plaintiffs filed an application for an individual sewage disposal installation permit with the GCHD. An inspection of the ground was made by Emery Nelson, Gallatin County Sanitarian. After the inspection, plaintiffs were never notified by the GCHD that the septic tank and sewage disposal system did not comply with the requirements of state law or the regulations of the County or the State Board of Health, predecessor to DHES. The District Court further found that at the time Emery Nelson inspected the installation, it was in the process of being constructed. At no time in the following six years did anyone notify plaintiffs that the installation would not be approved.

The District Court next found that in 1978 the plaintiffs applied to the County Clerk and Recorder for the recording of a deed, which was refused without the sanitary restrictions being either approved or removed. Plaintiffs then consulted with GCHD and discovered that the department contended the system was not approved, even though it had been installed and used for seven years. Tests made in 1979 showed no evidence of contamination of the water in the well.

While not included in the District Court finding of facts, the uncontested evidence is that the Gallatin County Sanitarian assisted the plaintiffs with the design and specifications for the sewage system in 1971, and the plaintiffs installed the system in accordance with those plans. Although Sanitarian Nelson testified at trial that the system could not be approved because there was ground water in the drainfield trenches in 1971, and that the drainfield therefore violated the County regulations requiring a 2-foot separation between the bottom of the trench and the highest water table, the District Court specifically found that any such disapproval was not communicated to the plaintiffs. [486]*486Mr. Huttinga, Richard’s father, testified that one of the County sanitarians had “said it was ok to go ahead and fill it.” The trench was then covered. Plaintiffs occupied the trailer house and used the completed septic system for over seven years.

After the County Clerk and Recorder refused to record the deed in 1978, plaintiff Richard Huttinga and Sanitarian Nelson obtained water samples from above and below the septic system to test whether the system was polluting the water. Nelson testified he believed the State might approve an existing system “if it could be shown that water, the water table, was not being degraded.” Nelson subsequently returned the $4.00 testing fee to the plaintiffs, explaining that the DHES would not pass the system for State subdivision review as it lacked County approval. In addition, without County approval, the DHES would not conduct subdivision review and would not issue its own certificate of approval indicating there were no sanitary restrictions.

In May of 1979, plaintiffs attempted to file the certificate of survey and to record the deed of the 5.002 acres. The Gallatin County Clerk and Recorder refused to file the same without the DHES certificate stating there were no sanitary restrictions. Without a filed survey, the deed itself could not be recorded by the County.

In July of 1979, a tapwater sample was taken by the plaintiffs, tested by DHES, and found not to be contaminated. DHES informed the plaintiffs that “these results cannot be relied upon as indicating the safety of the water at all times unless the source is properly located and maintained.” In August of 1979, GCHD notified plaintiffs that unless they complied with current, more stringent requirements for subsurface sewage disposal systems, GCHD would not approve the plaintiffs’ system.

On January 31, 1980, plaintiffs petitioned the District Court for a writ of mandamus ordering the Clerk and Recorder to file the certificate of survey and record the deed. Following a hearing, the District Court joined DHES as a [487]*487party defendant and set a new hearing date. Prior to that hearing, the parties stipulated that no additional testimony would be given and the transcript from the first hearing would suffice.

On April 5, 1982, the District Court entered judgment for the plaintiffs and issued a writ of mandamus ordering the defendants to certify that the property was subject to no sanitary restrictions and requiring the Clerk and Recorder to record the deed. By subsequent order, the Court awarded attorneys’ fees of $1,539.13 to be borne equally by DHES and Gallatin County. Defendants appeal.

During the pendency of this action, Gary W. Pringle succeeded Lucille Bridges as Clerk and Recorder of Gallatin County. Because the suit is against the Clerk and Recorder in his or her official capacity, Pringle has been substituted for Bridges as a party defendant pursuant to Rule 37(c)(1), M.R.App.Civ.P.

Based upon the previously described findings of fact, which are not contested by the defendants, the District Court concluded that it was incumbent upon the Gallatin County Health Department to advise the plaintiffs of any disapproval, and that the failure to notify the plaintiffs for a period of six years after installation of the drainfield constituted grounds for estoppel under the law. While the parties agree that Gallatin County is estopped from disapproving the system, the defendants argue that it is not appropriate to estop either the Clerk and Recorder,, who only has a duty to file and record, or the DHES, which has not actually participated because no application has been made to it.

The issue raised by the Clerk and Recorder is whether the Clerk and Recorder failed to perform a clear legal duty by refusing to file the certificate of survey and to record the deed of the plaintiffs. Our conclusion is determined by the statutes. Sections 76-3-101 through 76-3-614, MCA, constitute the chapter entitled “Montana Subdivision and Platting Act.” This chapter controls the survey re[488]*488quired in the present case. Under section 76-3-104, MCA, a subdivision comprises a parcel less than 20 acres which has been separated from the original tract. Section 76-3-207(1), MCA, provides that certain divisions of land, even though less than 20 acres, are not subdivisions under this particular chapter but are subject to surveying requirements.

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Bluebook (online)
668 P.2d 1068, 205 Mont. 482, 1983 Mont. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huttinga-v-pringle-mont-1983.