Jensen, Hoffman v. Dep't of Corrections

2025 S.D. 35
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 2025
Docket30890
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 S.D. 35 (Jensen, Hoffman v. Dep't of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen, Hoffman v. Dep't of Corrections, 2025 S.D. 35 (S.D. 2025).

Opinion

#30890-a-MES 2025 S.D. 35

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

MICHELLE K. JENSEN, MICHAEL J. HOFFMAN, JAY W. WHITE, THOMAS M. EIESLAND, and NOPE-LINCOLN COUNTY, INC., a South Dakota non-profit corporation, Plaintiffs and Appellants,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, and KELLIE WASKO, Secretary, Defendants and Appellees. ****

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT LINCOLN COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE JENNIFER MAMMENGA Judge

A.J. SWANSON Canton, South Dakota Attorney for plaintiffs and appellants.

MARTY J. JACKLEY Attorney General

GRANT M. FLYNN Assistant Attorney General PAUL SWEDLUND Solicitor General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for defendants and appellees.

ARGUED MARCH 25, 2025 OPINION FILED 07/09/25 #30890

SALTER, Justice

[¶1.] House Bill 1017 (HB 1017), enacted by the 2023 Legislature,

authorized the Department of Corrections (DOC) to purchase property for a new

men’s state prison. The DOC later selected two contiguous state-owned parcels in

rural Lincoln County, currently zoned for agricultural use. A group of private

parties (the Appellants) commenced this action against the State of South Dakota,

the DOC, and the DOC Secretary (collectively, the State), seeking declaratory and

injunctive relief. The State subsequently moved for dismissal based on various

theories, including the argument that the Appellants lack standing to bring this

action along with merits assertions that the State is immune from suit and that HB

1017 preempts local zoning rules. The circuit court granted the State’s motion,

prompting this appeal by the Appellants. We affirm on the basis that the

controversy here is not justiciable because the Appellants lack the right to enforce

local zoning regulations against the State in a declaratory judgment action. We do

not reach the merits of the State’s sovereign immunity and preemption claims.

Factual and Procedural Background

[¶2.] Governor Kristi Noem signed HB 1017 into law on March 27, 2023.

Relevant here, HB 1017 authorized the DOC to “purchase, on behalf of the State of

South Dakota, real property for offenders committed to the [DOC]” and “contract for

the planning and site preparation of a prison facility[.]” 2023 S.D. Sess. Laws ch.

195, §§ 1–2.

[¶3.] Using this statutory authority, DOC Secretary Kellie Wasko selected

two adjoining 160-acre parcels of state-owned land in rural Lincoln County as the

-1- #30890

site for the new prison facility. The State, through the Office of School and Public

Lands, originally obtained this land by escheat in 1992. 1 Following a formal 0F

appraisal, the DOC purchased the land from the Office of School and Public Lands

for approximately $7,910,000.

[¶4.] Secretary Wasko announced the DOC’s selected location on October 6,

2023. Concerned over the State’s intended use and its site selection process, the

Appellants, who include Mike Hoffman, Michelle Jensen, Jay White, and Tom

Eiesland, as well as a non-profit corporation, NOPE-Lincoln County Inc. (NOPE),

retained counsel and eventually commenced this declaratory judgment action. At

the heart of their case, the Appellants seek a declaration that the State is subject to

Lincoln County’s 2009 Revised Zoning Ordinance (the Zoning Ordinance).

[¶5.] The Appellants note, in this regard, that the property selected by the

DOC is located in an “A-1 Agricultural District” under the Zoning Ordinance, and a

prison would not be considered a permissible use. For a nonconforming use of this

nature, the Zoning Ordinance typically requires either a conditional use permit

(CUP) or a rezoning request, both of which provide for public notice and an

opportunity for public comment—something the Appellants allege to be due process

rights that they will be denied if the State is not subject to local zoning regulations.

1. Escheat describes the process by which a person’s property passes to “the state of South Dakota for the support of the common schools” in cases where an “an heir, devisee, or claimant cannot be found[.]” In re Est. of Jetter, 1997 S.D. 125, ¶ 17, 570 N.W.2d 26, 30 (quoting SDCL 29A-3-914); see also S.D. Const. art. VIII, § 2 (creating a permanent trust fund “for the maintenance of public schools” funded, in part, by “all property that shall fall to the state by escheat”).

-2- #30890

[¶6.] Styled as a declaratory judgment action, the Appellants’ complaint

advances their due process theory using its claim that the State is subject to the

Zoning Ordinance as a predicate. As to why the Appellants, and not Lincoln

County, were seeking to enforce the Zoning Ordinance, the complaint stated:

Lincoln County itself seems legally inhibited to maintain an action against the State and its agencies . . . . Plaintiffs are not similarly constrained.

(Emphasis added.) 2 1F

[¶7.] In an amicus curiae filing before the circuit court, Lincoln County

stated that it does, indeed, believe itself unable to enforce its Zoning Ordinance

against the State. At oral argument, the Appellants seemed to suggest that Lincoln

County was also unwilling to enforce the Zoning Ordinance. Regardless, the only

logical inference from this aspect of the Appellants’ complaint is that they believe

that they not only possess a private right of action to enforce the Zoning Ordinance,

but also that they may do so exclusive of Lincoln County. 3 2F

2. For its statement that Lincoln County was unable to bring an action against the State, the Appellants cited two of our decisions: (1) Pennington County v. State ex rel. Unified Judicial System, 2002 S.D. 31, 641 N.W.2d 127, which expressed the general rule that counties cannot sue the state sovereign that created them; and (2) Dan Nelson Automotive, Inc. v. Viken, 2005 S.D. 109, 706 N.W.2d 239, which allowed declaratory judgment actions against state officials to obtain a judicial interpretation of statutes.

3. In addition to their request for declaratory relief, the Appellants also sought “a permanent injunction directing the State make no use . . . [of the selected site] except in a manner that is wholly consistent with [the Zoning Ordinance].”

-3- #30890

[¶8.] However, the Appellants’ complaint confirms that each of them is a

private individual or, in the case of NOPE, a private corporation. 4 At no point in 3F

the complaint or at any other stage of the litigation, including this appeal, have the

Appellants identified their authority for what is plainly a private zoning

enforcement action against the State.

[¶9.] The Appellants also used their complaint to present something of a

preemptive legal argument on the general topic of whether the State is subject to

county zoning regulations. Prior to commencement of the present action, counsel

for Appellants wrote to Secretary Wasko, inquiring as to the DOC’s position on

whether zoning or land use laws applied to state-owned property. Featured

prominently in the Secretary’s brief response was a 1977 Attorney General opinion

noting “the general rule that zoning regulations . . . do not apply [to the State]

absent a clear manifestation of legislative intent[.]” 1977 S.D. Op. Att’y Gen 13.

The Attorney General opined that the State “has not manifested an intent to

4.

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Bluebook (online)
2025 S.D. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-hoffman-v-dept-of-corrections-sd-2025.