KZ Forever, LLC v. City of Dover City Council

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 9, 2016
DocketK16A-02-001 WLW
StatusPublished

This text of KZ Forever, LLC v. City of Dover City Council (KZ Forever, LLC v. City of Dover City Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KZ Forever, LLC v. City of Dover City Council, (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE KZ FOREVER, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, : C.A. No. Kl 6A-02-001 WLW Kent County Petitioner, v.

CITY OF DOVER CITY COUNCIL, :

Respondent.

Submitted: Septernber 6, 2016 Decided: November 9, 2016 ORDER Upon a Petition for Writ of Certiorari to

Reverse an Order by City of Dover City Council. Order Reversed.

Tasha Marie Stevens, Esquire of Fuqua Yori & Willard, P.A., Georgetown, Delaware; attorney for Petitioner.

William W. Pepper, Sr., Esquire of Schmittinger and Rodriguez, P.A., Dover, Delaware; attorney for Respondent.

WITHAM, R.J.

KZ Forever, LLC v. Dover City Council C.A. NO. K16A-02-001 WLW November 9, 2016

Petitioner KZ Forever, LLC (“KZ”) has filed a petition for a Writ of certiorari, asking this Court to reverse an order by the Respondent City of Dover City Council (the “Council”) that declared the Petitioner’s property dangerous and mandated its demolition.

The central question in this case is Whether the City of Dover’s ordinances permit it to order the demolition of an allegedly dangerous building Without also issuing Written findings of fact and a Written order.

Because the Council proceeded irregularly When it failed to issue a Written order or make Written findings of fact, the Council’s order is REVERSED.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This proceeding in certiorari arises from attempts by the City of Dover to repair or demolish a property located at 2 South Queen Street in Dover, DelaWare.

The property Was purchased by the Petitioner in February 2015 and had a checkered code enforcement history. Several months after the property Was sold, city official condemned it because of a number of violations.

After a long string of inspections and correspondence, the code enforcement officer sent a violation letter to the Petitioner on November 5, 2015. The violation letter attached a list of code violations and required a follow-up inspection by November 19. For each identified code violation, the letter provided a “corrective action required” to bring the property to code.

Ann Marie ToWnshend, Director of Planning and Community Development for

the City of Dover, sent a separate notice to the Petitioner the next day. Attached to

KZ Forever, LLC v. Dover City Council C.A. No. K16A-02-001 WLW November 9, 2016

her letter was the code violation letter and the list of violations. In Ms. Townshend’s letter, she warned the Petitioner that the property was “found to be in violation of the Dangerous Building Ordinance of the City” and identified the grounds upon which the building was alleged to be dangerous

Ms. Townshend’s letter notified the Petitioner that it was to complete three items by November 19. The three required items were (l) submission of a renovations permit application along with a structural engineer’s report and recommendations; (2) an electrical inspection; and (3) payment of all fees, citations, and taxes. The letter also informed the Petitioner of its right to appeal by filing a notice of appeal within five days of receipt.

On November 17, nine days after the notice was received (and by then beyond the five-day period for appeal), Zionna Adamolekun, a member of KZ, sent a letter to Ms. Townshend on behalf of the Petitioner. In the letter, Ms. Adamolekun acknowledged having received the notice and indicated that the items would not be completed by November 19. She asked to be given ninety days to complete the tasks.

After an inspection by the City revealed that no repairs had been made, Ms. Townshend sent a notice to the Petitioner dated November 24. The letter noted that the matter would be presented to the Council at a hearing on December 9 and that the Petitioner could state its case at the hearing “as to why the house should not be declared dangerous and ordered demolished, including why an extension should be

provided to allow repairs.”l

1 Resp’t’s App. B-39.

KZ Forever, LLC v. Dover City Council C.A. No. Kl6A-02-001 WLW November 9, 2016

On December 9, 2015, the Council held the public hearing on the violation. MS. Townshend spoke and presented the property’s history. Ms. Adamolekun spoke and explained, among other things, that she had not received many of the notices sent before November and had difficulty communicating with the city despite several attempts She also questioned whether Ms. Townshend was qualified to perform property inspections and asked for the city to give her “breathing room” to address the property issues

The Council voted to give the Petitioner an additional fifteen days to provide the staff with estimates, placing the matter on the agenda for the January ll, 2016 Council meeting. Before the next Council meeting, the Petitioner submitted a copy of the structural engineering report, two proposals from building contractors, and a receipt from an electrical contractor.

At the January 1 1 Council meeting, Ms Townshend discussed the Petitioner’s submissions According to Ms. Townshend’s testimony, the City Building Inspector reviewed the submissions and found the structural engineering report to be incomplete because it addressed only some of the identified issues As for exterior issues, the proposals were for repairs that would not bring the building up to code.

Ultimately, Ms. Townshend recommended:

1) Declaring the building and all accessory structures on the property dangerous; 2) Ordering the property demolished by February l l, 2016 by the owner or equity owner at their own risk; 3) Ordering the Building Inspector to cause the demolition of the structures if not completed by the owners within 10 days of the date established by City Council; and 4) Ordering the City Manager . . . to cause the cost of demolition to be

KZ Forever, LLC v. Dover City Council C.A. No. Kl6A-02-001 WLW November 9, 2016

charged against the land on which the buildings exist as a municipal lien

or cause such costs to be added to the tax duplicate as an assessment, or

to be levied as a special tax, or to be recovered in a suit at law against

the owners2

The Petitioner then testified, which apparently required the Council to suspend its rules because the matter was not a public hearing. The Petitioner stated that She intended to “cure all the defective conditions cited in the Code Enforcement Report” and that she was prepared to complete all of the repairs3

After hearing the Petitioner’s testimony, three members of the Council voted to amend the motion to give the Petitioner ninety days to repair or demolish the house, but the amendment failed. lnstead, the Council voted simply to adopt the staff recommendation

Ms. Townshend sent the Petitioner a letter on January 28 indicating that at the hearing the Council had made a number of findings of fact. The letter related that the Council had voted to declare the structure in violation of the City’s Dangerous Building Ordinance and to authorize ordering the property to be demolished, According to an email from Ms. Townshend, the letter constituted the Council’s written findings of fact and order.

The Petitioner then requested a writ of certiorari, which this Court issued as a

matter of course.4

2 Resp’t’s App. B-84. 3 Resp’t’s App. B-84_85. 4 10 Del. C. § 562.

KZ Forever, LLC v. Dover City Council C.A. No. Kl6A-02-001 WLW November 9, 2016

THE PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS

The Petitioner argues that the Council committed legal error by failing to provide substantive notice according to sections 22-3 84(5) and (6) of the Dover Code of Ordinances, additionally implicating due process concerns lt further contends that the Council failed to create an adequate record by omitting findings of fact or a written order.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Handloff v. City Council of City of Newark
935 A.2d 255 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2007)
Christiana Town Center, LLC v. New Castle County
865 A.2d 521 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2004)
Rash v. Allen
76 A. 370 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
KZ Forever, LLC v. City of Dover City Council, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kz-forever-llc-v-city-of-dover-city-council-delsuperct-2016.