M & S COX INVESTMENTS v. Provo City Corp.

2007 UT App 315, 169 P.3d 789, 587 Utah Adv. Rep. 34, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 323, 2007 WL 2791469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedSeptember 27, 2007
Docket20060386-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2007 UT App 315 (M & S COX INVESTMENTS v. Provo City Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M & S COX INVESTMENTS v. Provo City Corp., 2007 UT App 315, 169 P.3d 789, 587 Utah Adv. Rep. 34, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 323, 2007 WL 2791469 (Utah Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

BILLINGS, Judge:

T1 Plaintiffs M & S Cox Investments, LLC, and Mervyn and Sue Cox (collectively, Cox) appeal two trial court orders. | First, Cox appeals the trial court's grant of summary judgment to Defendant Provo City Corporation (the City). Second, Cox appeals the trial court's intervention order. We affirm. >

BACKGROUND

T2 In 1996, Cox acquired residential property (the Property) in Provo, Utah, for $192,624. At the time of Cox's purchase, the Property was zoned as R1i-Single Family Residential with an "S" Supplementary Residential Overlay. The S-Overlay zoning provision permitted Cox to maintain an accessory dwelling unit in addition to the home's normal dwelling unit. Zoning regulations did not require that Cox, as owner, occupy the home. ©

T3 Following purchase, Cox spent over $500,000 remodeling and updating the Property to take advantage of the S-Overlay Provisions. Specifically, Cox created two separate dwelling units that allowed Mr. and Mrs. Cox's relatives to live in the Property, for little or no rent, while attending educational institutions in Utah County. Mr. and Mrs. Cox are residents of St. George, Utah.

T4 In April 2000, the City amended its zoning ordinance (the Ordinance) to require that homes within the S-Overlay zone, including the Property, be owner-occupied if the home owner wishes to rent the accessory dwelling unit. The purpose of the Ordinance was to maintain the residential atmosphere of the neighborhood while accommodating the need for off-campus housing for Brigham Young University students.

5 To aid non-resident owners of affected properties, the Ordinance permitted such owners to apply to the City's Community Development Director (CDD) for an extension to bring properties into compliance. In determining the appropriate amortization pe- > riod for affected properties, the CDD used a mathematical formula set forth in the Ordinance. The formula provides:

The time period during which an owner may recover the amount of his investment in property affected by [the Ordinance] shall be determined by dividing the residual value of the property by the average monthly net rental income from the property. The resulting figure is the number *792 of months which the owner shall have to recover his investment in 'the property.

Provo, Utah, Code § 14.80.090(2)(a) (2000). Under the Ordinance, " 'Residual value means the difference between a property's adjusted present value and its compliance value as of April 4, 2000," 1 and " '[aldjusted present value' means a property's original purchase price plus any capital improvements and less depreciation and net income from the property, all as adjusted for inflation to April 4, 2000." Id. §§ 14.30.090@)(a)Gi), (iv). The Ordinance does not define "average monthly net rental income" as used in the formula, nor does it define "net income" as used in the definition of adjusted present value.

T6 In November 2000, Cox filed a complaint against the City (Case no. 000408654), alleging that the Ordinance as applied to Cox violated the Utah Constitution and was facially unenforceable as it exceeded the City's power to regulate land use. Cox also sought judgment declaring that then-numbered Utah Code section 10-9408, see Utah Code Ann. § 10-9-408 (2000) (current version at Utah Code Aun. § 10-92a-511 to the extent that it permits the City to adopt the Ordinance, is unconstitutional as applied to Cox. The City answered Cox's complaint and subsequently moved for summary judgment. In its motion for summary judgment, the City argued that Cox's facial challenge to the Ordinance failed as a matter of law and that Cox failed to exhaust its administrative remedies by not first applying for amortization under the Ordinance.

T 7 In March 2002, Cox submitted an application for determination of its amortization period. In its application, Cox relied on its average net rental incomes from 1996 to 2000, calculated after depreciation, to argue that the Property's net income is a negative value and therefore Cox is entitled to an infinite amount of time to bring the Property into compliance with the Ordinance.

T8 Sometime after Cox submitted its amortization application, Cox and the City entered into settlement negotiations. During the settlement negotiations, the City emphasized to Cox that any agreement reached by the parties was conditional and would not be binding unless approved by the City Council. In November 2002, the City sent Cox an outline of a possible settlement agreement in which Cox would receive permanent exemption status. |

T9 In January 2008, several Provo residents filed a petition for intervention. The trial court granted this petition in March 2008. One month later, the City informed Cox that the settlement offer "as currently framed" was unacceptable. The City requested additional information from Cox, and upon reviewing this information, decided against granting Cox permanent exemption from the Ordinance's owner-occupancy requirements.

{10 Using the values Cox supplied in its application, but relying on these values before depreciation and adjusting them for inflation, the City calculated Cox's amortization period as 22.11 years. In making its calculation, the City calculated Cox's net income from 1996 to 2000 as ($27,004.60), 2 and its average monthly net income as $1,322.59. The City interpreted the Ordinance's term "average monthly net income" as meaning fair market rental value. Thus, in making its average monthly net income calculation, the City only relied on years 1999 to 2000 because from 1996 to 1998 the Property was undergoing major capital improvements and therefore rental figures from this construction period did not reflect the fair rental market value of the Property. From 1999 to 2000, the average monthly net income was a positive number, whereas from 1996 to 1998, the average monthly net income was a negative number.

11 In a March 9, 2004 letter to Cox, the City advised Cox of the calculated amortization period and explained that because Cox had already received three years to recover on its investment (from April 4, 2000 to April 4, 2008), the remaining investment recovery *793 period, as of April 4, 2003, was nineteen years and three months. Thus, the City stated, "[Cox] must come into compliance with the occupancy standards set out in [the Ordinance] no later than ... July 4, 2022."

112 Cox subsequently appealed the City's amortization determination to the Board of Adjustment (the Board), arguing that the City's calculation was both arbitrary and illegal. Specifically, Cox averred that the City violated the Ordinance in using two different figures for its calculations of "average monthly net rental income" and "net income from the property," and that this violation resulted in a dramatically shorter amortization period than the "infinite" period to which Cox claimed it was entitled.

113 In response, the City argued that an amortization period, by its very definition, cannot be infinite, and an infinite amortization period is inconsistent with the language and purpose of the Ordinance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 UT App 315, 169 P.3d 789, 587 Utah Adv. Rep. 34, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 323, 2007 WL 2791469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-s-cox-investments-v-provo-city-corp-utahctapp-2007.