Martha Cares Olsen v. Chikaming Township

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 2018
Docket337726
StatusPublished

This text of Martha Cares Olsen v. Chikaming Township (Martha Cares Olsen v. Chikaming Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martha Cares Olsen v. Chikaming Township, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MARTHA CARES OLSEN, FRITZ OLSEN, FOR PUBLICATION ROBERT E. LEHRER, SHERIBEL F. July 3, 2018 ROTHENBERG, STEPHEN CASEY, 9:05 a.m. KATHLEEN CASEY, ERNEST LEWIS MACVICAR III, JANICE MACVICAR, RONALD DEVLAM, and MICHELLE DEVLAM,

Appellees,

v No. 337724 Berrien Circuit Court JUDE AND REED, LLC, LC No. 16-000059-AA

Appellant.

MARTHA CARES OLSEN, FRITZ OLSEN, ROBERT E. LEHRER, SHERIBEL F. ROTHENBERG, ZWIER FAMILY TRUST, STEPHEN CASEY, KATHLEEN CASEY, ERNEST LEWIS MACVICAR III, JANICE MACVICAR,

v No. 337726 Berrien Circuit Court JUDE AND REED, LLC, LC No. 16-000059-AA

Before: MURRAY, C.J., and HOEKSTRA and GADOLA, JJ.

GADOLA, J.

In Docket No. 337724, appellant appeals by leave granted the order of the circuit court reversing the determination of the Chikaming Township Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA)

-1- granting appellant’s application for a nonuse zoning variance. In Docket No. 337726, appellant appeals as of right the same order of the circuit court. In both appeals, appellant challenges whether appellees1 are aggrieved parties who may contest the final order of the ZBA. We reverse and remand.

I. FACTS AND BACKGROUND

In 1957, Preston and Doris Sweet platted a 17-lot subdivision near Lake Michigan called the Merriweather Shores subdivision. In the following years, the Sweets conveyed some of the lots to buyers, while retaining other lots. This case involves Lot 6 of the subdivision. Lot 6 has 118 feet of frontage along Huntington Drive, is 82 feet deep, and has a total area of 9,676 square feet.

The subdivision is located in Chikaming Township. At the time Merriweather Shores was platted, the township did not have a zoning ordinance. The township thereafter enacted a zoning ordinance in 1964, and in 1981 enacted a new zoning ordinance. The parties agree that at some point after enactment of the 1981 ordinance, Lot 6 was rendered nonconforming because the ordinance required all lots to have a minimum area of 20,000 square feet for buildability. Regarding nonconforming lots, § 4.02 of the 1981 ordinance provided:

If two or more lots or combination of lots and portions of lots with continuous frontage in single ownership are of record at the time of passage or amendment of this ordinance, and if all or part of the lots do not meet the requirements established for lot width and area, the lands involved shall be considered to be an undivided parcel for the purposes of this ordinance and no portion of said parcel shall be used or sold in a manner which diminishes compliance with lot width and area requirements established by this ordinance, nor shall any division of any parcel be made which creates a lot with width or area less than the requirements stated in this ordinance.

In 1982, Doris Sweet, as survivor of Preston Sweet, conveyed the remaining lots to herself and to David Sweet as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. The parties do not dispute that in 1989, David Sweet, as survivor of Doris Sweet, conveyed Lots 8 through 10 to unrelated parties but maintained ownership of Lots 6 and 7. In 1996, a prospective buyer, David Zilke, was interested in purchasing Lots 6 and 7 from David Sweet. Combined, Lots 6 and 7 had an area of 19,352 square feet, and Zilke requested a variance from the 20,000 square foot minimum for buildability, and from the rear and side setback requirements. The ZBA denied the variance application, and Zilke declined to purchase the property.

1 In Docket No. 337724, this Court granted the motion of appellees Ronald DeVlam and Michelle DeVlam to be substituted as successors in interest for the Zwier Family Trust. Olsen v Twp of Chickaming, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered May 11, 2017 (Docket No. 337724).

-2- In 1998, the township adopted a new zoning ordinance, which remained in effect at the times relevant to this case. In 2011, the Berrien County Treasurer foreclosed on David Sweet’s interest in Lot 7 for nonpayment of property taxes, and T&W Holdings, LLC purchased Lot 7 at a tax foreclosure sale. In 2013, the Berrien County Treasurer foreclosed on David Sweet’s interest in Lot 6 for nonpayment of property taxes, and appellant purchased Lot 6 at a tax foreclosure sale.

Seeking to build a residential cottage on Lot 6, appellant filed an application with Chickaming Township for a nonuse variance under § 4.02(C) of the zoning ordinance. Appellant requested a nonuse dimensional variance under § 14.02, which requires all R-1 lots to have a minimum lot area of 20,000 square feet and a rear setback of 50 feet. Lot 6 had square footage of 9,676, and would require a rear setback of 30 feet. Appellant argued that as a nonconforming lot, Lot 6 was eligible for a variance pursuant to § 4.02 and § 4.06 of the zoning ordinance and that without the variance, Lot 6 would be rendered unusable.

Before the ZBA held a hearing to address appellant’s application, the township sent notice to property owners who owned property within a 300-foot radius of Lot 6.2 At the ZBA hearing, some of the neighboring property owners appeared by counsel to argue against the variance. Following public comment and extensive discussion by the ZBA members, the ZBA voted to approve the variance request.

Appellees appealed the ZBA’s decision to the circuit court, and the circuit court permitted appellant to intervene in the circuit court action. The ZBA moved to dismiss the circuit court action for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, arguing that appellees lacked standing to challenge the ZBA’s decision to grant the variance. Appellant joined the ZBA in the motion. Appellant and the ZBA argued that only an “aggrieved” party could appeal the ZBA’s decision and that appellees were not aggrieved because they could not show that they suffered special damages. At the conclusion of the hearing on the motion, the trial court found that appellees had standing to appeal the ZBA decision to the circuit court, explaining:

I find in this circumstance that the Legislature has a scheme that implies it intended to confer standing on these litigants. The Zoning Enabling Act provides, in section 3103, that notice shall be given to persons—all persons who have real property that is assessed within 300 feet of the property that is [the] subject of the request, and it seems to me that in the context of the [appellees] challenging the actions of the Zoning Board of Appeals, I—I must find that this notice requirement implies that the Legislature intended to confer standing to those individuals so as to qualify as aggrieved part[ies] for the purposes of the appeal under 3606. . . . [W]ere this not true . . . only an applicant who’s denied a variance would have standing to appeal save . . . they can show themselves to otherwise have a special interest, the door would be open to those individuals. But, again, is that only individuals within the 300 feet, or is that any ole person that can show

2 MCL 125.3103 requires notice of the public hearing to persons to whom property is assessed within 300 feet of the subject property.

-3- some other—some other interest . . . . [M]y interpretation is that the Legislature wouldn’t intend that result to only confer the—the appeal status, particularly as I said, within the context of the Statute indicating that they must give notice to these folks within 300 feet. And also specifically indicating what that notice has to have when and where written comments will be received concerning the request.

The circuit court also noted that the ordinance generally required a 50-foot setback for a septic system, and the ZBA provided appellant with a 20-foot variance for the septic system.

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Martha Cares Olsen v. Chikaming Township, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martha-cares-olsen-v-chikaming-township-michctapp-2018.