Meinholz, LLC v. Dane Town Board of Zoning Appeals and Adjustment

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedMay 5, 2022
Docket2021AP000346
StatusUnpublished

This text of Meinholz, LLC v. Dane Town Board of Zoning Appeals and Adjustment (Meinholz, LLC v. Dane Town Board of Zoning Appeals and Adjustment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meinholz, LLC v. Dane Town Board of Zoning Appeals and Adjustment, (Wis. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. May 5, 2022 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2021AP346 Cir. Ct. No. 2019CV3564

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT IV

MEINHOLZ, LLC,

PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,

V.

DANE TOWN BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS AND ADJUSTMENT AND TOWN OF SPRINGFIELD,

DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.

APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Dane County: FRANK D. REMINGTON, Judge. Affirmed.

Before Blanchard, P.J., Graham, and Nashold, JJ.

¶1 BLANCHARD, P.J. Meinholz, LLC, owns three contiguous parcels of land in the Town of Springfield (the “Town”), which are all subject to a zoning classification that prohibits quarrying (i.e., nonmetallic mineral extraction). No. 2021AP346

Thus, quarrying the parcels would ordinarily be a “nonconforming use” of this land. Meinholz wants to use the parcels for quarrying, and toward that end it asked the Town Board to recognize quarrying as a legal nonconforming use of the parcels. The board voted in favor of the recognition requested by Meinholz. However, just under six months later, the board revisited the legal nonconforming use issue, and referred the issue to the Town’s zoning administrator so that the administrator could make a “formal ruling.” The zoning administrator determined that Meinholz does not have a right to quarry the subject parcels as a legal nonconforming use, contrary to the earlier recognition by the Town Board. Meinholz appealed the zoning administrator’s decision to the Dane Town Board of Zoning Appeals and Adjustment (the “Appeals Board”), which affirmed the decision of the zoning administrator.

¶2 Meinholz commenced this action in the circuit court, seeking common-law certiorari review of the Appeals Board decision to affirm the zoning administrator. Meinholz does not advance any argument that the Town Board’s recognition of quarrying as a legal nonconforming use of the parcels was substantively correct. Instead, Meinholz argues that the Appeals Board was bound by the Town Board’s recognition as a valid, final, and unchallenged decision. The circuit court granted summary judgment to the Appeals Board, dismissing this claim. We affirm the circuit court on this issue. We conclude that the Town Board’s recognition did not preclude the Appeals Board from addressing whether quarrying is a legal nonconforming use for the parcels, because the Town Board withdrew the recognition by unambiguously referring the issue to the zoning administrator. We reject Meinholz’s alternative arguments that the Town Board’s referral to the zoning administrator did not constitute a proper withdrawal of the

2 No. 2021AP346

Town Board recognition, or that, if it did, the Appeals Board could not uphold the withdrawal because that would interfere with a vested right held by Meinholz.

¶3 As a separate claim in the circuit court, Meinholz sought a declaratory judgment that, due to the Town Board’s recognition of a legal nonconforming right to quarry the subject parcels, the Town is equitably estopped from asserting that Meinholz cannot quarry the parcels. The circuit court granted summary judgment to the Town, dismissing this claim. Meinholz argues that this is the rare case in which a municipality may be estopped from enforcing a zoning rule. We disagree. Further, we separately conclude that the Town is not estopped because Meinholz fails to show that it reasonably relied on the Town Board recognition.

¶4 Accordingly, we affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Appeals Board and the Town.

BACKGROUND

¶5 To put the factual and procedural history of this case in context, we now briefly summarize the law that generally governs legal nonconforming uses of land and relevant historical legal developments regarding quarrying in Dane County, in which the Town is located, before turning to the facts of this case.

¶6 “Nonconforming land uses” are uses that violate a zoning rule that applies to the land. See Schroeder v. Dane Cnty. Bd. of Adjustment, 228 Wis. 2d 324, 339, 596 N.W.2d 472 (Ct. App. 1999). The nonconforming use doctrine recognizes the unfairness that typically arises when a new zoning rule bars an established use that was previously permitted. Under the doctrine, an existing land use continues to be lawful, and cannot be prohibited by a zoning rule enacted after

3 No. 2021AP346

a use has been established, if the preexisting use was lawful before the enactment of the local zoning rule that rendered the use nonconforming. See WIS. STAT. §§ 59.69(10)(ab)-(am), 60.61(5)(ab)-(am) (2019-20).1 The nonconforming use doctrine is rooted in underlying constitutional law, and it is also codified in statutes—such as in § 60.61(5), which applies to towns. See Town of Cross Plains v. Kitt’s “Field of Dreams” Korner, Inc., 2009 WI App 142, ¶¶18-19, 30, 321 Wis. 2d 671, 775 N.W.2d 283 (“statutory nonconforming use provisions arise out of the same [constitutional] concern for retroactive application of zoning laws and ordinances”).

¶7 It is undisputed that Dane County zoning rules applied in the Town in 1968. See Schroeder, 228 Wis. 2d at 326. In that year, the county adopted an ordinance providing that, if an identified parcel of land was registered with and approved by county zoning authorities as a quarrying site, then quarrying would be deemed a legal nonconforming use for that site. See id. at 326-27, 339-340. We refer to the list of parcels that resulted from this process as “the Dane County registration.”

¶8 For purposes of this case, the Dane County registration interacts with a separate, court-created doctrine called the “diminishing assets rule.” See id. at 331. The diminishing assets rule is designed to address the fact that a single quarrying operation (sometimes referred to as a nonmetallic mineral extraction, or mining, operation) is often planned for a larger area than the limited area in which initial extraction occurs. See id. at 331-32. Wisconsin courts adopted the

1 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2019-20 version unless otherwise noted.

4 No. 2021AP346

diminishing asset rule beginning in 1987 to address some circumstances in which extraction operations are planned for land that is contiguous to land that had previously been lawfully and actively quarried, including land that qualifies for legal nonconforming extraction. See Smart v. Dane Cnty. Bd. of Adjustments, 177 Wis. 2d 445, 453-54, 501 N.W.2d 782 (1993) (discussing rule’s adoption in Sturgis v. Winnebago Cnty. Bd. of Adjustments, 141 Wis. 2d 149, 413 N.W.2d 642 (Ct. App. 1987)). Under the diminishing asset rule, “when a single owner has contiguous parcels on which an excavation operation is in existence, all land which constitutes an integral part of the operation is deemed [to be] ‘in use’” as a legally nonconforming quarry, despite “the fact that a particular portion [of the land] may not yet be under actual excavation.” See Sturgis, 141 Wis. 2d at 154.

¶9 As would be expected, adoption of the diminishing asset rule had an effect on some parcels that were contiguous to other parcels which qualified as legal nonconforming uses based on the Dane County registration.

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Meinholz, LLC v. Dane Town Board of Zoning Appeals and Adjustment, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meinholz-llc-v-dane-town-board-of-zoning-appeals-and-adjustment-wisctapp-2022.