METROP. GOV. NASH., DAVIDSON CTY v. Barry Construction Company, Inc.

240 S.W.3d 840, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 14, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 240 S.W.3d 840 (METROP. GOV. NASH., DAVIDSON CTY v. Barry Construction Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
METROP. GOV. NASH., DAVIDSON CTY v. Barry Construction Company, Inc., 240 S.W.3d 840, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 140 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

240 S.W.3d 840 (2007)

METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY
v.
BARRY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC. et al.

Court of Appeals of Tennessee, at Nashville.

April 5, 2006 Session.
February 21, 2007.
Order Denying Petition for Rehearing March 14, 2007.
Permission to Appeal Denied August 13, 2007.

*842 J. Brooks Fox and John Kennedy, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County.

Christopher W. Cardwell and Mary Beth Hagan, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Barry Construction Company, Inc.

Shawn R. Henry, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, JCH Development Company, Inc.

Permission to Appeal Denied by Supreme Court August 13, 2007.

OPINION

WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which PATRICIA J. COTTRELL and FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., JJ., joined.

This appeal arises from a dispute involving an unfinished public road in a large residential and commercial development in southeast Davidson County. The road was an integral part of the plans used by the developers to induce the city to rezone the property to accommodate the project and to approve the planned unit development overlay. After the developers declined to complete the road, the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County filed suit in the Chancery Court for Davidson County seeking to force the developers either to complete the road or to pay damages equal to the cost that city would incur if it completed the road itself. The trial court dismissed the city's complaint after concluding that the city had failed to provide any legal basis for requiring the developers to complete the road. The city appealed. We have determined that the ordinance approving the rezoning of the property to accommodate the development provides sufficient legal basis to require the developers to complete the road.

I.

In 1988, JCH Development Co., Inc. (JCH) developed a proposal to build four hundred new residences, a retail shopping facility, and two community centers on an undeveloped site in southeast Davidson *843 County. The project, named "Long Hunter Chase," was bounded on the north by Mt. View Road and on the south by Hobson Pike, two major transportation arterials in the area. JCH could not begin construction without first convincing the Metropolitan Council[1] to rezone the property[2] and then obtaining the approval of the planned unit development (PUD) district overlay from both the Metropolitan Planning Commission[3] and the Council.[4]

As required by the zoning ordinance, JCH prepared and submitted a preliminary master development plan (preliminary master plan)[5] in conjunction with its request for rezoning and adoption of the PUD district overlay.[6] The preliminary master plan included features designed to *844 mitigate the traffic impacts of the massive development on the surrounding area. Specifically, it called for the construction of a new north-south road named "Smith Springs Parkway." The purposes of the road were to provide a direct connection between Mt. View Road and Hobson Pike through the western portion of the development and to divert traffic from the residential streets. JCH agreed to pave the road to a width of thirty feet, to dedicate the road and an eighty-foot-wide right of way to Metro, and to install thirty-five-foot-wide landscape buffers on either side of Metro's eighty-foot-wide right of way. The preliminary master plan expressly assigned Metro the responsibility for any future widening of the road within the right of way.

The Planning Commission approved the preliminary master plan on August 4, 1988. Two months later, on October 18, 1988, the Council amended the comprehensive zoning ordinance to rezone the property to R15 and to apply the PUD district overlay as envisioned in the preliminary master plan. Metro Ordinance 88-491 (Oct. 18, 1988).[7] The Council ordered that the official zoning map be amended to reflect these changes and directed that the ordinance be published in a local newspaper of general circulation. Metro Ordinance 88-491 §§ 2-3.[8] The Council explicitly incorporated the requirements of the preliminary master plan into the new zoning of the property. Metro Ordinance 88-491 § 1.

Following Council approval of the preliminary master plan, JCH submitted a final master development plan (final master plan) for Phase I[9] for review by the Planning Commission.[10] The final master plan for Phase I included the entire length of Smith Springs Parkway. The Planning Commission approved the final master plan for Phase I on June 8, 1989. Council approval was not required.[11] However, construction of Phase I did not begin immediately. In fact, it was not until June 1992 that JCH finally submitted detailed construction plans for Phase I for review by the various Metro agencies. Like the final master plan, the construction plans showed all of Smith Springs Parkway as part of Phase I of the project.

In December 1993, JCH agreed to sell Phase I to another developer, Barry Construction Co. (Barry Construction). JCH conveyed half of Phase I to Barry Construction immediately and granted Barry Construction a twelve-month option to purchase the other half. JCH agreed to secure and pay for all governmental approvals necessary for the development of Phase I up to and including approval of *845 the final subdivision plats,[12] while Barry Construction agreed to bear the cost of all "Development." The purchase agreement defined the word "Development" to include "the construction of roads . . . required by plans and specifications as approved by all appropriate persons and governmental authorities." Barry Construction exercised the option to purchase the second half of Phase I on December 1, 1994. Thus, by the end of 2004, Barry Construction owned all of Phase I of the project.

As required by the purchase agreement, JCH prepared final subdivision plats for both parts of Phase I and provided them to Barry Construction. Because of the configuration of the project, Phase I, section 1 included only the north and south ends of Smith Springs Parkway. The middle part of the road, a stretch approximately one thousand feet long, was part of Phase I, section 2. The final subdivision plats showed unmistakably that Phase I was intended to include all of Smith Springs Parkway. The Planning Commission approved the final subdivision plat for Phase I, section 1 on November 7, 1994, and Barry Construction recorded it later the same day. Barry Construction then built out Phase I, section 1, including the construction and paving of the north and south ends of Smith Springs Parkway.

Several years later, when it came time to build out Phase I, section 2 of the project, Barry Construction did a very strange thing. Instead of simply submitting JCH's final subdivision plat for Phase I, section 2 which Barry Construction had in its possession, for review and approval, Barry Construction hired another company, Site Engineering Consultants, to draw up new final subdivision plats dividing Phase I, section 2 into two parts — Phase I, section 2 and Phase I, section 3. Mysteriously, neither of these new final subdivision plats for Phase I included the middle one-thousand-foot stretch of Smith Springs Parkway necessary to connect the north and south ends of the road and to provide a direct connection through the development between Mt. View Road and Hobson Pike.

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240 S.W.3d 840, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metrop-gov-nash-davidson-cty-v-barry-construction-company-inc-tennctapp-2007.