Moondance Enterprises, LLC v. Brown County, Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 2012
Docket07A01-1201-PL-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Moondance Enterprises, LLC v. Brown County, Indiana (Moondance Enterprises, LLC v. Brown County, Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moondance Enterprises, LLC v. Brown County, Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FILED Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of establishing Oct 22 2012, 8:48 am the defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case. CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES:

DAVID C. GRUPENHOFF DAVID B. SCHILLING Thomas M. Barr & Associates Bloomington, Indiana Nashville, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

MOONDANCE ENTERPRISES, LLC, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 07A01-1201-PL-5 ) BROWN COUNTY, INDIANA, ET AL., ) ) Appellees-Plaintiffs. ) )

APPEAL FROM THE BROWN CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Bruce S. Markel, III, Special Judge Cause No. 07C01-0907-PL-414

October 22, 2012

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

VAIDIK, Judge Case Summary

Moondance Enterprises, LLC, appeals the trial court’s determination that it

violated the Brown County Zoning Ordinance (“BCZO”) by operating its property as a

tourist home. Moondance contends that it operated the property as a lodge or private

club, which is permitted by the BCZO. Moondance also argues that the penalty imposed

by the trial court is excessive. We conclude that the trial court properly rejected

Moondance’s argument that it operated the property as a lodge or private club. We do

find, however, that the penalty imposed for Moondance’s violation of the BCZO was

excessive. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Facts and Procedural History

Moondance is a real-estate development company that owns and operates a

number of tourist homes in Brown County, Indiana. In October 2007, Moondance

purchased property located on Lanam Ridge Road. The Lanam Ridge property (“the

property”) is located in a “secondary residence” or “R2” zoning district, according to the

BCZO. The BCZO does not allow tourist homes in R2 districts.1 The BCZO defines a

tourist home as “a building in which not more than 5 guest rooms are used to provide or

offer overnight accommodations to transient guests for compensation[.]” Appellee’s

App. p. 30.

Moondance’s original intent was to buy the property, improve it, and then sell it.

However, even after performing significant renovations, Moondance was unable to sell

the property and began considering alternative uses. In August 2008, Moondance started

1 Tourist homes are permitted in R2 districts only by special exception. It is undisputed that Moondance did not seek such an exception for this property. Moondance has, however, obtained a number of tourist-home exceptions for other nearby properties. See Tr. p. 16. 2 advertising the property, which it named “The Rancho Valle Lodge,” on the internet as a

vacation rental. From October 2008 to April 2011, Moondance rented the property 178

times for a total of 490 nights. Appellant’s App. p. 22. The length of guests’ stays

ranged from one to seven nights. Id. The average number of bedrooms occupied during

this time period was 2.6. Id. at 23.

In October 2008, the Brown County Area Board of Zoning Appeals (“BZA”)

received a complaint about Moondance’s use of the property. After an investigation, the

BZA notified Moondance that it had concluded the property was being used as a tourist

home. After meeting with Moondance’s manager, Doug Tracey, the BZA maintained

that the property was being used as a tourist home in violation of the BCZO, and it

instructed Moondance to cease using the property as a tourist home. The BZA also

notified Moondance of its right to appeal its determination to the BZA within ten days.

Moondance did not appeal and continued advertising and using the property as a vacation

rental.

In July 2009, Brown County filed an action in Brown Circuit Court seeking to

enjoin Moondance’s use of the property as a tourist home. A trial was held in October

2011. At trial, the parties stipulated to the facts underlying the dispute, including the

property’s rental history. However, Moondance argued that it was using the property as a

lodge or private club, which is permitted in a R2 district. See Appellee’s App. p. 36. As

support for this claim, Doug Tracey pointed to a number of distinctions between the

property at issue and a nearby tourist home also owned by Moondance, Loretta’s Cabin:

Q [W]hat goes on . . . at the Lodge at Rancho Valle?

3 A Club members are offered the opportunity to spend the night or as many nights as they like for . . . a fee.

* * * * *

Q Are the facilities and the amenities offered at Loretta’s Cabin essentially the same as those offered at the Lodge at Rancho Valle?

A No.

Q And, what’s the difference?

A The difference is that the . . . at Rancho Valle there’s a . . . that the five percent donation of the . . . of the stay is made to local [charities]. They receive an automatic discount on future reservations, dinner certificate to local restaurants[,] and full use of the entire sixty acres of the property.

A Excuse me, there’s actually a fifth [difference], which is the exclusive discounts, offers made through . . . through our website. So, they occasionally receive an offer that other clients would not for purposes of . . . of staying at Rancho Valle.

Tr. p. 23-25 (formatting altered) (ellipses in original).

Brown County maintained the property was being used as a tourist home in

violation of the BCZO. The parties submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions

of law in support of their respective positions. Two months later, the trial court entered

its own findings of fact and conclusions of law and ruled that Moondance was indeed

using the property as a tourist home in violation of the BCZO. Id. at 51. In reaching this

conclusion, the trial court rejected Moondance’s definition of “lodge” and concluded that

it had not established it was a private club.

The trial court first explained that there were numerous dictionary definitions for

the term “lodge,” but that Moondance contended that it meant only “a resort hotel.” Id.

4 The court pointed out, however, that the BCZO expressly prohibited hotels in R2

districts, and accepting this definition would amount to “interpreting a zoning ordinance

to permit a use that is expressly prohibited . . . .” Id. The court further explained that

Moondance’s interpretation of the term “mixes two different types of land uses [lodging

and residential use] into one land use category.” Id. Because “zoning ordinances group

similar or compatible classes of uses together,” adopting Moondance’s definition of

“lodge” would lead to absurd results.

The trial court then set forth another dictionary definition of “lodge”—“the

meeting place of a branch of an organization [such as] a fraternal organization.” Id.

(citing Webster’s Dictionary 702 (9th ed. 1986)). Similarly, the term “club” could be

defined as “an association of persons for some common object usu[ally] jointly supported

and meeting periodically . . . the meeting place of a club.” Id. The common definition of

club, the trial court noted, “does not include an overnight lodging component.” Id. The

court explained that “interpreting ‘lodge’ to refer to the meeting place of an organization

makes the ‘lodge or private club’ use consistent throughout.” Id. That is,

Each component of the use term relates to a meeting place. Meeting places have similar land use impacts and are logically grouped together.

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