Nickle v. Board of County Commissioners of Platte County

2007 WY 115, 162 P.3d 1208, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 125, 2007 WL 2107950
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 2007
DocketNo 06-128
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2007 WY 115 (Nickle v. Board of County Commissioners of Platte County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nickle v. Board of County Commissioners of Platte County, 2007 WY 115, 162 P.3d 1208, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 125, 2007 WL 2107950 (Wyo. 2007).

Opinion

*1209 HILL, Justice.

Appellant, Hubert Nickle (hereafter, "Nickle"), challenges the district court's order that had the effect of applying a portion of a supersedeas bond that Nickle posted in an earlier appeal, which arose out of the same cireumstances as the instant appeal, so as to recompense the Appellee, Platte County Board of County Commissioners ("the County"), for damages it suffered as a result of that appeal (which was dismissed for want of prosecution). We will affirm.

ISSUE

Nickle states the issue he wants the Court to address as follows:

Does [the County] have the right to recover the costs expended for abatement of a nuisance?

The County poses an entirely different question:

Is [the County] entitled to recover against the supersedeas bond in [Case No.] 05-252 for its damages incurred by the delay caused by filing of that appeal?

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

At the outset we will take note that, as the record on appeal in this case, we have only a portion of a very short district court record. It consists of 49 pages from the clerk's record, and that includes counting certificates of service and designations of the record by the parties Transcripts of the several hearings held in this case are not included.

A complaint was first filed on February 19, 2004, although it is not included in the record on appeal. On March 12, 2004, Nickle answered that complaint pro sg, stating: "I don't believe I am in violation of statutes referred to in this complaint. My zoning is proper for this purpose. These regs. were adopted after I1 was zoned & established this use.... P.S. You weren't able to even spell my name right."

[T5] On March 31, 2004, the County filed an amended complaint. The County prefaced its complaint with the statement that it is the governing body of Platte County and in that capacity had adopted a zoning resolution regulating the use of lands within Platte County. The zoning resolution itself is not in the record. Continuing, the County alleged:

2. [Nickle is] the owner of part of the SE1/ANW1/4, Section 20, Township 24 North, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M., in Platte County Wyoming.
3. [Nickle is] currently using [his] property for the storage of derelict vehicles and miscellaneous junk.
4. [Nickle has] not obtained a special permit as required under the Platte County Zoning Rules and Regulations for the maintenance or operation of a junkyard on the lands in question.
5. [Nickle's] use of the lands in question is in violation of the Platte County Zoning Resolution. Pursuant to W.S. § 18-5-204 each day's continuation of the violation is a separate offense.
6. Pursuant to W.S. 18-5-206 each day's violation is subject to a fine of not more than seven hundred fifty dollars ($750.00).
7. Pursuant to W.S. § 18-5-205 the zoning resolution is enforceable by injunction and abatement.
NOW THEREFORE the plaintiffs pray that the Court enjoin [Nickle] from continued use of [his] lands in violation of the Platte County Zoning Resolution and order the abatement of the violating use at the expense of [Nickle] and further that the Court fine [Nickle] an appropriate amount for [his] continuing violation of the zoning resolution.

The district court's order, entered on October 8, 2004, recites that a trial was had on September 28, 2004. There is no transcript of that trial in the record. The district court's findings, made after that trial, were:

1. The property in question is zoned industrial and does not have a special permit for use as a commercial junkyard.
2. Platte County's zoning regulations require that a special permit be obtained for industrial property to be used as a junkyard.
*1210 8. The current use of the property by Nickle is as a junkyard as that term is defined in the Platte County Zoning Regulations.
4. The Defendant Nickle raises three defenses which the Court addresses as follows:
a. The Defendant's ex-wife, Maria Nickle, was not served with the Complaint. The Court finds that Maria Nickle, although named as a defendant in the case, has no interest in the property, that interest having been set over to Defendant, Hubert Nickle, in a divorce approximately ten years ago.
b. The use of the property as a junkyard is grandfathered. The Court finds that the Defendant's use of the property did not begin until after the adoption of the Platte County Zoning Regulations and so is not grandfathered.
c. The Defendant's use of the property as a junkyard results in an estoppel in this action. The Defendant has not established the elements necessary to support a finding of estoppel.
NOW THEREFORE the Court finds generally for the Plaintiff, Board of County Commissioners for Platte County, State of Wyoming, in this matter and enters the following orders of injunction and abatement.
ORDER OF INJUNCTION
The Defendant Hubert Nickle is hereby enjoined from using the SE1/A4NW1/4, Section 20, Township 24 North, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M., in Platte County Wyoming, as a junkyard as that term is defined in the Platte County Zoning Regulations until such time as he secures a special use permit authorizing the use of the property for that purpose. The Defendant is enjoined from receiving onto the property additional scrap metal, derelict vehicles, or other similar materials until such time as a special use permit is obtained.
ORDER OF ABATEMENT
The Defendant Hubert Nickle is ordered to abate his illegal use of the property within sixty (60) days of September 28, 2004, by removing from that property all scrap metal, abandoned mobile homes, unlicensed vehicles and other salvage materials.

[T7] Nieckle's efforts to subvert and delay said order were called to the district court's attention. On December 8, 2004, the district court issued an order to show cause. A hearing was held on December 20, 2004, but a transcript of it is not included in the record on appeal. On January 6, 2005, after that hearing, the district court supplemented its original order as follows:

1. The Defendant has not made good faith efforts to comply with the Court's Order of Abatement filed herein on October 8, 2004.
2. The Defendant may comply with the October 8, 2004, Order between this date and January 23, 2005.
3. It is necessary to issue an Order authorizing the County to remove the illegal materials as listed in the Order filed October 8, 2004, and impose a lien against the property to acquire payment of such removal.

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Bluebook (online)
2007 WY 115, 162 P.3d 1208, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 125, 2007 WL 2107950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickle-v-board-of-county-commissioners-of-platte-county-wyo-2007.