Peter Barrett v. City of Gulfport, Mississippi

196 So. 3d 905, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 164, 2016 WL 1593353
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 2016
Docket2015-CA-00353-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 196 So. 3d 905 (Peter Barrett v. City of Gulfport, Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Barrett v. City of Gulfport, Mississippi, 196 So. 3d 905, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 164, 2016 WL 1593353 (Mich. 2016).

Opinion

WALLER, Chief Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. The Gulfport City Council approved the City of Gulfport’s application to use the historic Grass Lawn Home as a recreation center upon its reconstruction after Hurricane Katrina. Peter and Fay Barrett appealed the City Council’s decision to the Harrison County Circuit Court, arguing that Grass Lawn was zoned exclusively for residential use and that the City had abandoned any nonconforming use on the property in question. The circuit court dismissed the Barretts’ claim as moot, and the Barretts now appeal to this Court. We find that the circuit court correctly found that the Barretts’ appeal was rendered moot by the City’s withdrawal of its application, and the Barretts’ appeal does *907 not meet an exception to the mootness doctrine. Accordingly, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of the.Barretts’ appeal.

FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. The instant case arises out of the City’s efforts to rebuild the antebellum home Grass Lawn after it was destroyed during Hurricane Katrina. Grass Lawn was built in 1836, sixty years prior to the City’s founding. Grass Lawn served as a private residence until 1973, when the City purchased it to use as an event space for weddings, parties, and other private events. Critically to this case, the Grass Lawn property is located in a R-l-7.5 zoning district, which is defined as “single-family residence districts — low density.” 1

¶ 3. On August 29, 2005, Grass Lawn was reduced to its slab by Hurricane Katrina, and it remained in this condition for roughly three years. In November of 2008, the City filed an application with its Department of Urban Development Planning Commission seeking approval “[t]o allow a non-conforming use in an R1.75 zoning district. The use shall be a Recreational facility.” The application identified Grass Lawn as the property in question and also noted that the “building/structure does conform with R1.75 zoning requirements.”

¶ 4. The City’s application seems self-contradictory at -first glance. The application requests approval of a nonconforming use on the property but states that Grass Lawn will be used as a “recreational facility.” The record reveals that the City intended to use the term “public recreation center,” rather than “recreational facility,” as the former is included in the City’s zoning ordinances as a permitted use for property, located within a R-l-7.5 zoning district. This intent is supported by the City’s later arguments before the Planning Commission and City Council. Because Planning -Commission approval still is required for permitted uses, it appears that the purpose of the City’s application was to secure a permitted, use — a public recreation center — rather than a nonconforming use for Grass Lawn.

¶ 5. The City’s application was accompanied by a letter from Frank Genzer, whose architecture firm Genzer-WHLC was planning the reconstruction of Grass Lawn. The letter established that the reconstruction of Grass Lawn “will re-establish its use as a museum, providing educational tours and lectures, as well as a location for community receptions.”

¶6. The Gulfport Code of Ordinances requires the Planning Commission to respond to applications like the City’s at its next regular meeting after such an application is filed. 2 However, in this case, Plan- *908 rang Commission Chairperson Anna D. Stewart was asked to schedule a special meeting on December 2, 2008, to consider the City’s application. She refused, noting that a City Council meeting was scheduled for the same day. City Council members often attended the Planning Commission’s meetings, and Stewart felt it would be appropriate to give them the opportunity to do so in this case. Over Stewart’s objection, Larry Jones, the Planning Commission’s Director of Urban Development, scheduled a special meeting on December 2, 2008, to review the City’s application. Stewart objected to Jones’s actions as violating the Planning Commission’s bylaws, which, give only the. chairperson the authority to call special meetings. Stewart also objected to the use of her name on the public notice for the meeting.

¶ 7. Peter and Fay Barrett, who owned property adjacent to Grass Lawn, filed a Memorandum in Opposition to the City’s application. The Barretts alleged that the City had used Grass Lawn as a private event venue, a nonconforming use for its zoning district, since 1973, The Barretts then argued that the City had abandoned any continued nonconforming use of Grass Lawn by failing to fíle a building permit within one year after Grass Lawn was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina, as required by the City’s zoning ordinances. 3 The Barretts also contended that the use of the term “recreational facility” in the City’s application was a “subterfuge,” because. the City did not intend to rebuild Grass Lawn as a public recreation center within the meaning of the zoning ordinances. Rather, the Barretts alleged that the City intended to continue to use Grass Lawn as a commercial space and included the term “recreational facility” only as an attempt to fit within the zoning regulations. Finally, the Barretts argued that Grass Lawn’s suggested use as a museum would not conform with the zoning ordinances, either. Accordingly, the Barretts asked the Planning Commission to deny the City’s application.

¶ 8. The special meeting of the Planning Commission took place on December 2, 2008. At the hearing, Jones explained that the term “recreational facility” was used in the application because “that terminology is in the ordinance.... Really, a better explanation of the use would be a museum available to the public for private events.” Genzer confirmed that Grass Lawn was being designed as a museum which could be rented to private parties for events. Jones and Genzer explained that Grass Lawn itself would be rebuilt as it Originally stood in 1836, with any later additions to the home being excluded from the’ plans. However, a catering kitchen, public restrooms, and offices would be added in an adjacent building on the property. A representative of Genzer’s architecture firm explained that the plan to rebuild Grass Lawn had taken longer than expected because it was being funded by FEMA and had to be approved by FEMA, the National Historic Association, and the Mississippi Department of Archives and History-

*909 ¶ 9. The Barretts appeared at the meeting and argued that the applicable zoning ordinances required that the property be limited to residential use because the City had failed to apply to rebuild Grass Lawn within the one-year time limit. Other neighboring property owners appeared at the meeting and explained the various problems caused by Grass Lawn’s former use as a private event venue.’ They contended that the neighborhood in which Grass Lawn was located consistently was filled with loud noise and heavy traffic during events and that the City had failed to enforce any noise or traffic regulations or the fire code at Grass Lawn in the past.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 3d 905, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 164, 2016 WL 1593353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-barrett-v-city-of-gulfport-mississippi-miss-2016.