Riverton Citizens Group v. Bingham County Commissioners

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 2023
Docket48743
StatusPublished

This text of Riverton Citizens Group v. Bingham County Commissioners (Riverton Citizens Group v. Bingham County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riverton Citizens Group v. Bingham County Commissioners, (Idaho 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 48743

RIVERTON CITIZENS GROUP, joined ) individuals, property owners and aggrieved ) citizens collectively, ) ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) Boise, February 2022 Term ) v. ) Opinion Filed: March 28, 2023 ) BINGHAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, a ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk local governmental agency, ) ) Respondent. ) )

Appeal from the District Court of the Seventh Judicial District, State of Idaho, Bingham County. Darren Simpson, District Judge.

The judgment of the district court is vacated, its decision dismissing the petition is reversed, and this case is remanded for further proceedings.

Justin B. Oleson, Blaser Oleson & Lloyd, Chartered, Blackfoot, for appellant. Justin B. Oleson argued.

N. Paul Rogers, Bingham County Prosecuting Attorney, Blackfoot, for respondent. N. Paul Rogers argued.

_____________________

BRODY, Justice. This appeal provides important clarifications of the procedure governing petitions for judicial review under Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 84, which is distinct from the procedure governing appeals from magistrate court to district court under Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 83. In the proceedings below, a group of pro se aggrieved property owners dubbed “Riverton Citizens Group,” timely filed a petition for judicial review challenging the Bingham County Commissioners’ (“the County”) decision to grant a zone change request. The caption of the petition named “Riverton Citizens Group” as the pro se petitioner, but the body of the petition then named the aggrieved property owners individually as the parties petitioning the County’s decision, while also providing that they were proceeding pro se under the title of “Riverton Citizens Group.” The

1 petition was not signed by any of the aggrieved property owners. Instead, it was signed by a non- petitioner who purported to be the “agent” for “Riverton Citizens Group.” The purported “agent” was not licensed to practice law in Idaho. After the district court entered a notice of intent to dismiss the petition because Riverton Citizens Group was not represented by counsel, the aggrieved property owners attempted to correct the petition through five subsequent filings, each signed by only one of the aggrieved property owners. The district court subsequently issued a written decision, concluding the petition was “improperly filed” and therefore was not a “petition” that invoked the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction under Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 84(n). Because the time for filing a new “petition” under I.R.C.P. 84(n) had passed, the district court dismissed the case with prejudice—reasoning it no longer had jurisdiction. A licensed attorney did not appear on behalf of the aggrieved property owners until after the district court’s decision to dismiss. For the reasons discussed below, the district court’s judgment of dismissal is vacated, its decision striking and dismissing the timely petition is reversed, and this case is remanded with instructions to determine an appropriate sanction for the filing of the petition in violation of the requirements of I.A.R. 11.2(a). While Rule 11.2(a) provides for the imposition of an appropriate sanction, the errors in the caption and the omitted signatures were not fatal or so defective as to render the petition a nullity or “improperly filed” such that the district court had no subject matter jurisdiction. Instead, these errors may be corrected through a filing or amended petition on remand that relates back to the date of the timely petition. See I.A.R. 17(m). I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On January 4, 2021, a group of pro se aggrieved property owners, who called themselves the “Riverton Citizens Group” in proceedings before the County, collectively filed a petition for judicial review in district court challenging the December 7, 2020, final order of the County that granted a zone change to land adjacent to their land. The petition’s caption listed “Riverton Citizens Group, joined individuals, property owners and aggrieved citizens collectively” as the “pro se [p]etitioner” and the County as the respondent. The body of the petition named the following aggrieved property owners, individually (i.e., collectively the “Riverton Citizens Group”), as the parties petitioning for judicial review: “Brett McDaniel, Debra Steele, Tricia Gay, Paul Phelps, Walter & Irma Gay, Paul and Linda McDaniel, [the] Desta M. Johnson Trust, Joyce Novasad, Lorenzo Rodriguez, Blain & Annette Cathey, and Stecklein Land LLC.” Notably,

2 “Riverton Citizens Group” is not a recognized business entity or unincorporated non-profit association. The aggrieved property owners did not sign the petition individually or through a licensed attorney. Instead, it was signed only by a non-attorney named Joel Weaver, who designated himself as “Agent for Petitioner Riverton Citizens Group.” Later, the aggrieved property owners would explain, through a filing signed by one aggrieved property owner, Debra Steele, that Weaver signed the petition not in a representative capacity, but merely to continue a “practice” established before the County in which Weaver “had been designated as the mutually recognized point of contact for the Riverton Citizens Group[,]” i.e., the aggrieved property owners. Roughly one week after the petition was filed, the district court issued a “Notice of Intent to Dismiss Petition for Judicial Review,” explaining that Weaver was neither a member of Riverton Citizens Group, nor a licensed attorney, and could not represent the aggrieved property owners, collectively known as the “Riverton Citizens Group.” In addition, the district court’s notice explained that the individual aggrieved property owners were not named as parties in the caption, and that although they appeared to be individually proceeding pro se, none of the property owners had signed and authorized the petition. From this, the district court pointed to signature requirements in both Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 11(a) and Idaho Appellate Rule 11.2(a) and ordered that the petition would be dismissed in twenty-one days unless the aggrieved property owners could show why, through briefing, their petition for judicial review could proceed. Two days later, the County filed a motion to dismiss the petition, arguing the petition should be dismissed because, among other things, it did not identify the individual aggrieved property owners as petitioning “parties,” it was not individually signed by those property owners, and that it was not signed by a licensed attorney who could represent the non-existent entity, i.e., the Riverton Citizens Group. During the twenty-one day period, the aggrieved property owners made five filings—all signed by one aggrieved property owner—Debra Steele. In each of these filings, above the caption, Weaver’s contact information remained listed, and added Steele’s, and identified both as individuals “For Pro Se Plaintiffs.” The first filing provided a supplemental statement of issues for judicial review pursuant to Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 84(c)(5) which allows a statement of issues to be filed separately from the petition after it is filed. The second filing advised the district court that “Riverton Citizens Group” intended to formally respond to the district court’s notice of

3 intent to dismiss, clarified that Weaver was the “Designated Agent” only for purposes of transmitting communications—not in a representative capacity, and that another filing would be made that included the signatures “omitted” from the timely petition. The third filing provided the signature corrections discussed in the second filing, and included a signature page as an attachment (“Exhibit A”) with the following signatures purporting to authorize the original petition: Debra Steele, Blain J.

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Bluebook (online)
Riverton Citizens Group v. Bingham County Commissioners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riverton-citizens-group-v-bingham-county-commissioners-idaho-2023.