Sandra Walker v. Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 30, 2009
DocketM2007-01701-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sandra Walker v. Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation (Sandra Walker v. Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation) 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
Sandra Walker v. Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE January 9, 2009 Session

SANDRA WALKER, ET AL. v. METROPOLITAN BOARD OF PARKS AND RECREATION, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 07-1166-II Carol L. McCoy, Chancellor

No. M2007-01701-COA-R3-CV - FILED DECEMBER 30, 2009

AND

SANDRA WALKER, ET AL. v. METROPOLITAN BOARD OF PARKS AND RECREATION, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 07-2480-III Carol L. McCoy, Chancellor

No. M2008-01226-COA-R3-CV - FILED DECEMBER 30, 2009

ORGANIZED NEIGHBORS OF EDGEHILL (O.N.E.), ET AL. v. METROPOLITAN BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 07-2310-II Carol L. McCoy, Chancellor

No. M2008-02218-COA-R3-CV - FILED DECEMBER 30, 2009

ORGANIZED NEIGHBORS OF EDGEHILL (O.N.E.), ET AL. v. METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 08-48-II Carol L. McCoy, Chancellor

No. M2008-01748-COA-R3-CV - FILED DECEMBER 30, 2009 Two residents of the Edgehill neighborhood of Nashville, as well as an organization of neighborhood residents, filed petitions for writ of certiorari with the aim of preventing the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County from entering into a lease agreement with Belmont University. The same parties also brought a petition for declaratory judgment challenging the lease. The proposed lease provided that the University would construct an extensive sports complex in a public park located in the petitioners’ neighborhood for the use of the University as well as local schools and neighborhood residents. The first petition was filed after a public meeting at which the Metro Parks Board recommended that the lease be adopted, but before it was actually approved by the Metro Council. The trial court dismissed it without prejudice as premature. Subsequent petitions were filed after the Metro Council voted to approve the lease. The petitioners argued that the process the Parks Board followed was arbitrary and capricious, that it deprived them of their right to procedural due process, and that the action of the Metro Council was invalid because it was based on a flawed process of recommendation. The trial court dismissed all the petitioners’ claims. Because the Board’s recommendation was not a final order or judgment resulting from the exercise of judicial functions, and because the record showed that there was a rational basis for the Metro Council’s decision, we affirm the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, P.J.,M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR. and ANDY D. BENNETT , JJ., joined.

Joseph Howell Johnston, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Sandra Walker and Janice Richardson.

Richard L. Tennent, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Organized Neighbors of Edgehill (O.N.E.), Arlene Lane, et al.

Sue B. Cain, Director of Law, The Department of Law of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, Lora Barkenbus Fox, Assistant Metropolitan Attorney, Paul Jefferson Campbell, II, Assistant Metropolitan Attorney for the appellees, Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation;

John Lee Farringer, IV, for the appellee, Belmont University.

OPINION

The appeals decided in this opinion arose from challenges to an agreement between the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County (“Metro”) and Belmont University (“Belmont”) regarding the use and development of a public park. As will be explained below, these challenges resulted in lawsuits that took various procedural forms, involved some of the same parties, and were subject to consolidations, transfers, severances, and joinder of claims in the trial

-2- court.1 We need not, and will not, detail in every particular the complicated procedural path that led the cases to these appeals. We have concluded that several issues exist that should be addressed, regardless of the action in which they were raised, and that it will be simpler and clearer to decide all the appeals in one opinion, because they all arise from the same set of facts and share related issues.

Two residents who live near the park in question, Sandra Walker and Janice Richardson, as well as a community organization called Organized Neighbors of Edgehill (“O.N.E.”) filed actions challenging Metro’s decision to enter into a longterm lease with Belmont. They named, as various defendants or respondents in the different actions, all the Metro entities that played some part in the process(es) resulting in approval and implementation of the lease: Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation (“Parks Board’), the Metropolitan Planning Commission, the Metropolitan Council (“Council”), and the Metropolitan Board of Zoning Appeals (“the BZA”). Belmont University was also named as a defendant or respondent.

Eventually, the various actions were appropriately separated out by the trial court into claims properly brought by common law writ of certiorari and those properly brought as actions for declaratory judgment. Like claims were joined or consolidated, and dissimilar claims were severed.2 All of the cases arose from the same proposed transaction, and the underlying facts are not in dispute.

I. A PLAN FOR A PARK

E.S. Rose Park is a 23.88 acre park in the Edgehill neighborhood of Nashville. It is owned by Metro and is managed by the Parks Board. Much of the park is undeveloped, but it is crossed by trails that neighboring residents use for walking and bicycling. One acre contains the Easley Community Center and a public swimming pool. There are also a baseball field and two playgrounds. Two public schools adjoin Rose Park and use its facilities: Carter-Lawrence Elementary School and Park Middle School. Hume-Fogg High School, located in another part of the city, uses the Rose Park baseball field for its games.

Belmont University is a private university located about ten blocks away from Rose Park. It has a number of varsity athletic teams sanctioned by the NCAA, including men’s and women’s baseball, soccer and track teams. In January of 2006, Belmont asked Metro if some of its athletic teams could use Rose Park. That request led to discussions with the acquisition/disposition committee of the Parks Board and finally to the drafting of an agreement which the committee

1 This court consolidated the four appeals into two for purposes of briefing and argument.

2 For example, the declaratory judgment claim by Ms. W alker and Ms. Richardson against the Metro Council was severed from their certiorari claims and was joined with O.N.E.’s case through an “Amended Joint Petition for Declaratory Judgment and Injunctive Relief.” Appellate causes of action, like a petition for common law writ of certiorari, may not be combined with original causes of action, like petitions for declaratory judgment. Hunter v. Metropolitan Board of Zoning Appeals, No. M2002-00752-COA-R3-CV, 2004 W L 315060 at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 17, 2004)(no Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application filed). The W alker and Richardson petition did not specifically refer to declaratory judgment. However, the trial court deemed the claim against the Metropolitan Council to be one for declaratory relief and, accordingly, allowed it to be severed from the claims against the other governmental entities.

-3- recommended to the full membership of the Board “contingent upon conditions relative to scheduling, traffic control/parking being resolved and subject to approval by Metro Legal before the final contract is signed.”

The proposed agreement was a 40 year Property Improvement and Lease Agreement (“the Agreement”).

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Sandra Walker v. Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-walker-v-metropolitan-board-of-parks-and-re-tennctapp-2009.