St. Johns County v. Smith
This text of 766 So. 2d 1097 (St. Johns County v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ST. JOHNS COUNTY, etc., Petitioner,
v.
Donald R. SMITH and R. Lee Smith, Respondents.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*1098 Patrick F. McCormack and Richard A. Barfield, St. Augustine, for Petitioner.
J. Stephen Alexander, St. Augustine, for Respondents.
W. SHARP, J.
St. Johns County (by its Board of County Commissioners) seeks certiorari review in this court of the order rendered by the circuit court in certiorari proceedings below, which directed the County Commission to grant Donald R. and R. Lee Smith's application for a modification to a PUD which included a solid waste transfer facility as a permitted use. We grant the writ.
The parcel of land involved in this proceeding is an 89-acre PUD for the Cumberland Industrial Park. It had been initially zoned "open rural," which would not have permitted solid waste transfer stations. The PUD provided for "all essential public services including waste, sewer, gas substations, lift stations, treatment plants and similar installations." But it also provided the PUD would not adversely affect the health and safety of residents, would not be detrimental to the natural environment, and would "accomplish a more desirable environment than would be possible through the strict application of the zoning code."
The County staff approved the modification, provided the solid waste transfer facility was dropped. The Board of County Commissioners held two hearings on the application, and at both indicated concerns about the transfer station. At the hearing at issue in this proceeding, which was held January 26, 1999, county staff recommended approval of the application, provided the transfer station was deleted because the transfer station was not compatible with the existing residential and light industrial commercial development surrounding the parcel. Two witnesses testified as experts on the negative-use aspects of a transfer station and why it would not be compatible with the light manufacturing or processing uses allowed in the PUD.[1]
*1099 During the hearing, some members of the County Commission voiced concerns over the effect of the transfer station on the County's solid waste franchise system. However, counsel advised that their decision should be based on testimony indicating the proposed transfer station use was or was not compatible with the PUD, and whether the proposed modification would accomplish a more desirable environment within the PUD. The County Commission concluded that the heavy industrial nature of the proposed station would not provide:
[A]n environment of stable character compatible with the surrounding residential area and it does not accomplish a more desirable environment than would be possible through the strict application of the minimum requirements of the zoning ordinances.
The Smiths pursued their review remedies by filing a petition for writ of certiorari with the St. Johns County Circuit Court.[2] Judge Richard Weinberg held a hearing on September 27, 1999, which was not reported. After the hearing, the Smiths filed an affidavit which offered a compromise: they would restrict the proposed transfer station to "non-putrescible and non-hazardous construction and demolition debris," until or unless the owner of the transfer station became a solid waste contractor ("franchisee") for the County. The County objected on the ground that certiorari review is limited to the record made at the County Commission hearing below.
The circuit judge ordered the County Commission to consider the issue of the offer of compromise at a subsequent hearing. The parties orally agreed to request a stay in the case to see if County staff could bring the new offer back to the County Commission.
On October 8, 1999, the judge held a second hearing and heard arguments concerning the new offer of compromise. The County continued to object. The Smiths agreed Judge Weinberg could not properly review the offer, but that it should go back to the County Commission for consideration. The judge ruled he was remanding the cause so that the Smiths could supplement the record.
On October 19, 1999, the County Commission voted not to join the Smiths' request for a remand, but to wait until the cause was remanded and then, if necessary, file a petition for writ of certiorari in this court. The circuit judge was so notified.
At that point the circuit judge issued an order granting the petition for writ of certiorari. He remanded the cause to the County Commission with directions to approve the application for modification, which included the transfer station, based on the compromise offer. The judge found, in summary, that the Smiths' burden under Snyder[3] to demonstrate that the proposed request was consistent with the comprehensive plan was met by the staff report, and that the witness, John Schwab, did not provide any substantial competent evidence about the proposed transfer station because he was not a registered engineer. The judge also mistakenly considered *1100 the Commission's 4-to-1 vote as an actual vote on October 19, 1999, on the application as revised by the compromise offer. In fact, however, neither party considered the October 19, 1999, presentation to the County Commission to be a hearing and neither side presented any evidence and no vote was taken on the revised application.
It appears that the Smiths were seeking a major modification to the PUD. Section 8-2-4(B) of the St. Johns Zoning Code provides:
Major Adjustments to Ordinance Creating a PUD. The developer of lands zoned PUD may apply for major adjustments to plans approved as part of the Ordinance creating a PUD, and such application shall proceed and be processed in the same manner as standard rezoning applications....
Board of County Commissioners of Brevard County v. Snyder, 627 So.2d 469 (Fla.1993), sets forth the controlling rules concerning burden of proof and quality of evidence in such zoning cases. In specific, Snyder holds that a landowner seeking to rezone property has the burden of proving his proposal is consistent with the comprehensive plan, after which the burden shifts to the Board of County Commissioners to show that maintaining the existing zoning accomplishes a legitimate public purpose. If the burden shifts, the County must show there was substantial competent evidence presented to the Commission to support its action. Id. at 476.
In overturning the Commission's decision, the circuit court made two legal errors in regard to Snyder. First, the burden was not properly shifted in this case to the County Commission, because the Smiths offered no proof that their proposal was consistent with the comprehensive plan.[4] The circuit court relied on the county staff report which initially approved the complete proposal. However that staff report was effectively superseded. The staff's recommendation in the record before the Commission approved the proposal only if the transfer station was omitted.
Second, even if the burden shifted under Snyder to the Commission, it appears the circuit court substituted its evaluation of the evidence for that of the Commission's, and in so doing, departed from the essential requirements of law. See Florida Power & Light Co. v. City of Dania, 761 So.2d 1089 (Fla.2000).
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766 So. 2d 1097, 2000 WL 1133079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-johns-county-v-smith-fladistctapp-2000.