State Ex Rel. SCA Chemical Services, Inc. v. Sanidas

681 S.W.2d 557, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3429
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 20, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 681 S.W.2d 557 (State Ex Rel. SCA Chemical Services, Inc. v. Sanidas) 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
State Ex Rel. SCA Chemical Services, Inc. v. Sanidas, 681 S.W.2d 557, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3429 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

TOMLIN, Judge.

This cause began as a mandamus action and a suit for declaratory judgment against the City of Memphis and Shelby County governments and the Chief Building Official of Shelby County. The relator, SCA Chemical Waste Service, Inc. (hereafter “SCA” or “plaintiff”) sought to void an amendment to the comprehensive Memphis and Shelby County zoning ordinance passed at a public hearing held by the joint legislative bodies of the two governments for the purpose of considering and passing the ordinance, but without the amendment. SCA also sought a writ against the Chief Building Officer of Shelby County to require him to issue a building permit to it for a proposed chemical waste treatment plant. The chancellor found that the amendment submitted and passed at the public hearing, without prior notice of any kind, was not a substantial enough change to require its prior consideration by the Shelby County Land Use Control Board (formerly the Shelby County Planning Commission) and dismissed the complaint. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court who transferred the case to this Court, stating that the action was one for declaratory judgment rather than mandamus.

Two issues are presented to this Court for our consideration on appeal: (1) whether or not the amendment, submitted for the first time at the public hearing and passed at that time, was a valid and lawful amendment to the comprehensive zoning ordinance inasmuch as it was neither submitted to the Shelby County Land Use Control Board prior to its passage, nor subject to a public hearing by the joint legislative bodies prior to its passage; and (2) whether or not, by simple resolution, the Shelby County Commission (hereafter “County Commission”) can make the granting of a building permit conditional upon the applicant’s submitting written compliance with the U.S. Equal Opportunity of Employment Act of 1972, as codified in 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et *559 seq. (1976). In the opinion of this Court, both of these issues are resolved in favor of the plaintiff.

Most of the essential facts in this case are not in dispute. SCA, a public company listed on the New York Stock Exchange, is in the business of collecting and disposing of garbage and refuse, including the disposal of hazardous wastes generated by government and industry. The handling and disposal of hazardous wastes is regulated by the Federal Resources Conservation and Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6901, et seq. (1976) and the Tennessee Hazardous Waste Management Act, T.C.A. § 68-46-101, et seq. SCA, after extensive research of the southeastern part of the United States, proposed to acquire a site in Shelby County on which to build an incinerator and chemical waste treatment plant. Various kinds of waste would be brought to this plant in bulk quantities to be unloaded, analyzed and put through an appropriate treatment process. Any material residue would be shipped off to a chemical landfill. Waste water from this process would be analyzed, and if in compliance with the agreement with the Public Works Department of the City of Memphis, it would be discharged into the North Waste Water Treatment Works.

Having selected Shelby County as a location for one of its plants, in August, 1980, SCA began making preparations to obtain appropriate permits and to acquire a site. At that time, through legal counsel, it reviewed the zoning laws in Memphis and Shelby County and determined that the heavy industrial district or zone classification designated M-4, as designed under the zoning ordinances then existing, would permit the building and operation of such a facility.

SCA was also fully cognizant,that at that time a comprehensive new zoning ordinance was being considered by the legislative bodies of the city and county. Plaintiff was advised by its counsel, and correctly so, that the new ordinance as proposed would not affect plaintiffs plans to locate its plant in the heavy industrial district, other than to change the designation of that zone from “M-4” to “I-H.”

What has been designated as the “new comprehensive zoning ordinance,” was initially proposed by the Memphis and Shelby County Office of Planning and Development in 1978. The final draft of the ordinance, as recommended by the Control Board to the legislative bodies of the City of Memphis and Shelby County on July 23, 1980, was likewise identical to both the existing ordinance and the initial draft of 1978 in regard to the land uses permitted in the M-4 or I-H zone. One of the uses permitted in this zone was “garbage or refuse collection service,” which of course was not applicable to the use here intended by SCA. There was also a category for chemical plants, in which category it appears that SCA’s activities would fall.

Pursuant to law, as we will consider in more detail later, the Control Board held a public hearing on July 23, 1980, to consider the comprehensive ordinance recommended to it by staff. At this public hearing no changes were made in the text of the ordinance as recommended to it. The Control Board recommended the adoption of the ordinance in its original form to the joint legislative bodies of the city and county.

On September 25, 1980, there appeared in the “Daily News,” and perhaps other newspapers in Memphis and Shelby County, the full text of the proposed zoning ordinance to be considered by the legislative bodies of the two governments in joint session on October 6, 1980. Inasmuch as plaintiff had concluded that the only change to be made by the proposed ordinance in the zone under consideration was the change in designation, no representatives of plaintiff attended the public hearing.

At the public meeting of the joint legislative bodies on October 6, 1980 representatives of the staff of the Office of Planning and Development submitted almost six pages of changes and modifications to the proposed ordinance. For the most part they were what has been designated and agreed upon as “housekeeping” changes. *560 However, two changes were proposed and adopted that materially affected plaintiff. First, a new category of use in the I-H zone was created and designated as “refuse processing, treatment and storage.” Secondly, it was provided that such use could not be carried on in the I-H zone as a matter of right, but rather it would require the obtaining of a special use permit. Both the zoning ordinance as it existed prior to the consideration and adoption of the comprehensive zoning ordinance and the new comprehensive zoning ordinance itself required a special use pe'rmit before a building permit could be issued for various operations to be carried on in both residential and industrial areas in accordance with specific regulations. We will address this in more detail hereafter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
681 S.W.2d 557, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sca-chemical-services-inc-v-sanidas-tennctapp-1984.