Taylor v. Board of County Commissioners

860 P.2d 8, 124 Idaho 392
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1993
Docket19415
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 860 P.2d 8 (Taylor v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Board of County Commissioners, 860 P.2d 8, 124 Idaho 392 (Idaho Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

SWANSTROM, Judge.

This is an appeal from a district court decision reversing a zoning change ordered by the Bonner County Board of Commissioners (Board) at the request of Merritt Brothers Lumber, Inc. (Merritt) in 1989. The Board enacted an ordinance rezoning two parcels of real property owned by Mer *394 ritt from suburban to industrial. Thomas and Thelma Taylor (Taylors) appealed the zone change decision to the district court which reversed the Board’s decision and declared the ordinance void. The Board appealed that decision, and Merritt joined the appeal as an intervenor. For reasons given below, we vacate the Board's decision and remand the case to the Board for further findings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURE

In 1968, Merritt acquired a small stud mill and several acres adjacent to the City of Priest River in Bonner County, Idaho. A mill had been operated on that site at least as early as 1959. Merritt continued to operate, expand and upgrade the lumber mill after its acquisition.

In 1978, Bonner County adopted a Comprehensive Plan in conformity with the Local Planning Act of 1975. As required by the Act, the County enacted a general county-wide zoning ordinance, Ordinance No. 140, effective July 1, 1980. 1 By this ordinance, the Merritt mill site and adjacent real property involved in this action were zoned suburban. No “industrial” districts or zones were created by the ordinance. The operation of a sawmill was not a permitted use within a suburban district.

After July 1, 1980, the Merritt mill continued to operate as a nonconforming use within the suburban district. During these years Merritt acquired additional parcels of real property which were incorporated into the mill’s operation. The expanded site of 28.47 acres now includes a sawmill, planer mill, dry kilns, a boiler, maintenance shops, office .space, log and lumber storage areas, and parking for trucks and workers’ vehicles. Under Merritt’s ownership, the mill’s daily production has grown from 20,000 board feet of lumber to 500,000, and the number of employees has increased from a few to 125.

Merritt’s expansion of the mill’s operations was not universally acclaimed. By 1987, some neighboring homeowners complained to county officials that Merritt’s expansion into their subdivision was in violation of county building and zoning laws. There is evidence in the record, which Merritt does not dispute, that after July 1, 1980, Merritt built additional structures and purchased adjacent real property without seeking any approval from county building and zoning officials. For the purposes of this appeal we can assume that Merritt’s past action constituted improper expansion of a nonconforming use. In any event, the complaints made to county officials prompted Merritt to apply for a zone change for the mill site. In 1987, the Board granted the request, rezoning the 28.47 acres on which the mill operated at that time from suburban to industrial. Thomas and Thelma Taylor, neighbors who had opposed the requested change, appealed the change order to the district court. In February, 1989, the court reversed the Board’s order, holding that the Board had failed to make adequate findings, and remanded the case. That decision was not appealed.

In March and May, 1989, Merritt made two new zone change applications. Application CZ 164-89 covered the identical site for which the 1987 zone change application was made. Application CZ 162-89 was for an adjoining 13.15 acre parcel west of the mill site, which recently had been acquired by Merritt. Merritt requested these two parcels be rezoned to an “industrial” district “to facilitate an already existing mill and its necessary ability to expand its operations” and “to expand [its] employee and equipment parking.”

The 28.47 acre parcel now includes a portion of the neighboring Springdale Gardens Subdivision lying east of the mill. First Street in that subdivision forms part of the present eastern boundary of the mill site. To the south lie rural residential tracts, but the number of residences, their density and their proximity to the mill site are not revealed in any detail by the record. *395 The property to the west of the 13.15 acre parcel is relatively undeveloped timberland with scattered homesites in existence or projected for the future. A county highway running parallel to the Pend Oreille River forms the northern boundary of the mill site. The City of Priest River lies immediately to the north, across the river. A paved north-south highway bisects the mill site, crossing the river and leading directly into the City of Priest River.

After a public hearing and several public meetings, the Bonner County Planning and Zoning Commission (Commission) recommended, by split votes of its members, that the Board deny the zone change applications. Thereafter, the Board also held public hearings on the zone change applications. In a memorandum decision and order, the Board approved the zone change applications. The Board then enacted an ordinance changing the zoning designation of the two parcels, comprising forty-two acres, from suburban to industrial.

Again the Taylors appealed the Board’s decision to the district court. Again the court reversed the Board’s decision and further declared the rezoning ordinance void. The court concluded that the Board’s grant of the zone change applications and enactment of the new zoning ordinance giving conforming status to the industrial use, was arbitrary, capricious and an abuse of discretion. The court reasoned that the Board’s actions were improper because they violated the letter and spirit of the Bonner County Comprehensive Plan and Bonner County Ordinance 140 by giving conforming status to an unlawfully expanded nonconforming use. The court also held that the granting of the zone change applications and enactment of the new zoning ordinance constituted improper “spot zoning.” This appeal by the Board followed.

ISSUES

The Board, as the initial appellant, raises several issues relating to the district court’s appellate decision: whether the district court erred by substituting its judgment for that of the Board; whether the court exceeded its authority by declaring that “nonconforming uses are to be eliminated over the long term not expanded;” whether the court erroneously applied the “spot zoning” doctrine because of Idaho’s quasi-judicial model of deciding site-specific zoning requests; and whether the court erred in reversing the Board and in voiding the newly enacted zoning ordinance absent a documented finding that the Taylors’ substantial rights were prejudiced.

Merritt, who did not participate in the appeal from the Board’s decision to the district court, was granted permission by the Supreme Court to intervene in the present appellate proceeding. Merritt joins with the Board in appealing from the district court’s decision. Merritt adopts the Board’s issues and arguments and raises some additional issues discussed later.

The Taylors, who are respondents in the present appeal, raise additional issues pursuant to I.A.R. 35(b)(4). Their issues focus on the action of the Board, not upon the district court’s appellate decision.

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Bluebook (online)
860 P.2d 8, 124 Idaho 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-board-of-county-commissioners-idahoctapp-1993.