Town of Stillwater v. Minnesota Municipal Commission

219 N.W.2d 82, 300 Minn. 211, 1974 Minn. LEXIS 1328
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 31, 1974
Docket44415, 44500
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 N.W.2d 82 (Town of Stillwater v. Minnesota Municipal Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Stillwater v. Minnesota Municipal Commission, 219 N.W.2d 82, 300 Minn. 211, 1974 Minn. LEXIS 1328 (Mich. 1974).

Opinion

Rogosheske, Justice.

In this declaratory judgment action arising out of proceedings pending before the Minnesota Municipal Commission, the commission appealed pursuant to Rule 103.03 (i), Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure, from an order of the district court denying a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and certifying the question presented to be important and doubtful.

The commission is an agency of the state vested with authority under Minn. St. c. 414 to conduct proceedings and issue orders regarding incorporation of villages and annexation, consolidation, and detachment of municipal lands. The proceedings involved here concern two petitions requesting annexation of certain lands in the township of Stillwater to the city of Stillwater initiated by all the owners of the lands. Before the commission had completed hearings and issued all final orders in response to the petitions, the town commenced an action in district court for declaratory judgment against the commission. The relief sought was to invalidate the orders of annexation issued by the commission and to enjoin further pending proceedings. The action was based upon allegations essentially claiming that the commission had exceeded its statutory powers and arbitrarily *213 ordered piecemeal annexation of township property, thus enabling the city of Stillwater to annex additional adjoining township property without affording a hearing and opportunity to vote for or against annexation to owners of lands adjacent to the lands ordered annexed. The district court, in denying the commission’s pretrial motion for dismissal of the town’s declaratory judgment action, certified the propriety of the denial as important and doubtful. The sole question presented is whether a declaratory judgment action pursuant to Minn. St. c. 555 is available as an alternative remedy to challenge commission annexation proceedings. Because we conclude that a statutory proceeding for judicial review pursuant to § 414.07, subd. 2, is ordinarily the exclusive remedy for challenging commission proceedings and orders requiring commission approval, we reverse and order dismissal of the action for declaratory judgment.

These cases arise from almost 2 years of proceedings before the commission concerning proposed annexations, community planning, and development in the Stillwater township area west of the city of Stillwater and the village of Oak Park Heights. 1 This case, however, involves but two proceedings heard by the commission dealing with the annexation of certain township property abutting the boundaries of the city of Stillwater. These proceedings bear commission docket numbers A-1985 and A-2056. Both were instituted by petitions signed by all of the owners of the lands who seek annexation to the city of Stillwater. In each case, the town objected and hearings, as required by c. *214 414, were ordered. Numerous hearings, many of them consolidated, were held between September 1971 and August 1972.

Subsequent to the hearings, the commission ordered the annexation of the petitioned property in proceeding A-1985 on October 30,1972. On November 10, 1972, the town of Stillwater, as authorized by § 414.07, subd. 2, applied to the district court for statutory review of the commission’s order.

The annexation petition in proceeding A-2056, originally filed with the commission on August 10, 1971, was expanded by the commission on March 21, 1972, pursuant to § 414.031, subd. 4, to include township property which had not been included in the original petition for annexation. When the commission, on January 5, 1973, also ordered these lands annexed, § 414.031, subd. 5, necessitated a supplementary hearing to determine whether the petitioning owners constituted a majority of the owners of. lands ordered annexed. If the petitioning owners do not constitute a majority, an election approving or rejecting annexation is required.

Subsequent to the annexation order in A-1985 and the expansion of proceeding A-2056 but before both the orders for annexation and supplementary hearing were issued in the latter proceeding, the town of Stillwater and the village of Oak Park Heights filed with the commission a petition for consolidation of those two governmental units pursuant to § 414.021. This consolidation proceeding is pending before the commission.

Prior to the supplementary hearing, the town of Stillwater applied for statutory review of the commission’s order in proceeding A-2056. Following the commission’s order of annexation in A-2056, the town of Stillwater commenced this declaratory judgment action challenging both annexation proceedings. Finally, in April 1973, the town of Stillwater requested a rehearing before the commission of both annexation proceedings, which request is still pending.

In its prayer for declaratory relief, the town of Stillwater requested the district court to declare the rights of the parties in *215 volved, declare the acts of the commission arbitrary and capricious, declare c. 414 unconstitutional, vacate the commission’s orders in proceedings A-1985 and A-2056, and restrain and enjoin the commission from proceeding further with A-2056. The village of Oak Park Heights and individual residents of the town of Stillwater intervened in the town’s declaratory judgment action.

In the action for declaratory judgment, the district court refused to restrain the commission from proceeding further with A-2056, concluding that the commission’s order for a supplementary hearing was “not a final administrative order with respect to whether an annexation election [was] required.” However, at a later date, the court ordered the proceeding in A-2056 reopened. In response to the court’s reopening order and in an apparent attempt to remove all doubt concerning the propriety of the annexation of the A-2056 property as expanded, the commission reopened the proceeding and “decided to rescind the proposed expansion and approve the annexation only of the petitioned property.” Such supplementary order concerning A-2056 was issued by the commission on March 22, 1973. The village of Oak Park Heights timely sought statutory review of the commission’s order, alleging that such action was “arbitrary, fraudulént, capricious and oppressive and [was] in unreasonable disregard of the best interests of the territory affected.”

The town of Stillwater and the intervenors in the declaratory judgment action moved the district court for an order consolidating the statutory appeals from the commission’s final orders in proceedings A-1985 and A-2056 with the declaratory judgment action. In response, the commission moved to dismiss the declaratory judgment action, maintaining that the statutory review provided by § 414.07 was the exclusive means of judicial review of actions of the commission. The district court denied the commission’s motion but certified the denial to this court as an important and doubtful question.

We regard the issue of whether an action for declaratory judg *216 ment may be used as an alternative remedy for statutory judicial review of annexation orders requiring commission approval as one of first impression. 2

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Bluebook (online)
219 N.W.2d 82, 300 Minn. 211, 1974 Minn. LEXIS 1328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-stillwater-v-minnesota-municipal-commission-minn-1974.