Tuscola Area Airport Zoning Bd of Appeals v. Aeronautics Comm

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 2022
Docket357209
StatusPublished

This text of Tuscola Area Airport Zoning Bd of Appeals v. Aeronautics Comm (Tuscola Area Airport Zoning Bd of Appeals v. Aeronautics Comm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuscola Area Airport Zoning Bd of Appeals v. Aeronautics Comm, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

TUSCOLA AREA AIRPORT ZONING BOARD OF FOR PUBLICATION APPEALS, February 24, 2022 9:30 a.m. Appellant,

v No. 357209 Ingham Circuit Court MICHIGAN AERONAUTICS COMMISSION, LC No. 20-000206-AA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, and PEGASUS WIND, LLC,

Appellees.

TUSCOLA AREA AIRPORT AUTHORITY,

Appellant,

v No. 357210 Ingham Circuit Court MICHIGAN AERONAUTICS COMMISSION, LC No. 20-000207-AA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, and PEGASUS WIND, LLC,

Before: RICK, P.J., and MURRAY and SHAPIRO, JJ.

RICK, P.J.

In these consolidated appeals, appellants Tuscola Area Airport Zoning Board of Appeals (AZBA) and Tuscola Area Airport Authority (Airport Authority) appeal as of right the trial court’s order granting appellee Pegasus Wind, LLC’s motion to dismiss, with concurrence by appellees the Michigan Aeronautics Commission (MAC) and Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT), on the ground that neither appellant was an aggrieved party. This case raises an issue of first impression regarding the interpretation of “aggrieved party” under the tall structure act,

-1- MCL 259.489, and MCR 7.103(A). MCR 7.215(B)(2). For the reasons explained below, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

This controversy has an extensive procedural and factual history involving local regulatory authorities’ decisions on a wind energy system being built by Pegasus. Pegasus is constructing a commercial wind energy system in Tuscola County. Some of the planned wind turbines are within the Tuscola Area Airport zoning area. Airport Authority owns the airport and is responsible for maintenance and operation of the landing, navigational, and building facilities. See MCL 259.622. The AZBA is responsible for deciding whether to grant variances from airport zoning regulations. See MCL 259.454.

In April 2019, Pegasus received “Determinations of No Hazard” (DNH) from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for some of its proposed wind turbines within the Tuscola Airport zoning area. The FAA report stated that the turbines “would have no substantial adverse effect on the safe and efficient utilization of the navigable airspace by aircraft or on the operation of air navigation facilities.” The report noted that the turbines would require an increase in the minimum descent altitude for flights using a Very High Frequency Omni-Directional Radio Range system, known as VOR. VOR is an older technology for instrument flight. A pilot using a VOR approach must stay above the minimum descent altitude until the aircraft is in position to descend to the runway and the pilot has a visual reference point for the runway.1 The Determinations also addressed seven letters of objection that the FAA had received in response to its 2018 studies. Although some Tuscola residents petitioned the FAA to review its DNH, the FAA denied the petition for review, reiterating that the proposed turbines would not have an adverse effect on the safe use of the airspace and would not be a hazard to air navigation. While the FAA petition for review was pending, MDOT’s Office of Aeronautics held a meeting to review the project and subsequently issued a letter in which it concurred with the FAA’s DNH and stated that a “Michigan tall structure permit could be issued” once it received certificates of local variance approval.

Pegasus applied to the Tuscola Airport Zoning Administrator for 40 wind turbine permits within the airport zoning area. The administrator approved seven permits, but denied the other 33 because the turbines would violate certain airport zoning ordinances, such as aircraft descent minimums. Pegasus then sought variances from the AZBA for those 33 turbines.

The AZBA denied all 33 variances, and Pegasus appealed to the Tuscola Circuit Court. In late November 2019, the Tuscola Circuit Court concluded that Pegasus had established the requirements for the variances and reversed the AZBA’s denial of the variances.2 On March 6,

1 Federal Aviation Administration, Descent to MDA or DH and Beyond, (accessed January 26, 2022). 2 The AZBA’s subsequent applications for leave to both this Court and our Supreme Court were denied. Pegasus Wind LLC v Tuscola Area Airport Zoning Bd of Appeals, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered February 26, 2020 (Docket No. 351915), lv den 506 Mich 941 (2020), recon den 507 Mich 871 (2021).

-2- 2020, the AZBA issued the 33 variance certificates. The certificates were sent to MAC and, after they were reviewed, MAC issued the tall structure permits (the Permits). Ten days later, the AZBA and Airport Authority each initiated an appeal with the Ingham Circuit Court alleging that it was an aggrieved party of the MAC’s order issuing the Permits.

In May 2020, Pegasus filed a motion to expand the record and a motion to dismiss the appeal. Pegasus alleged that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction because MAC’s issuance of the Permits was not an order or rule that was appealable under the tall structure act, MCL 259.481 et seq., (the Act). Pegasus further argued that, even if MAC’s issuance of the Permits was appealable, neither the AZBA nor Airport Authority were aggrieved parties. MDOT and MAC filed a joint brief concurring in both the motion to dismiss and the motion to expand the record. Electing not to hold oral argument, the circuit court granted Pegasus’s motion to dismiss. Although the court concluded that it had jurisdiction over an appeal of the Permits, it determined that neither the AZBA nor Airport Authority were aggrieved parties.

These appeals followed.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

This Court reviews de novo as a question of law whether a party has standing to invoke appellate review of an administrative ruling. Olsen v Chikaming Twp, 325 Mich App 170, 180; 924 NW2d 889 (2018). This Court also reviews de novo “whether a matter is properly placed before a court by a person with standing,” as well as the interpretation of statutes and court rules. Matthew R Abel, PC v Grossman Investments Co, 302 Mich App 232, 237; 838 NW2d 204 (2013).

III. ANALYSIS

The sole issue before this Court is whether either the AZBA or Airport Authority is an “aggrieved party” under MCL 259.489 and MCR 7.103(A). We hold that the circuit court properly concluded that neither the AZBA nor Airport Authority was an aggrieved party.

The AZBA and Airport Authority filed their appeals in the circuit court pursuant to MCL 259.489, which provides:

Within 10 days after the issuance of an order or rule of the commission,[3] a person aggrieved by the order or rule may appeal to or have the action of the commission reviewed by the circuit court of Ingham county in the manner provided for the review of orders of other administrative bodies of this state.

Under MCR 7.103, a circuit court has jurisdiction over an appeal as of right “filed by an aggrieved party from . . . a final order or decision of an agency from which an appeal of right to the circuit court is provided by law.” MCR 7.103(A)(3); MCNA Ins Co v Dep’t of Technology, Mgt & Budget, 326 Mich App 740, 744-745; 929 NW2d 817 (2019). Thus, under MCL 259.489, a party seeking relief from a decision from the MAC must establish to the circuit court that they are “an

3 “Commission” refers to the MAC. See MCL 259.481(d).

-3- aggrieved” party. See MCL 259.489. “An aggrieved party is not one who is merely disappointed over a certain result.

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Tuscola Area Airport Zoning Bd of Appeals v. Aeronautics Comm, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuscola-area-airport-zoning-bd-of-appeals-v-aeronautics-comm-michctapp-2022.