United States Cellular Corp. v. Board of Adjustment

589 N.W.2d 712, 1999 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 36, 1999 WL 74159
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 17, 1999
Docket97-426
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 589 N.W.2d 712 (United States Cellular Corp. v. Board of Adjustment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Cellular Corp. v. Board of Adjustment, 589 N.W.2d 712, 1999 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 36, 1999 WL 74159 (iowa 1999).

Opinion

TERNUS, Justice.

This ease involves an attempt by appellee, United States Cellular Corporation (U.S.Cellular), to obtain a special use permit for construction of a communications tower in the City of Des Moines. Appellant, the Board of Adjustment for the City of Des Moines, denied U.S. Cellular’s request for such a permit. The district court sustained U.S. Cellular’s petition for a writ of certiorari and directed the Board to issue the special use permit. The Board has appealed. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

U.S. Cellular applied to the Board of Adjustment for a special permit to construct “a 100 foot monopole and a 12’ x 20’ equipment building for cellular communication use” at 1629 Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway in Des Moines. The property in question was zoned C-0 commercial. Although a communications tower and equipment building were permitted uses in this district, a special permit was required.

At the time in question the property on which the tower was to be erected was being used for a dry cleaning business. The owners of this business had decided they could no longer remain in operation due to requirements imposed by the Environmental Protection Agency. U.S. Cellular offered the owners a lease/buy agreement that would allow it to construct the pole and building. U.S. Cellular was interested in this site because it was located in an area in which it currently had a need to improve cellular service.

The Board held a public hearing to address the company’s application. Property owners within 200 feet of the site were notified of the hearing and were also provided response/comment cards to indicate support for or opposition to the proposed construction. Seven cards were returned: three in favor, three opposed, and one indicating no position.

At the hearing on U.S. Cellular’s application, the staff of the zoning commission submitted a report stating:

Staff recommends denial of this appeal [sic]. The question of monopole locations has and is being studied by the Plan and Zoning Commission and the City Council. A proposal has been prepared and is being looked at for possible minor modification. The applicant’s proposal does not meet the standards in the proposed ordinance on several counts. As such, Staff strongly recommends against this request.

(Emphasis added.) A speaker at the hearing observed that the current draft of the proposed ordinance would prohibit communications towers in a C-0 district.

A real estate agent spoke in support of the application. He informed the Board that he had been hired by U.S. Cellular to locate a site for the monopole within this particular service area. He had investigated other sites within the defined boundaries and the only larger site he found, other than a school yard, was located in a more residential neighborhood. The real estate agent also stated that the current owners of the proposed site, who were with him at the hearing, planned to close their business in the next several weeks for reasons unrelated to the pending application. Therefore, he noted, granting U.S. Cel- *715 Mar’s application would not remove an active business from the area.

One of the current property owners then spoke. She confirmed that she and her husband planned to close their business in the immediate future and that if U.S. Cellular did not buy the property, it would end up vacant with a deteriorating building. She also said she had driven by a similar tower on Hickman Road that had been landscaped so well by U.S. Cellular that she was unaware there was a tower there until another person pointed it out to her. Her husband echoed her comments, noting that U.S. Cellular would maintain the property, unlike other properties in the area “that are vacant and just going to trash.” A neighboring property owner also expressed a desire to have U.S. Cellular occupy the property rather than having the site deteriorate.

The president of the Mondamin Presidential Association spoke next. 1 She requested that the Board deny the application for several reasons: (1) possible expansion of Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway in the future; (2) that other, more commercial areas would be more appropriate for the tower; and (3) that the closing of the dry cleaning business was contrary to neighborhood revitalization efforts. Two other individuals, one who appeared to live in the general area and one who did not live in the affected area, expressed opposition to the tower without giving any specific reasons.

Mark Dixon, a U.S. Cellular representative, referred the Board to previously submitted letters from the tower manufacturer that explained the engineering of the tower and how it would fall. He noted that towers buckle and fold down upon themselves; if the proposed tower were built within the setback requirements and fell, it would land within the confines of the site. Dixon also pointed out that the City had allowed other cellular poles to be located near busy highways.

The Board then opened the hearing to questions. In response to an inquiry about future plans for Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway, the staff stated that there were no particular plans at present. There was some discussion of an alternative site at Broad-lawns Hospital and the use of a smaller, less intrusive antenna. Dixon responded that the reach of a smaller antenna would be insufficient to cover the area, and other proposed locations, such as Broadlawns, were outside the required range. No further information was requested of U.S. Cellular.

After this short discussion, the Board voted unanimously to deny the application based on the staff recommendation. In its written denial to U.S. Cellular, the Board stated:

The selection of this relatively small site located adjacent to Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway and to residences in a neighborhood struggling to pull itself into a more desirable residential situation is unacceptable for containing such a large structure. Considerable organized neighborhood opposition exists.

U.S. Cellular then filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the district court challenging the action of the Board and asking that the court direct the Board to issue the requested permit. See Iowa Code § 414.15 (1995) (allowing persons aggrieved by a decision of the board of adjustment to challenge the decision in the district court by filing a petition pointing out the illegality in the board’s decision). The district court granted the writ of certiorari and in response, the Board made a return that included the complete record before the Board. See id. §§ 414.16, .17 (specifying procedure for issuing a writ and making a return to the writ). No additional evidence was taken by the court at the hearing on U.S. Cellular’s petition. See id. § 414.18 (allowing district court to take additional evidence).

Upon its review of the Board’s decision, the district court held that the Board acted illegally in rejecting U.S. Cellular’s application.

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Bluebook (online)
589 N.W.2d 712, 1999 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 36, 1999 WL 74159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-cellular-corp-v-board-of-adjustment-iowa-1999.