V. Kathie Brazinski Case M. Brown Margaret E. Creel Joseph M. Demarsh Jan Demarsh-Lovett Lloyd Dorsey and Michele W. Dorsey, Trustees of the Dorsey Revocable Trust Dated 12/5/2012 Mark Lovett Allison F. Merritt and Janice K. Smith, Trustee of the William R. and Janice K. Smith Revocable Trust Dated 3/15/2005 v. Board of County Commissioners of Teton County, Wyoming and Stage Stop, Inc.

2024 WY 40
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 2024
DocketS-23-0157
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 WY 40 (V. Kathie Brazinski Case M. Brown Margaret E. Creel Joseph M. Demarsh Jan Demarsh-Lovett Lloyd Dorsey and Michele W. Dorsey, Trustees of the Dorsey Revocable Trust Dated 12/5/2012 Mark Lovett Allison F. Merritt and Janice K. Smith, Trustee of the William R. and Janice K. Smith Revocable Trust Dated 3/15/2005 v. Board of County Commissioners of Teton County, Wyoming and Stage Stop, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
V. Kathie Brazinski Case M. Brown Margaret E. Creel Joseph M. Demarsh Jan Demarsh-Lovett Lloyd Dorsey and Michele W. Dorsey, Trustees of the Dorsey Revocable Trust Dated 12/5/2012 Mark Lovett Allison F. Merritt and Janice K. Smith, Trustee of the William R. and Janice K. Smith Revocable Trust Dated 3/15/2005 v. Board of County Commissioners of Teton County, Wyoming and Stage Stop, Inc., 2024 WY 40 (Wyo. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING

2024 WY 40

APRIL TERM, A.D. 2024

April 10, 2024

V. KATHIE BRAZINSKI; CASE M. BROWN; MARGARET E. CREEL; JOSEPH M. DEMARSH; JAN DEMARSH-LOVETT; LLOYD DORSEY and MICHELE W. DORSEY, Trustees of the Dorsey Revocable Trust dated 12/5/2012; MARK LOVETT; ALLISON F. MERRITT; and JANICE K. SMITH, Trustee of the William R. and Janice K. Smith Revocable Trust, dated 3/15/2005,

Appellants (Petitioners), S-23-0157 v.

BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF TETON COUNTY, WYOMING,

Appellee (Respondent),

and

STAGE STOP, INC.,

Appellee (Intervenor/Respondent).

Appeal from the District Court of Teton County The Honorable Melissa M. Owens, Judge Representing Appellants: William P. Schwartz, Leah C. Schwartz of Ranck & Schwartz, LLC, Jackson, Wyoming. Argument by Ms. Schwartz.

Representing Appellee Board of County Commissioners of Teton County: Abigail S. Moore, Deputy County Attorney, Jackson, Wyoming.

Representing Appellee Stage Stop, Inc.: Brandon L. Jensen, Rachael L. Buzanowski of Budd-Falen Law Offices, LLC, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Argument by Mr. Jensen.

Before FOX, C.J., and KAUTZ,* BOOMGAARDEN, GRAY, and FENN, JJ.

* Justice Kautz retired from judicial office effective March 26, 2024, and, pursuant to Article 5, § 5 of the Wyoming Constitution and Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 5-1-106(f) (2023), he was reassigned to act on this matter on March 27, 2024.

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of typographical or other formal errors so correction may be made before final publication in the permanent volume. KAUTZ, Justice.

[¶1] V. Kathie Brazinski, Case M. Brown, Margaret E. Creel, Joseph M. DeMarsh, Jan DeMarsh-Lovett, Mark Lovett, Allison F. Merritt, Lloyd Dorsey and Michele W. Dorsey, as Trustees of the Dorsey Revocable Trust, and Janice K. Smith, as Trustee of the William R. and Janice K. Smith Revocable Trust (hereinafter referred to collectively as Objectors) were residents of the Rafter J Ranch (Rafter J) Subdivision in Teton County. They appeal the Teton County Board of County Commissioners’ (Board) approval of Intervenor Stage Stop, Inc.’s petition to amend the Rafter J Planned Unit Development (PUD) to allow Stage Stop to use Lot 333 of the Rafter J Subdivision for workforce apartments. We affirm.

ISSUES

[¶2] The issues raised on appeal are:

1. Is the Board’s approval of the Rafter J PUD Amendment subject to judicial review?

2. Did the Board err by allowing the Rafter J PUD Amendment to change the use on Lot 333 without requiring a vacation of the Rafter J Subdivision Plat (Plat)?

3. Was the Board’s approval of the Rafter J PUD Amendment to allow workforce apartments as a conditional use of Lot 333 arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with the law?

FACTS

[¶3] The Board approved the Rafter J Subdivision in 1977, and the Plat was recorded in early 1978. The Rafter J Subdivision, which encompassed 447.83 acres, was divided into lots with uses designated in the notes on the Plat (Plat Notes), including mostly single residence lots, a few lots labeled for multiple dwellings, and a few lots set aside for facilities providing services and amenities to the Subdivision. Lot 333, containing 5.37 acres, was designated in the Plat Notes as “Ranch Headquarters & Local Commercial.”

[¶4] When the Board approved the Rafter J Plat in 1977, Teton County did not have a comprehensive land use plan. However, after the Board approved Rafter J, it adopted a comprehensive plan and land development regulations in 1978 (1978 LDRs). Although the 1978 LDRs recognized PUDs, there was no formal PUD zone or application process; instead, “PUDs were often reviewed as part of the Subdivision [P]ermit or Development Plan.” The purpose of a PUD, according to the 1978 LDRs, was to “encourage clustering of residential development to achieve preservation of open space and scenic areas[.]” PUD

1 zones were officially recognized in later versions of the LDRs, which explained that PUD “zones permit variation from the strict application of the zones in order to achieve specific community goals that enhance the community’s implementation of the Jackson/Teton County Comprehensive Plan. The intent of PUD zones is that large or complex developments under unified control be planned as a single, continuous project with greater design flexibility.” LDR § 4.4.1.A.

[¶5] Although the Rafter J Subdivision was formed before Teton County officially adopted PUD zones, subsequent versions of the LDRs designated the Rafter J Subdivision as a PUD. Until the current dispute, no one objected to the designation of Rafter J as a PUD. Under current LDR 8.7.3.E, “[a]pproval of a PUD constitutes a zoning map amendment that has the effect of applying the master plan as the zone-specific standards for the site.” LDR 4.4.1.C.2 sets out the requirement for a PUD to have a master plan:

A PUD shall include . . . a master plan that establishes the general configuration and relationship of the principal elements of the proposed development and specifies terms and conditions defining development parameters, including uses, general building types, density/intensity, resource protection, pedestrian and vehicular circulation, open space, public facilities, and phasing.

Because the Rafter J Subdivision predated the PUD zone designation, it did not have “a formal Master Plan.” Consequently, the Teton County Planning Staff (Planning Staff) used the Plat Notes as the “PUD guiding documents” “equivalent to a [M]aster [P]lan.” Again, no one contested the use of the Plat Notes as the Rafter J PUD Master Plan until this dispute arose.

[¶6] The Plat Notes designated Lot 333 as “Ranch Headquarters & Local Commercial.” The Planning Staff determined the “Local Commercial” Plat Note subjected Lot 333 to Local Convenience Commercial (CL) zoning district standards, which permitted uses “intended to serve the day to day needs of local residents.” “Institutional use” was one of the conditional uses allowed under the CL standards. In 1998, the Board approved an application to construct a 50,000 square foot assisted-living facility on Lot 333 as a conditional institutional use. The assisted-living facility operated from 2004, when construction was completed, until 2021, when it shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic.

[¶7] In 2021, Stage Stop purchased Lot 333 and applied for an amendment to the PUD and a conditional use permit (CUP) to convert the assisted-living facility to workforce apartments. The Planning Staff prepared a report on Stage Stop’s application which stated “[u]nder the current standards of the Rafter J PUD, Lot 333 is subject to the uses and standards of the [CL] District of the 1978 LDRs.” Under the CL standards and the

2 underlying Rural-3 zoning, use of Lot 333 for apartments was not permitted as a conditional use. However, the LDRs provided a process to amend a PUD to allow apartments as a conditional use.

[¶8] The Planning Staff also recognized the PUD option was no longer available for new developments in Teton County, but the LDRs continued to allow amendments to existing PUDs. “Therefore, [Stage Stop was] seeking to amend the Rafter J PUD to include an allowance for apartments [as a conditional use] on this lot only[.]” After two public hearings, at which residents of the Rafter J Subdivision, including the Objectors, voiced their concerns, the Planning Commission recommended the Board approve Stage Stop’s request for a PUD amendment to allow apartments as a conditional use on Lot 333.

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