Wallingford v. Moab City

2020 UT App 12, 459 P.3d 1039
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 24, 2020
Docket20180524-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2020 UT App 12 (Wallingford v. Moab City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallingford v. Moab City, 2020 UT App 12, 459 P.3d 1039 (Utah Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 UT App 12

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

LUCY WALLINGFORD, KILEY MILLER, JOHN RZECZYCKI, CAROL MAYER, DAVID BODNER, MEECHE BODNER, SARAH STOCK, JOSEPHINE KOVASH, AND LIVING RIVERS, Appellants, v. MOAB CITY AND MOAB CITY COUNCIL, Appellees,

UTAH SCHOOL AND INSTITUTIONAL TRUST LANDS ADMINISTRATION AND LB MOAB LAND COMPANY LLC, Intervenors and Appellees.

Opinion No. 20180524-CA Filed January 24, 2020

Seventh District Court, Moab Department The Honorable Lyle R. Anderson No. 170700009

Daniel J. McDonald and Kyle C. Fielding, Attorneys for Appellants Christopher G. McAnany, Attorney for Appellees Moab City and Moab City Council Jody K. Burnett and Robert C. Keller, Attorneys for Appellees Utah School and Institutional Trust Lands Administration and LB Moab Land Company LLC

JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and KATE APPLEBY concurred. Wallingford v. Moab City

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1 For several years, LB Moab Land Company LLC (Developer), a real estate development firm, has been planning a large mixed-use development project known as Lionsback Resort (the Project) on land located just east of Moab, Utah and owned by the Utah School and Institutional Trust Lands Administration (SITLA). The original iteration of the Project, including a resort hotel and numerous condominiums, was approved by the relevant land use authorities more than a decade ago, and a challenge to the propriety of those approvals has already been rejected by this court. See generally Moab Local Green Party v. Moab City, 2012 UT App 113, 276 P.3d 1230.

¶2 More recently, however, Developer has proposed certain modifications to the Project’s site plan, but those modifications are publicly opposed by a group of local citizens 1 (Citizens). Aware of Citizens’ opposition, and also aware that Developer had threatened litigation if the newly-modified Project was not approved, the City of Moab (the City) entered into a contract with SITLA and Developer, pursuant to which the City agreed to deem the proposed modifications “minor” rather than “major,” a classification which, under applicable municipal ordinances, allows the proposed modifications to be approved without a public hearing. Shortly thereafter, the Moab City Council (the Council) adopted a resolution—without holding a public hearing—authorizing the City’s mayor to execute the contract.

¶3 Citizens then sued the City, seeking (among other things) an order enjoining the Project from proceeding until a public hearing was held on the proposed modifications. The district

1. The complaining citizens are Lucy Wallingford, Kiley Miller, John Rzeczycki, Carol Mayer, David Bodner, Meeche Bodner, Sarah Stock, Josephine Kovash, and Living Rivers.

20180524-CA 2 2020 UT App 12 Wallingford v. Moab City

court dismissed Citizens’ lawsuit on summary judgment, and Citizens appeal. We reverse, concluding that municipalities may not contract around public hearing requirements found in statute or ordinance.

BACKGROUND 2

¶4 SITLA owns roughly 175 acres of land (the Property) just east of Moab, Utah, near the trailhead for the popular Slick Rock Trail. In 2006, SITLA agreed to lease the Property to Developer for the purpose of pursuing a “mixed use residential, commercial, and hotel development” to be known as Lionsback Resort, “named for a prominent nearby geological feature.” Moab Local Green Party v. Moab City, 2012 UT App 113, ¶ 2, 276 P.3d 1230.

¶5 A couple of years later, in October 2008, the City and Developer, joined by SITLA, entered into a “Pre-Annexation Agreement” to facilitate annexation of the Property—which at that time was located in unincorporated Grand County—into the City. Under this agreement, Developer agreed to submit a petition seeking annexation of the Property, and the City agreed to consider that petition “in compliance with the [a]pplicable [l]aws.” The parties also agreed that “[t]he Project will be subject to” the City’s municipal code. In December 2008, the City passed an ordinance annexing the Property into the City. However, the Pre-Annexation Agreement contained a provision stating that, “in the event the City does not approve” the Project, Developer

2. “When reviewing a district court’s grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment, we view the facts in a light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.” Anderson Dev. Co. v. Tobias, 2005 UT 36, ¶ 31, 116 P.3d 323 (quotation simplified). The facts set forth here are recited with this standard in mind.

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“shall have the option to terminate this Agreement” and “the City shall have no further right to annex the Property,” and that if annexation had already occurred, “then upon request of [Developer] the City shall immediately commence proceedings to disconnect the Property from the City.”

¶6 Over the next year, the Project proceeded through the City’s land use approval process, and in 2009 the City finalized all necessary approvals for the Project, and authorized Developer to begin construction. As originally approved, the Project consisted of a nine-building, fifty-unit hotel—complete with a café, convention meeting rooms, a health club, and a 105- stall parking lot—as well as 188 single-family housing lots. During the City’s land use approval process, certain Moab area citizens 3 voiced opposition to the Project, and had the opportunity to be heard at public hearings. See id. ¶¶ 3–4 (describing “public hearing[s]” held before both the City’s planning commission and the Council). But the City approved the Project notwithstanding their opposition. Id. Some of the citizens who were opposed to the Project filed a lawsuit to challenge the City’s approval of it; their suit was unsuccessful at the district court level, and this court affirmed the district court’s dismissal of the lawsuit. See generally id.

¶7 The litigation (as well as changing economic conditions) delayed the Project for several years, and in the interim, Developer determined, based on updated market analysis, that modifications to the Project’s master plan would be beneficial. Among other things, Developer wanted to consolidate the hotel portion of the Project into one three-story building (instead of nine separate two-story buildings), and wanted to design the

3. The citizens who brought the challenge to the first iteration of the Project are—with one exception—different than the Citizens who bring the current challenge to the Project’s second iteration.

20180524-CA 4 2020 UT App 12 Wallingford v. Moab City

hotel units as “three bedroom condominiums with ‘lockout’ doors allowing individual bedrooms that could be rented separately,” creating a potential for 150 rentable rooms in the fifty units. Although the Project’s overall footprint would remain unchanged, the hotel’s footprint would nearly double, as would the size of its parking lot. In addition, the consolidated hotel would have certain new amenities, including retail space, a restaurant, and a conference center.

¶8 According to the City’s municipal code, project amendments “that change the character, basic design, building density and intensity, open space or any other requirements and conditions” will be considered “major changes” that “shall not be permitted without prior review and approval by the planning commission,” a process that requires a “[p]ublic [h]earing.” See Moab, Utah, Mun. Code §§ 17.65.080(A), 17.65.130(B) (2015). On the other hand, “[m]inor changes” necessitated by “unforeseen circumstances, such as engineering requirements,” “may be authorized by Moab City planning department staff” without a public hearing. Id. § 17.65.130(A).

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Bluebook (online)
2020 UT App 12, 459 P.3d 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallingford-v-moab-city-utahctapp-2020.