Wastewater One, LLC v. Floyd County Board of Zoning Appeals

947 N.E.2d 1040, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 929, 2011 WL 2002314
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 2011
Docket22A04-1007-PL-418
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 947 N.E.2d 1040 (Wastewater One, LLC v. Floyd County Board of Zoning Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wastewater One, LLC v. Floyd County Board of Zoning Appeals, 947 N.E.2d 1040, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 929, 2011 WL 2002314 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

BROWN, Judge.

Wastewater One, LLC (the “Utility”) and William A. Musselman (“Musselman,” and collectively with the Utility, the “Applicants”) appeal the Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Judgment in favor of the Floyd County Board of Zoning Appeals and Floyd County, Indiana (collectively, the “BZA”) affirming the BZA’s denial of a conditional use permit for the expansion of a sewage treatment plant. The Applicants raise four issues which we revise and restate as:

I. Whether the BZA had jurisdiction over the Utility’s proposal to expand the Plant;
II. Whether the requirements of the Floyd County Zoning Ordinance (the “Ordinance”) for evaluating conditional use petitions are contrary to Indiana law; and
III. Whether the court erred in affirming the BZA’s denial of the conditional use petition.

We affirm. 1

The relevant facts follow. In 2006, the Utility was approved to purchase a sewage treatment plant known as the Highlander Village Sewage Treatment Plant (the “Plant”) that serviced two residential subdivisions in Floyd County, Highlander Vil *1042 lage and Cedar Pointe, since the 1970s. 2 The Plant was situated on a .324-acre parcel in close proximity to some of the houses in the subdivisions, was located in a “Residential Suburban” zoning district, and treated approximately 37,000 gallons per day servicing 123 customers. Appellants’ Appendix at 241. At some point since the Plant was built, Floyd County made changes to its zoning ordinance, and to the extent that the Plant’s use or specifications conflict with the current Ordinance, it is considered a grandfathered-in, non-conforming use. The Ordinance lists a sanitary sewage treatment plant as a conditional use “permitted upon conditional approval of the [BZA] in accordance with Article 15 of [the] Ordinance for the Residential Suburban (RS) District.” Id. at 105.

The Utility entered into an agreement with Musselman, who owned tracts of land in the area, to provide sewage services for a new 129-home subdivision Musselman was developing which would be located adjacent to Cedar Pointe. 3 Musselman also owns a 1.954-acre tract situated adjacent to the Plant, and as part of their agreement he agreed to allow the Plant to build an expansion on this property. The property that the Plant sits on and Mus-selman’s 1.954-acre tract were joined as a single tract when the Plant was initially built.

On June 21, 2007, the Applicants jointly submitted a Conditional Use Application to the BZA to expand the Plant’s treatment capacity to 100,000 gallons per day, and on June 25, 2007 they filed a conditional use permit checklist and submission of information as required by the Ordinance. On November 14, 2007, the BZA conducted a public hearing on the application. At the hearing, the Applicants presented facts consistent with the foregoing and that rates were to be increased from $45 to $74 per month due to a $60,000 investment by the Utility to renovate the facility which had fallen into disrepair under previous ownership. The Utility stated that “when this plant goes to a hundred thousand gallons,” the sewage flow will be processed faster “and will alleviate those odor conditions that periodically exist[] now,” and that although incidents of odor would not be eliminated, “it will be less than it is today.” Id. at 287. The Utility stated that, due to the already-high projected monthly price of $74 per month for sewage services, building another plant at another location “probably isn’t financially feasible” because of the new infrastructure that would have to be installed. Id. The Utility noted that they were seeking a conditional use permit rather than a variance and thus were “not seeking to do something that your ordinance otherwise prohibits.” Id. at 288. The Utility also “preemptively objected]” to the ballot upon which the BZA would decide the issue if it contained “the five items on the variance requirements in the statute....” Id. at 290. The Utility noted that they would not shut down the existing plant until “the new plant was operating properly.” Id. at 293.

Remonstrators also appeared in opposition to the application. Carol Bedan stated that the Plant is located “fifteen feet *1043 from the back line of ... a couple of [ ] houses,” which would not be allowed for new construction under current law, that “there’s something to be said about [] changing the proximity of houses to sewer plants,” and she asked the BZA “to please consider the spirit of the new five-hundred-foot rule.” Id. at 808-309. Bedan noted that the expansion “is going to result in facilitating more subdivisions” because it will allow “over five hundred new sewer tap-ins.... ” Id. at 309. She noted that “[s]ummertime odor from the plant is going to be tremendous, as it is from other plants in the area.” Id. She also noted that “[t]he traffic is terrible at rush hour and [] bad at many other times,” that “[e]very new home results in at least two to three more cars” on the local roadways, and that “two to three hundred more cars ... [is] unacceptable on the present highway.” Id. at 310-311. George Mouser stated that “there is no way to argue that the use and value of adjacent property will not be adversely affected” and that “[a] young man, not too long ago, went into that area to look at a house that was for sale, and he told me that he saw it was by a sewage treatment plant and he turned around and left promptly.” Id. at 313. He also noted that just because the Plant had “been in compliance for the last few months [ ] doesn’t mean that it will be in compliance after its [sic] expanded” and that, based on past experience, it is difficult to get a sewer back into compliance. Id.

At the conclusion of the hearing, one of the BZA members noted that Tolliver revealed in a letter that his “objective was to make this a three hundred thousand gallon plant ultimately when it’s completed, not just this one hundred thousand.” Id. at 322. The BZA voted 4-1 to deny the Applicants’ conditional use application and adopted the following findings by use of a conditional use ballot prepared in accordance with Section 15.09(C)(1) of the Ordinance:

After careful review the Board finds that:
(1) The conditional use WILL NOT be injurious to the public health, safety, moral, and general welfare of the
■ community because: It will provide an essential service to the community-
(2) The use and value of the area adjacent to the property WILL be adversely affected because: Expansion of this capacity within the area now available will impact adjacent residences.
(3) The need for the conditional use DOES NOT result from any conditions, unusual or peculiar to the subject property itself because: This is an expanded use of a public facility.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
947 N.E.2d 1040, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 929, 2011 WL 2002314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wastewater-one-llc-v-floyd-county-board-of-zoning-appeals-indctapp-2011.