Wheeler v. City of Wayzata

533 N.W.2d 405, 1995 Minn. LEXIS 499, 1995 WL 371741
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 23, 1995
DocketC2-93-775
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 533 N.W.2d 405 (Wheeler v. City of Wayzata) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. City of Wayzata, 533 N.W.2d 405, 1995 Minn. LEXIS 499, 1995 WL 371741 (Mich. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

COYNE, Justice.

On the petition of the defendant City of Wayzata we review a decision of the court of appeals reversing summary judgment in favor of Wayzata. Plaintiffs had sued in the alternative for a declaration of the invalidity of all Wayzata’s zoning ordinances and permanent injunction against their enforcement or for mandamus to compel proceedings in eminent domain. We reverse the decision of *406 the court of appeals and reinstate the summary judgment entered by the district court.

The dispute revolves about the use of a spit of land projecting into Lake Minnetonka and lying between Gray’s Bay on the east and Wayzata Bay on the west. This narrow point of land, which has approximately 1000 feet of shoreline on either side, varies in width from about 33 to 100 feet, the exact width depending on the level of the lake at any given time. Since 1887, when a perpetual right of way four rods wide (66 feet) and running the length of the spit was conveyed to the Hennepin County Board of Commissioners for use as a public road, the land has been a causeway connecting the cities of Wayzata and Minnetonka. Today the road is known as State Highway 101.

Walter J. and Cecile Wheeler, the parents of the individual plaintiffs W. Thomas and Carolyn J. Wheeler, acquired an interest in the causeway in 1953. In 1953 Walter and Cecile Wheeler resided on premises situated in the City of Wayzata and abutting the northerly end of the causeway. In 1956 Wayzata annexed the causeway from the City of Minnetonka. According to the Way-zata zoning ordinance in effect at the time of annexation, the causeway was automatically zoned residential, as was the adjacent homestead of the Wheelers.

Walter and Cecile Wheeler initiated proceedings in 1960 for registration of the title to the causeway and in 1961 Walter requested permission to subdivide the adjoining homestead parcel into two lots. At a regular meeting of the Wayzata Planning Commission on August 15, 1961 (continued from August 8, 1961 for lack of quorum) on motion duly made and seconded, the following resolution was unanimously adopted:

The Planning Commission approves and recommends approval of the subdivision of Lot A Carpenter’s Point as shown on the enclosed plat, subject to the following conditions: If Lot B is ever sold, all rights that Mr. Wheeler has to the property on the point be attached to Lot B and if it is possible to combine Lot B and the Causeway, they should be combined.

On August 24, 1961 Walter Wheeler wrote this letter addressed to the mayor and the members of the city council and of the planning commission acknowledging those conditions:

Your records will show that on August 15, 1961, the Planning Commission acted on a request to permit the division of the property at this address [655 Bushaway Road], more appropriately described by and shown on the Surveyor’s Plat already filed in the City Hall.
It was requested that I write this letter to assure the Planning Commission and the Council that it is my intention to combine the southerly portion of the property with the northerly portion of Gray’s Bay Causeway. The northerly portion of Gray’s Bay Causeway is in process of being registered in so-called “Torrens” proceedings, Application No. 14821. When these proceedings are successfully concluded, as in my opinion they will be, this causeway strip will be added to the adjoining lot, and it is my intention that the causeway strip and adjoining lot will constitute a single tract upon which a residence will one day become erected.

Based on the recommendation of the planning commission, the Wayzata City Council approved Wheeler’s subdivision request at a meeting in the Council Chambers on September 5, 1961. 1

Despite Wheeler’s expressed intention of joining the causeway with the adjacent lot on completion of the Torrens proceeding, the proceeding was either dismissed or abandoned prior to completion, and when Walter and Cecile Wheeler sold the adjacent lot, Lot B, in 1969, after a house had been built there, the causeway was not included in the transaction. Instead, the Wheelers retained the causeway property until August 7,1985 when Walter and Cecile conveyed the parcel by *407 quit claim deed to their children, W. Thomas and Carolyn J. Wheeler. 2 Thomas Wheeler asserts that the reason for conveyance of the causeway to Carolyn and Thomas was to permit them to carry out a plan to develop the causeway property as a commercial marina. However, the causeway lies in a district zoned R-1A, low density single family residence district. 3

On October 24, 1985, after Emerson Property Company had been incorporated, Thomas and Carolyn Wheeler each conveyed by warranty deeds in which their respective spouses joined, an undivided one-half interest in the causeway to Emerson Property Company in exchange for one-half of the company’s shares of capital stock and a promissory note in the amount of $50,000. The note was to be paid from profits realized from operation of the planned marina.

Thomas Wheeler has stated that as early as 1985 the Wayzata City Manager advised him that Wayzata did not want any development of the hitherto undeveloped causeway. Nevertheless, after acquiring the causeway, Emerson Property Company secured a permit from the Minnesota Department of Transportation for a driveway access to State Highway 101 and constructed a 100- to 150-foot semi-circular blaektopped driveway. Pursuant to a permit from the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District Emerson installed riprap for protection against erosion, and further improved the tract with a dock which houses a 26-foot Sea Ray Weekender used by Thomas Wheeler for business and pleasure.

At some point Emerson applied for rezoning of the causeway to commercial so that it could develop a commercial marina on the Wayzata Bay side of the causeway. The Wayzata City Manager regarded the application as defective and requested additional information. Emerson’s only response was Thomas Wheeler’s contention that additional information was unnecessary for commencement of the rezoning application process.

In April of 1990 Emerson Properties petitioned for the detachment of the causeway from the City of Wayzata, and a hearing on that petition was held on June 25, 1990. On or about August 13, 1990, before the Minnesota Municipal Board ruled on the petition and while the matter was pending, the plaintiffs commenced this action.

Following denial of the detachment petition, the district court granted Wayzata’s motion for summary judgment. On appeal from the judgment the court of appeals held that the self-imposed hardship rule was not applicable to an intra-family transfer or to a transfer fi"om incorporators to the corporation and that the taking claim was not ripe. Wheeler v. City of Wayzata, 511 N.W.2d 39, 43 (Minn.App.1994). Nevertheless, the court of appeals declared that because the zoning ordinance denied all uses but residential “and nature bars that * ⅜ * the ordinance does not permit [plaintiffs] a reasonable use of their property.”

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

Related

State v. Henning
666 N.W.2d 379 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2003)
Prior Lake American v. Mader
642 N.W.2d 729 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2002)
Graham v. Itasca County Planning Commission
601 N.W.2d 461 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1999)
Lakehead Pipe Line Co. v. American Home Assurance Co.
981 F. Supp. 1205 (D. Minnesota, 1997)
Bonge v. County of Madison
567 N.W.2d 578 (Nebraska Court of Appeals, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
533 N.W.2d 405, 1995 Minn. LEXIS 499, 1995 WL 371741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-city-of-wayzata-minn-1995.