Yang v. County of Carver

660 N.W.2d 828, 2003 Minn. App. LEXIS 613, 2003 WL 21146887
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 20, 2003
DocketC3-02-1460
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 660 N.W.2d 828 (Yang v. County of Carver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yang v. County of Carver, 660 N.W.2d 828, 2003 Minn. App. LEXIS 613, 2003 WL 21146887 (Mich. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERT H. SCHUMACHER, Judge.

By writ of certiorari, relator Thor Yang appeals the decision of respondent County of Carver to deny his application for a conditional use permit, asserting that the denial is arbitrary and capricious because the county had no legally sufficient reason to deny and that the denial was motivated by discriminatory intent. Because the county had no legally sufficient reason to deny the permit, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

In March 2002, Yang applied to the county for a conditional use permit to operate a custom slaughterhouse as a farm-related business on his 40-acre property in Hollywood Township. In a custom slaughterhouse, animals are purchased and slaughtered on-site; all meat derived from the slaughter is returned to the purchaser. See Minn. R. 1540.0010, subp. 7 (2000). The local zoning ordinance required Yang to obtain a conditional use permit because a farm-related business is a permitted conditional use within the zoning district. See Carver County, Minn. Zoning Ordinance No. 32S (2000).

The Carver County Board of Commissioners must find a proposed use meets the following criteria before the board may issue a conditional use permit:

1. The conditional use is permitted as a permitted conditional use within the zoning district, and meets all requirements of this ordinance and any other County, Regional, State, or Federal laws, ordinances, rules, or regulations.
2. The conditional use will not be injurious to the use and enjoyment of other property in the immediate vicinity for the purposes already permitted.
3. The establishment of a conditional use will not impede the normal and orderly development and improvement of surrounding vacant property for uses predominant in the area.
4. The effects of the proposed use will not be detrimental to the health, safety and welfare of Carver County or to the occupants of the immediate neighborhood.
5. That adequate utilities, access roads, drainage and other facilities have been or are being provided.
6. That adequate measures have been or will be taken to provide sufficient off-street parking and loading space to serve the proposed use if these measures are applicable.
7. That adequate measures have been or will be taken to prevent or control offensive odor, fumes, dust, noise and vibration, so that none of these will constitute a nuisance if these measures are applicable.
8. The use or development conforms with the County and Township Comprehensive plan.
9. The use or development is compatible with the land uses in the neighborhood.
10. A public hearing was held ⅜ * *.

Ordinance § 12.05013C. Ordinance section 12.05011, subp. 2, required Yang to submit an operational plan describing the number of employees and hours of operation, use of new and existing structures, water service, sewage disposal, area and capacity of parking areas, and access, storage, and operational areas.

The Carver County Planning and Zoning Commission held three public hearings on Yang’s application. At the first, the commission staff presented a report that *831 included analyses of the proposed use by the Minnesota Department of Health, the Minnesota Board of Animal Health, and the Minnesota Department of Agriculture. The report expressed concerns with the adequacy of the slaughterhouse’s water supply, composting plan, rendering provisions, and compliance with state bio-seeurity measures. The commission also heard public comment from Hollywood Township residents who opposed the application on the grounds that the slaughterhouse would diminish local property values, cause pollution and noise, and create excessive traffic on the' gravel township road serving Yang’s property.

After the first commission meeting, the Hollywood Township board met and voted to recommend denial of the application to the Carver County Board of Commissioners. The recommendation was based solely on concerns expressed by Hollywood Township residents at the meeting that the slaughterhouse would create excess traffic and disturb its neighbors.

At the second commission meeting, the staff used Yang’s estimate of ten daily customers to predict 50 daily road uses associated with the slaughterhouse, or ,25% of the gravel road’s capacity of 200 daily uses established by the comprehensive plan. See Carver County Comprehensive Plan, General Development Policy 18 (1991) (providing capacity of township gravel road is typically 200 average daily trips). The report concluded that traffic generated by the slaughterhouse appeared to prevent it from meeting the ordinance’s definition of a farm-related business and from complying with the Carver County comprehensive plan. See Ordinance § 8.0305(C) (providing proposed activity is not a farm-related, permitted conditional use if its demand for road services cannot be accommodated “within the context of the service levels available in the commercial agricultural area”); Carver County Comprehensive Plan, Policy 16C, § 2 (providing proposed use may not comply with comprehensive plan if “substantial percentage of the road capacity will be used by the proposed activity”).

The report also stated that because the application did not limit the number of customers, animal units to be processed weekly, or hours of operation, the operation could be injurious to the use of nearby property, be detrimental to the health, safety, and welfare of county residents, and create a nuisance, thereby violating Ordinance conditional use permit criteria 2, 4, and 7. Several Hollywood Township residents spoke to reiterate concerns raised in public comments at the first commission hearing.

Following the second planning commission meeting, Yang submitted an amended operational plan stating the slaughterhouse would process no more than 20 animal units in any five-day workweek, during which time he expected to attract a maximum of 50 customers. Based on his prior experience operating a slaughterhouse, Yang estimated that even with 50 weekly customers, the slaughterhouse would generate approximately 112 weekly trips, less than 10% of the road’s 1400 trip weekly capacity. The amended plan included a map showing the Yang property is located approximately ⅛ mile south of a highway and that highway traffic accessing the slaughterhouse via the gravel road would pass one other residence and a steel scrapyard, whose gravel-road ingress is regularly used by 18-wheel trucks. The amended plan further stated Yang would contract with rendering services for hide disposal, would work with Hollywood Township to provide dust control, and would purchase liability insurance.

After the third hearing, the planning commission voted to recommend denial of *832 the application to the board of commissioners after finding that the slaughterhouse’s traffic and weekend operating intensity were excessive and that Yang’s operational plan was inadequate.

The board of commissioners voted to deny the application after a public hearing.

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660 N.W.2d 828, 2003 Minn. App. LEXIS 613, 2003 WL 21146887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yang-v-county-of-carver-minnctapp-2003.