COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED March 31, 2011 A.
John Voelker Acting Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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NOTICE |
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This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62. |
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Appeal No. |
2010AP1292 |
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STATE OF |
IN COURT OF APPEALS |
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DISTRICT IV |
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Michael Toubl and Roger Bryden, d/b/a Coon Creek Sportsman’s Club, LLC,
Plaintiffs-Respondents, v. Town of
Defendant-Appellant. |
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APPEAL
from an order of the circuit court for
Before
Vergeront, P.J.,
¶1 VERGERONT, P.J. This case arises out of the
revocation of a conditional use permit (CUP) the Town of
BACKGROUND
¶2 In January 2007, Toubl and Bryden (collectively, the club
owners) applied for a CUP to operate the Coon Creek Sportsman’s Club, a bird
hunting preserve. The hunting club, run
by Toubl, hosts hunts on Bryden’s property.
The property at issue is located in an A-1 exclusive agricultural
district. At the time the club owners applied
for the CUP, bird hunting preserves were neither permitted nor conditional uses
in A-1 districts. Town of
¶3 In July 2007, the board issued CUP 513 to the club owners. This CUP authorized them to operate a bird hunting preserve. The CUP also authorized them to use as a clubhouse a legal nonconforming structure located on one of the parcels. In September 2007, this building was completely destroyed by fire.
¶4 The board renewed the CUP on April 7, 2008, after a hearing on that date. The references to “the club house” in the original permit were not removed from the renewed permit. On May 14, 2008, the club owners signed the renewed CUP, indicating that they had received it and agreed to abide by its terms.
¶5 On April 21, 2008, after the CUP was renewed but before the club owners signed it, Bryden applied for a building permit to construct a new building on a different parcel of his property. On the application, Bryden listed “ag building” as the project description. On the same day the application was made, a building permit was issued. The permit stated “agricultural use only.”
¶6 About ten months later, several Town supervisors learned that the club owners were using the new building as a clubhouse for the hunting club. The Town zoning administrator sent the club owners a letter ordering them to cease using the new building as a clubhouse, but they continued using it as a clubhouse. In April 2009, the club owners applied for an amendment to the CUP to allow the hunting club to use the new building as a clubhouse. The Town planning commission tabled this application pending submission of a site plan, but the club owners did not submit one.
¶7 After a public hearing in January 2010, the board voted unanimously to revoke the CUP. The board minutes state that the board did so because it concluded that the club owners had violated the CUP by using the new building as a clubhouse.
¶8 Shortly thereafter, the club owners filed this action, alleging that the board’s decision to revoke the CUP was arbitrary and seeking a permanent injunction preventing the Town from revoking the permit. The circuit court concluded that the Town’s actions were arbitrary and granted the injunction.[1] The circuit court’s conclusion of arbitrariness was based on its determination that, when the board issued the renewed CUP, it intended that the new building would be used at least in part as a clubhouse.
DISCUSSION
¶9 On appeal, the Town contends that it acted reasonably in revoking the CUP and therefore the permanent injunction against the Town should be vacated. In the following sections we first decide the proper standard for our review. We then analyze the circuit court’s decision and conclude that certain findings material to the circuit court’s conclusion of arbitrariness are clearly erroneous. Finally, based on the court’s findings that are not clearly erroneous and the undisputed facts, we conclude the board acted reasonably in revoking the CUP.
I. Standard of Review
¶10 We begin by addressing the appropriate standard of review. The club owners contend that we should review
the circuit court’s decision under the standard we apply to discretionary
decisions. They rely on Hoffman
v. Wisconsin Electric Power Company, 2003 WI 64, ¶23, 262 Wis. 2d
264, 664 N.W.2d 55, in which the court held that the decision whether to grant
an injunction and the determination of its form and scope are within the
circuit court’s discretion. However, the
court in Hoffman was addressing the circuit court’s decision to issue a
permanent injunction after there had
been a determination—in that case, by a jury—that the plaintiff had prevailed
on its underlying claim.
¶11 In this case, the underlying claim—the claim that, according to
the club owners, entitles them to permanent injunctive relief—is that the board
acted arbitrarily in revoking the CUP. In
analyzing the appropriate standard of review for the court’s decision that the
board acted arbitrarily, we first note that this complaint does not seek review
by certiorari of the board’s decision, which is the usual method for a judicial
challenge to a board’s decision.
Specifically, the club owners did not follow the statutory procedures
for municipal administrative review and then judicial review by certiorari.[2]
See
Wis. Stat. §§ 68.02-68.12;
68.13 (2009-2010).[3]
On certiorari review the circuit court is
limited to deciding whether a board “kept within its jurisdiction, acted
according to law, acted arbitrarily or unreasonably, and whether the evidence
was such that the board might reasonably make the order or determination it
made.” Cohn v. Town of Randall,
2001 WI App 176, ¶25, 247
¶12 Although the Town asserted in its amended answer that the proper proceeding to challenge the revocation of the CUP in the circuit court was by certiorari review, the Town apparently did not pursue this issue in the circuit court. Apparently the Town did not object to the court conducting its own evidentiary hearing. On appeal, the Town makes no objection to the procedure followed in the circuit court.[4] We therefore accept that procedure and determine our standard of review accordingly.
¶13 The standard of review for a circuit court’s factual findings is
that we affirm unless they are clearly erroneous. Brandon Apparel Group, Inc. v. Pearson
Props., Ltd., 2001 WI App 205, ¶10, 247
II. Analysis of the Circuit Court’s Decision
¶14 The circuit court based its conclusion that the board acted arbitrarily on the following factual findings: (1) the original CUP and the renewed CUP both refer to “the club house”; (2) the renewed CUP became effective in May 2008; (3) the Town issued the building permit for the new building prior to renewing the CUP; and (4) the only structure on the property in May 2008 was the new building described in the building permit. Because the circuit court found that the board renewed the CUP after it issued the building permit, it determined that the Town “intended in the issuing of a conditional use permit that the [new] building would be used at least in part as a clubhouse. Otherwise that provision in the conditional use permit would be meaningless.”
¶15 The court’s finding that both the original and the renewed CUP refer to “the club house” is supported by the plain language and is thus not clearly erroneous. However, we conclude the other three factual findings are clearly erroneous.
¶16 By finding that the renewed CUP became effective in May 2008,
the circuit court necessarily determined that the renewed CUP did not become
effective until the club owners signed it on May 14, 2008. (We say “necessarily” because there is no
evidence of another May date in connection with the renewed CUP.) However, the renewed CUP plainly states that
it became effective on April 7, 2008. The
heading of the permit states: “Amended and Renewed April 7, 2008.” At the conclusion of all the terms, the permit
states: “EFFECTIVE DATE: This permit shall be valid for a period of one (1)
year from the date first stated above.” We
see no support in the record for viewing the effective date of the renewed CUP
to be the date on which the club owners signed it and agreed to be bound by its
terms. Nor do we see a legal theory that
supports this conclusion. A CUP is not a
contract; it is issued by the Town and can be enforced by the Town. Town of Cedarburg v. Shewczyk, 2003
WI App 10, ¶¶15-17, 259
¶17 Because it is undisputed that the renewed CUP became effective April 7, 2008, and that the Town issued Bryden a building permit on April 21, 2008, the circuit court’s finding that the Town issued the building permit prior to renewing the CUP is also clearly erroneous.
¶18 With respect to the court’s finding that the new building was the only structure on the property in May 2008, it is undisputed that the old clubhouse had burned down the preceding fall and the board knew this. However, we have found nothing in the record supporting a finding that the new building existed in May 2008. The club owners themselves disagree with the substance of this finding: they state in their response brief that “[o]n May 14, 2008, no building existed on the property, because the prior building was burned to the ground….” It follows from this concession that the new building did not exist on April 7, 2008, the date on which the board issued the renewed permit. Even apart from this concession, in the absence of any other evidence, the only reasonable inference from the issuance of the building permit on April 21 is that the new building did not exist on April 7.
¶19 In summary, several of the factual findings that are material to the circuit court’s conclusion of arbitrariness are not supported by the record. In the next section we will examine whether the board’s revocation of the renewed CUP was arbitrary given these undisputed facts: (1) the renewed CUP, like the original CUP referred to “the club house;” (2) the renewed CUP became effective on the date the board issued it, April 7, 2008; (3) on April 7 when the board held the hearing and renewed the CUP, there was no building on the property and no building permit had yet been sought or issued for a new building.
III. Whether Revocation of the CUP Was Arbitrary
¶20 As the parties agree, their dispute over whether the Town acted arbitrarily turns on whether the club owners violated a term of the renewed CUP. The Town’s ordinances provide:
1. Compliance Required. The conditions set forth in the approved Conditional Use Permit shall be complied with by the applicant and property owners and future tenants or users of the property. Any deviation or alteration of use from those conditions shall constitute a violation of the terms of the Conditional Use Permit. Such violation shall constitute a violation of this Ordinance and will be subject to prosecution and penalties under the terms of this Ordinance.
2. Revocation of a Conditional Use Permit. If a conditional use has not operated in conformity with the conditions of the permit or other requirements in the Zoning Ordinance, the Town Board may after due notice and public hearing, revoke the conditional use permit by a majority vote.
Town of
¶21 The renewed CUP contains parallel provisions, permitting revocation for any violation of a term of the permit, § I.6.a, and providing that the CUP is “subject to the general conditions of the Town of Beloit Code of Ordinances and the specific conditions of use contained in this permit.” § I.1.
¶22 The Town contends that by using the new building—built on property in an A-1 exclusive agricultural district—as a clubhouse for the hunting club, the club owners violated the terms of the renewed CUP. In the Town’s view, “the club house” refers to a building replacing the old clubhouse that is a legal nonconforming use, like the old clubhouse.[5] The Town asserts that the use of the new building is not a legal nonconforming use.
¶23 The club owners’ position is that the new building is a legal nonconforming use because the old building was a legal nonconforming structure and they are using the new building in the same manner. In the alternative, they argue, the reference to “the club house” in the renewed permit means their new building, even if it is not a legal nonconforming use.
¶24 We first consider whether the new building is a legal
nonconforming use. This arguments
requires us to construe the statute, Wis.
Stat. § 60.61(5m), and the town ordinance, Town of
¶25 Wisconsin Stat. § 60.61(5m) provides that an ordinance may not prohibit a nonconforming structure destroyed by fire from being rebuilt if it is “restored to the size, … location, and use that it had immediately before the damage or destruction occurred….” Consistent with this statute, Town of Beloit, General Zoning Ordinances § 2.17D.4 provides: “If a nonconforming structure is moved for any reason for any distance whatever, it shall thereafter conform to the regulations for the district in which it is located after it is moved.” (Emphasis added.) It is undisputed that the new building was constructed in a different location than the old building. Therefore, under the plain language of the statute and the ordinance, the new building is not a legal nonconforming structure.
¶26 We next consider whether the renewed CUP nonetheless permits use of the new building as a clubhouse for the hunting club. As we understand the club owners’ argument, they assert that, because the renewed CUP allows for a clubhouse, because the old building was validly used as a clubhouse, and because the new building is used in the same manner as the old building, the only reasonable inference is that the new building comes within the term “the club house” in the renewed CUP. We disagree because the undisputed facts do not support this inference.
¶27 It is undisputed that the CUP was renewed on April 7, 2008, and Bryden did not apply for a building permit until April 21, 2008. There is no evidence that the board knew when it renewed the CUP that Bryden intended to rebuild the clubhouse in a different location. It is therefore not reasonable to infer that the board intended for the new building to be “the club house” referred to in the CUP.
¶28 Moreover, even if we overlook the fact that the renewed CUP was issued before a building permit was applied for and issued, it is not reasonable to infer that “the club house” in the CUP refers to the new building. The building permit application states that it is for an “ag building,” and approval of this permit is conditioned on the building being for “agricultural use only.” The ordinance definition of agriculture does not include bird hunting preserves or hunting clubs.[6] It is not reasonable from this evidence to conclude that the Town intended that the new building would be used as a clubhouse by the hunting club, in direct contradiction to the condition stated on the building permit.
¶29 The Town, as already noted, construes the reference to “the club house” in the renewed CUP to permit a replacement building that is a legal nonconforming use. We conclude the Town’s proposed construction is the proper construction of the renewed CUP. It is a reasonable construction and the club owners have not identified an alternative reasonable construction. The one they advocate is unreasonable given the undisputed facts.
¶30 Because the renewed CUP does not permit the club owners to use
the new building as a clubhouse, we conclude the club owners violated the CUP,
which was also a violation of the ordinance. See Town of
CONCLUSION
¶31 We conclude the evidence supports only one conclusion: that the board acted reasonably and not arbitrarily in revoking the CUP. Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s order issuing a permanent injunction and remand with directions to vacate the injunction. Ordinarily, we would also direct the circuit court to dismiss the action. However, because the court’s order granting the injunction against the Town also dismisses the Town’s counterclaim to enjoin the club owners from operating the hunt club and to impose a fine, we do not direct the circuit court to dismiss the action. See supra, ¶8 n.1. As we stated in footnote 1, nothing in this opinion prevents further proceedings on the Town’s counterclaim consistent with this opinion.
By the Court.—Order reversed.
Not recommended for publication in the official reports.
[1] The circuit court also dismissed the Town’s counterclaim for an injunction against the club owners and for a fine. The Town does not address its counterclaim in its briefs on appeal. We therefore do not address it. However, nothing in this opinion prevents further proceedings on the Town’s counterclaim consistent with this opinion.
[2] A
municipality may elect not to be governed by these provisions if “by an
ordinance or resolution” it provides administrative review procedures. Wis.
Stat. § 68.16. The record
does not disclose whether the Town has opted to provide its own review
procedures, but if it has done so and has not provided for judicial review by
certiorari, review by common law certiorari is available. See
[3] All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2009-10 version unless otherwise noted.
[4] Had
the Town pursued this issue, the circuit court would have been required to
either apply the exhaustion doctrine and dismiss the case or determine that the
facts of the case came within an exception to the exhaustion doctrine. See
Metz
v. Veterinary Examining Bd., 2007 WI App 220, ¶¶13-15, 305
[5] “A
legal nonconforming use is ‘a use of land for a purpose not permitted’ under
the zoning ordinance but which was an active and actual use existing prior to
the commencement of the zoning ordinance.
[In contrast,] [a] conditional use is one which the zoning code allows.” State ex rel. Brooks v. Hartland Sportsman’s
Club, Inc., 192
Wisconsin Stat. § 60.61(5m) provides, in relevant part,
(5m) Restoration of certain nonconforming structures. (a) Restrictions that are applicable to damaged or destroyed nonconforming structures and that are contained in an ordinance adopted under this section may not prohibit the restoration of a nonconforming structure if the structure will be restored to the size, subject to par. (b), location, and use that it had immediately before the damage or destruction occurred, or impose any limits on the costs of the repair, reconstruction, or improvement….
[6] Town of Beloit, General Zoning Ordinances § 2.20B, titled “Specific Words and Phrases,” defines “agriculture” as: “The production of livestock, dairy animals, dairy products, poultry or poultry products, fur-bearing animals, horticultural or nursery stock, fruit, vegetables, forages, grains, timber, trees, or bees and apiary products. The term also includes wetlands, pasture, forest land, wildlife land, and other uses that depend on the inherent productivity of the land.” Ordinance No. 04-26 (Dec. 6, 2004).