Langer v. Board of County Commissioners , 2020 CO 31 ( 2020 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    April 27, 2020
    
    2020 CO 31
    No. 19SC650 Langer v. Board of County Commissioners—Land Use
    Classifications—C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4).
    This case is a companion to Yakutat Land Corp. v. Langer, 
    2020 CO 30
    , __ P.3d __,
    also decided today, and like that case, the present case is before the supreme court
    on a transfer from the court of appeals pursuant to C.A.R. 50. Here, the court must
    decide whether a Board of County Commissioners (the “BOCC”) misconstrued
    applicable law and abused its discretion in finding that defendant’s mountain
    coaster project was properly classified as a Park and Recreation Facility, rather
    than as an Outdoor Commercial Recreation or Entertainment Establishment.
    The supreme court now concludes that the BOCC correctly construed the
    applicable code provisions, and, applying the deferential standard of review
    mandated here, the court further concludes that the BOCC did not abuse its
    discretion in classifying the mountain coaster project as a Park and Recreation
    Facility. Accordingly, the supreme court affirms the judgment of the district court
    below.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2020 CO 31
    Supreme Court Case No. 19SC650
    C.A.R. 50 Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    Court of Appeals Case No. 19CA947
    Larimer County District Court Case No. 18CV31008
    Honorable Juan G. Villaseñor
    Petitioners:
    Peter E. Langer III, Linda W. Langer, M. Marsha Sypher, Dennis D. Sohocki,
    Dena L. Sohocki, and Janet Lynn Gehlhausen,
    v.
    Respondents:
    Board of Commissioners of Larimer County, Colorado and Yakutat Land
    Corporation.
    Judgment Affirmed
    en banc
    April 27, 2020
    Attorney for Petitioners:
    Rebecca L. Urquhart
    Estes Park, Colorado
    Attorneys for Respondent Board of County Commissioners of Larimer County,
    Colorado:
    Larimer County Attorney’s Office
    Jeannine S. Haag
    William G. Ressue
    Fort Collins, Colorado
    Attorneys for Respondent Yakutat Land Corporation:
    Snell & Wilmer L.L.P.
    Nathan K. Davis
    Denver, Colorado
    JUSTICE GABRIEL delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    2
    ¶1    This case is a companion to Yakutat Land Corp. v. Langer, 
    2020 CO 30
    , __ P.3d
    __, also decided today, and like that case, the present case is before us on a transfer
    from the court of appeals pursuant to C.A.R. 50. Here, we must decide whether
    the Larimer County Board of County Commissioners (the “BOCC”) misconstrued
    applicable law and abused its discretion in finding that defendant Yakutat Land
    Corporation’s (“Yakutat’s”) mountain coaster project was properly classified as a
    Park and Recreation Facility, rather than as an Outdoor Commercial Recreation or
    Entertainment Establishment.
    ¶2    We now conclude that the BOCC correctly construed the applicable code
    provisions, and, applying the deferential standard of review mandated here, we
    further conclude that the BOCC did not abuse its discretion in classifying the
    mountain coaster project as a Park and Recreation Facility. Accordingly, we
    affirm.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    ¶3    The facts and procedural history of this case are more fully set forth in
    Yakutat, ¶¶ 4–13, and we need not repeat all of those facts here. Instead, we will
    constrain ourselves to the facts pertinent to the present appeal.
    ¶4    Yakutat sought to place a gravity-driven roller coaster and related
    infrastructure (e.g., a coaster storage building, ticketing office, restroom facilities,
    and parking area) on its property. To that end, Yakutat submitted a proposed
    3
    development plan to the Estes Park Community Development Department (the
    “Department”), seeking approval for its mountain coaster project.
    ¶5    As pertinent here, the Department determined that the project was properly
    classified under the Estes Valley Development Code (the “Code”) as a Park and
    Recreation Facility, which was a use by right (or permitted use), rather than as an
    Outdoor Commercial Recreation or Entertainment Establishment, which was not
    a permitted use under the Code.           Randy Hunt, Estes Park’s Community
    Development Director, and his staff arrived at this determination for three reasons.
    First, the property at issue had previously been classified as a Park and Recreation
    Facility because it had long been used for horse trail rides offered by a neighboring
    stable. Second, the proposed use of the property for the mountain coaster was
    deemed to be “a less intense use” in terms of proportionality, scale, and density
    than would be typical of an Outdoor Commercial Recreation or Entertainment
    Establishment. In support of this finding, the Department noted that the proposed
    mountain coaster would occupy a total footprint of no more than eight acres in the
    interior of Yakutat’s 160-acre tract of land, leaving the vast majority of the property
    undisturbed. Accordingly, the expansion in the use of the property resulting from
    the mountain coaster would be modest. Finally, the Department considered the
    fact that the common law rule was to construe property restrictions in favor of the
    free, as opposed to the more restrictive, use of land.
    4
    ¶6    The plaintiffs, a group of owners of neighboring properties (the
    “Neighbors”), appealed the Department’s determination to the BOCC. After a
    public hearing, the BOCC affirmed the Department’s decision, concluding, for the
    reasons cited by the Department’s staff, that the mountain coaster project was
    properly classified as a Park and Recreation Facility. In so ruling, the BOCC stated
    that it was most persuaded by the following facts: (1) the mountain coaster would
    be a low-intensity use, given that it would occupy a total footprint of eight acres
    near the middle of a 160-acre tract and that the number of vehicle trips and the
    visual and noise impacts that it would generate would be minimal; (2) the coaster
    would essentially follow existing horse trails and would therefore effect only a
    modest intensification of use; (3) the definition of Park and Recreation Facility had
    been amended to remove the prior requirement that the use be for non-commercial
    purposes; (4) the coaster would be a single attraction and thus would not qualify
    as an amusement park (which would justify classification as an Outdoor
    Commercial Recreation or Entertainment Establishment); and (5) the common law
    favors construing property restrictions in favor of the free use of land.
    ¶7    Pursuant to C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4), the Neighbors then filed a petition for review
    in the Larimer County District Court. In a lengthy and comprehensive written
    order, that court ultimately affirmed the BOCC’s determination.
    5
    ¶8    As pertinent here, the court began by noting that “Park and Recreation
    Facilities”   and    “Outdoor     Commercial      Recreation     or   Entertainment
    Establishments” are distinct classifications in the Code. A Park and Recreation
    Facility is a low-intensity use that includes, among other things, parks,
    playgrounds, recreation facilities, and open spaces. An Outdoor Commercial
    Recreation or Entertainment Establishment, in contrast, is a high-intensity use that
    includes go-kart tracks, riding academies, and amusement parks.
    ¶9    Finding these definitions unambiguous, the district court ultimately
    concluded that competent evidence in the record supported the BOCC’s finding
    that the mountain coaster fell within the Park and Recreation Facility classification.
    In so concluding, the court found that the BOCC had (1) properly considered the
    enumerated characteristics in the Code, focusing on the amount of activity or
    intensity; (2) correctly found that the visual, noise, and traffic impacts of the
    coaster would be minimal; and (3) rightly distinguished the mountain coaster
    from the higher intensity uses of an Outdoor Commercial Recreation or
    Entertainment Establishment.       The court thus determined that the BOCC’s
    interpretations and applications of the Code were reasonable in light of the
    evidence presented.
    ¶10   The Neighbors then appealed the district court’s determination to the court
    of appeals. In both this case and in the Yakutat case, however, the court of appeals
    6
    filed C.A.R. 50 motions in this court for a determination of jurisdiction.          As
    pertinent here, the court of appeals noted in the Yakutat case, that the district court
    had found a portion of the Code to be unconstitutional. This, in turn, raised a
    question under section 13-4-102(1)(b), C.R.S. (2019), as to the court of appeals’
    jurisdiction to hear the Yakutat case, because that statute restricts the jurisdiction
    of the court of appeals in cases in which a municipal charter provision has been
    declared unconstitutional. The court of appeals asked us to determine where
    jurisdiction of the Yakutat case properly lay, and if we accepted jurisdiction in that
    case, to accept jurisdiction in the present case as well, because this case involves
    the same parcel of land and the same zoning determination as the Yakutat case.
    We accepted jurisdiction in both cases.
    II. Analysis
    ¶11   We begin our analysis by setting forth the applicable standard of review.
    We then discuss the pertinent provisions of the Code. We end by addressing
    whether the BOCC properly construed these provisions and whether it abused its
    discretion by classifying the mountain coaster project as a Park and Recreation
    Facility, rather than as an Outdoor Commercial Recreation or Entertainment
    Establishment.
    7
    A. Standard of Review
    ¶12    “Our review under C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4) is limited to ‘a determination of
    whether the [governmental] body or officer has exceeded its jurisdiction or abused
    its discretion, based on the evidence in the record before the defendant body or
    officer.’”   Ad Two, Inc. v. City & Cty. of Denver, 
    9 P.3d 373
    , 376 (Colo. 2000)
    (alteration in original, quoting C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4)(I)). Accordingly, in reviewing an
    administrative decision under C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4), we sit in the same position as the
    district court. 
    Id.
    ¶13    In conducting our review under C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4), we apply a deferential
    standard, and we may not disturb the governmental body’s decision absent a clear
    abuse of discretion. Stor-N-Lock Partners #15, LLC v. City of Thornton, 
    2018 COA 65
    , ¶ 22, __ P.3d __. A governmental entity abuses its discretion only when it
    applies an erroneous legal standard or when no competent evidence in the record
    supports its ultimate decision. See 
    id.
     We will conclude that no competent
    evidence supported an administrative decision only when that decision was “so
    devoid of evidentiary support that it can only be explained as an arbitrary and
    capricious exercise of authority.” Freedom Colo. Info., Inc. v. El Paso Cty. Sheriff’s
    Dep’t, 
    196 P.3d 892
    , 900 (Colo. 2008).
    8
    B. Applicable Law
    ¶14   Yakutat’s property falls within an RE-1 Rural Estate Zoning District. The
    Code defines such a district as one “established to protect and preserve some of
    the most rural areas of the Estes Valley in which significant view sheds,
    woodlands, rock outcroppings, ridgelines, other sensitive environmental areas
    and low-density residential development comprise the predominant land use
    pattern.” Estes Valley Dev. Code § 4.3(A)(1) (Apr. 2020).
    ¶15   Under the Code, certain uses are expressly permitted in an RE-1 Rural Estate
    Zoning District. Id. at § 4.3(B). As pertinent here, a Park and Recreation Facility is
    one such permitted use.         Id.   An Outdoor Commercial Recreation and
    Entertainment Establishment, in contrast, is not. See id. (not listing such a use as
    one of the permitted uses).
    ¶16   At the time pertinent here, the Code defined “Park and Recreation
    Facilities” as “[p]arks, playgrounds, recreation facilities and open spaces.” Estes
    Valley Dev. Code § 13.2(C)(34) (Jan. 2019). Although at one point, this provision
    required that such uses be non-commercial, the definition was amended to
    eliminate that restriction. See Bd. of Trustees of the Town of Estes Park, Colo.,
    Ordinance No. 17-17 (2017).
    ¶17   “Commercial Recreation or Entertainment Establishments, Outdoor,” in
    turn, were and are defined as “[a]ny outdoor enterprise whose main purpose is to
    9
    provide the general public with an amusing or entertaining activity, where tickets
    are sold or fees collected at the gates of the activity.”      Apr. 2020 Code, at
    § 13.2(C)(13)(a). The Code lists as examples of this classification “go-kart tracks,
    outdoor mazes, riding academies, roping arenas, livery stables, equestrian arenas,
    amusement parks, golf driving ranges, miniature golf facilities and zoos.” Id. at
    § 13.2(C)(13)(b).
    ¶18   The Code provides that use classifications such as these “classify land uses
    and activities based on common functional, product or physical characteristics.
    Characteristics include the type and amount of activity, the type of customers or
    residents, how goods or services are sold or delivered and site conditions.” Id. at
    § 13.2(A).
    ¶19   To assist the pertinent governmental authorities in determining a subject
    property’s appropriate use classification, the Code sets forth the following
    considerations that are to be used:
    1.     The actual or projected characteristics of the subject use
    compared to the stated characteristics of each use classification
    allowed in the zoning district . . . ;
    2.     The relative amount of site area or floor space and equipment
    devoted to the use;
    3.     Relative amounts of sales from the subject use compared to
    other permitted uses;
    4.     The relative number of employees in each use;
    10
    5.    Hours of operation;
    6.    Building and site arrangement;
    7.    Vehicles used with the use;
    8.    The relative number of vehicle trips generated by the use;
    9.    Signs expected in conjunction with the use;
    10.   How the use advertises itself;
    11.   Whether the use is likely to be found independent of other uses
    on the site;
    12.   Any other potential impacts of the subject use relative to other
    specific uses included in the classification and permitted in the
    applicable zoning district; and
    13.   Whether the subject use is consistent with the stated intent and
    purposes of this Code and the zoning district in which it is to
    be located.
    Id. at § 3.12(C).
    C. The BOCC’s Construction of the Code and Exercise of Discretion
    ¶20     Applying the foregoing provisions, the Department concluded, and the
    BOCC affirmed, that the purposes of the Code and consideration of the factors set
    forth therein warranted classification of the mountain coaster project as a Park and
    Recreation Facility. The Neighbors now contend that in so concluding, the BOCC
    misconstrued the Code and otherwise abused its discretion. We are unpersuaded.
    ¶21     As an initial matter, we conclude that the BOCC correctly construed the
    applicable Code provisions.
    11
    ¶22   As both the Department and the BOCC recognized, the mountain coaster
    project could possibly be classified as either a Park and Recreation Facility or as an
    Outdoor Recreation or Entertainment Establishment. Specifically, at the time
    pertinent here, Park and Recreation Facilities were defined to include recreation
    facilities, and the mountain coaster at issue here certainly would fall within that
    definition.   See Jan. 2019 Code, at § 13.2(C)(34).       Conversely, an Outdoor
    Commercial Recreation or Entertainment Establishment was and is defined as
    “[a]ny outdoor enterprise whose main purpose is to provide the general public
    with an amusing or entertaining activity,” and the mountain coaster would fit
    within that definition as well. Apr. 2020 Code, at § 13.2(C)(13)(a).
    ¶23   Faced with this potential overlap, both the Department and the BOCC
    looked to the purposes of the Code, as well as to the above-quoted considerations
    set forth therein that were to be used to determine a particular use’s classification.
    See id. at §§ 1.3(H), 3.12(C). In our view, this method of analysis was not only
    proper but also it was mandated by the Code.
    ¶24   As noted above, section 3.12(C)(13) requires the Department, in determining
    the appropriate classification of a proposed use, to consider whether the subject
    use was “consistent with the stated intent and purposes of this Code.” One such
    purpose is to encourage development that preserves and protects the character of
    the community and minimizes objectionable noise, glare, odor, traffic, and other
    12
    impacts of such development, especially when adjacent to residential uses. See id.
    at § 1.3(H).
    ¶25   In addition, section 3.12(C) sets forth the considerations that must be
    examined in making a use classification. These include, among other things, the
    characteristics of the subject use compared to the characteristics of each use
    classification allowed in the zoning district, the relative amount of site area
    devoted to the use, the building and site arrangement, the relative number of
    vehicle trips generated by the use, and any other potential impacts of the subject
    use relative to other specific uses included in the classification and permitted in
    the applicable zoning district. Id. at § 3.12(C).
    ¶26   In our view, in considering the intensity of the mountain coaster’s use, the
    increase in intensity resulting from that use, the consistency of the use with the
    definition of a Park and Recreation Facility, the contrast between this use and uses
    such as an amusement park (which would be an Outdoor Commercial Recreation
    or Entertainment Establishment), and the applicable law, the BOCC complied with
    the requirement that it consider both the purposes of the Code and the pertinent
    factors enumerated therein and described above.
    ¶27   For these reasons, we perceive no error of law in the BOCC’s construction
    of the pertinent Code provisions or in the analytical framework that it employed.
    13
    The question thus becomes whether the BOCC abused its discretion in applying
    this framework to the facts of this case. We conclude that it did not.
    ¶28   Here, as noted above, the BOCC found that (1) the mountain coaster would
    be a low-intensity use, given that it would occupy a total footprint of eight acres
    near the middle of a 160-acre tract and that the number of vehicle trips and the
    visual and noise impacts that it would generate would be minimal; (2) the coaster
    would essentially follow existing horse trails and would therefore effect only a
    modest intensification of use; (3) the definition of Park and Recreation Facility had
    been amended to remove the requirement that the use be non-commercial; (4) the
    coaster would be a single attraction and thus would not constitute an amusement
    park; and (5) the common law favors construing property restrictions in favor of
    the free use of land.
    ¶29   The record amply supports each of these findings. Indeed, the Neighbors
    do not appear to challenge, in a substantive way, any of such findings. Rather, at
    root, the Neighbors essentially ask us to reweigh the evidence and conclude that
    the mountain coaster is an Outdoor Commercial Recreation or Entertainment
    Establishment because, in the Neighbors’ view, the project more closely fits that
    definition than the definition of a Park and Recreation Facility.
    ¶30   Although the Neighbors’ argument is not without force, and indeed we
    might have reached a different conclusion than the BOCC were we deciding this
    14
    case in the first instance, under our applicable standard of review, we do not do
    so. Instead, our review is limited to whether the BOCC correctly construed the
    applicable Code provisions and, if so, whether it abused its discretion in applying
    those provisions to the facts before it. On the facts presented here, and given the
    substantial deference that we must afford the BOCC’s determination, see
    Stor-N-Lock Partners, ¶ 22, we cannot say that the BOCC abused its discretion in
    finding that the mountain coaster was a Park and Recreation Facility within the
    meaning of the Code.
    ¶31   In so concluding, we are not persuaded by the Neighbors’ contentions that
    (1) the removal of the requirement of non-commercial use from the definition of
    Park and Recreation Facilities was merely a housekeeping change that was
    intended to allow farmers’ markets to continue and (2) allowing commercial uses
    on private land was an unintended consequence of that legislative amendment.
    These contentions effectively ask us to rewrite the definition of Park and
    Recreation Facilities to preclude all non-commercial uses other than the existing
    farmers’ markets. This, however, we cannot do. See People v. Cali, 
    2020 CO 20
    ,
    ¶ 17, 
    459 P.3d 516
    , 519 (“We do not add words to a statute or subtract words from
    it.”); Town of Erie v. Eason, 
    18 P.3d 1271
    , 1275 (Colo. 2001) (“To properly construe a
    municipal ordinance, we must turn to the rules of construction applying to
    statutory provisions.”).    Nor can we presume that those who enacted the
    15
    amendment to the Code used language idly and with no intent that meaning
    should be given to the language used, which the Neighbors’ contention would
    essentially require us to do. See Lombard v. Colo. Outdoor Educ. Ctr., Inc., 
    187 P.3d 565
    , 571 (Colo. 2008).
    ¶32   We likewise are unpersuaded by the Neighbors’ argument that section
    1.8(A)(1) of the Code required the governmental bodies below to impose the more
    restrictive use on the subject property, which here would have been an Outdoor
    Commercial Recreation or Entertainment Establishment classification.
    ¶33   Section 1.8(A)(1) provides:
    When the provisions of this Code are inconsistent with one another,
    or when the provisions of this Code conflict with provisions found in
    other ordinances, codes or regulations adopted by the Town of Estes
    Park or Larimer County, the more restrictive provision shall govern
    unless the terms of the provisions specify otherwise.
    ¶34   Here, although the definitions of a Park and Recreation Facility and of an
    Outdoor Commercial Recreation or Entertainment Establishment arguably
    overlap, we perceive nothing in those provisions that are inconsistent with one
    another. Nor do we see any conflict between those provisions and any provisions
    found in other ordinances, codes, or regulations adopted by Estes Park or Larimer
    County. As a result, section 1.8(A)(I) does not apply in this case.
    16
    ¶35    For all of these reasons, we perceive no abuse of discretion by the BOCC in
    finding that the subject property should be classified as a Park and Recreation
    Facility.
    III. Conclusion
    ¶36    For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the BOCC correctly
    construed the provisions of the Code and then properly exercised its discretion in
    applying those provisions to the facts before it. We thus further conclude that the
    district court correctly upheld the BOCC’s determination that Yakutat’s mountain
    coaster project was properly classified as a Park and Recreation Facility, and we
    therefore affirm the district court’s judgment.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19SC650

Citation Numbers: 2020 CO 31

Filed Date: 4/27/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/27/2020