Sadusky v. Lake Creek ( 2020 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 19-0756
    Filed July 22, 2020
    GAYLERD A. SADUSKY TRUST, GAYLERD A. SADUSKY, TRUSTEE, and
    GAYLERD A. SADUSKY, individually,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    vs.
    LAKE CREEK AREA SANITARY SEWER DISTRICT, a Corporate and Body
    Politic,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    THE BUENA VISTA COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS,
    Defendant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Buena Vista County, David A. Lester,
    Judge.
    Plaintiffs appeal from summary judgment granted to Lake Creek Area
    Sanitary Sewer District. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Matthew G. Sease of Sease & Wadding, Des Moines, for appellants.
    Brett C. Redenbaugh of The Law Offices of Redenbaugh & Mohr, P.C.,
    Storm Lake, for appellee.
    Considered by Bower, C.J., and Doyle and May, JJ.
    2
    BOWER, Chief Judge.
    Plaintiffs, Gaylerd A. Sadusky Trust and Gaylerd Sadusky as trustee and
    as an individual (collectively “Sadusky”), appeal from summary judgment granted
    to Lake Creek Area Sanitary Sewer District (“Sewer District”).1 Sadusky asserts
    genuine issues of material fact exist, including whether Sadusky received proper
    notice of the establishment of the Sewer District, whether an excessive
    assessment was imposed, and whether Sadusky received a benefit from the
    Sewer District’s creation. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
    Sadusky, there remain material factual disputes precluding summary judgment.
    I. Background Facts.
    On September 16, 2003, the Gaylerd A. Sadusky Trust purchased a lot with
    a triplex consisting of three two-bedroom apartments, locally known as 3 Golfview
    Court, Storm Lake.2 The former owner was “W.J. & Amelia Wiegand Living Trust.”
    Sadusky’s personal residence address is 1020 Oak Lane in Storm Lake.
    A deed of the purchase was filed in the Buena Vista County Recorder’s
    Office on September 18, 2003, and showed the transfer as being from “Kay L.
    Kraai and Robert R. Kraai” to the Gaylerd Sadusky Trust. Until September 5, 2013,
    however, the official records maintained by Buena Vista County, including the
    1 The appeal does not involve Sadusky’s claims against the Buena Vista County
    Board of Supervisors, which remain pending in the district court.
    2 The property was legally described as:
    Lots Thirty-three (33) and Thirty-four (34), Auditor’s Subdivision of
    the Southwest Fractional Quarter (SW FRL 1/4) of Section Thirty
    (30), Township Ninety-one (91) North, Range thirty-seven (37) West
    of the 5th P.M., Buena Vista County, Iowa, except the North One
    Hundred Thirty (130) Feet thereof.
    3
    county auditor, continued to show the owner of 3 Golfview Court as “Weigand Trust
    c/o Gaylerd Sadusky.”
    On March 31, 2009, a petition requesting an election to establish the Sewer
    District was filed with the Buena Vista County Auditor. A public hearing was
    scheduled for June 29. By affidavit filed in this action, the Sewer District’s clerk,
    Doug Thompson, states notice was mailed June 6 to “Weigand Trust c/o Gaylerd
    Sadusky” at 3 Golfview Court and 1020 Oak Lane. Sadusky denies receiving
    either of these notices. Notice of the meeting was also published in the Storm
    Lake Pilot-Tribune on June 13, 2009.
    Sadusky did not attend the June 29 hearing or file objections to the
    proposed establishment of the Sewer District. The Sewer District was established
    on August 4 following a special election.
    On September 21, Thompson mailed notice of a public hearing at which the
    Sewer District trustees would consider a name change and establish the
    boundaries.    Thompson’s summary judgment affidavit and attached list of
    interested property owners included:
    WJ Wiegand Trust
    % Gaylard Sadusky
    3 Golfview Ct.
    Storm Lake, IA 50588
    1020 Oak Lane, Storm Lake, IA 50588 (Mail address)
    10-30-351-009
    On November 14, 2011, the Sewer District filed with the county treasurer a
    “Certificate of the Clerk of the Lake Creek Area Sanitary Sewer District in the
    County . . . after Adoption of the Resolution of Necessity” and “Notice of Pending
    Assessment Proceedings.”       Listed in an attachment was parcel 1030351009,
    4
    “Wiegand W J Trustee, Wiegand Amerlia I Trustee, Sadusky Gaylerd A” with an
    assessment $27,000.00 and address 1020 Oak Lane, Storm Lake.
    Neal Kuehl, the Sewer District engineer, filed an affidavit in these
    proceedings stating, “On May 9, 2012, the [Sewer] District held a meeting related
    to a ‘Resolution Approving Post-Issuance Compliance Policy.’ Sadusky appeared
    at the May 9th meeting and voiced his concerns with the assessment that was to
    be levied against him. The meeting minutes reflect the same.” The minutes of the
    May 9 meeting state:
    Butch Sadusky, owner of a Lake Creek Area property, discussed the
    original assessment notice which he doesn’t believe he received.
    The current notice, accompanied by a temporary easement, was
    inadequate. He also objected to the amount of the assessment,
    which is much higher than similar properties. Kuehl reviewed the
    method that was used to set the assessments. Trustees will discuss
    the matter.
    On May 17, Kuehl mailed a letter to Sadusky at 1020 Oak Lane explaining
    how the assessment was calculated. Kuehl also wrote:
    It is the District’s intention to install the tank and pump required for
    the Triplex on Golf View Court. However to do so, we need your
    permission for our contractor to be on that property. To that end, our
    engineer has sent a temporary easement agreement for you to sign
    and return. The temporary easement allows our contractor to be on
    your property to do the required work. The work in your area will take
    place in June or July of this year. If we do not have the signed
    temporary easement agreement by the time our contractor reaches
    your property it will have [to] be bypassed and we will consider that
    you do not want your property connected to the new sewer system.
    The assessment will still stand as it has been approved by Resolution
    of Necessity and the District has entered an an agreement with their
    contractor to complete work in the District including your property.
    Connection in the future may be possible but it will be at a cost that
    will include whatever extra costs are involved with having a
    contractor install just one (1) connection. The District prefers that the
    connection be made now and on a voluntary basis while we have a
    contractor in place.
    Based on the above, we respectfully request that the
    Temporary Easement Agreement be returned and the District be
    5
    allowed to complete the project as approved with the Resolution of
    Necessity filed in 2011.
    On August 28, 2012, Sadusky telephoned the Sewer District’s attorney,
    David Jennet, to discuss his dissatisfaction with the assessment. On September
    26, Jennet wrote to Sadusky at 1020 Oak Lane of the trustees’ decision not to
    adjust the assessment. Jennet also wrote:
    That brings us back to the issue of an easement for your property.
    The contractors are to be finished with the project in two weeks. I
    need to know if you are willing to provide an easement to the Board
    before the contractor leaves the work site. If you are, please let me
    know immediately and I will have an easement for your signature
    ready the same day. If you do not provide an easement, then the
    contractors will complete the project without installing the tank and
    appurtenances on your property. That means that in the near future
    the Trustees may utilize the nuisance abatement procedures to
    construct and connect your property to the sewer system and the
    cost of the work will be charged to the property owner and levied as
    a special assessment against the land to be collected in the manner
    provided for taxes in section 364.12(3)(h).
    On January 11, 2013, Thompson sent a certified mailing of “Notice of Filing
    of the Final Plat and Schedule of Assessment against Benefited Properties” to
    every property owner within the Sewer District, including to “Weigand Trust c/o
    Gaylerd Sadusky” at 3 Golfview Court and 1020 Oak Lane. Included with the
    mailing was “information for property owners.” The notice was also published in
    the Storm Lake Pilot-Tribune on both January 5 and January 12, 2013. Sadusky
    admits receiving the January 11 mailing at his Oak Lane address.
    Sadusky did not grant the temporary easement and no septic tank or
    connection to the sewer system was installed at 3 Golfview Court. The property
    was assessed by the Sewer District and the assessment attached to the property.
    Because the property does not have a permitted sewer system, it is not
    transferrable.
    6
    On August 7, 2018, Sadusky filed suit against the Sewer District and the
    county board of supervisors, asserting the Sewer District failed to provide proper
    notice of establishment, improperly imposed an excessive levy on 3 Golfview
    Court, and created no benefit to the property. The Sewer District denied the
    allegations and raised statute-of-limitations and estoppel-by-acquiescence
    affirmative defenses.
    The Sewer District filed a motion for summary judgment. Sadusky resisted.
    After arguments, the court granted the Sewer District’s motion on all grounds.
    Sadusky appeals.
    II. Scope and Standard of Review.
    “We review rulings that grant summary judgment for correction of errors at
    law.” Luana Sav. Bank v. Pro-Build Holdings, Inc., 
    856 N.W.2d 892
    , 895 (Iowa
    2014). Summary judgment is properly granted if the moving party establishes
    “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact” and it “is entitled to judgment as
    a matter of law.” Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3); see Luana 
    Sav., 856 N.W.2d at 895
    .
    “We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Luana
    
    Sav., 856 N.W.2d at 895
    .
    III. Discussion.
    Sadusky first contends the Sewer District did not provide proper it notice of
    the petition to create the sanitary district and, therefore, the assessment against
    the property is invalid.3
    3 We disagree with the Sewer District’s claim that Sadusky’s jurisdictional claim is
    raised for the first time on appeal. Sadusky’s petition asserts “the Plaintiffs
    received no notice of any kind of the proposed project until the levy had been done
    and the appeal date had also run.”
    7
    County boards of supervisors have authority to establish and maintain
    sanitary districts through the procedure set out in Iowa Code chapter 358 (2009).
    Twenty-five or more eligible elector residents of the area in question may file a
    petition in the county auditor’s office addressed to the board of supervisors and
    setting out the proposed sanitary district. Iowa Code § 358.2. The county board
    of supervisors then sets the time and place for a hearing on the petition.
    Id. § 358.4(1).
    Interested property owners are to be given notice of the petition as set
    out in section 358.4:
    (1) . . . . The board shall direct the county auditor in whose
    office the petition is filed to cause notice to be given to all persons
    whom it may concern, without naming them, of the pendency and
    content of the petition, by publication of a notice as provided in
    section 331.305.[4] Proof of giving the notice shall be made by
    affidavit of the publisher and the proof shall be on file with the county
    auditor at the time the hearing begins. The notice of hearing shall be
    directed to all persons it may concern, and shall state:
    ....
    (2) For a district which does not include land within a city, copy
    of the notice shall also be sent by mail to each owner, without naming
    them, of each tract of land or lot within the proposed district as shown
    by the transfer books of the auditor’s office. The mailings shall be to
    the last known mailing address unless there is on file an affidavit of
    the auditor or of a person designated by the board to make the
    necessary investigation, stating that a mailing address is not known
    and that diligent inquiry has been made to ascertain it. The copy of
    notice shall be mailed no less than twenty days before the day set
    for hearing and proof of service shall be by affidavit of the auditor.
    The proofs of service required by this subsection shall be on file at
    the time the hearing begins.
    4   Section 331.305 provides:
    Unless otherwise provided by state law, if notice of an election,
    hearing, or other official action is required by this chapter, the board
    shall publish the notice at least once, not less than four nor more
    than twenty days before the date of the election, hearing, or other
    action, in one or more newspapers which meet the requirements of
    section 618.14. Notice of an election shall also comply with section
    49.53 [(entitled, publication of ballot and notice)].
    8
    (Emphasis added.)
    “The requirement of hearing and notice is a safeguard to the individual
    taxpayer and property owner. The statute must be construed in relation to his right
    to be informed and to object.” Thompson v. Joint Drainage Dist. No. 3-11, 
    143 N.W.2d 326
    , 330 (Iowa 1966).         Strict compliance with statutory provisions is
    required to establish a sanitary district. Cf. Hicks v. Franklin Cty. Auditor, 
    514 N.W.2d 431
    , 435 (Iowa 1994) (establishing the levels of compliance for a drainage
    district).
    In support of it motion for summary judgment, the Sewer District provided
    Thompson’s affidavit, in which he states, “All District Notices related to 3 Golfview
    Ct. Storm Lake, IA 50588 were mailed to WJ Weigand Trust, c/o Gaylerd Sadusky
    at Sadusky’s home address of 1020 Oak Lane, Storm Lake.” Thompson’s affidavit
    also states, “Notice of Public Hearing, to be held June 29th, 2009, was published
    on June 13, 2009, in the Storm Lake Pilot-Tribune, and was sent on June 6, 2009[,]
    to all of the owners in the proposed district.”
    In resistance, Sadusky filed an affidavit stating, the January 11, 2013
    certified letter (addressed to Wiegand WJ Trustee, Weigand Amelia L Trustee,
    Sadusky Gaylerd, 1020 Oak Lane) “is the first notice that I received of any kind
    mailed to me. I can state with certainty, that regardless of the affidavit filed herein,
    that this notice, . . . was the only notice received.”
    He also filed an affidavit of Nancy Sadusky, who asserted:
    (1) [I] am the owner and operator of Buena Vista Abstract &
    Title Company. I have extensive experience in searching public
    records in the various county offices.
    (2) On or about January 14, 2019, I searched the records in
    the Buena Vista County Auditor’s Office pertaining to the
    9
    establishment of Lake Creek Area Sanitary District commencing with
    the filing of the Petition on March 31, 2009.
    (3) There is no Affidavit of Publication of Notice of Hearing for
    June 29, 2009.
    (4) There is no Affidavit of the Auditor to establish service of
    Notice by mail on property owners for the Hearing on April 29, 2009.
    (5) There is an Affidavit on file to establish the qualification of
    the petitioners.
    The Sewer District focuses solely on the language of Sadusky’s petition,
    equating the admitted allegation—“That Defendant District relied on the books of
    the Buena Vista County Auditor and served notice on the owner according to the
    Official Auditor’s books.”—with a conclusion that the Sewer District “did what was
    statutorily required to do in providing notice of the hearing on the petition to
    authorize the establishment.” We cannot condone this narrow focus and overly-
    broad conclusion in light of the summary judgment record.
    In response to Sadusky’s resistance, the Sewer District complained
    Sadusky’s assertion of improper notice was “attempting to move the goalposts,”
    and provided an attachment of a list of addresses and this language:5
    I hereby certify that a Notice of Hearing re: “Petition for Election to
    Establish Lake Creek Area Sanitary Sewer District”, scheduled June
    29, at 7:00 p.m. at LCCC Country Clubhouse at 1 Club House Dr,
    was mailed to each of the following individuals by regular mail on this
    date. Certified at Storm Lake, Iowa on June 6, 2009.
    Karen M. Strawn, BV Co. Auditor County Seal.
    See Appendix A attached to this opinion. However, there is no affidavit providing
    any foundation about what the attachment is or from whence it comes.
    The Sewer District has not established as a matter of law on this record,
    which we view in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, that notice was
    5One entry on the list was “WJ Wiegand Trust % Gaylard Sadusky, 1020 Oak Ln,
    Storm Lake, IA 50588.”
    10
    provided as required under Iowa Code section 358.4. Because there is a question
    whether the statutorily-required notice was given, which must be determined by
    the fact finder, the district court erred in granting summary judgment to the Sewer
    District. In addition, because the question remains whether the Sewer District had
    jurisdiction as to Sadusky,6 we reverse the entry of summary judgment on
    Sadusky’s claim that an excessive assessment was imposed, and whether
    Sadusky received a benefit.       We therefore reverse and remand for further
    proceedings.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    6 If the Sewer District did not have jurisdiction, any assessment may be void. Cf.
    Ioerger v. Schumacher, 
    203 N.W.2d 572
    , 575 (Iowa 1973) (finding that in the
    context of drainage districts, “[a]ctual notice in absence of notice required by
    sections [468.14] and [468.15] is not sufficient to confer jurisdiction with regard to
    the levy of an assessment against the minors’ property”); Minneapolis & St. L.R.
    Co. v. Bd. of Sup’rs of Marshall Cty., 
    201 N.W. 14
    , 15 (Iowa 1924) (“The statute
    expressly provides exactly how the service of such notice shall be made under
    such circumstances as are disclosed in this case. It is conceded that the notice
    was not served in that manner; nor was any attempt made to serve it in any
    substantial compliance with the manner provided by the statute. Therefore it, of
    necessity, follows that no jurisdiction was obtained of appellee at the initial step in
    the proceedings, and that the subsequent proceedings were, of necessity, void.”);
    Askew v. Trs. of Mule Slough Drainage Dist., No. 19-0525, 
    2020 WL 569337
    , at *6
    (Iowa Ct. App. Feb. 5, 2020) (vacating annexation where “Trustees did not
    sufficiently comply with the requirements in sections 468.119 and 468.356 for the
    annexation of land by a drainage district”). We express no opinion as to the merits.
    11
    Appendix A
    Compare with the affidavit attached to Thompson’s affidavit related to the
    September 30, 2009 hearing on the proposed name change of the Sewer District.
    12