Outfront Media, LLC v. Salt Lake City Corp. , 850 Utah Adv. Rep. 47 ( 2017 )


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  •                  This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2017 UT 74
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    OUTFRONT MEDIA, LLC,
    Appellant,
    v.
    SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION, CORNER PROPERTY, L.C.,
    and UTAH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, INC.,
    Appellees.
    No. 20160150
    Filed October 23, 2017
    On Direct Appeal
    Third District, Salt Lake
    The Honorable Todd M. Shaughnessy
    No. 160900413
    Attorneys:
    Leslie Van Frank, Bradley M. Strassberg, Salt Lake City, for appellant
    Samantha J. Slark, Katherine N. Lewis, Salt Lake City, for appellee
    Salt Lake City Corporation
    Jon H. Rogers, Salt Lake City, for appellees Corner Property, L.C.
    and Utah Outdoor Advertising, Inc.
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, JUSTICE DURHAM, JUSTICE HIMONAS, and
    JUSTICE PEARCE joined.
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, opinion of the Court:
    Introduction
    ¶ 1 In this case, we review Salt Lake City‘s decisions regarding
    two billboard owners‘ requests to relocate their billboards. Outfront
    Media, LLC, formerly CBS Outdoor, LLC, (CBS) came out the worse
    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    in the City‘s decision-making process. The City denied CBS‘s request
    to relocate its billboard to an adjacent lot along Interstate 15 (I-15).
    The same day, the City granted Corner Property, L.C.‘s request to
    relocate its billboard to the lot CBS was vacating.
    ¶ 2 Dissatisfied with the City‘s decisions, CBS appealed to a
    land use hearing officer, who upheld both decisions. CBS then
    sought judicial review in district court under the Municipal Land
    Use, Development, and Management Act, Utah Code section 10-9a-
    801. The district court also upheld the City‘s decisions. CBS now
    appeals to this court, contending that the City‘s denial of its
    relocation request and grant of Corner Property‘s were arbitrary,
    capricious, and illegal.
    ¶ 3 CBS‘s primary argument on appeal is that the City‘s
    decision to deny CBS‘s requested relocation was ―illegal‖ because
    the City invoked the power of eminent domain to effect a physical
    taking of CBS‘s billboard without complying with the procedural
    requirements that constrain the use of eminent domain. In particular,
    CBS asserts that the City was required to comply with Utah Code
    section 78B-6-504(2)(b), which provides that ―[p]roperty may not be
    taken by a political subdivision of the state unless the governing
    body of the political subdivision approves the taking.‖ For a city, the
    ―governing body‖ is the city‘s ―legislative body.‖ For Salt Lake City,
    that legislative body is the city council. It is undisputed that the
    City‘s mayor made the decision denying CBS‘s request to relocate its
    billboard without the approval of the Salt Lake City Council.
    ¶ 4 At the heart of this case is the proper interpretation of Utah
    Code section 10-9a-513 (Billboard Compensation Statute), which
    provides that a municipality is ―considered to have initiated the
    acquisition of a billboard structure by eminent domain‖ when it
    denies billboard relocation requests that, like CBS‘s, meet certain
    spacing requirements. In CBS‘s view, under this statute the denial of
    its relocation request constituted a physical taking of its billboard,
    which required compliance with the eminent domain procedures.
    We disagree. The Billboard Compensation Statute does not provide
    that a municipality has taken a billboard structure when it denies a
    relocation request. Instead, under that section, a municipality is only
    considered to have done so for purposes of compensation. We
    therefore view the Billboard Compensation Statute as creating a
    standalone compensation scheme that does not incorporate,
    expressly or impliedly, the procedural requirements that
    circumscribe the eminent domain power. Accordingly, the mayor of
    Salt Lake City was not required to seek the approval of the Salt Lake
    City Council before denying CBS‘s request to relocate its billboard.
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 5 We also reject CBS‘s additional arguments that the Mayor‘s
    decision violated the City‘s billboard ordinance and that the Mayor‘s
    decision was arbitrary and capricious. We therefore affirm the
    district court.
    Background
    ¶ 6 CBS owned a billboard at 726 West South Temple, adjacent
    to I-15. CBS leased the land at that location from Corner Property.
    Corner Property also owned land and had a billboard at 280 West
    500 South. In the fall of 2014, CBS‘s lease from Corner Property was
    about to expire, so CBS sought a means for relocating its billboard.
    CBS submitted a request—not the one currently before us—to the
    City to relocate its billboard to an adjacent lot at 738 West South
    Temple, and to increase its billboard‘s height. The City denied this
    request, and this denial was affirmed upon district court review.1
    CBS then voluntarily demolished its billboard to avoid trespassing
    on Corner Property‘s land.
    ¶ 7 In its letter denying CBS‘s first request, the City told CBS it
    could ―modify its application to either bank its billboard credits [for
    the now demolished sign] . . . or request to relocate the sign under
    Utah Code 10-9a-511(3)(c)(i).‖ The City reserved the right, however,
    to condemn the sign under Utah Code section 10-9a-513(2). CBS
    accepted this invitation to modify its relocation request ten months
    later.2 Its modified relocation request conformed to the requirements
    _____________________________________________________________
    1 CBS made its initial relocation request under Utah Code section
    72-7-510.5, which allows the owner of a sign to take certain actions if
    a UDOT improvement obstructs the view of the sign. Under this
    statute ―the owner of the sign may: (a) adjust the height of the sign;
    or (b) relocate the sign to a point within 500 feet of its prior location,
    if‖ certain other requirements are met. Because CBS‘s request sought
    to both ―relocate the sign‖ and ―adjust the height of the sign,‖ the
    City denied the request. CBS sought an administrative appeal, which
    the City denied. It then sought district court review, and the district
    court affirmed the City‘s conclusion that section 72-7-510.5 allows
    only relocation or height increase, but not both. CBS did not appeal
    from that decision.
    2  The City and Corner Property note that CBS tore down its
    billboard before modifying its request to relocate to conform to the
    requirements of Utah Code section 10-9a-511(3)(c)(i) (the Billboard
    Relocation Statute). In Corner Property‘s view, this means that CBS
    (Continued)
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    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    of Utah Code section 10-9a-511(3)(c)(i) (the Billboard Relocation
    Statute). That statute provides that a municipality may, despite a
    prohibition in its zoning ordinance, agree to a mutually acceptable
    relocation of a billboard. But if the City denies a billboard owner‘s
    request to relocate, and the request meets certain spacing
    requirements, the City ―is considered to have initiated the
    acquisition of [the] billboard structure by eminent domain.‖3 CBS‘s
    requested relocation, from the 726 lot to the 738 lot, was within the
    spacing requirements.
    ¶ 8 Shortly after CBS first applied to relocate its billboard,
    Corner Property also requested to relocate a billboard under the
    Billboard Relocation Statute. Corner Property asked the City to
    permit it to relocate its billboard from 280 West 500 South to 726
    West South Temple. This move failed to satisfy the spacing
    requirements in the Billboard Compensation Statute, so the City
    would have been free to deny it without paying just compensation.
    The City could not grant both CBS‘s and Corner Property‘s requests
    to relocate, because state law prohibits freeway-oriented billboards
    from being located within 500 feet of each other,4 and the two South
    Temple lots are within that spacing restriction. Both relocations were
    also technically prohibited under the City‘s zoning ordinance
    pertaining to billboards, Salt Lake City Code section 21A.46.160(N).
    That ordinance prohibits the construction of new billboards in a
    ―gateway‖ area, which includes I-15 and the area of 500 South where
    Corner Property‘s billboard was previously located.5
    did not have a billboard to relocate, but instead was the owner of
    only billboard credits. But this overlooks the fact that the City
    invited CBS to ―modify‖ its application to relocate, including the
    specific option of modifying the request to conform to the Billboard
    Relocation Statute. The City has thus treated CBS‘s request to
    relocate as if it was filed while the billboard was still in existence,
    and the City has not argued that we should treat it any other way. In
    any event, because we conclude below that the City validly denied
    CBS‘s relocation request, we need not decide whether CBS was
    technically entitled to file such a request after taking down its
    billboard.
    3   UTAH CODE § 10-9a-513(2)(a)(iv).
    4   See id. § 72-7-505(3).
    5   See SALT LAKE CITY CODE § 21A.46.160(B) (defining ―gateway‖).
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    ¶ 9 The City, acting through its then-mayor, Ralph Becker, and
    without seeking the approval of the city council, denied CBS‘s
    request to relocate its billboard and approved Corner Property‘s. The
    City stated that its reason for denying CBS‘s request was that the
    requested location fell within a gateway under the City‘s zoning
    ordinances, and the ordinance prohibits construction of a billboard
    in a gateway area. The City acknowledged that it had authority
    under the Billboard Relocation Statute to waive this zoning
    ordinance, but it informed CBS that it was unwilling to do so
    because it ―has a longstanding policy in favor of retiring and
    removing billboards as the opportunity to do so arises.‖
    ¶ 10 The City granted Corner Property‘s request to relocate on
    the same day it denied CBS‘s. Though, like CBS‘s request, Corner
    Property‘s requested relocation would have been in violation of the
    ―gateway‖ zoning ordinance, the City waived this ordinance for
    Corner Property. Mayor Becker submitted a declaration stating that
    he decided to deny CBS‘s request, and grant Corner Property‘s, in
    order to achieve a net reduction in the number of billboards located
    in ―gateway‖ areas by one. His decisions resulted in the permanent
    removal of Corner Property‘s 500 South billboard.
    ¶ 11 CBS sought review of these decisions before the City‘s
    appeal authority, a land use hearing officer.6 The hearing officer
    _____________________________________________________________
    6  ―[A]ny person adversely affected by the land use authority‘s
    decision administering or interpreting a land use ordinance may,
    within the time period provided by ordinance, appeal that decision
    to the appeal authority by alleging that there is error in any order,
    requirement, decision, or determination made by the land use
    authority in the administration or interpretation of the land use
    ordinance.‖ UTAH CODE § 10-9a-703(1).
    Before the hearing officer, the parties disputed the scope of
    review by the hearing officer and, in particular, whether the hearing
    officer could decide issues of state law. The City argued that the
    hearing officer had authority to determine only the correctness of
    city decisions insofar as they turned on the interpretation of a city
    ordinance. The City relied on Utah Code section 10-9a-707 (2016),
    which provides that ―[t]he appeal authority shall determine the
    correctness of a decision of the land use authority in its
    interpretation and application of a land use ordinance‖ and that
    ―[o]nly those decisions in which a land use authority has applied a
    land use ordinance to a particular application, person, or parcel may
    (Continued)
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    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    ultimately upheld the City‘s decisions to deny CBS‘s request and
    approve Corner Property‘s. CBS then sought judicial review in
    district court.7 The district court rejected CBS‘s arguments and
    concluded that the City‘s decisions were not arbitrary, capricious, or
    illegal, and affirmed the decision. CBS now appeals, pressing the
    same arguments it made below. We have jurisdiction under Utah
    Code section 78A-3-102(3)(j).
    Standard of Review
    ¶ 12 This is an appeal from a district court‘s review of an
    administrative appeal challenging a municipal land use decision.8
    be appealed to an appeal authority.‖ The hearing officer disagreed
    and concluded that he had authority to review the City‘s decisions in
    their entirety, including the aspects of state law that were implicated
    by the City‘s decisions.
    7 ―Any person adversely affected by a final decision made in the
    exercise of or in violation of the provisions of this chapter may file a
    petition for review of the decision with the district court within 30
    days after the decision is final.‖ UTAH CODE § 10-9a-801(2)(a).
    The district court determined that the hearing officer‘s authority
    was limited to considering the application and interpretation of city
    ordinances, not state statutes, and accordingly disregarded the
    portions of the hearing officer‘s decision that dealt with state law. No
    party has argued that we need to resolve the issue of the scope of the
    hearing officer‘s authority, and so we express no opinion as to that
    issue.
    8 The parties dispute whether on appeal we review the decision
    of the City or the hearing officer; neither argues that we review the
    decision of the district court. The City argues that, because the
    hearing officer in this case ―perform[ed] the same review as a district
    court in a petition for judicial review or an appellate court on an
    appeal from that decision,‖ the decision we review is the one made
    by the City, that is, by Mayor Becker. CBS counters that, under Utah
    Code section 10-9a-801, the courts review only a ―final decision,‖
    which Utah Code section 10-9a-708 defines as the ―written decision‖
    of the ―appeal authority.‖ We disagree with both parties‘
    characterization of our review. Their apparent consensus that we do
    not review the decision of the district court may be attributable to
    language in our previous cases suggesting that, ―[w]hen a district
    court reviews an order of a local land use authority and we exercise
    appellate review of the district court‘s judgment, we act as if we
    were reviewing the land use authority‘s decision directly.‖ Fox v.
    (Continued)
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    ―When a district court reviews an order of a local land use authority
    and we exercise appellate review of the district court‘s judgment, . . .
    we afford no deference to the district court‘s decision.‖9 The
    legislature has directed that ―[t]he courts shall . . . presume that a
    decision, ordinance, or regulation made under the authority of this
    chapter is valid; and [] determine only whether or not the decision,
    ordinance, or regulation is arbitrary, capricious, or illegal.‖10 ―A
    determination of illegality requires a determination that the decision,
    ordinance, or regulation violates a law, statute, or ordinance in effect
    at the time the decision was made or the ordinance or regulation
    adopted.‖11 The proper interpretation of a set of statutes presents a
    question of law, which we review for correctness. 12 We review the
    interpretation of ordinances for correctness as well.13 A decision is
    Park City, 
    2008 UT 85
    , ¶ 11, 
    200 P.3d 182
    . But as we have recently
    noted, this language should not be understood to mean that the
    district court‘s decision is a superfluity. See McElhaney v. City of
    Moab, 
    2017 UT 65
    , ¶¶ 15–26, __ P.3d __. Our recent decision in
    McElhaney clarified that the fact that we afford no deference to the
    intermediate court does not obviate the need for parties to make and
    preserve below the arguments they wish to press on appeal. 
    Id.
    ¶¶ 24–25. And the lack of deference likewise does not mean that we
    are not in fact reviewing the decision of the district court. So, as we
    said in McElhaney, when we exercise appellate review of a district
    court‘s judgment in connection with judicial review under Utah
    Code section 10-9a-801, ―we review the intermediate court‘s
    decision.‖ Id. ¶ 26.
    9   Fox, 
    2008 UT 85
    , ¶ 11.
    10UTAH CODE § 10-9a-801(3)(a) (2016). We note that this provision
    was recently amended, effective May 9, 2017. See H.B. 232, 62nd
    Legislature, Gen. Sess. (2017). We apply the version of the statute
    that was in effect at the time of the events relevant to this
    proceeding.
    11  UTAH CODE § 10-9a-801(3)(d) (2016). See Patterson v. Utah Cty.
    Bd. of Adjustment, 
    893 P.2d 602
    , 604 (Utah Ct. App. 1995) (―[W]hether
    or not the Board‘s decision is illegal depends on a proper
    interpretation and application of the law.‖).
    12   2 Ton Plumbing, L.L.C. v. Thorgaard, 
    2015 UT 29
    , ¶ 17, 
    345 P.3d 675
    .
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    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    arbitrary and capricious only if it is not supported by ―substantial
    evidence,‖ which is ―that quantum and quality of relevant evidence
    that is adequate to convince a reasonable mind to support a
    conclusion.‖14
    Analysis
    ¶ 13 CBS levels three challenges at the City‘s decision denying its
    billboard relocation request.15 First, CBS contends that the decision
    13 In the past, we ―afford[ed] some level of non-binding deference
    to‖ a local agency‘s interpretation of its own ordinance. Carrier v. Salt
    Lake Cty., 
    2004 UT 98
    , ¶ 28, 
    104 P.3d 1208
    . But this deference cannot
    stand in view of subsequent developments in our precedent. Our
    cases since Carrier have expressly rejected the notion of affording
    Chevron-style deference to state agencies‘ interpretation of statutes,
    see Hughes Gen. Contractors, Inc. v. Utah Labor Comm’n, 
    2014 UT 3
    ,
    ¶ 25, 
    322 P.3d 712
    , or regulations, see Ellis-Hall Consultants v. Pub.
    Serv. Comm’n, 
    2016 UT 34
    , ¶ 21, 
    379 P.3d 1270
    . Given that we do not
    defer to state agencies on pure questions of law, there is even less
    reason to defer to local agencies‘ interpretations of ordinances, given
    that those local agencies ―do not possess the same degree of
    professional and technical expertise as their state agency
    counterparts.‖ Carrier, 
    2004 UT 98
    , ¶ 28. In keeping with our recent
    decisions, we review the interpretation of ordinances for correctness.
    14  Bradley v. Payson City Corp., 
    2003 UT 16
    , ¶ 15, 
    70 P.3d 47
    (citation omitted).
    15 In its briefs, CBS also challenges the City‘s decision to grant
    Corner Property‘s request to relocate. CBS contends that the grant of
    Corner Property‘s application was illegal for two reasons. First, CBS
    argues that Corner Property‘s relocated billboard would be in
    violation of city ordinances regarding the permissible height and
    size of billboards. Second, CBS argues that the City‘s billboard
    ordinance forbids the mayor from waiving a zoning ordinance for a
    billboard owner who, like Corner Property, requests to move a
    billboard that is outside the spacing requirements set forth in the
    Billboard Compensation Statute. But counsel for CBS conceded at
    oral argument that, were we to conclude that the City‘s decision to
    deny CBS‘s request to relocate its billboard was not arbitrary,
    capricious, or illegal, then CBS lacks standing to challenge the grant
    of Corner Property‘s request. See Oral Argument at 1:53:16–1:55:45,
    https://www.utcourts.gov/opinions/streams/sup. Because we
    reach just that conclusion below, we accordingly do not consider
    CBS‘s arguments challenging the grant of Corner Property‘s request.
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    Opinion of the Court
    to deny its request was illegal because Mayor Becker did not obtain
    the approval of the city council before making that decision. In CBS‘s
    view, such a denial is an exercise of the eminent domain power. We
    reject this argument and hold that the procedural requirements of
    eminent domain mandated by Utah Code section 78B-6-504 do not
    apply because, under the Billboard Compensation Statute, relocation
    denials are merely ―considered‖ to be the acquisition of a billboard
    structure by eminent domain for compensation purposes, but these
    denials do not actually involve the formal exercise of the eminent
    domain power and the concomitant procedures the legislature has
    prescribed to restrain the exercise of that power.
    ¶ 14 Second, CBS contends that Salt Lake City‘s billboard
    ordinance prohibited the City from denying CBS‘s request to
    relocate. That ordinance provides that ―[e]xcept as otherwise
    authorized herein, existing billboards may not by relocated except as
    mandated by the requirements of Utah State law.‖16 In CBS‘s view,
    this means that if a relocation denial would trigger just
    compensation under the Billboard Compensation Statute, then the
    relocation is ―mandated by . . . State law,‖ and the City must approve
    the relocation request. We find no support for this interpretation of
    the ordinance in its plain language, and in any event, even if that
    were the proper interpretation, it would be preempted by state law.
    ¶ 15 Finally, CBS argues that Mayor Becker‘s decision to deny
    CBS‘s request and approve Corner Property‘s was arbitrary and
    capricious because, in CBS‘s view, a city‘s mayor cannot act
    according to an unwritten policy to reduce the number of billboards
    in the city. We disagree. There is substantial evidence in the record
    that Mayor Becker‘s administration had a goal of reducing the
    number of billboards in the city, and his decision to deny CBS‘s
    request and approve Corner Property‘s resulted in the net reduction
    of one billboard from a gateway area in the City, directly furthering
    that goal.
    I. The City‘s Decision to Deny CBS‘s Billboard Relocation Request
    Was Not Illegal, Because the Eminent Domain Statutes Do Not
    Apply to Such Denials
    ¶ 16 CBS argues that the City‘s decision to deny its request to
    relocate its billboard was illegal because the decision was made by
    the City‘s mayor without the approval of the City‘s legislative body,
    _____________________________________________________________
    16   SALT LAKE CITY CODE § 21A.46.160(CC).
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    Opinion of the Court
    the city council. In CBS‘s view, the provisions of Utah Code sections
    78B-6-501 through 522 (the Eminent Domain Statutes), especially
    section 78B-6-504‘s requirement of legislative approval of a taking,
    apply to the decision to deny a relocation request that triggers the
    requirement of just compensation under the Billboard Compensation
    Statute.
    ¶ 17 We disagree. The Billboard Compensation Statute neither
    expressly nor impliedly incorporates the Eminent Domain Statutes,
    so the procedures specified there do not apply to the denial of
    relocation requests submitted under the Billboard Relocation Statute.
    Instead, the Billboard Compensation Statute functions as a stand-
    alone scheme, mandating the payment of compensation upon the
    occurrence of certain triggering events.
    ¶ 18 We begin with the text of the statutes. The Billboard
    Relocation Statute provides:
    Notwithstanding a prohibition in its zoning ordinance,
    a municipality may permit a billboard owner to
    relocate the billboard within the municipality's
    boundaries to a location that is mutually acceptable to
    the municipality and the billboard owner . . . . If the
    municipality and billboard owner cannot agree to a
    mutually acceptable location within 90 days after the
    owner submits a written request to relocate the
    billboard, the provisions of Subsection 10-9a-
    513(2)(a)(iv) apply.17
    The Billboard Compensation Statute provides, in pertinent
    part:
    A municipality is considered to have initiated the
    acquisition of a billboard structure by eminent domain
    if the municipality prevents a billboard owner from . . .
    relocating a billboard into any commercial, industrial,
    or manufacturing zone within the municipality‘s
    boundaries, if [certain spacing requirements are met];
    and . . . the billboard owner has submitted a written
    request under Subsection 10-9a-511(3)(c); and . . . the
    municipality and billboard owner are unable to agree,
    _____________________________________________________________
    17   UTAH CODE § 10-9a-511(3)(c).
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    Opinion of the Court
    within the time provided in Subsection 10-9a-511(3)(c),
    to a mutually acceptable location[.]18
    ¶ 19 In sum, the Billboard Relocation Statute permits a
    municipality to agree to a billboard relocation request that would
    otherwise be prohibited by the city‘s zoning ordinance. But if the city
    does not agree to a relocation request, and that request meets certain
    spacing requirements, the city is ―considered‖ under the Billboard
    Compensation Statute to have ―initiated the acquisition of the
    billboard structure by eminent domain.‖
    ¶ 20 The Eminent Domain Statutes, on the other hand, offer a
    host of procedural protections for property owners. Particularly
    relevant here, Utah Code section 78B-6-504(2)(b) provides that
    ―[p]roperty may not be taken by a political subdivision of the state
    unless the governing body of the political subdivision approves the
    taking.‖ The parties agree that the ―governing body‖ here is the Salt
    Lake City Council and that the city council did not participate in the
    decision to deny CBS‘s relocation request.
    ¶ 21 CBS argues that the Eminent Domain Statutes apply
    because, in its view, the denial of its request to relocate a billboard
    constitutes a physical taking of the billboard. It points to the
    common textual link between the Billboard Compensation Statute
    and the Eminent Domain Statutes: both use the phrase ―eminent
    domain.‖ The Billboard Compensation Statute provides that the City
    ―is considered to have initiated the acquisition of a billboard
    structure by eminent domain‖ in certain circumstances, and the
    Eminent Domain Statutes set procedures to constrain the exercise of
    the eminent domain power. According to CBS, because the Billboard
    Compensation Statute tells the City the circumstances in which its
    denial of a relocation request will constitute an ―acquisition by
    eminent domain,‖ the City is formally exercising its power of
    _____________________________________________________________
    18 
    Id.
     § 10-9a-513(2)(a)(iv). The Billboard Compensation Statute
    also mandates compensation in other circumstances, for example
    where a municipality ―prevents a billboard owner from . . .
    rebuilding, maintaining, repairing, or restoring a billboard structure
    that is damaged by casualty, an act of God, or vandalism‖ or from
    making certain structural modifications or upgrades. Id. §§ 10-9a-
    513(2)(a)(i), (ii), (iii). Because this case features the denial of a request
    to relocate, we accordingly focus our discussion on that aspect of the
    Billboard Compensation Statute.
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    Opinion of the Court
    eminent domain and acquiring the billboard whenever it denies such
    a relocation request. And formal use of that power, CBS argues,
    necessitates compliance with the Eminent Domain Statutes.
    ¶ 22 CBS draws support for its position from Utah Department of
    Transportation v. Carlson,19 claiming that case stands for the principle
    that, although the permissible public uses for eminent domain are
    scattered throughout the code, they are all subject to the general
    requirements of the Eminent Domain Statutes. Additionally, CBS
    argues that it makes good sense to require the legislative body‘s
    approval before the City denies a relocation request, given that
    condemnation is often expensive, and that the city council is the
    body typically tasked with budgetary responsibilities.
    ¶ 23 The City20 contends that the Eminent Domain Statutes do
    not apply to billboard relocation denials. Like CBS, the City begins
    with the text of the Billboard Compensation Statute. The City points
    out that neither the Billboard Relocation Statute nor the Billboard
    Compensation Statute incorporates the Eminent Domain Statutes by
    explicit textual reference. The City argues that the absence of a
    specific incorporation was a purposeful omission, indicating the
    legislature‘s intent that the Eminent Domain Statutes do not apply.
    The City also rebuts CBS‘s concern about fiscal responsibility,
    arguing that the city council, though tasked with general budget
    creation, does not oversee every action with financial
    consequences.21 We agree with the City on each point.
    _____________________________________________________________
    19   
    2014 UT 24
    , 
    332 P.3d 900
    .
    20 Corner Property‘s arguments largely track the City‘s, so
    reference to the City‘s arguments includes both the City and Corner
    Property unless otherwise noted.
    21 The City also argues that legislative history confirms that the
    Billboard Compensation Statute does not incorporate the Eminent
    Domain Statutes, citing a failed bill that would have required
    compliance with the Eminent Domain Statutes in the context of the
    Billboard Compensation Statute. Additionally, the City argues that
    the absurd consequences canon supports its interpretation,
    describing several absurd consequences that would follow from
    adopting CBS‘s interpretation. Because we conclude that the statute
    unambiguously compels the City‘s interpretation, we have no need
    to employ these auxiliary tools of statutory construction here. See
    Bagley v. Bagley, 
    2016 UT 48
    , ¶ 10, 
    387 P.3d 1000
     (―When we can
    ascertain the intent of the legislature from the statutory terms alone,
    (Continued)
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    ¶ 24 Under the plain text of the Billboard Compensation Statute,
    a municipality ―is considered to have initiated the acquisition of a
    billboard structure by eminent domain‖ when it takes certain
    actions.22 The statute does not say that a municipality must acquire a
    billboard structure by eminent domain in those circumstances.23
    Instead, we read the plain language to simply specify that, for
    compensation purposes, a municipality will be considered to have
    acquired it. ―Consider‖ in this context means ―[t]o regard in a certain
    light or aspect; to look upon (as), think (to be), take for.‖24 In other
    words, ―consider‖ in this context means ―will be treated for present
    purposes as though it has, whether in fact it has or not.‖25 We
    accordingly read the Billboard Compensation Statute to treat a
    denial under the Billboard Relocation Statute as an acquisition for
    compensation purposes only, even though the denial itself is not an
    acquisition.
    ‗no other interpretive tools are needed,‘ and our task of statutory
    construction is typically at an end.‖ (citation omitted)).
    22   UTAH CODE § 10-9a-513(2)(a).
    23 CBS‘s argument is driven in part by its flawed assumption that
    the City has ―require[d] termination‖ of CBS‘s billboard. In fact, it
    has done no such thing. It is true that Utah Code section 10-9a-512
    states that a ―municipality may only require termination of a
    billboard and associated property rights through . . . eminent
    domain‖ or by voluntary transfer. Were the City indeed requiring
    termination of CBS‘s billboard, a different analysis may very well
    apply. But here, it is the termination of its lease from Corner
    Property, and not an action of the City, that is requiring CBS to
    terminate its billboard. The fact that the legislature has mandated
    that the City pay compensation for some relocation denials does not
    transform the City‘s action into one ―requir[ing] termination‖ of the
    billboard.
    24  Consider, OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY ONLINE (June 2017),
    http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/39593?redirectedFrom=consider
    (last visited September 29, 2017).
    25 The legislature frequently uses the word ―considered‖ in this
    sense—to treat something in a certain way. See, e.g., UTAH CODE § 75-
    2-104(1)(a) (―An individual born before a decedent‘s death who fails
    to survive the decedent by 120 hours is considered to have
    predeceased the decedent.‖ (emphasis added)).
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    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
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    ¶ 25 This reading of the Billboard Compensation Statute is
    confirmed by subsection 2(d) of that statute. That subsection
    provides that ―[i]f a municipality is considered to have initiated the
    acquisition of a billboard structure by eminent domain under
    Subsection 2(a) . . . the municipality shall pay just compensation to
    the billboard owner in an amount‖ specified in that subsection. 26 So
    the Billboard Compensation Statute creates a stand-alone scheme
    that functions without interface with the Eminent Domain Statutes:
    subsection 2(a) describes certain triggering conditions and
    subsection 2(d) describes what compensation must be paid when
    those conditions occur.
    ¶ 26 Our reading of the statute is confirmed by two well-worn
    canons of statutory construction: the canon of independent meaning
    and the canon of meaningful variation. And our reading is not
    contradicted by CBS‘s argument about the delegation of fiscal
    responsibility in city government. We discuss each point in turn.
    A. The Canon of Independent Meaning Confirms that the
    Eminent Domain Statutes Do Not Apply
    ¶ 27 CBS‘s argument overlooks the legislature‘s use of the word
    ―considered,‖ essentially writing it out of the statute. In CBS‘s view,
    by denying a relocation request that meets the spacing requirements,
    the City acquires the billboard by eminent domain. In essence, CBS‘s
    interpretation would rewrite the statute as follows: ―a municipality
    is considered to have initiated the acquisition of has acquired a
    billboard structure by eminent domain‖ when it denies a relocation
    request that meets the spacing requirements. But to make this
    change violates a core principle of statutory interpretation—our
    distaste for superfluity. That is, we avoid reading statutes in a way
    that renders portions inoperative. Instead, we seek to read them in a
    way that gives effect to each word and phrase.27
    ¶ 28 CBS‘s reading fails to give any independent meaning to the
    word ―considered.‖ On this basis alone, there seems to be good
    reason to reject CBS‘s reading of the statute. But CBS‘s reading also
    _____________________________________________________________
    26   UTAH CODE § 10-9a-513(2)(d).
    27  See, e.g., Turner v. Staker & Parson Cos., 
    2012 UT 30
    , ¶ 12, 
    284 P.3d 600
     (―Wherever possible, we give effect to every word of a
    statute, avoiding ‗[a]ny interpretation which renders parts or words
    in a statute inoperative or superfluous.‘‖ (alteration in original)
    (citation omitted)).
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    Opinion of the Court
    runs afoul of another canon: the canon that different words used in
    similar statutes are presumed to have different meanings.
    B. The Canon of Meaningful Variation Confirms that the
    Eminent Domain Statutes Do Not Apply
    ¶ 29 Our conclusion is supported by the fact that the Billboard
    Compensation Statute lacks an express or implied textual cross-
    reference to the Eminent Domain Statutes. CBS seeks to show that
    the Eminent Domain Statutes apply by placing the Billboard
    Compensation Statute alongside a group of statutes that bestow the
    eminent domain power on municipalities. But this analogy is
    inapposite—comparing the Billboard Compensation Statute to these
    statutes reveals it to be an apple among oranges. The statutes to
    which CBS attempts to analogize all feature a common trait that the
    Billboard Compensation Statute lacks: each one grants the power of
    eminent domain to a municipality or agency. These statutes provide
    that an entity ―may acquire land . . . by eminent domain‖ 28 or ―may
    exercise eminent domain.‖29 Typically, though not universally, these
    statutes include a specific textual cross-reference incorporating the
    provisions of the Eminent Domain Statutes.30
    ¶ 30 Standing in stark contrast is the Billboard Compensation
    Statute, which provides that a municipality ―is considered to have
    initiated the acquisition . . . by eminent domain‖ in certain
    circumstances.31 No other statutory provision uses the word
    ―considered‖ in the context of eminent domain. We thus view the
    _____________________________________________________________
    28   See, e.g., UTAH CODE § 69-3-2.
    29   See, e.g., id. § 73-26-404; id. § 73-23-3(3).
    30 See, e.g., id. § 17B-2a-820 (―The state, a county, or a municipality
    may, by eminent domain under Title 78B, Chapter 6, Part 5, Eminent
    Domain, acquire within its boundaries a private property interest,
    including fee simple, easement, air right, right-of-way, or other
    interest, necessary for the establishment or operation of a public
    transit district.‖); id. § 73-26-404 (―In order to construct the reservoirs
    and other facilities authorized under this chapter, the division may
    exercise eminent domain as provided in Title 78B, Chapter 6, Part 5,
    Eminent Domain.‖). But see, e.g., id. § 73-23-3(3) (―Division of Water
    Resources . . . may acquire land or any other property right by any
    lawful means, including eminent domain . . . .‖).
    31   Id. § 10-9a-513(2)(a) (emphasis added).
    15
    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    Billboard Compensation Statute as something of a unique animal,
    and we do not find it analogous to statutes granting the power of
    eminent domain. While the Billboard Compensation Statute uses the
    term ―eminent domain,‖ it neither explicitly cross-references the
    Eminent Domain Statutes, nor implies such a reference through the
    use of language similar to statutes that grant the power of eminent
    domain. Instead, under the terms of the statute, the City is not
    ―acquiring‖ land or ―exercising‖ eminent domain, but it is merely
    ―considered to have initiated the acquisition of a billboard structure
    by eminent domain.‖ That difference is significant.
    ¶ 31 The canon of meaningful variation suggests that ―[d]ifferent
    words used in . . . a similar[] statute . . . are assigned different
    meanings whenever possible.‖32 We accord the Billboard
    Compensation Statute‘s different words ―considered to have
    initiated‖ different meanings by construing this section to operate as
    a standalone scheme, rather than incorporating the Eminent Domain
    Statutes.
    ¶ 32 For this reason, CBS‘s reliance on Utah Department of
    Transportation v. Carlson is misplaced. In that case, we described a
    number of statutes that grant the power of eminent domain. CBS
    correctly points out that we recognized in Carlson that the legislature
    has ―authoriz[ed]‖ the use of ―eminent domain across a wide range
    of statutory provisions.‖33 And there is a solid basis for CBS‘s
    position that, though these grants of the eminent domain power are
    scattered throughout the code, each is constrained by the Eminent
    Domain Statutes. But none of those statutes provides that a
    municipality ―is considered to have initiated the acquisition of a
    billboard structure by eminent domain‖34 if it denies a relocation
    request under certain conditions. So, again, the use of the word
    ―considered‖ makes a great deal of difference, and distinguishes the
    Billboard Compensation Statute from statutes that actually grant the
    power of eminent domain. We now turn to CBS‘s argument
    regarding the fiscal impact of denying a billboard relocation request.
    _____________________________________________________________
    32  SUTHERLAND STATUTES & STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION 2A
    Sutherland Statutory Construction § 46:6 (7th ed. 2016); see also City
    Ctr. Exec. Plaza, LLC v. Jantzen, 
    344 P.3d 339
    , 344 (Ariz. Ct. App.
    2015).
    33   
    2014 UT 24
    , ¶ 21.
    34   UTAH CODE § 10-9a-513(2)(a) (emphasis added).
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    C. The Fiscal Impact of a Relocation Denial Does Not Make It an
    Exercise of the Eminent Domain Power
    ¶ 33 Finally, we address CBS‘s argument regarding the fiscal
    impact of a relocation denial. CBS argues that it would be anomalous
    to interpret the Billboard Compensation Statute to permit the City‘s
    mayor to unilaterally exercise the power of eminent domain. CBS
    argues that it is the City Council that is charged with ―drafting
    ordinances,‖35 ―controlling finances and property,‖36 and
    ―purchasing property.‖37
    ¶ 34 The City points out that the division of labor in a mayor-
    council form of city government assigns to the mayor a host of
    functions, and though the city council sets the general budget and
    appropriations, many of the mayor‘s actions expend fiscal resources
    without specific council approval. Though CBS is right that
    condemnation can be an expensive decision, that fact alone does not
    override the legislature‘s decision to merely ―consider‖ relocation
    denials to be an acquisition by eminent domain. Where the language
    employed by the legislature contains no intent to incorporate the
    Eminent Domain Statutes, it is not our role to expand the otherwise
    limited text of the Billboard Compensation Statute and infer such an
    incorporation out of concern that good policy requires it.38
    ¶ 35 In sum, the Eminent Domain Statutes do not apply to
    actions that may trigger the Billboard Compensation Statute. We
    interpret the Billboard Compensation Statute to mean that, by
    denying billboard relocation requests that meet the spacing
    requirements, the City is considered to have initiated the acquisition
    _____________________________________________________________
    35   Citing UTAH CODE § 10-3b-203.
    36   Citing id. §§ 10-6-101, 10-8-1.
    37   Citing id. §§ 10-3b-203(1), 10-8-1.
    38 See, e.g., Univ. of Utah v. Shurtleff, 
    2006 UT 51
    , ¶ 53, 
    144 P.3d 1109
     (―No matter how persuasive we may find such arguments, we
    are constrained by our judicial role. Our role is one of interpreting,
    not drafting.‖); see also Hughes Gen. Contractors, Inc. v. Utah Labor
    Comm’n, 
    2014 UT 3
    , ¶ 29, 
    322 P.3d 712
     (―[T]he interpretive function
    for us is not to divine and implement the statutory purpose, broadly
    defined. It is to construe its language. Where, as here, that language
    dictates an answer to the question presented, we are not at liberty to
    adopt a different one . . . .‖).
    17
    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    of a billboard structure by eminent domain, solely for purposes of
    just compensation as dictated in that section. Because ―considered‖
    in this context means ―to look upon (as),‖ we conclude that
    relocation denials that meet the spacing requirements are only to be
    looked upon as acquisitions by eminent domain, though in fact they
    are not.
    II. The City‘s Decision to Deny CBS‘s Request Did Not Violate the
    City‘s Billboard Ordinance
    ¶ 36 CBS next challenges the denial of its relocation request as
    violating Salt Lake City‘s Billboard Ordinance. That ordinance
    provides, in relevant part:
    State Mandated Relocation of Billboards: Except as
    otherwise authorized herein, existing billboards may
    not be relocated except as mandated by the
    requirements of Utah state law.39
    ¶ 37 In CBS‘s view, a relocation is ―mandated‖ by state law—and
    therefore the City must approve a relocation request—when a denial
    would trigger a right to just compensation under the Billboard
    Compensation Statute. We reject CBS‘s reading. It misreads the plain
    language of the ordinance. Nothing in the ordinance mandates that
    certain relocation requests be granted. The ordinance, on its face,
    speaks only to the conditions under which relocation will not be
    allowed. And in any event, the Billboard Compensation Statute does
    not mandate relocation of any billboard; it simply specifies
    circumstances where just compensation must be paid if relocation is
    denied. The statute gives the municipality the option of permitting
    the relocation, or denying it and paying just compensation. It
    nowhere mandates that relocation be permitted to occur. So CBS‘s
    reading of the ordinance is misguided. But even if the ordinance had
    the meaning that CBS assigns it, it would be preempted by state law.
    ¶ 38 If CBS‘s interpretation were correct—that the ordinance
    means that the City must grant relocation requests where denying
    them would require just compensation—then the ordinance would
    be preempted by the Billboard Relocation Statute. The City correctly
    points out that ―[i]t is well established that, where a city ordinance is
    in conflict with a state statute, the ordinance is invalid at its
    inception. ‗In determining whether an ordinance is in ―conflict‖ with
    _____________________________________________________________
    39   SALT LAKE CITY CODE § 21A.46.160(CC).
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    general laws, the test is whether the ordinance permits or licenses
    that which the statute forbids and prohibits, and vice versa.‘‖40
    ¶ 39 Here, the Billboard Relocation Statute gives the City
    discretion to grant or deny requests for billboard relocation.41 No
    ordinance can effectively prohibit the City from exercising that
    discretion. CBS reads the ordinance to forbid the City from denying
    some relocation requests—those that fall within the spacing
    requirements that trigger the just compensation requirement under
    the Billboard Compensation Statute. But the Billboard Relocation
    Statute expressly permits the City to deny such requests, so long as it
    pays just compensation. This argument therefore fails.
    III. The City‘s Decision to Deny CBS‘s Request and Grant Corner
    Property‘s Was Not Arbitrary and Capricious, Because It Furthered
    the City‘s Goal of Reducing the Number of Billboards in
    ―Gateway‖ Areas
    ¶ 40 CBS argues that the City‘s stated purpose for denying its
    application—that it was doing so in accordance with its
    longstanding policy in favor of retiring and removing billboards—
    was arbitrary and capricious. A decision is arbitrary and capricious
    when it is not supported by ―substantial evidence.‖42 Substantial
    evidence is that ―quantum and quality of relevant evidence that is
    adequate to convince a reasonable mind to support a conclusion.‖43
    CBS argues that the City‘s decisions were arbitrary and capricious
    because 1) no policy of billboard reduction exists in written form; 2)
    even if there were a policy, the executive branch cannot make
    ―policy,‖ only the legislative body can; and 3) even if unwritten
    policies of the executive are acceptable, the executive cannot have a
    policy that conflicts with an ordinance. We reject the first two
    arguments, and, even if we agreed with the premise of the third—
    _____________________________________________________________
    40 Hansen v. Eyre, 
    2005 UT 29
    , ¶ 15, 
    116 P.3d 290
     (citations
    omitted).
    41 ―Notwithstanding a prohibition in its zoning ordinance, a
    municipality may permit a billboard owner to relocate the billboard
    within the municipality‘s boundaries to a location that is mutually
    acceptable to the municipality and the billboard owner.‖ UTAH CODE
    § 10-9a-511 (3)(c)(i) (emphasis added).
    42   UTAH CODE § 10-9a-801(3)(c).
    43  Bradley v. Payson City Corp., 
    2003 UT 16
    , ¶ 15, 
    70 P.3d 47
    (citation omitted).
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    OUTFRONT MEDIA v. SLC CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    that an executive‘s policy cannot conflict with an ordinance—we see
    no such conflict here.
    ¶ 41 First, we agree with the City that there is substantial
    evidence that Mayor Becker had a policy of reducing billboards. The
    City points to, and CBS does not refute, several pieces of evidence to
    this effect. For example, Mayor Becker submitted a declaration
    referring to his ―longstanding policy to reduce the total number of
    billboards within the City.‖ Mayor Becker publicly announced this
    policy several times, including in his 2013 State of the City address.
    The City also entered into numerous agreements under Mayor
    Becker‘s direction to limit the ability of property owners to place
    billboards on their property. We agree with the City that this
    constitutes substantial evidence that the Becker administration had a
    policy of reducing the number of billboards in the City.
    ¶ 42 The next question is whether such a policy needs to be in
    writing to be valid. We conclude that it does not. We see no reason
    why a city executive is not entitled to have informal policies, i.e.,
    objectives, goals, or standards that he or she applies in carrying out
    the executive function. Informal executive policies represent an effort
    to administer consistently, and we agree with the City that an
    executive branch of city government can make decisions in
    accordance with informal goals and objectives.
    ¶ 43 In the end, we are left with CBS‘s argument that the Becker
    administration‘s policy of reducing billboards is inconsistent with
    the City‘s Billboard Ordinance. The Billboard Ordinance provides:
    This section is intended to limit the maximum number
    of billboards in Salt Lake City to no greater than the
    current number. This chapter further provides
    reasonable processes and methods for the replacement
    or relocation of existing nonconforming billboards to
    areas of the city where they will have less negative
    impact on the goals and policies of the city which
    promote the enhancement of the city‘s gateways,
    views, vistas and related urban design elements of the
    city‘s master plans.44
    ¶ 44 The question here is whether a policy of actively reducing the
    number of billboards is in conflict with a policy to ―limit‖ the
    number of billboards to ―no greater than the current number.‖ We
    conclude that there is no conflict in these policies. If the mayor had a
    _____________________________________________________________
    44   SALT LAKE CITY CODE § 21A.46.160(A).
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    policy of increasing the number of billboards in the city, then this
    policy would conflict with the ordinance. But a policy of reducing
    the total number of billboards is consistent with the goal of
    ―limit[ing]‖ the number of billboards to no greater than the current
    number.
    ¶ 45 Mayor Becker‘s decision in this case had exactly that effect.
    By denying CBS‘s relocation request and granting Corner Property‘s,
    he achieved the net reduction of one billboard, and it was a billboard
    located in a ―gateway‖ area—an area that the City has prioritized as
    important for protecting the aesthetics of the City. Accordingly, the
    mayor‘s decision to deny CBS‘s relocation request and grant Corner
    Property‘s was not arbitrary and capricious.
    Conclusion
    ¶ 46 We affirm the conclusion that the City‘s decision to deny
    CBS‘s request to relocate its billboard was not arbitrary, capricious,
    or illegal. The Eminent Domain Statutes do not apply in the context
    of the Billboard Compensation Statute, so the City was not required
    to seek city council approval before denying CBS‘s request. The
    City‘s Billboard Ordinance does not forbid the City from denying a
    billboard relocation request that fits within the spacing requirements
    of the Billboard Compensation Statute. And Mayor Becker‘s decision
    was not arbitrary and capricious because it furthered his established
    goal of achieving a net reduction in the number of billboards in
    gateway areas.
    21