Court Opinion

ID: 902131
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-13 01:11:50.562582+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:10.098232
License: Public Domain

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2012 S.D. 76

                               IN THE SUPREME COURT
                                       OF THE
                              STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

                                       ****
LAMAR ADVERTISING OF
SOUTH DAKOTA, INC.,                            Petitioner and Appellant,

      v.

ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
OF THE CITY OF RAPID CITY,                     Respondent and Appellee.

                                       ****

                    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
                      THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
                    PENNINGTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

                                       ****

                       THE HONORABLE WALLY EKLUND
                                  Judge

                                       ****

EDWARD C. CARPENTER
STEPHEN C. HOFFMAN of
Costello, Porter, Hill, Heisterkamp,
 Bushnell & Carpenter, LLP
Rapid City, South Dakota                       Attorneys for petitioner
                                               and appellant.

JOEL P. LANDEEN of
Office of the City Attorney
Rapid City, South Dakota                       Attorneys for respondent
                                               and appellee.

                                       ****
                                               CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS
                                               ON AUGUST 27, 2012

                                               OPINION FILED 10/31/12
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KONENKAMP, Justice

[¶1.]        In denying a writ of certiorari, the circuit court ruled that Rapid City

regularly pursued its authority when it required a conditional use permit as a

prerequisite to granting a request to alter an existing off-premises sign. We

reverse.

                                    Background

[¶2.]        On April 4, 2011, Lamar Advertising of South Dakota, Inc., submitted

applications to Rapid City Building Official Brad Solon for sign building permits,

which would allow Lamar to convert six traditional billboards to digital signs.

Solon denied Lamar’s applications, relying on the opinion of Rapid City’s Growth

Management Director, Marcia Elkins, “that any alteration to an off-premise [sic]

sign would require a conditional use permit under Title 17.50.380 (Off-Premise [sic]

Signage as a Conditional Use).” In appealing the denial to the Rapid City Zoning

Board of Adjustment, Lamar contended that a conditional use permit was not

required to alter an existing sign under Rapid City Municipal Code Chapter 15.28

(Sign Code). After a hearing on June 21, 2011, the City unanimously upheld Solon’s

denial.

[¶3.]        Lamar petitioned the circuit court for a writ of certiorari. It argued

that the City, in at least 100 prior instances, allowed Lamar to alter existing signs

without first obtaining a conditional use permit, and therefore, the City should be

estopped from now requiring a conditional use permit. Lamar further argued that

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the City’s denial was “arbitrary and beyond its jurisdiction as an effort to

improperly regulate digital billboards in contravention of existing ordinances.” 1

[¶4.]         In response, the City asserted that Lamar was aware that a

conditional use permit would be required before altering existing off-premises signs,

because in 2010, the City denied Lamar’s application to alter two traditional off-

premises signs without an accompanying conditional use permit. 2 The City further

claimed that the Rapid City Municipal Code (City Code) makes off-premises signs a

conditional use, for which a permit is required (see City Code Section 17.18.030),

and Sign Code Section 15.28.240 requires that all sign alterations comply with the

“Code” and therefore, Lamar must bring its signs into compliance under the

conditional use City Code section.

1.      In June 2011, two months after Lamar applied to convert the six signs to
        digital, Rapid City voters approved an initiated measure that banned the use
        of off-premises digital billboards. Because Lamar’s application preceded the
        June 2011 election, the newly-enacted ban did not apply to Lamar’s request.

2.      In denying Lamar’s application, Solon informed Lamar that a conditional use
        permit was required for each sign. Lamar did not appeal the denial, but
        instead applied for conditional use permits. On March 25, 2010, the Rapid
        City Planning Commission denied Lamar’s request for each conditional use
        permit. Lamar’s appeal to the City Council was denied on June 6, 2010. On
        July 5, 2010, Lamar petitioned the circuit court for a writ of mandamus. But
        the parties later stipulated that Lamar would dismiss its petition as it
        related to the sign on Mount Rushmore Road. In exchange, the City granted
        Lamar’s request to convert the sign on East Anamosa Street to digital.
        Lamar reserved the right to file a new application for a sign permit to convert
        the sign on Mount Rushmore Road to digital. This sign permit application is
        included in the current appeal.

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[¶5.]        At a hearing before the circuit court, Solon testified that the City, from

2002 until 2010, did not require a conditional use permit before allowing Lamar to

alter existing signs, even though City Code Section 17.18.030 was in effect,

designating off-premises signs as a conditional use. For new signs, however, the

City required a conditional use permit after 2002. Indeed, in 2006, Lamar obtained

a conditional use permit and constructed a new sign. When, in 2010, the City’s

Growth Management Director told Solon to start requiring a conditional use permit,

Solon began to impose the requirement for existing off-premises signs.

[¶6.]        In its memorandum decision, the circuit court framed the issues as (1)

whether Solon had jurisdiction to deny Lamar’s applications and (2) whether the

denial was beyond Solon’s defined authority. On the first question, the court

concluded that “there is no doubt as to Solon’s jurisdiction over Lamar’s sign

building permit application because Rapid City Sign Building Code 15.28.090

expressly grants him this authority.” As to the second question, whether Solon

exceeded his authority, the court quoted language from a Sign Code section related

to what must be included in a sign building permit application. See Sign Code

Section 15.28.090(E). In particular, the court interpreted the language “other such

data and information as may be required by the Building Official” to mean that the

City could require a conditional use permit before granting Lamar’s request. The

court also concluded that the City was not estopped from requiring a conditional use

permit because Lamar applied for and received a conditional use permit in 2006.

(The sign was new, however, not existing.) Accordingly, the court denied Lamar’s

petition.

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[¶7.]        On appeal, Lamar argues that the circuit court erred in refusing to

grant a writ of certiorari, as the City acted in an irregular pursuit of its authority

when it denied Lamar’s applications. “Our review of certiorari proceedings is

limited to whether the challenged court, officer, board, or tribunal had jurisdiction

and whether it regularly pursued its authority.” Esling v. Krambeck, 2003 S.D. 59,

¶ 6, 663 N.W.2d 671, 675 (citation omitted). Construing city ordinances requires de

novo review. Ridley v. Lawrence Cnty. Comm’n, 2000 S.D. 143, ¶ 5, 619 N.W.2d

254, 257 (citations omitted). We interpret an ordinance to “discover the true

intention of the law which is to be ascertained primarily from the language

expressed in the [ordinance].” Esling, 2003 S.D. 59, ¶ 6, 663 N.W.2d at 675-76

(citing City of Rapid City v. Anderson, 2000 S.D. 77, ¶ 7, 612 N.W.2d 289, 291-92

(citations omitted)).

                               Analysis and Decision

[¶8.]        The circuit court’s denial of Lamar’s petition for a writ was based on

reasons not asserted by the City at the hearing or in its pre- and post-hearing

briefs. At no point did the City claim that by obtaining a conditional use permit in

2006 for a new sign, Lamar was put on notice of the City’s policy for existing signs.

Furthermore, the City did not rely on or mention the “other such data and

information” language in Sign Code Section 15.28.090 as support for Solon’s denial.

Considering that we review the City’s denial of Lamar’s applications without regard

to the correctness of the circuit court’s decision, we need not address the propriety of

the court’s reasoning. Our duty is to determine whether the City acted “in excess of

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its jurisdiction or in an irregular pursuit of its authority[.]” See Esling, 2003 S.D.

59, ¶ 10, 663 N.W.2d at 677.

[¶9.]         Lamar does not challenge the City’s jurisdiction to consider its appeal

or its authority to deny its applications. Rather, Lamar avers that nothing in the

Sign Code requires it to obtain a conditional use permit before it may alter its

existing signs. Therefore, the question is whether the City acted in an irregular

pursuit of its authority when it denied Lamar’s applications. Importantly, five of

the six applications submitted by Lamar involved legal non-conforming signs.

These five applications were denied because no conditional use permits had been

obtained. The application for the sixth sign, however, involved a sign that had been

issued a conditional use permit in 2006. Lamar’s application for that sign was

denied because Solon thought that altering the face of that sign from static to

digital constituted a major amendment under City Cody Section 17.54.030(I)

(Procedures for authorization of conditional use permits). 3 Because altering the

sixth sign was denied for a different reason, we will address it apart from the five

legal non-conforming signs.

3.      Lamar argues that because the circuit court did not accept the City’s
        argument that the proposed alteration constituted a major amendment to an
        existing conditional use permit, the City was required to file a notice of
        review in order to have this Court consider that claim. Indeed, notice of
        review is required when a court rules adversely to a party on an issue. See
        SDCL 15-26A-22. However, the court did not rule adversely to the City on
        this issue; it ruled in favor of the City on theories not asserted by either side.

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             Legal Non-Conforming Signs

[¶10.]       The City does not dispute that Sign Code Section 15.28.040 applies to

Lamar’s request to alter its five existing legal non-conforming signs. That section

provides:

             A. Whenever any existing sign is structurally altered, it must be
             brought into conformance with all requirements of this code.
             Any existing sign that is structurally altered and which does not
             comply with all requirements of this code shall be deemed
             unlawful by the Building Official and removed in accordance
             with § 15.28.040 of the Rapid City Municipal Code.

             B. Notwithstanding subsection A. of this section, any legal non-
             confirming [sic] off-premise [sic] sign or reconstructed by the
             current permit holder in the same location as it currently exists
             so long as the alterations of reconstruction of the sign bring it
             into compliance with all of the provisions of this chapter with the
             exception of any spacing requirements between signs. A sign
             building permit is required to make the alterations allowed by
             this subsection.

Sign Code Section 15.28.240 (emphasis added). The dispute is whether the phrase

“this code” in subsection (A) refers to the Sign Code or the City Code, and whether

subsection (B) is an independent subsection, requiring only compliance with “this

chapter.”

[¶11.]       Lamar argues that “this code” and “this chapter” mean compliance

with the Sign Code. It directs us to various sections in the Sign Code in which the

language “Sign Code” and “Rapid City Municipal Code” are used. In Lamar’s view,

the language used illustrates the difference between the Sign Code and the City

Code, and the use of “code” in the Sign Code Section 15.28.240(A) is a reference to

the Sign Code, not the City Code.

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[¶12.]         The City, on the other hand, argues that “this code” in subsection (A)

clearly and unambiguously means the City Code and that Lamar must comply with

all provisions of the City Code when altering an existing sign, including the

conditional use permit requirements of Title 17. It further argues that subsection

(B) does not remove the requirement that an altered sign must be brought into

compliance with the City Code, because “traditional rules for legal non-conforming

structures” require that altered signs be brought into compliance with all

regulations.

[¶13.]         Yet the City cites no traditional rules for legal non-conforming

structures. Nor does it indicate how “this chapter” in subsection (B) means

something more than the Sign Code, which is a chapter in the City Code. It is

fundamental to statutory interpretation that we give the language used its plain

meaning. See Jensen v. Turner Cnty. Bd. of Adjustment, 2007 S.D. 28, ¶ 5, 730

N.W.2d 411, 413; see also Moss v. Guttormson, 1996 S.D. 76, ¶ 10, 551 N.W.2d 14,

17 (citations omitted). Based on our review of the Sign Code, Lamar’s requests to

alter the five legal non-conforming signs come directly within the purview of

subsection (B). Subsection (A) is not implicated, and under Sign Code Section

15.28.240(B), an alteration to an existing legal non-conforming sign is allowed if the

sign is brought into compliance with the Sign Code. The City does not dispute that

Lamar’s proposed alterations would bring its signs into compliance with the Sign

Code. Therefore, when the City interpreted Sign Code Section 15.28.240(B) to

require conditional use permits, the City unreasonably interpreted and applied its

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Sign Code in an irregular pursuit of its authority. See Esling, 2003 S.D. 59, ¶ 10,

663 N.W.2d at 677.

             Sign with an Existing Conditional Use Permit

[¶14.]       In 2005, Lamar applied for a conditional use permit to remove an off-

premises sign on West Main Street and construct a new sign at that same location.

Lamar’s request indicated that it intended to make the east face of the billboard

static and the west face digital. A review of Lamar’s request resulted in a

recommendation to the Rapid City Planning Commission that Lamar be issued a

conditional use permit on the requirement that Lamar submit revised plans

“indicating that the off-premise [sic] sign will not include any electronic

components.” The Rapid City Planning Commission considered Lamar’s request on

January 26, 2006. It did not accept the condition barring the use of a digital sign.

The Planning Commission granted Lamar’s request with the following stipulations:

             1. A Sign Permit shall be obtained prior to the construction of
             the sign;
             2. The sign shall be located as per submitted plans;
             3. The maximum height of the sign shall be 30 feet and the
             maximum size of the sign shall be 250 square feet;
             4. The billboard sign shall continually comply with all provisions
             of the Sign Ordinance; and
             5. The Conditional Use Permit shall expire if the use is not
             undertaken and completed within two years of the date of
             approval by the Planning Commission, or if the use as approved
             has ceased for a period of 2 years.

In 2006, Lamar constructed the new off-premises sign on West Main Street in

accord with its conditional use permit.

[¶15.]       Lamar now seeks to alter its existing off-premises sign by converting

the east face from static to digital. The City argues that Lamar’s conditional use

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permit “authorized a digital face to be mounted on one side of the billboard,” and

therefore, Lamar must apply to amend its previously approved conditional use

permit. But there is nothing in the conditional use permit issued by the Planning

Commission restricting the sign to one digital face. Nor is there any indication

within the minutes of the meeting that Lamar promised to install only one digital

face.

[¶16.]       City Code Section 17.54.030(D) gives the Planning Commission the

authority to “impose such conditions regarding the location, character or other

features of the proposed use or buildings as it may deem advisable[.]” In granting

Lamar’s conditional use permit in 2006, the Planning Commission issued several

conditions, none being a limitation on the number of digital faces Lamar may

install. The City, therefore, acted unreasonably and exceeded its jurisdiction when

it denied Lamar’s request for a sign building permit for this sign.

[¶17.]       Because the City acted in an irregular pursuit of its authority when it

denied Lamar’s six applications for sign building permits, the circuit court erred in

denying a writ of certiorari.

[¶18.]       Reversed.

[¶19.]       GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and ZINTER, SEVERSON, and

WILBUR, Justices, concur.

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