Court Opinion

ID: 4308025
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-08-28 19:09:00.556405+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:42:34.814350
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

                               NO. 2016-CA-01649-COA

SHARON G. LEE AND HERBERT LEE, JR.                                        APPELLANTS

v.

CITY OF BYRAM, MISSISSIPPI, MAYOR                                          APPELLEES
RICHARD WHITE AND BOARD OF
ALDERMEN OF THE CITY

DATE OF JUDGMENT:                         11/14/2016
TRIAL JUDGE:                              HON. HENRY L. LACKEY
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
                                          FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:                 JANE E. TUCKER
                                          EDWARD BLACKMON
                                          HERBERT LEE JR.
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                  JOHN PRESTON SCANLON
                                          JERRY L. MILLS
NATURE OF THE CASE:                       CIVIL - OTHER
DISPOSITION:                              REVERSED AND REMANDED: 08/28/2018
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:

       BEFORE GRIFFIS, P.J., FAIR AND TINDELL, JJ.

       FAIR, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    Sharon and Herbert Lee filed a “Verified Complaint for Declaratory Relief, Injunctive

Relief, Damages and Other Relief, Including Declaring Invalid Zoning Ordinance . . . ,”

contending, among other things, they had not received the required notice that the City of

Byram intended to consider rezoning certain property located near their home. The Lees’

complaint was filed about ten months after the zoning decision, and the circuit court

ultimately dismissed the complaint after finding that it was not filed as an appeal from the
zoning decision within ten days, as required by statute. We hold that this was in error

because under the recent Mississippi Supreme Court decision City of Jackson v. Jordan, 202

So. 3d 199, 204 (¶14) (Miss. 2016), when the required notice is not given, an appeal is not

the exclusive remedy and the statutory time limit for appeals does not apply.

                                            FACTS

¶2.    The City of Byram incorporated in 2009 and adopted a comprehensive zoning plan

in 2011. At issue here is the zoning of several parcels on Siwell Road, in the north part of

town. 4101 Siwell Road is the site of a used-car dealership called “Hillcrest Motors.” The

site of Hillcrest Motors had been zoned commercial by the county, but it was zoned

residential in Byram’s new comprehensive plan. The parties agree this was a mistake, and

the Lees say they have no objection to rezoning the Hillcrest Motors site. The Hillcrest

Motors site was owned by Hillcrest Motors’ proprietors, Brett and Joni Hutchins. A larger,

eighty-seven-acre parcel to the south was owned by “Hillcrest Motors LLC” and zoned either

residential or agricultural in the Byram comprehensive plan.

¶3.    The Lees contend that the City has repeatedly confused the two parcels, since the

Hutchinses own the site of Hillcrest Motors and Hillcrest Motors LLC owns the land to the

south. In 2012 the City set out to correct the mistaken zoning of the site of the dealership,

but the ordinance it passed identified the rezoned property only as “certain property located

on Siwell Road owned by Hillcrest Motors.” The Lees contend this language can only be

interpreted as referring to the eighty-seven-acre parcel, not the site of Hillcrest Motors as the

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City may have intended. Then, in 2013, the City rezoned a two-acre portion of the eighty-

seven acres, located at 4149 Siwell Road, where the Hutchinses were building a dance studio.

This property is across the street from the Lees’ home.

¶4.    The City then moved to “correct” these rezonings due to a number of errors in the first

efforts; it re-rezoned the sites of the dealership and the dance studio in late 2013 and early

2014, respectively. The 2013 and 2014 rezonings of the dance-studio site are apparently

being contested by the Lees in separate, ongoing proceedings.

¶5.    In 2015, the circuit court dismissed the Lees’ 2013 complaint—the one that is the

subject of this appeal—because it was not filed as a timely appeal from the 2012 zoning

decision. The City contends that this was correct, a point we reject because a timely appeal

was precluded by the City’s failure to publish proper notice. The City also contends that the

2013 and 2014 rezonings render the 2012 rezoning moot. Given the disconnect between the

City’s assertions as to what the 2012 ordinance did and what it actually says, we disagree on

that point as well, and so we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

                                        DISCUSSION

       1.       Jurisdiction, Timeliness of Appeal, and Exclusive Remedy

¶6.    The circuit court dismissed the Lees’ suit on the basis that it was not filed as a timely

appeal from the 2012 zoning decision. In doing so, the court relied on Mississippi Code

Annotated section 11-51-75 (Rev. 2012),1 which provided in relevant part that:

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           The statute has since been superseded by legislation effective July 1, 2018.

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       Any person aggrieved by a judgment or decision of the board of supervisors,
       or municipal authorities of a city, town, or village, may appeal within ten (10)
       days from the date of adjournment at which session the board of supervisors
       or municipal authorities rendered such judgment or decision, and may embody
       the facts, judgment and decision in a bill of exceptions which shall be signed
       by the person acting as president of the board of supervisors or of the
       municipal authorities.

¶7.    Ordinarily, an appeal to circuit court under section 11-51-75 is an “exclusive remedy”

for a party aggrieved by the decision of a municipal authority. See, e.g., Malone v. Leake

Cty. Bd. of Sup’rs, 841 So. 2d 141, 145 (¶9) (Miss. 2003). But in Jordan, 202 So. 3d at 204

(¶14) (Miss. 2016), the Mississippi Supreme Court made it clear that “the appeal process of

Section 11-51-75 contemplates the aggrieved party receiving proper notice of the hearing.”

The supreme court noted its prior decision in Williams v. Walley, 295 So. 2d 286, 288 (Miss.

1974), where it had held that, when the required notice was not given, an appeal under

section 11-51-75 “would not have afforded [the plaintiff] adequate relief” and therefore “was

not the exclusive remedy under the circumstances.” Jordan, 202 So. 3d at 204 (¶11).

¶8.    The City seems to concede that there were deficiencies in the published notice for the

2012 hearing before Byram’s Mayor and Board of Aldermen. Indeed, the published notice

that appears in the record lacks any mention of any of the parcels at issue. We conclude that

the notice was deficient, and appeal was not the exclusive remedy. Id. at 204 (¶14). The

Lees’ complaint should not have been dismissed for failure to timely appeal under section

11-51-75.

       2.     Mootness

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¶9.    Next, we consider the City’s claim that the controversy is moot because of the 2014

rezoning of the dance-studio property. The issue here boils down to a dispute over what

property the 2012 ordinance rezoned; the ordinance stated that it was rezoning “certain

property located on Siwell Road owned by Hillcrest Motors.” The Lees contend that by its

own terms the 2012 zoning ordinance encompassed the eighty-seven-acre tract “owned by

Hillcrest Motors” on Siwell Road; the City asserts that the tract rezoned was the site of

Hillcrest Motors, a nearby (but non-adjacent) parcel owned by the proprietors of Hillcrest

Motors. (Emphasis added). The City points out that the rezoned property was—at least

sometimes—identified in the Zoning and Planning Commission documents as the “site” of

Hillcrest Motors. According to the City, the issue is moot because of the 2013 re-rezoning

of the Hillcrest Motors site and the 2014 re-rezoning of the two-acre portion of the eighty-

seven-acre tract that is the site of the dance studio.

¶10.   It is apparent to us that there is a remaining issue as to the effect of the 2012 ordinance

because, on its face, the ordinance appears to refer to the property the Lees say it does.

Regardless of the City’s interpretation of the ordinance and assertions regarding its intent,

the ordinance itself controls. Byram’s Mayor and the Board of Aldermen, like any public

board, can only speak and act through its minutes. Wellness Inc. v. Pearl River County

Hosp., 178 So. 3d 1287, 1290 (¶9) (Miss. 2015). The controversy is not moot.

       3.     Failure to Prosecute

¶11.   Finally, the City contends that the suit should have been dismissed for failure to

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prosecute. This claim is raised for the first time on appeal, and it is barred as a result. See

Anderson v. LaVere, 136 So. 3d 404, 410 (¶27) (Miss. 2014).

¶12.   REVERSED AND REMANDED.

    LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, CARLTON, WILSON,
GREENLEE, WESTBROOKS AND TINDELL, JJ., CONCUR.

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