Hauser Lake Rod & Gun Club v. City of Hauser , 162 Idaho 260 ( 2017 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 44095
    HAUSER LAKE ROD AND GUN CLUB,          )
    INC., an Idaho non-profit corporation, )
    )
    Petitioner-Appellant,            )
    )                      Wallace, April 2017 Term
    v.                                     )
    )                      2017 Opinion No. 61
    THE CITY OF HAUSER, an Idaho municipal )
    corporation,                           )                      Filed: June 9, 2017
    )
    Respondent on Appeal,            )                      Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    and                                    )
    )
    KOOTENAI COUNTY, a political           )
    subdivision of the State of Idaho,     )
    )
    Respondent.                      )
    )
    Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District, State of Idaho,
    Kootenai County. Hon. Richard S. Christensen, District Judge.
    District court order denying attorney fees to prevailing party, reversed.
    James, Vernon & Weeks, PA, Coeur d’Alene, for appellant. Susan P. Weeks
    argued.
    William Mark Appleton, Coeur d’Alene, for respondent.
    _________________________________
    BURDICK, Chief Justice.
    This appeal from Kootenai County concerns attorney fees under Idaho Code section 12-
    117. The district court held that Hauser Lake Rod and Gun Club, Inc. was not entitled to attorney
    fees under section 12-117 because, even though it had prevailed against the City of Hauser in a
    code violation dispute, the administrative tribunal that reviewed the dispute was staffed with both
    County and City officials. According to the district court, section 12-117’s definition of
    “political subdivision” does not include administrative review tribunals staffed with officials
    from multiple governmental entities. We reverse.
    1
    I.     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The district court summarized the relevant facts giving rise to this “procedural nightmare
    for all involved” as follows:
    In February 2012, Plaintiff, Hauser Lake Rod and Gun Club (hereinafter “the
    Club”), inquired with Kootenai County (hereinafter “the County”) about obtaining
    a building permit to construct an accessory storage building on [its] property.
    Plaintiff was referred to the City of Hauser Lake (hereinafter “the City”) to
    proceed with [its] request because the Club’s property was within the City’s area
    of impact,[1] and the type of permit sought was a Class II building permit. The
    Club submitted a Class II permit request to the City in early 2012. On March 27,
    2012 a public hearing was held on this Class II application. After the hearing, the
    City informed the Club that the City would not issue a decision on the application.
    Rather, the City and County agreed that the Club’s application required different
    administrative procedures.
    On June 8, 2012, the City, [sic] delivered a notice of violation of Hauser
    Code to the Club for “operating outside of the historical hours of operation.” The
    Club was told it had several options. It could change its hours, thus continuing to
    operate only during the historical hours of operation; alternatively, it could apply
    for a City of Hauser Class II permit for commercial use, or it could appeal the
    alleged code violation issued by the City of Hauser Code Administrator to the
    Joint Planning and Zoning Commission (“the Joint Commission[”]). The Joint
    Commission is made up of both City and County officials and residents.
    The Club chose the third option and appealed the alleged code violation to
    the Joint Commission, denying that it had ever violated the code. In its December
    11, 2012, Findings of Facts and Conclusion the Joint Commission upheld the
    violation determination by the City Code Administrator. The Club appealed to the
    [Kootenai County Joint Board of Commissioners (“the Joint Board”)] on January
    8, 2013.
    The Joint Board is comprised of the Kootenai County Board of
    Commissioners and two City of Hauser City Council Members, one of which may
    be the mayor. The Joint Board was created by Kootenai County to hear appeals of
    the Joint Commission’s decisions. The City officials on the Joint Board do not
    have authority to make motions or vote, but serve only in an advisory capacity.
    The City officials may question witnesses testifying and may confer and
    deliberate with the County Commissioners prior to the final decision being issued.
    While the Joint Board’s voting members are also Kootenai County
    Commissioners, the Joint Board has been established as a separate and distinct
    entity from the County Commissioners.
    1
    Although the Club is located within the City’s area of impact, it is not located within City limits and therefore is a
    non-resident of the City.
    2
    In August 2013, the Joint Board reversed the Joint Commission. 2 The Joint Board held
    that the City lacked jurisdiction to issue a code violation to the Club because it was not a resident
    of the City. The Club requested attorney fees under Idaho Code section 12-117. The Joint Board
    made no findings concerning whether section 12-117 was applicable, declaring instead that it
    “was not inclined to award attorney fees as requested by [the Club].” The Club moved for
    reconsideration of the attorney fees ruling. The Joint Board never ruled on the motion.
    In September 2013, the Club appealed the Joint Board’s attorney fees ruling to the district
    court. As is relevant here, the district court concluded the Joint Board had erred by making no
    findings concerning attorney fees and remanded the case with instructions to determine whether
    the Club was entitled to attorney fees. 3 The Club moved for reconsideration of that order,
    questioning “the finality of the judgment and the premature issuance of the remittitur before the
    time for appeal had [run], and seeking clarification if the decision was intended to be final,” but
    the district court never ruled on the motion.
    On remand, the Joint Board found that the Club had prevailed but declined to award
    attorney fees under section 12-117. Even though the City lacked jurisdiction to enforce its code
    on the Club since it was not a resident of the City, the Joint Board found that the City had acted
    with a reasonable basis in fact or law. Again, the Club appealed the Joint Board’s attorney fees
    ruling to the district court. The primary issue raised was whether the Joint Board abused its
    discretion in denying the Club’s attorney fee request by concluding the City had acted with a
    reasonable basis in fact or law. The district court consolidated the Club’s two appeals, noting the
    Club’s outstanding motion for reconsideration and that the issues in both appeals were
    substantively the same. Although the district court affirmed that attorney fees were improper, the
    district court did not reach whether the City had acted with a reasonable basis in fact or law.
    Instead, the district court held that section 12-117 did not authorize attorney fees against the City
    2
    The Club appealed to the Joint Board in January 2013, but several “months passed with no appeal hearing
    scheduled.” So the Club filed a declaratory judgment action (CV-13-4626) in June 2013, concerning “[1] whether
    the City could issue code enforcement violations against non-residents . . . [2] the City did not control Class I
    permits under the area of city impact ordinance . . . and [3] City’s role with respect to Class II building permits
    within the area of city impact . . . .” The Club requested attorney fees in CV-13-4626. After the Club filed CV-13-
    4626, the Joint Board scheduled a hearing in the Club’s appeal. The parties then settled CV-13-4626.
    3
    In addition, the district court concluded assessing an award of attorney fees against the Joint Commission and the
    County would be improper. The Club does not dispute those rulings, conceding those “entities acted as review
    bodies . . . and were not the entities that issued the adverse action which was appealed.”
    3
    because the Joint Board was not a “political subdivision” since it was staffed with both County
    and City officials. 4 The Club timely appealed to this Court.
    II.     ISSUES ON APPEAL
    1.       Did the district court erroneously interpret Idaho Code section 12-117 by concluding the
    Joint Board was not a “political subdivision?”
    2.       Should the district court be affirmed on the alternative basis that the Joint Board did not
    abuse its discretion in denying the Club’s request for attorney fees?
    3.       Is the prevailing party entitled to attorney fees on appeal?
    III.     ANALYSIS
    A.       The district court erroneously interpreted Idaho Code section 12-117 by concluding
    the Joint Board was not a “political subdivision.”
    We exercise free review over the interpretation of a statute because it is a question of law.
    E.g., Hayes v. City of Plummer, 
    159 Idaho 168
    , 170, 
    357 P.3d 1276
    , 1278 (2015). This appeal
    concerns Idaho Code section 12-117, which provides:
    Unless otherwise provided by statute, in any proceeding involving as
    adverse parties a state agency or a political subdivision and a person, the state
    agency, political subdivision or the court hearing the proceeding, including on
    appeal, shall award the prevailing party reasonable attorney’s fees, witness fees
    and other reasonable expenses, if it finds that the nonprevailing party acted
    without a reasonable basis in fact or law.
    I.C. § 12-117(1).
    We start by recognizing that section 12-117(1) expressly indicates that it applies to “any
    proceeding” involving a state agency or political subdivision and a person as adverse parties. In
    the proceedings before the Joint Board, the City and the Club were adverse parties. The City is—
    by statutory definition—a “political subdivision.” I.C. § 12-117(5)(b). 5 Likewise, the Club is
    defined by the statute as “a person.” I.C. § 12-117(5)(a). 6 Thus, if the Joint Board constitutes a
    “state agency, political subdivision or the court[,]” it was charged with awarding attorney fees
    and other costs if the losing party acted without a reasonable basis in law or fact. In this case, the
    district court correctly focused on whether the Joint Board is a “political subdivision.” The
    4
    The district court reaffirmed its previous ruling that section 12-117 did not authorize fees against the Joint
    Commission, but that ruling is not challenged on appeal.
    5
    Idaho Code section 12-117(5)(b) defines “political subdivision” as “a city, a county, any taxing district or a health
    district.” (emphasis added).
    6
    Idaho Code section 12-117(5)(a) defines “person” as “any individual, partnership, limited liability partnership,
    corporation, limited liability company, association or any other private organization.” (emphasis added).
    4
    district court held that the Joint Board did not constitute a “political subdivision” because the
    Joint Board was staffed with both County and City officials.
    We cannot agree with the district court’s conclusion in this regard. The municipal and
    county ordinances creating the Joint Board unambiguously declare that the Kootenai County
    Board of Commissioners was the only entity that possessed the authority to decide the dispute
    between the City and the Club. The City’s ordinance expressly provides that City officials
    serving on the Joint Board “shall not have the authority to make motions(s) [sic] or vote.”
    Instead, “[t]he role of city elected officials is limited to an advisory capacity to the Board of
    County Commissioners.” Kootenai County Ordinance No. 289 uses identical language to
    identify the respective roles of the County Commissioners and City officials. Thus, the decision
    of the Joint Board was, in fact, a decision of the Board of County Commissioners.
    The decision of the Board of County Commissioners was the act of a political
    subdivision. The statutory definition of a political subdivision expressly includes counties. I.C. §
    12-117(5)(b) (“ ‘political subdivision’ means a city, a county, any taxing district or a health
    district[.]”). As with any corporate body, a county may only act through its human agents. Under
    Idaho law, those agents are the Board because a county’s “powers can only be exercised by the
    board of county commissioners, or by agents and officers acting under their authority, or
    authority of law.” I.C. § 31-602. For these reasons, the district court erred when it held that the
    Joint Board was not a political subdivision.
    B.      We decline to affirm the district court on an alternative basis because the Joint
    Board abused its discretion in denying the Club’s request for attorney fees.
    The City urges us to affirm on the alternative basis that the Joint Board did not abuse its
    discretion when it denied the Club’s request for attorney fees because, as the City maintains, it
    acted with a reasonable basis in fact or law when attempting to enforce its code outside City
    limits on the Club, a non-resident. While this issue was raised at length before the district court,
    it was not addressed in light of the district court’s construction of section 12-117. Because the
    issue was raised, we will entertain the City’s argument. Peckham v. Idaho State Bd. of Dentistry,
    
    154 Idaho 846
    , 851, 
    303 P.3d 205
    , 210 (2013) (“When reviewing a district court’s decision in a
    petition for judicial review under the Idaho Administrative Procedure Act, we examine the
    agency record independently, but ultimately decide whether the district court correctly ruled on
    the issues presented to it.”).
    5
    As the City acknowledges, we “uphold the decision of a trial court if any alternative legal
    basis can be found to support it.” Syringa Networks, LLC v. Idaho Dep’t of Admin., 
    159 Idaho 813
    , 827, 
    367 P.3d 208
    , 222 (2016) (quoting Daleiden v. Jefferson Cnty. Joint Sch. Dist. No.
    251, 
    139 Idaho 466
    , 470–71, 
    80 P.3d 1067
    , 1071–72 (2003)). But we may set aside an agency’s
    decision if it abused its discretion and prejudiced a party’s substantial rights. I.C. § 67-5279(2)–
    (4). When reviewing for an abuse of discretion, we evaluate whether the agency: (1) correctly
    perceived the issue as discretionary; (2) acted within the outer boundaries of its discretion and
    consistently with relevant legal standards; and (3) reached its decision by an exercise of reason.
    Clear Springs Foods, Inc. v. Spackman, 
    150 Idaho 790
    , 813, 
    252 P.3d 71
    , 94 (2011).
    We decline to affirm on this alternative basis. The Joint Board’s conclusion that the City
    acted with a reasonable basis in fact or law when attempting to enforce its code outside City
    limits on the Club, a non-resident, signifies an abuse of discretion because it is inconsistent with
    relevant legal standards. Article XII, Section 2 of the Idaho Constitution provides that “[a]ny
    county or incorporated city or town may make and enforce, within its limits, all such local police,
    sanitary and other regulations as are not in conflict with its charter or with the general laws.”
    (emphasis added). Thus, “[t]his Court has held that the power of cities and counties only exists
    within the sovereign boundaries of the cities and the counties respectively.” Blaha v. Bd. of Ada
    Cnty. Comm’rs, 
    134 Idaho 770
    , 777, 
    9 P.3d 1236
    , 1243 (2000); see also Hobbs v. Abrams, 
    104 Idaho 205
    , 207–08, 
    657 P.2d 1073
    , 1075–76 (1983); Boise City v. Blaser, 
    98 Idaho 789
    , 790–91,
    
    572 P.2d 892
    , 893–94 (1977). As we stated in Reardon v. City of Burley,
    Where an agency has no authority to take a particular action, it acts
    without a reasonable basis in fact or law. This Court recognized as far back as
    1949 that a city’s exercise of jurisdiction in an impact area lying beyond a city’s
    limits is inconsistent with the constitutional limitations placed on a city’s powers
    by Article XII, § 2 of the Idaho Constitution.
    
    140 Idaho 115
    , 120, 
    90 P.3d 340
    , 345 (2004), overruled on other grounds by City of Osburn v.
    Randel, 
    152 Idaho 906
    , 
    277 P.3d 353
     (2012) (internal citations omitted). As such, the Joint
    Board’s conclusion that the City acted with a reasonable basis in fact or law is inconsistent with
    longstanding, axiomatic legal standards. This error, in turn, prejudiced the Club’s substantial
    rights by embroiling the Club in administrative and legal proceedings that culminated in this
    appeal, all while requiring the Club to continuously expend resources to resolve a matter that
    never should have arisen in the first place.
    6
    The City offers two counter-arguments. First, the City asserts in passing that it did not act
    at all, and therefore, the “non-acting City could not have acted unreasonably.” The City explains
    that it was the Joint Commission, not the City, that reviewed and affirmed the issuance of the
    code violation to the Club. That argument distorts the events that gave rise to this matter. It was
    clearly the City that initially issued the code violation to the Club, as the code violation was
    signed by the “City of Hauser Code Administrator” and provided contact information for the
    “City Clerk.” Had the City never issued the code violation, the Joint Commission would have
    had nothing to review. Thus, we reject the City’s first argument.
    Second, the City argues it acted with a reasonable basis in fact or law, albeit erroneously,
    because its belief that it had authority to enforce its code outside City limits on the Club, a non-
    resident, was merely a good faith mistake. As the City notes, “a governmental agency does not
    act without a reasonable basis in fact or law when its interpretation of a statute that has not been
    previously construed by the courts is incorrect, but not unreasonable.” Randel, 
    152 Idaho at 909
    ,
    
    277 P.3d at 356
    . According to the City, it relied on Ordinance No. 289 to conclude it had
    authority to enforce its code against the Club. Utilizing authority under Idaho Code section 67-
    6526, the County and the City enacted Ordinance No. 289. See Hauser City, Idaho, Ordinance
    No. 289 (Oct. 27, 1999). Ordinance No. 289 governs the relationship between the County and the
    City for planning and zoning matters within the area of city impact. 
    Id.
     Ordinance No. 289 sets
    forth building permit application procedures and details the administrative review processes to
    which those applications are subject. 
    Id.
     §§ 4–5.
    The City elaborates that a court has never interpreted Ordinance No. 289, and as such,
    interpreting Ordinance No. 289 to give the City authority to enforce its code outside City limits
    on non-residents was not unreasonable. We are not persuaded. Ordinance No. 289 makes no
    reference to code enforcement by the City on non-residents. Sure, Ordinance No. 289 instructs
    that “[t]he City of Hauser Development Code and subsequent amendments thereto . . . shall
    apply to all Class II permits . . . to all proposals within the Area of City Impact.” Hauser City,
    Idaho, Ordinance No. 289 § 4(B) (Oct. 27, 1999). But Ordinance No. 289 says nothing that could
    reasonably be construed as granting the City any authority to enforce its code outside City limits
    on non-residents. Even were that the case, Ordinance No. 289 would, on its face, conflict with
    fundamental principles allocating power between governmental entities and could not provide
    for reasonable reliance.
    7
    In sum, we decline to affirm the district court on an alternative basis. We find no reason
    to remand the case to the district court because the above demonstrates that the City acted with
    no reasonable basis in fact or law by attempting to enforce its code outside City limits on the
    Club, a non-resident. Accordingly, we grant the Club’s request for attorney fees incurred at the
    administrative and district court levels under section 12-117.
    C.     The Club is entitled to attorney fees on appeal.
    Both the Club and the City seek attorney fees on appeal under section 12-117. However,
    only the Club is the prevailing party on appeal. As reasoned above, the City did not act with a
    reasonable basis in fact or law by attempting to enforce its code outside City limits on the Club, a
    non-resident. Because that action led to extensive administrative and legal proceedings and
    ultimately required the Club to bring this appeal, wherein the City made arguments that conflict
    with longstanding, axiomatic legal standards, we award the Club attorney fees on appeal under
    section 12-117.
    IV.     CONCLUSION
    We reverse the district court and grant the Club’s request for attorney fees incurred at the
    administrative and district court levels. We award the Club attorney fees and costs on appeal.
    Justices EISMANN, JONES, HORTON and BRODY, CONCUR.
    8