City of Orono v. Jay T. Nygard ( 2015 )


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  •                          This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A14-1062
    City of Orono,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Jay T. Nygard, et al.,
    Appellants.
    Filed June 1, 2015
    Affirmed
    Hooten, Judge
    Hennepin County District Court
    File Nos. 27-CV-11-5626, 27-CV-11-7765
    Soren M. Mattick, Shana N. Conklin, Campbell Knutson, P.A., Eagan, Minnesota (for
    respondent)
    Erick G. Kaardal, Mohrman, Kaardal & Erickson, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for
    appellants)
    Considered and decided by Hooten, Presiding Judge; Schellhas, Judge; and
    Stauber, Judge.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    HOOTEN, Judge
    Appellants Jay and Kendall Nygard constructed a wind turbine in their backyard in
    violation of the City of Orono’s zoning code.        The district court found them in
    constructive civil contempt of court for repeatedly refusing to comply with its order to
    remove the turbine after their legal challenges to Orono’s zoning code failed. The
    Nygards now appeal the district court’s denial of their motion to stay the contempt
    proceedings. We affirm.
    FACTS
    Appellants Jay and Kendall Nygard live in a residential zoning district in the city
    of Orono. They applied for a permit to construct a wind turbine in their backyard. Orono
    denied their application, but the Nygards nonetheless constructed the turbine.        The
    Nygards subsequently challenged Orono’s denial of their permit application in district
    court, but the district court affirmed Orono’s decision.
    The Nygards appealed, and we reversed and remanded. City of Orono v. Nygard,
    No. A12-0711, 
    2012 WL 5188078
    , at *5 (Minn. App. Oct. 22, 2012). Orono had argued
    that its decision to deny the permit could be supported by the fact that the Orono zoning
    code did not specifically mention that wind turbines were a lawful accessory use. Id. at
    *3. We determined that the Orono ordinance describing lawful accessory uses was not
    exhaustive, and therefore the city could not support its decision to deny the Nygards’
    permit based solely on this interpretation of a single provision of the Orono zoning code.
    Id. at *3–4. But, because we did not state that the wind turbine was permitted, only that
    Orono’s argument that wind turbines were prohibited under this specific provision of the
    code was not persuasive, we remanded the case “to the city for further consideration of
    the Nygards’ permit application.” Id. at *4. In conjunction with the remand, we did not
    render an opinion as to whether or not the Nygards’ construction of the turbine should be
    2
    approved, nor did we render an opinion as to whether Orono’s zoning code permitted
    turbines. Id.
    Upon remand, Orono sent a letter to the Nygards stating that it had “been directed
    by the Minnesota Court of Appeals to review and further consider your permit
    application.” In the letter, Orono asked the Nygards to provide answers to a series of
    questions about the turbine in order to determine whether the turbine complied with the
    zoning code. Orono asked for the Nygards’ answers by November 16.
    On November 2, the Nygards’ counsel sent a letter to Orono stating that Orono’s
    request for additional information served “no purpose other than to notify my clients that
    the City of Orono does not intend to cooperate with my clients or the Minnesota
    Appellate Court Ruling.”        According to the letter, the “correct interpretation and
    implementation” of this court’s October 2012 opinion was that “no building permit is or
    was required.” The letter further advised that the Nygards would sue Orono in district
    court if Orono took any further action on the Nygards’ permit application.
    Two weeks after Orono’s November 16 deadline for the Nygards’ answers passed,
    Orono denied the Nygards’ permit application. Orono informed the Nygards that it
    denied their permit because it determined that their wind turbine did not comply with its
    zoning code. Orono found that the turbine was not an acceptable accessory use or
    structure because wind turbines are not “customarily incidental to the principal use or
    structure” as the zoning ordinance requires.         Orono also contended that the turbine
    violated four other provisions of the city’s zoning code because (1) it was not located at
    least 10 feet from a side lot line, (2) it was not at least 10 feet from the principal structure,
    3
    (3) it exceeded the 25% hardcover allowance, and (4) the turbine was located beyond the
    existing “average lakeshore setback line.”
    The Nygards did not administratively appeal this decision to the Orono zoning
    board of appeals. Instead, they bypassed the board and filed an informational statement
    in the ongoing district court action. The Nygards stated that they were challenging
    Orono’s authority to prevent them from installing a turbine. Orono argued that it was
    justified in denying the permit because the wind turbine did not comply with its zoning
    code, and Orono moved for summary judgment.
    In May 2013, the district court granted summary judgment for Orono. The
    district court determined that Orono’s stated rationales for denying the permit were
    consistent with this court’s previous decision to remand the case to Orono for “further
    consideration” of the permit. The district court granted Orono summary judgment on
    each one of its stated rationales for denying the permit. The district court also noted that
    following the remand from this court, the Nygards told Orono that they did not need a
    permit, even though this court told Orono to further consider the permit. The district
    court entered judgment and ordered the Nygards to remove the turbine, the pole
    supporting the turbine, and the concrete pad supporting the pole within 30 days.
    The Nygards attempted to appeal the district court’s judgment, but we dismissed
    their appeal as it was untimely. See City of Orono v. Nygard, No. A13-1459 (Minn. App.
    Nov. 5, 2013) (order). After the Nygards refused to remove the turbine, Orono alerted
    the district court to the Nygards’ refusal to comply with the district court’s now-final
    4
    order. The district court, noting that their appeal had failed, ordered the Nygards to show
    cause for their failure to timely comply with its order.
    The record does not indicate that the Nygards responded to the district court’s
    order to show cause. Instead, the Nygards contacted Orono directly, and in a letter
    received by Orono on February 10, 2014, the Nygards informed Orono that they did not
    need a permit, and they threatened to litigate the dispute in district court if Orono did not
    “[c]ease and desist” its “arbitrary harassment of the Nygard property.” In a second letter
    received by Orono on February 11, 2014, the Nygards indicated that they would not
    respond to Orono’s October 31, 2012 request for information about their turbine, and the
    Nygards denied even having a wind “tower” in violation of the zoning code on their
    property.
    After hearing nothing from the Nygards, the district court found the Nygards in
    constructive civil contempt of court for refusing to remove the turbine. The district court
    then ordered the Nygards to remove the turbine and support pole within 20 days, while
    providing 60 days to remove the concrete pad. The district court also ordered the
    Nygards to contact the city by March 21, 2014 to allow Orono to inspect their property to
    confirm that the turbine and its support parts had been removed. As part of its civil
    contempt order, the district court indicated that if the Nygards did not comply with its
    order to remove the turbines, it would fine them and confine them in jail.
    The Nygards did not comply with the district court’s order. Instead, two months
    after the district court’s deadline for removing the turbine passed, they requested that the
    district court stay the contempt proceedings. The Nygards asserted that the district court
    5
    should stay the contempt proceedings because they filed a declaratory judgment action in
    district court challenging Orono’s zoning ordinance. Orono opposed the stay, arguing
    that “[t]his case should be closed” because the district court’s May 2013 order granting
    Orono summary judgment established that the wind turbine did not comply with Orono’s
    zoning code, and the Nygards’ declaratory judgment action had nothing to do with the
    current dispute: the Nygards’ failure to comply with the district court’s order requiring
    the Nygards to take down the turbine. In their response, the Nygards argued for the first
    time that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the contempt
    proceedings.
    The district court determined that it had subject matter jurisdiction to hear the
    contempt proceedings, and it denied the Nygards’ request for a stay of that proceeding.
    The district court again ordered the Nygards to remove the turbine, but that order was
    stayed pending this appeal, which we are now asked to decide.
    DECISION
    I.
    The Nygards argue that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to
    conduct the contempt proceedings. Their argument is cumulative: they believe that the
    district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to find them in contempt because the
    contempt proceedings arose from their failure to comply with the district court’s order in
    their permit dispute, and the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over that
    permit dispute. The Nygards’ argument is entirely meritless.
    6
    Subject matter jurisdiction refers to a court’s authority to adjudicate a particular
    class of actions and the questions presented in those actions. Anderson v. Cnty. of Lyon,
    
    784 N.W.2d 77
    , 80 (Minn. App. 2010), review denied (Minn. Aug. 24, 2010). A party
    may challenge the validity of a judgment on the grounds that the court issuing the
    judgment lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Bode v. Minn. Dep’t of Natural Res., 
    612 N.W.2d 862
    , 866 (Minn. 2000). These challenges may be either “direct” or “collateral.”
    
    Id.
     A challenge is direct when a party challenges the subject matter jurisdiction of the
    court in the same proceeding in which the judgment is entered. 
    Id.
     A challenge is
    collateral when, in a proceeding other than the one in which the judgment is entered, the
    party attacks the judgment by asserting that the court which entered the judgment lacked
    the subject matter jurisdiction to do so. 
    Id.
    Under the traditional rule, a party could, at any time, collaterally challenge the
    validity of a judgment on the theory that the court entering that judgment lacked subject
    matter jurisdiction. 
    Id.
     at 866–67. Minnesota courts no longer follow the traditional rule.
    Id. at 868. Instead, a party collaterally attacking the subject matter jurisdiction of a final
    judgment entered in a separate proceeding must do more than prove that the court lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction; it must also demonstrate either that:
    (1) The subject matter of the action was so plainly
    beyond the court’s jurisdiction that its entertaining the action
    was a manifest abuse of authority; or
    (2) Allowing the judgment to stand would substantially
    infringe the authority of another tribunal or agency of
    government; or
    7
    (3) The judgment was rendered by a court lacking
    capability to make an adequately informed determination of a
    question concerning its own jurisdiction and as a matter of
    procedural fairness the party seeking to avoid the judgment
    should have opportunity belatedly to attack the court’s subject
    matter jurisdiction.
    Id. at 867 (quotation omitted).
    The Nygards contend that they properly “initiated a special proceeding” to
    collaterally challenge the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction over the city’s second
    denial of their permit. To succeed, they must demonstrate both that the district court
    lacked subject matter jurisdiction and that at least one of the three factors explained in
    Bode is present in this case. See id.
    The Nygards never presented the district court with any evidence or argument to
    support the existence of any of the three Bode factors. Instead, they simply clung to the
    traditional rule that a party could challenge the validity of a judgment for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction “at any time” without making an additional showing under Bode.
    Because the Nygards did not present the district court with at least one of the three
    necessary Bode factors, their argument before the district court was, as a matter of law,
    insufficient to allow the district court to vacate the judgment based on a purported lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction. And while the Nygards’ argument to this court did briefly
    mention Bode, we will not consider their Bode argument for the first time on appeal. See
    Thiele v. Stich, 
    425 N.W.2d 580
    , 582 (Minn. 1988) (declining to review argument raised
    for first time on appeal).
    8
    Even if we excused the Nygards’ failure to raise the proper argument before the
    district court, we would still reject their Bode argument on appeal. On appeal, the
    Nygards simply asserted that they met the first Bode factor because they brought their
    challenge to the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction sooner than the unsuccessful
    plaintiffs in Bode. The Nygards do not explain how the length of delay in bringing a
    challenge to subject matter jurisdiction is relevant to the first Bode factor, and we do not
    find any support in Bode for the assertion that it is relevant. See Bode, 612 N.W.2d at
    867. Without any evidence or argument as to how the district court manifestly abused its
    authority to adjudicate the permit dispute, the Nygards failed to articulate their argument
    in a way that would allow us to review it. See Schoepke v. Alexander Smith & Sons
    Carpet Co., 
    290 Minn. 518
    , 519–20, 
    187 N.W.2d 133
    , 135 (1971) (“An assignment of
    error based on mere assertion and not supported by any argument or authorities in
    appellant’s brief is waived and will not be considered on appeal unless prejudicial error is
    obvious on mere inspection.”).
    Finally, even if we excused the Nygards’ failure to raise the proper arguments
    before the district court, and we were persuaded instead somehow by their unsupported
    assertion under the first Bode factor, we would still reject their argument on appeal. The
    Nygards failed to meet their other burden under Bode to show that the district court did in
    fact lack subject matter jurisdiction over the permit dispute. The Nygards’ argument
    purporting to demonstrate that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over
    those proceedings is entirely unpersuasive for at least five reasons.
    9
    First, the Nygards rely on an Orono ordinance to assert that the district court
    lacked subject matter jurisdiction to review Orono’s denial of their permit.          Their
    argument looks to the wrong authority to determine the extent of the district court’s
    subject matter jurisdiction. The Orono ordinance states that “[t]he applicant . . . may
    appeal by filing a written notice stating the action appealed from and stating the specific
    grounds upon which the appeal is made.” Orono, Minn., Code of Ordinances § 78-99
    (2003). This ordinance governs the procedure for an administrative appeal within the
    city’s administrative structure. It does not address, much less determine, the subject
    matter jurisdiction of the district court.
    The relevant authority to determine whether the district court had subject matter
    jurisdiction over the Nygards’ challenge of Orono’s denial of their permit application is
    chapter 462 of the Minnesota statutes, which states:
    Any person aggrieved by an ordinance, rule, regulation,
    decision or order of a governing body or board of adjustments
    and appeals acting pursuant to sections 462.351 to 462.364
    may have such ordinance, rule, regulation, decision or order,
    reviewed by an appropriate remedy in the district court,
    subject to the provisions of this section.
    
    Minn. Stat. § 462.361
    , subd. 1 (2014). This statute unambiguously provides that the
    district court had subject matter jurisdiction. Orono acted pursuant to its zoning authority
    under section 462.357 to deny the Nygards’ permit application.            See 
    Minn. Stat. § 462.357
    , subds. 1, 6 (2014). Orono’s decision to deny the Nygards’ permit means that
    the Nygards were “aggrieved by an ordinance, rule, regulation, decision or order of a
    governing body or board of adjustments and appeals acting pursuant to sections 462.351
    10
    to 462.364.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 462.361
    , subd. 1. Therefore, they were entitled to have the
    denial “reviewed by an appropriate remedy in the district court.” 
    Id.
     When the Nygards
    followed through on their threat to “litigate the issue in [district] court,” they properly
    sought judicial review of Orono’s actions in district court, thereby invoking the district
    court’s subject matter jurisdiction over the dispute. See 
    id.
     Just because the Nygards
    failed to persuade the district court on the merits of their argument does not mean that the
    district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute that the Nygards
    brought to that court.
    The Nygards’ second unpersuasive argument is that the district court lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction because the Nygards did not exhaust their administrative
    remedies by filing an administrative appeal. This argument fails because the Nygards
    read the relevant statute backward. Subdivision 2 of section 462.361 states that “[i]n
    actions brought under this section, a municipality may raise as a defense the fact that the
    complaining party has not attempted to remedy the grievance by use of procedures
    available for that purpose under ordinance or charter.” 
    Id.,
     subd. 2 (2014) (emphasis
    added). The statute provides that only the municipality may use the exhaustion-of-
    administrative-remedies defense; the applicant may not raise the defense. See 
    id.
     And
    the municipality is not required to raise the defense; the municipality may do so. See 
    id.
    Since Orono did not raise this defense, the Nygards’ unpersuasive argument is not even
    relevant on this record. And we note that this defense was not provided to applicants, as
    the Nygards mistakenly assert, for good reason.        The Nygards’ faulty interpretation
    would wreak havoc on the straightforward process of judicial review that the statute
    11
    clearly provides. The Nygards’ mistaken reading would turn the municipality’s decision
    not to raise its own affirmative defense into a weapon that applicants could use to
    strategically, but improperly, challenge the district court’s decision after-the-fact when
    the applicants themselves voluntarily failed to administratively appeal, as was the case
    here. This is simply not how the affirmative defense was intended to work; the district
    court has subject matter jurisdiction over disputes appealed under section 462.361 even if
    the applicant does not exhaust its administrative remedies when the municipality does
    not raise the exhaustion-of-remedies defense when further administrative review would
    be futile. See Medical Servs., Inc. v. City of Savage, 
    487 N.W.2d 263
    , 266 (Minn. App.
    1992). There is no merit to the Nygards’ second argument.
    The third unpersuasive argument that the Nygards advanced on appeal is that they
    actually did administratively appeal, but Orono either ignored or precluded their
    administrative appeal before the Nygards brought the dispute back to district court. The
    record is wholly devoid of any support for the Nygards’ claim that they attempted an
    administrative appeal.   The Nygards claim that two letters that Orono received in
    February 2014 show that they attempted to administratively appeal. But in both of these
    letters, the Nygards explicitly told the city that they believed that they did not need a
    permit to construct the turbine. The first letter ominously warned Orono that if the city
    took any further action, the Nygards would litigate the dispute in district court. In the
    second letter, the Nygards denied that they had a “tower” in their backyard in violation of
    the zoning code, and for “proof” they provided Orono with a definition of the term
    “tower” and included a picture of the Eiffel Tower, apparently to indicate that they were
    12
    in compliance with Orono’s zoning code because they had not constructed a 1,000-foot-
    tall iron-latticed structure in their backyard.
    Looking backward now, the letters accurately captured how this dispute played
    out: the Nygards felt that they did not need a permit, and, if Orono thought otherwise, the
    Nygards would take the dispute to district court. This is exactly what had already
    happened. Now, more than a year later, they attempt to recast these documents as
    administrative appeals, and characterize Orono’s legal arguments to the Nygards’
    challenge in district court as thwarting that appeal. There is no support in the record for
    these claims.
    The fourth problem with their argument on appeal is that even if the Nygards
    somehow intended these letters to be an appeal, the Nygards failed to perfect their
    “appeal.” The Orono code requires that any appeal to the zoning board must state the
    specific action the applicant is appealing from, and the grounds on which the appeal is
    based. See Orono, Minn., Code of Ordinances § 78–99 (2003) (providing for conditions
    necessary to perfect zoning appeals). In the letters, the Nygards did not identify the
    action that they were challenging. The letters explicitly stated that they did not need a
    permit. And neither letter even used the word “appeal” or any synonym of that word.
    Even if the Nygards intended these letters to be an appeal, their “appeal” was deficient
    under the zoning code, and we cannot fault Orono for not treating these threatening
    letters as appeals. It is hardly surprising that Orono informed the Nygards that it did “not
    know the intent” of these letters.
    13
    The final problem with the Nygards’ argument is that even if Orono could have
    construed these letters as an appeal, Orono would have had no ability to adjudicate the
    Nygards’ administrative “appeal.” What the Nygards portray as an appeal occurred in
    February 2014. The Nygards’ purported “appeal” to the zoning appeals board came four
    months after the district court’s judgment affirming Orono’s denial of their second permit
    became a final judgment entered on the merits.1 Therefore, even if the Nygards tried to
    administratively appeal the decision in February 2014, they would have been barred from
    reopening the district court’s judgment affirming Orono’s denial of their second permit
    application because Orono and the Nygards already litigated the permit denial in district
    court which resulted in a final judgment on the merits.        See Wilson v. Comm’r of
    Revenue, 
    619 N.W.2d 194
    , 198 (Minn. 2000) (precluding subsequent litigation of
    previous claim decided on the merits by the same parties). Courts do not allow parties to
    reopen closed cases for the practical reason of relieving prevailing parties “of the burden
    of relitigating issues already determined.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted). This principal reflects
    our supreme court’s “disfavor” of multiple challenges involving the “same cause of
    action” because it leads to “wasteful litigation.” 
    Id.
     These concerns are well-founded
    here.
    The Nygards needed to advance a very specific argument under Bode to
    collaterally challenge the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction over the contempt
    1
    The district court granted summary judgment in May 2013 and entered judgment in July
    2013. That judgment became final in November 2013 following this court’s dismissal of
    their appeal as untimely. City of Orono v. Nygard, No. A13-1459 (Minn. App. Nov. 5,
    2013) (order).
    14
    proceedings. They failed to raise this claim before the district court, and they did not
    provide any argument on appeal as to how they satisfied Bode. Had they properly
    preserved these arguments for appeal, we still would have rejected their arguments
    because those arguments have no basis in the record and rely entirely on an erroneous
    view of the relevant caselaw and statutes. We affirm the district court’s concise and well-
    reasoned determination that it has subject matter jurisdiction over the contempt
    proceedings.
    II.
    The Nygards also challenge the district court’s decision to deny them a stay in the
    contempt proceedings. In their principal brief, they merely requested that we grant a stay
    without offering a single argument as to why we should grant that relief. We do not
    consider requests for relief when parties fail to provide any legal authority or argument
    supporting their position. See Schoepke, 290 Minn. at 519–20, 
    187 N.W.2d at 135
    . In
    their reply brief, the Nygards attempted to provide a reason as to why the district court
    abused its discretion by denying their motion for a stay. We do not allow parties to
    revive a waived argument in their reply brief when the respondent does not address the
    waived argument, as was the case here. See Wood v. Diamonds Sports Bar & Grill, Inc.,
    
    654 N.W.2d 704
    , 707 (Minn. App. 2002), review denied (Minn. Feb. 26, 2003).
    Accordingly, the Nygards waived their right to argue for a stay from this court.
    And, in any event, the Nygards failed to articulate any persuasive reason for a
    stay. Their theory before the district court, and in their reply brief, was that they should
    receive a stay because they filed a declaratory judgment action challenging an Orono
    15
    ordinance as preempted by state law. That action has absolutely no relation to the
    contempt proceeding. The Nygards’ argument purporting to draw a link between that
    case and this one is premised on the false belief that there is still an open question about
    whether their turbine complied with the Orono zoning requirements in 2010, or whether
    the district court erred in 2013 in ruling for Orono. There is no unanswered question.
    The district court settled this dispute two years ago, and its decision became final when
    the Nygards’ appeal of that decision failed. See Wilson, 619 N.W.2d at 198 (precluding
    parties from reopening litigation after court enters final judgment on the merits).
    These contempt proceedings have nothing to do with the 2010 version of the
    Orono zoning code or how the district court analyzed this dispute in 2013. The contempt
    proceedings are about one issue only: the Nygards’ flagrant and repeated refusal to
    recognize the legitimacy and finality of the district court’s adjudication resolving their
    dispute once their appeal failed. No subsequent developments in the Orono zoning code
    could retroactively change the 2010 zoning code or affect how the district court analyzed
    the zoning code in 2013. Any change to the zoning code since the Nygards built their
    turbine is not relevant to the contempt proceedings. As to this turbine, the matter is
    settled: the Nygards’ decision to construct the turbine without receiving the necessary
    permit from Orono means that the wind turbine must be removed from their property.
    We note that the district court indicated that it would fine the Nygards and confine
    them in jail if they refused to comply with its order. We think that these sanctions are
    well within the district court’s discretion to “compel future compliance” with its order.
    Mower Cnty. Human Servs. ex. rel. Swancutt v. Swancutt, 
    551 N.W.2d 219
    , 222 (Minn.
    16
    1996) (quotation omitted). If the Nygards still continue to refuse to remove the turbine,
    we note that the district court has “inherently broad discretion to hold an individual in
    contempt” when the individual acts “out of disrespect for the judicial process.” See
    Erickson v. Erickson, 
    385 N.W.2d 301
    , 304 (Minn. 1986) (quotation omitted). The
    district court should not feel constrained in its efforts to ensure that the Nygards comply
    with its now-final judgment ordering them to remove the turbine, nor should the district
    court consider any subsequent changes or challenges to the Orono zoning code as even
    remotely relevant to the contempt proceedings. The only issue relevant to the contempt
    proceedings is the Nygards’ intentional and inexcusable refusal to comply with the
    district court’s order requiring them to remove the turbine, pole, and concrete support pad
    from their property.
    Affirmed.
    17