Kenton County Board of Adjustment v. Ian Meitzen ( 2020 )


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  •                                             RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 24, 2020
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2018-SC-0677-DG
    KENTON COUNTY BOARD OF                                              APPELLANTS
    ADJUSTMENT; PLANNING AND
    DEVELOPMENT SERVICES OF KENTON
    COUNTY; AND NORTHERN KENTUCKY
    AREA PLANNING COMMISSION
    ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                       CASE NO. 2016-CA-1246
    KENTON CIRCUIT COURT NO. 16-CI-00056
    IAN MEITZEN; DONALD L. NAGELEISEN;                                   APPELLEES
    JESSICA SWOPE; AIMEE GLOVER; AND
    VIRGINIA DUPONT
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE HUGHES
    REVERSING AND REMANDING
    After the Kenton County Board of Adjustment unanimously granted
    approval of Jessica Swope and Aimee Glover’s conditional use application to
    allow the operation of The Growing Place, a nursery school in a residential
    zone, adjoining property owners Ian Meitzen and Donald Nageleisen initiated
    an administrative appeal pursuant to Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS)
    100.347(1). The circuit court dismissed the appeal because Meitzen and
    Nageleisen failed to claim that they were “injured or aggrieved” by a final action
    of the Board, as required by the plain language of the statute. The Court of
    Appeals reversed the circuit court order, finding that substantial compliance
    with the statute authorizing the appeal was sufficient. We granted
    discretionary review to determine whether a party must claim to be “injured or
    aggrieved” to perfect an appeal to circuit court under KRS 100.347(1). Having
    concluded that Kentucky law requires exactly that, we reverse the Court of
    Appeals’ decision.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In 2015, Jessica Swope and Aimee Glover filed with the Planning and
    Development Services of Kenton County (PDS)1 a conditional use permit
    application which would allow them to operate a commercial nursery school,
    The Growing Place, on property owned by Virginia Dupont. PDS submitted a
    report to the Kenton County Board of Adjustment2 recommending approval of
    the permit application. During a public meeting held on December 16, 2015,
    adjoining property owners Daniel Gaddis, Ian Meitzen and Donald Nageleisen3
    spoke in opposition to the application. Following the hearing, the Board
    unanimously granted the application.
    On January 13, 2016 and pursuant to KRS 100.347(1), Gaddis, Meitzen
    and Nageleisen filed an appeal with the Kenton Circuit Court against the
    Board, PDS, Northern Kentucky Area Planning Commission,4 Swope, Glover
    1  PDS is an area planning commission that provides planning and zoning
    services to the Kenton County Board of Adjustment (the Board) and other
    governmental entities. When applications for conditional use permits and variances
    are filed, PDS generates reports and makes recommendations to the Board.
    2 The Kenton County Board of Adjustment is established under KRS Chapter
    100 to make determinations regarding land use, including granting or denying
    applications for conditional use and zoning variances.
    3 Daniel Gaddis was originally part of the appeal but requested to be dismissed
    from the action. The circuit court issued an agreed order of dismissal as to Gaddis on
    May 9, 2016.
    4 The Northern Kentucky Area Planning Commission is the former name of the
    PDS.
    2
    and Dupont. The complaint alleged that the Board’s action was improper
    because it did not meet the requirements of the Kenton County Zoning
    Ordinance and certain statutory requirements. The complaint further stated
    that the subject location is on a very dangerous curve, posing risks to those in
    the vicinity. According to Meitzen and Nageleisen, Swope and Glover failed to
    meet the burden of proving that “the conditional use will not be detrimental to
    the health, safety or general welfare of persons residing or working in the
    vicinity . . . .” Additionally, Meitzen and Nageleisen stated that “to place a
    daycare facility in this area would put the general public and our school
    children in immediate and present danger.”
    PDS responded to the complaint, stating that Meitzen and Nageleisen
    failed to plead that they had been injured or aggrieved by a final action of the
    Board, as required by KRS 100.347(1). In its answer, the Board also asserted
    that Meitzen and Nageleisen failed to comply with KRS 100.347(1).
    On February 9, 2016, PDS filed a motion for summary judgment or, in
    the alternative, a motion to dismiss. PDS argued that an appeal from an
    administrative decision requires strict statutory compliance and, because
    Meitzen and Nageleisen failed to strictly comply by claiming they were “injured
    or aggrieved” as provided in KRS 100.347(1), the circuit court lacked
    jurisdiction to consider the appeal. PDS also asserted that the summons was
    improper and untimely, and that it is not a necessary party to a KRS 100.347
    appeal. Swope and Glover filed their own motion for summary judgment or, in
    the alternative, judgment on the pleadings, also contending the appeal should
    not proceed because Meitzen and Nageleisen failed to claim they were injured
    or aggrieved.
    3
    Responding to both motions, Meitzen and Nageleisen asserted that as
    adjacent property owners they were injured and aggrieved by the Board’s
    action. They cited Davis v. Richardson, 
    507 S.W.2d 446
    , 448 (Ky. 1974), to
    argue that their status as adjacent property owners is sufficient to satisfy the
    “injured or aggrieved” requirement of KRS 100.347(1). Simultaneously,
    Meitzen and Nageleisen filed a motion to amend their complaint pursuant to
    Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 15.01.
    On June 3, 2016, the circuit court entered an order of dismissal, finding
    that Meitzen and Nageleisen failed to allege in their complaint that they were
    injured or aggrieved by the final action of the Board. While the complaint
    alleged that Swope and Glover did not prove that the conditional use would not
    be detrimental to the health, safety and welfare of the community and that the
    Board failed to consider potential danger to children at a neighboring school,
    the complaint did not satisfy the “claim” of being “injured or aggrieved”
    requirements of KRS 100.347(1). Without an express claim that Meitzen and
    Nageleisen themselves were injured or aggrieved in some way by the Board’s
    action, the circuit court concluded it lacked subject matter jurisdiction.
    Although Meitzen and Nageleisen sought to amend their deficient
    complaint, at that point it was more than sixty days after the time for
    perfection of the appeal expired. Because the Kentucky Rules of Civil
    Procedure do not apply in this type of litigation until after an appeal has been
    perfected, the circuit court denied the motion to amend the complaint, citing
    Board of Adjustments v. Flood, 
    581 S.W.2d 1
    , 2 (Ky. 1978). The circuit court
    dismissed the action with prejudice and then denied Meitzen and Nageleisen’s
    ensuing motion to alter, amend or vacate.
    4
    On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the circuit court in a 2-1
    decision. The majority determined that “[t]here is nothing in the language of
    KRS 100.347(1) that requires appealing parties to specifically allege they were
    ‘injured or aggrieved’ in their complaint in order for the circuit court to have
    jurisdiction.” The Court of Appeals interpreted the “injured or aggrieved”
    language to be a standing requirement, not a jurisdiction requirement.
    In so ruling, the Court of Appeals addressed the earlier decision of
    Spencer County Preservation, Inc. v. Beacon Hill, LLC, 
    214 S.W.3d 327
    (Ky. App.
    2007), in which it interpreted the “injured or aggrieved” language as used in a
    different subsection of KRS 100.347. In that case, the Court of Appeals held
    that in order to pursue an appeal under KRS 100.347(3) a party must allege in
    the complaint that the party has been injured or aggrieved.
    Id. at 329.
    The
    Spencer County Preservation Court distinguished standing from jurisdiction
    and ultimately concluded that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to hear the
    appeal.
    Here, the Court of Appeals disagreed with the holding in Spencer County
    Preservation, finding that its “hyper technical strict compliance view” of KRS
    100.347(3) was improper. The appellate court also determined that, pursuant
    to Kentucky Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. Conley, 
    456 S.W.3d 814
    (Ky. 2015),
    only substantial compliance is required when pursuing an appeal, with two
    exceptions – the failure to timely file a notice of appeal or the failure to name
    an indispensable party. Because Meitzen and Nageleisen timely filed the notice
    of appeal and named all indispensable parties, the Court of Appeals concluded
    nothing more was required.
    5
    The Court of Appeals further determined that the circuit court erred in
    denying Meitzen and Nageleisen the opportunity to amend their complaint
    pursuant to CR 15.01. Accordingly, the appellate court reversed and
    remanded the circuit court order of dismissal and the order denying the motion
    to alter, amend or vacate, and directed the circuit court on remand to enter an
    order granting Meitzen and Nageleisen’s motion to amend their complaint.
    One judge on the appellate panel dissented, finding that the majority
    opinion creates an absurd and inconsistent result. Judge Acree opined that
    the circuit court properly followed the precedent established in Spencer County
    Preservation, 
    214 S.W.3d 327
    , and that the order of dismissal should be
    affirmed. On the Board’s motion,5 we granted discretionary review to interpret
    the requirements of KRS 100.347(1).
    ANALYSIS
    This case presents an issue of statutory interpretation: whether KRS
    100.347(1) requires a party to claim to be injured or aggrieved by a final action
    of a board of adjustment to perfect an appeal in circuit court. Statutory
    interpretation is a question of law, which we review de novo. Saint Joseph
    Hosp. v. Frye, 
    415 S.W.3d 631
    , 632 (Ky. 2013).
    I.         The language of KRS 100.347(1) is clear and unambiguous.
    KRS 100.347(1) creates a statutory right to appeal from a final action of a
    board of adjustment. It states:
    Any person or entity claiming to be injured or aggrieved by
    any final action of the board of adjustment shall appeal from the
    action to the Circuit Court of the county in which the property,
    which is the subject of the action of the board of adjustment, lies.
    5   All appellants will collectively be referred to as “the Board.”
    6
    Such appeal shall be taken within thirty (30) days after the final
    action of the board. All final actions which have not been appealed
    within thirty (30) days shall not be subject to judicial review. The
    board of adjustment shall be a party in any such appeal filed in the
    Circuit Court.
    The issue in this case arises from the first sentence of the statute, specifically,
    “[a]ny person or entity claiming to be injured or aggrieved . . . .” (emphasis
    added). To interpret this language, our inquiry
    begins and ends with application of the cardinal rule: “the
    intention of the legislature should be ascertained and given effect.”
    Discerning legislative intent requires a focus on the words chosen
    by the legislature. If those words, given their common
    understanding and meaning, are clear or unambiguous, our task
    is complete—we simply apply the will of the legislature. Only when
    a statute is ambiguous do we reach for more extensive
    interpretative aids.
    Allstate Ins. Co. v. Smith, 
    487 S.W.3d 857
    , 860–61 (Ky. 2016) (quoting Jefferson
    Cty. Bd. of Educ. v. Fell, 
    391 S.W.3d 713
    , 718 (Ky. 2012)) (citations omitted).
    The parties contest what is required by the “claiming to be injured or
    aggrieved” portion of the statute. Where a statute is clear and unambiguous,
    “we are not free to construe it otherwise . . . .” MPM Fin. Grp., Inc. v. Morton,
    
    289 S.W.3d 193
    , 197 (Ky. 2009). Although KRS Chapter 100 does not provide
    definitions for “claiming,” “injured,” or “aggrieved,” we look to the common
    meanings of these words to determine what the legislature intended when
    enacting KRS 100.347(1). Merriam Webster’s Dictionary defines “claim” as “to
    assert in the face of possible contradiction,” “to ask for,” and “a demand for
    something due or believed to be due.”6 According to Black’s Law Dictionary
    (11th ed. 2019), “claim” has several meanings, such as “[t]he assertion of an
    6 Claim, MERRIAM WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/
    claim (last visited Jul. 29, 2020).
    7
    existing right; any right . . . to an equitable remedy . . . .” It can also mean “[a]
    demand for . . . a legal remedy to which one asserts a right; esp., the part of a
    complaint in a civil action specifying what relief the plaintiff asks for.”
    As for “injury,” Merriam Webster defines it as “hurt, damage, or loss
    sustained,” and as a “violation of another’s rights for which the law allows an
    action to recover damages.”7 Finally, “aggrieved” is defined as “suffering from
    an infringement or denial of legal rights,” and “showing or expressing grief,
    injury, or offense.”8 Taking the plain meanings of these words in the context of
    KRS 100.347(1), we conclude that a party pursuing an appeal from a board of
    adjustment must claim some type of hurt or damage, or some form of suffering
    or infringement that the party will experience as a result of the board’s
    decision.
    The only reasonable method by which a person or entity can “claim” to
    be injured or aggrieved by a final decision of a board of adjustment when
    initiating an appeal in circuit court is through their complaint. But Meitzen
    and Nageleisen failed to provide any factual allegations to support a claim that
    they themselves were injured or aggrieved in some way by the Board’s action.
    In fact, the words “injured” or “aggrieved” (or even synonyms of those words) do
    not appear anywhere in their complaint. While these particular words are not
    necessarily required, a complaint pursuant to KRS 100.347(1) must reflect how
    the plaintiff fits into the statutory language authorizing an appeal. Meitzen
    and Nageleisen explain how they believe the Board erred legally but they fail to
    7  Injury, MERRIAM WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/
    injury (last visited Jul. 29, 2020).
    8 Aggrieved, MERRIAM WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/
    dictionary/aggrieved (last visited Jul. 29, 2020).
    8
    state how the alleged errors affect them or cause injury to them. In fact, the
    complaint reads solely as a critique of the Board’s decision to grant the
    conditional use permit, not as a claim on behalf of parties who are themselves
    injured or aggrieved.
    The language in KRS 100.347(1) is clear and unequivocal – a party must
    claim to be “injured or aggrieved” by a board’s final action. The legislative
    intent is apparent from the words used in the statute. While the General
    Assembly could have allowed any person residing in the county, for example, to
    initiate an appeal from a board of adjustment decision, the legislature
    deliberately limited appeals to those instances where a person or entity could
    claim to be actually injured or aggrieved by the board’s action. This specific
    jurisdictional requirement imposed by the legislature is clear and
    unambiguous. Because the judiciary’s role in statutory construction cases is
    to see that “the will of the legislature” is applied, Allstate Ins. Co. v. 
    Smith, 487 S.W.3d at 861
    , we must conclude that the Court of Appeals erred in condoning
    an appeal by parties who claimed no such injury or grievance. We turn next to
    the Court of Appeals’ willingness to accept substantial compliance with KRS
    100.347(1).
    II.      Strict compliance with KRS 100.347(1) was required.
    As a general rule, no appeal to the courts from an administrative agency
    exists as a matter of right. Kentucky Unemp. Ins. Comm’n v. Normal Wilson &
    Universal, LLC, 
    528 S.W.3d 336
    (Ky. 2017). “The right to appeal the decision of
    an administrative agency to a court is a matter of legislative grace.” Nickell v.
    Diversicare Mgmt. Servs., 
    336 S.W.3d 454
    , 456 (Ky. 2011). Consequently, “the
    failure to follow the statutory guidelines for such an appeal is fatal.” Triad
    9
    Dev./Alta Glyne, Inc. v. Gellhaus, 
    150 S.W.3d 43
    , 47 (Ky. 2004). For over forty
    years, Kentucky courts have required strict compliance with the provisions of
    KRS 100.347.
    In 1978, this Court held that strict compliance with KRS 100.347 is
    necessary to perfect an appeal and invoke circuit court jurisdiction. In Board
    of Adjustments v. Flood, the Court was tasked with interpreting the
    requirements for appeals from a board of adjustment under KRS 100.347.9
    Certain parties filed an appeal from the final action of a board of adjustment
    but failed to include the planning commission, a necessary party pursuant to
    the 1978 version of the statute, as a party until sixty-eight days after the
    board’s decision, well past the thirty-day requirement in the 
    statute. 581 S.W.2d at 2
    . Finding this defect fatal, the circuit court dismissed the appeal,
    but the Court of Appeals concluded otherwise and reversed.
    Id. On appeal in
    Flood, this Court explained that strict compliance is required in a statutory
    appeal from an administrative agency decision, and if the statutory conditions
    are not met then a court lacks jurisdiction over the controversy.
    Id. As the Court
    colorfully opined, the statute’s requirements were “as plain as a
    billboard.”
    Id. Because the appellants
    did not include the planning
    commission as a party within thirty days, dismissal was proper.
    Id. Notably, 9 While
    the version of KRS 100.347 effective today is not identical to the version
    of the statute as it existed at the time of the Flood decision, the provisions are
    substantially the same. The 1978 version states, in relevant part, “[a]ny person or
    entity claiming to be injured or aggrieved by any final action of the planning
    commission or Board of adjustments may appeal from the action to the circuit court of
    the county in which the land lies.” Therefore, the only difference is that the 1978
    version included appeals from a board of adjustment or planning commission in the
    same subsection, while the current version of KRS 100.347 places appeals from a
    board of adjustment in subsection (1) and a planning commission in subsection (2).
    10
    the appellants in Flood also attempted to frame the issue as one of
    indispensability of parties under CR 19.01, but this Court held that “[t]he civil
    rules do not apply in this type of litigation until after the appeal has been
    perfected.”
    Id. In statutory proceedings,
    the words of the statute are paramount. Here,
    as in Flood, the failure to comply with the requirements of KRS 100.347(1) is
    fatal.
    Id. A proper party
    has thirty days to perfect an appeal from a final
    action of a board of adjustment, and they must comply with all the
    requirements of the statute, including filing a claim that explains how the
    appealing party has been injured or aggrieved by the Board’s action.
    Recently, in Isaacs v. Caldwell, 
    530 S.W.3d 449
    , 451 (Ky. 2017), a
    developer sought to eliminate a proposed lake feature on a subdivision
    development plat. Several landowners, who had purchased their property in
    the subdivision relying on the economic and aesthetic value that would be
    added by the lake, opposed the amendment.
    Id. After the planning
    commission approved the amendment, the landowners initiated an appeal
    under KRS 100.347(2).
    Id. KRS 100.347(4) states
    that the owner of the
    subject property, in that case a bank, is a necessary party to any appeal.
    Id. The landowners’ counsel
    encountered difficulty in serving a summons on the
    bank and failed to serve the bank within the applicable limitations period.
    Id. at 453.
    Ultimately, the developer sought dismissal of the action based on the
    landowners’ failure to comply with KRS 100.347, and the circuit court
    dismissed the action as not commenced within the limitations period required
    by the statute.
    Id. 11
          On appeal, the Isaacs Court discussed the general guidelines for judicial
    review of administrative agency actions:
    [W]e acknowledge the authority of the General Assembly to
    prescribe by statute the procedures for seeking and securing
    judicial review of an administrative ruling. Out of deference to that
    authority, we require strict compliance with the statutory
    procedures. “When the right of appeal from an administrative
    agency’s ruling . . . is codified as a statutory procedure, as it is in
    KRS 100.347, then the parties are required to strictly follow those
    procedures.” Based upon these principles, to obtain judicial review
    of the Planning Commission’s approval of [the developer’s]
    proposed plat amendment, Appellants had to strictly comply with
    all relevant statutory requirements for bringing its action in the
    circuit court.
    
    Isaacs, 530 S.W.3d at 453
    –54 (quoting Triad 
    Dev., 150 S.W.3d at 47
    ).
    Although the Court was addressing the timing requirements of KRS 100.347(2)
    (which governs appeals from a decision of a planning commission, while
    subsection (1) governs appeals, as here, from a board of adjustment), the
    Isaacs’ decision, like 
    Flood, 581 S.W.2d at 1
    , clearly indicates that strict
    compliance with KRS 100.347 is required in order for an action to proceed in
    the circuit court.
    In KRS 100.347, the General Assembly specifically created a right to
    appeal from an administrative decision regarding planning and zoning but
    conferred that right only in those instances where persons or entities are
    injured or aggrieved by the administrative action. Just as it is within the
    legislature’s purview to create the right to appeal from administrative decisions,
    it is also within their purview to prescribe the method of appeal – as pertinent
    here, requiring that a party be injured or aggrieved and plead such an injury.
    We must emphasize yet again, “an appeal from an administrative decision is a
    matter of legislative grace and not a right.” Triad 
    Dev., 150 S.W.3d at 47
    .
    12
    When the grace to appeal a decision of a board of adjustment to a circuit court
    is granted by statute, strict compliance with the statute’s terms is required.
    Id. From a policy
    standpoint, we note that KRS 100.347(1) creates a narrow
    avenue to appeal the decision of a board of adjustment, and we conclude the
    legislature was intentional in creating that narrow avenue. By limiting the
    appeal process to certain injured or aggrieved persons or entities, the
    legislature has effectively prevented the filing of unnecessary and unfounded
    complaints by any citizen who simply disagrees with the board of adjustment’s
    action. To perfect a KRS 100.347(1) appeal, a party or entity must assert that
    they have been injured or aggrieved by the board’s action, thereby establishing
    their appeal is statutorily permissible.
    The Court of Appeals instead suggested that substantial compliance is
    sufficient in a KRS 100.347(1) appeal, citing Conley, 
    456 S.W.3d 814
    . The
    Conley Court, relying on Johnson v. Smith, 
    885 S.W.2d 944
    , 950 (Ky. 1994) and
    Lassiter v. American Express Travel Related Servs. Co., 
    308 S.W.3d 714
    , 718
    (Ky. 2010), concluded that this Court allows substantial compliance in the
    appellate process, except for “tardy appeals and the naming of indispensable
    parties.”
    Id. at 818.
    The Court of Appeals thus reasoned that because Meitzen
    and Nageleisen timely filed their notice of appeal and named all indispensable
    parties, nothing more was required. However, Conley involved a constitutional
    right to appeal from a lower court, not a statutorily-created right to appeal from
    an administrative body. Our Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure controlled the
    entire proceedings in Conley, including a motion to alter, amend or vacate.
    Statutory appeals, such as the one before us, are different. They are literally
    “borne of” a controlling statute and they are premised on strict compliance with
    13
    that statute. The Court of Appeals erred in relying on the distinguishable
    Conley decision to hold otherwise.
    In sum, Meitzen and Nageleisen were required to strictly comply with
    KRS 100.347(1) by claiming to be injured or aggrieved in some way by the
    Board’s action approving the conditional use permit for The Growing Place.
    Their failure to adhere to the rather simple – “plain as a billboard” –
    requirements of the statute was fatal to their claim, thus justifying the circuit
    court’s dismissal of the appeal. 
    Flood, 581 S.W.2d at 2
    .
    III.    Failure to comply with the requirements of KRS 100.347(1)
    creates an issue of jurisdiction, not standing.
    In analyzing the requirements for a KRS 100.347 appeal, Spencer County
    Preservation, 
    214 S.W.3d 327
    , has guided practitioners and circuit courts since
    2007. In that case, the Court of Appeals addressed an issue identical to the
    one before this Court. Property owners applied for a zoning map amendment
    to change the zoning of a 37-acre tract of land from agricultural to residential
    in order to develop a subdivision.
    Id. at 328.
    The application was approved,
    and Spencer County Preservation, Inc. (SCP) filed a complaint appealing the
    zoning amendment.
    Id. The circuit court
    determined that SCP lacked standing
    and granted summary judgment in favor of the appellees, holding that KRS
    100.347(3)10 was dispositive upon the issue of standing.
    Id. 10
    Although Spencer County Preservation interpreted the requirements of KRS
    100.347(3), not subsection (1) which is controlling on this appeal, KRS 100.347(1), (2),
    and (3) each contain similar requirements for appeals, they simply govern appeals
    from different entities. Subsection (1) pertains to appeals from actions of boards of
    adjustment, subsection (2) pertains to appeals from actions by planning commissions,
    and subsection (3) pertains to appeals from actions of legislative bodies of cities,
    counties, and governments. Each subsection provides that “[a]ny person or entity
    claiming to be injured or aggrieved by any final action . . .” may appeal to a circuit
    court.
    14
    The Spencer County Preservation court determined that the true issue
    was one of statutory interpretation – “whether it is mandatory under KRS
    100.347(3) for a party to allege in its complaint on appeal to the circuit court
    that the party has been injured or aggrieved by the final action of the legislative
    body . . . .”
    Id. at 329.
    The appellate panel noted its duty to “ascertain and
    give effect to the intent of the general assembly” and held that “a person or
    entity must claim in its complaint on appeal to be injured or aggrieved by a
    final action of a legislative body to pursue an appeal to the circuit court.”
    Id. Because SCP failed
    to claim it had been injured or aggrieved and failed to offer
    any factual allegations in support of such a claim, the circuit court was
    required to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
    Id. In Meitzen and
    Nageleisen’s appeal, the Court of Appeals disagreed with
    the holding in Spencer County Preservation, finding that the decision interprets
    KRS 100.347 with “a hyper technical strict compliance view.” Initially, we note
    that even if the statutory requirements are viewed as hyper technical, it is well
    within the legislature’s power to enact such a statute. Additionally, the Court
    of Appeals disputed the Spencer County Preservation Court’s framing of the
    issue as jurisdictional, finding no jurisdictional requirement in KRS 100.347(1)
    that parties must use the language “injured or aggrieved.” In the view of the
    two judges in the majority, this language only expresses a prerequisite for
    standing. We disagree.11
    11  Although Spencer County Preservation interpreted section (3), a subsequent
    case, Citizens for Preservation of Jessamine County, LLC v. Jessamine County, 2010-
    CA-000722-MR, 
    2011 WL 1706760
    , at *5 (Ky. App. May 6, 2011), by Judge Combs,
    interpreted the same “claiming to be injured or aggrieved” language in section (2) of
    KRS 100.347 in exactly the same way, i.e., as necessary to invoke jurisdiction not
    merely a reference to standing. At least one other appellate opinion has rejected the
    15
    Standing and jurisdiction are two distinct concepts, and the distinction
    is particularly important in this case. “‘Standing,’ of course, in its most basic
    sense, refers to an integral component of the ‘justiciable cause’ requirement
    underlying a trial court’s jurisdiction. To invoke the court’s jurisdiction, the
    plaintiff must allege an injury caused by the defendant of a sort the court is
    able to redress.” Lawson v. Office of Atty. Gen., 
    415 S.W.3d 59
    , 67 (Ky. 2013)
    (citing Ky. Const. § 112; Rose v. Council for Better Educ., 
    790 S.W.2d 186
    (Ky.
    1989)). More specifically in this case,
    “Statutory standing” refers to whether a statute creating a
    private right of action authorizes a particular plaintiff to avail
    herself of that right of action. Statutory standing is simply
    statutory interpretation: the question it asks is whether [the
    notion that the “claiming to be injured or aggrieved” language is just a reference to
    standing and not necessary to invoke circuit court jurisdiction. Eaves v. LRS
    Properties, LLC, 2013-CA-000728-MR, 
    2014 WL 1882418
    (Ky. App. May 9, 2014).
    Additionally, Spencer County Preservation has been cited numerous times for the
    general proposition that strict compliance with a statute granting an appeal from an
    administrative body is required.
    For reasons unknown, the secondary source cited by the dissent fails to
    acknowledge Spencer County Preservation or its progeny anywhere in the treatise.
    However, the full quote from that source states: “To be ‘injured or aggrieved,’ which is
    what is required in order to have standing to appeal a planning commission, local
    legislative body, or court of adjustment ‘final action,’ a person probably must be
    something more than just a property owner or taxpayer in the municipality with only a
    citizen’s interest in the efficient administration of zoning laws.” 3A Ky. Prac. Real
    Estate Transactions § 31:8 (2019 Update). Once the word “probably” is removed, this
    is a correct statement of Kentucky law as far as it goes but, as repeatedly noted, KRS
    100.347 requires an appealing party “claiming to be injured or aggrieved” and that
    “claim” part of the statute – an administrative appeal statute which we must strictly
    construe, 
    Flood, 581 S.W.2d at 2
    , – must be complied with in order to invoke the
    circuit court’s jurisdiction. A claim of personal injury or aggrievement is missing in
    this case.
    Meitzen and Nageleisen complained about the nursery school being in a
    residential neighborhood; the number of daycare facilities and an elementary school in
    the area; the proximity to a dangerous curve; two testifying witnesses who would
    benefit from the building of the nursery school; and stated, “to place a daycare facility
    in this area would put the general public and our school children in immediate and
    present danger.” This latter appears to be a general complaint, not a personally
    claimed injury or grievance regarding Meitzen’s or Nageleisen's own children.
    16
    legislature] has accorded this injured plaintiff the right to sue
    the defendant to redress his injury.
    Lexington-Fayette Urban Cty. Human Rights Comm’n v. Hands on Originals, 
    592 S.W.3d 291
    , 296 (Ky. 2019).
    Jurisdiction, on the other hand, “. . . is the power of the court to decide
    an issue in controversy. The courts’ power to inquire into facts, apply the law,
    make decisions, and declare judgment between parties is both constrained by
    and a function of their jurisdiction.” Nordike v. Nordike, 
    231 S.W.3d 733
    , 737
    (Ky. 2007) (citing Black’s Law Dictionary 867 (8th ed. 2004)). “It is
    fundamental that a court must have jurisdiction before it has authority to
    decide a case. Jurisdiction is the ubiquitous procedural threshold through
    which all cases and controversies must pass prior to having their substance
    examined.” Wilson v. Russell, 
    162 S.W.3d 911
    , 913 (Ky. 2005).
    Meitzen and Nageleisen cite Davis v. Richardson, 
    507 S.W.2d 446
    (Ky.
    1974), to support their characterization of this issue as one of standing. In
    Davis, a property owner obtained a conditional use permit to operate a social
    club on his residential property.
    Id. at 447.
    An adjacent property owner who
    opposed issuance of the conditional use permit filed an appeal in circuit court
    and that court determined that the order granting the permit was invalid.
    Id. Davis appealed, and
    this Court’s predecessor, then the Court of Appeals, held
    that property owners whose land is adjacent to and abuts property subject to a
    conditional use permit fall within the definition of injured or aggrieved parties
    and therefore have standing to seek judicial review of the permit.
    Id. at 448.
    In our view, Davis stops short of the larger issue before us.
    17
    Although Meitzen and Nageleisen are adjacent property owners to the
    property on which Swope and Glover seek to operate a commercial nursery,
    perfecting their right to appeal as granted by the General Assembly in KRS
    100.347(1) creates a jurisdiction issue. While admittedly the statute has a
    standing component – that a party must be “injured or aggrieved” by the
    board’s action – in order for a circuit court to exercise jurisdiction that party
    must claim their injury in the complaint. Mere ownership of adjoining property
    may place a party in the class of potential appellants but only when that party
    articulates his or her injury or grievance in the complaint have they complied
    with the statute. Addressing the timing requirement of KRS 100.347(2) as a
    jurisdictional issue, the Flood Court concluded “one of the conditions precedent
    to the exercise of judicial power by the circuit court was not met and [the
    circuit court] was required to dismiss the appeal for want of 
    jurisdiction.” 581 S.W.2d at 2
    . We hold similarly in the circumstances before us.
    Simply put, in order to have statutory standing, Meitzen and Nageleisen
    must be “injured or aggrieved” by a final action of the Board, but in order for
    the circuit court to have jurisdiction, Meitzen and Nageleisen must also strictly
    comply with KRS 100.347(1). Because Meitzen and Nageleisen did not comply
    with one of the conditions precedent, i.e. claiming that they were injured or
    aggrieved by the Board’s action, the circuit court was required to dismiss the
    action.
    IV.      Meitzen and Nageleisen were not entitled to amend their
    complaint pursuant to CR 15.01.
    Finally, the circuit court denied Meitzen and Nageleisen’s motion to
    amend their complaint pursuant to CR 15.01. That rule states that after a
    18
    responsive pleading is served, “a party may amend his pleading only by leave of
    court or by written consent of the adverse party; and leave shall be freely given
    when justice so requires.” The Court of Appeals opined that in making a ruling
    on Meitzen and Nageleisen’s motion, the circuit court should have considered
    whether the amendment could cure the complaint’s deficiencies, prejudice the
    opposing party or work an injustice, citing Kenney v. Hanger Prosthetics &
    Orthotics, Inc., 
    269 S.W.3d 866
    , 869 (Ky. App. 2007). According to the Court of
    Appeals, all these factors weigh in favor of allowing them to amend their
    complaint.
    However, as repeatedly noted, the Civil Rules do not apply until after an
    appeal has been perfected, 
    Flood, 581 S.W.2d at 2
    , rendering CR 15.01
    inapplicable here. Indeed, resolution of the motion to amend returns us to the
    same principle: “the failure to follow the statutory guidelines for such an appeal
    is fatal. A person seeking review of administrative decisions must strictly
    follow the applicable procedures.” Triad 
    Dev., 150 S.W.3d at 47
    (citing Taylor
    v. Duke, 
    896 S.W.2d 618
    (Ky. App. 1995)). Meitzen and Nageleisen failed to
    follow the appeal procedures in KRS 100.347(1) by not “claiming to be injured
    or aggrieved” in the complaint, and the circuit court dismissed the action.
    Without a properly perfected appeal, CR 15.01 did not apply, and the circuit
    court properly denied the motion to amend the complaint.
    CONCLUSION
    To perfect their appeal, Meitzen and Nageleisen were required by the
    plain language of KRS 100.347(1) to claim that they were injured or aggrieved
    in some way by the final action of the Board approving the conditional use
    permit for The Growing Place. Their complaint failed to contain this necessary
    19
    allegation – a statutory requirement to invoke the jurisdiction of the circuit
    court – and, accordingly, the circuit court properly dismissed the action. We
    therefore reverse the Court of Appeals and remand this matter to the circuit
    court for reinstatement of its order dismissing the action.
    Minton, C.J.; Nickell, and VanMeter, JJ., concur. Wright, J., dissents by
    separate opinion in which Keller, J., joins. Lambert, J., not sitting.
    WRIGHT, J., DISSENTING: I respectfully dissent and would affirm the
    Court of Appeals.
    Appellees, Meitzen and Nageleisen, sufficiently pleaded claims under KRS
    100.347(1), which provides “[a]ny person or entity claiming to be injured or
    aggrieved by any final action of the board of adjustment shall appeal from the
    action to the Circuit Court . . . .” (Emphasis added.) This dissent is based on
    the fact that the appeal to circuit court was sufficient to meet the statutory
    requirements that Meitzen and Nageleisen were injured or aggrieved by the
    Kenton Board of Adjustments’ actions; even if they failed to meet the statutory
    requirements, the trial court erred in failing to allow them to amend the
    complaint. Here, Meitzen and Nageleisen allege “our school children [are] in
    immediate and present danger.” (Emphasis added.) If the Kenton Board of
    Adjustments’ actions endanger Appellees’ children, how could they be more
    injured or aggrieved?
    As the majority points out, the requirement of a “claim” is satisfied when
    “assert[ing] in the face of possible contradiction.” Here, Meitzen and Nageleisen
    allege in their complaint that “our school children [are] in immediate and
    present danger.” This phrasing satisfies the definition of “claim” by being
    20
    placed in a legal complaint against an opposing party who would likely
    contradict; as such, the phrase amounts to a proper “claim” under the statute.
    The majority opinion states “a party pursing an appeal from a board of
    adjustment must claim some type of hurt or damage, or some form of suffering
    or infringement that the party will experience as a result of the board’s
    decision.” Later the majority states “Meitzen and Nageleisen explain how they
    believe the Board erred legally but they fail to state how the alleged errors affect
    them or cause injury to them.” I disagree because the complaint states that
    Meitzen’s and Nageleisen’s school children are in immediate and present
    danger.
    Paragraph 21 of the complaint alleges the Board of Adjustment “failed to
    order a traffic and sightline study be conducted in light of the evidence
    presented that the proposed conditional use would cause an increase in traffic
    collisions, injuries and fatalities.” Then they allege in paragraph 26 of the
    complaint “that to place a commercial nursery school on this particular parcel
    of land requiring the servicing up to 120 additional vehicles a day plus an
    additional 20 vehicles for employees plus yet additional vehicles for servicing
    the needs of a commercial nursery . . . .”
    The complaint alleges in paragraph 31 “the Growing Place Nursery has
    absolutely no business being relocated on a very dangerous curve right next to,
    of all things, a very busy school intersection (Whites Tower Elementary).”
    Meitzen and Nageleisen complete their allegation of how they are injured or
    aggrieved by stating in paragraph 38 “to place a daycare facility in this area
    would put the general public and our school children in immediate and present
    danger.” (Emphasis added.)
    21
    Meitzen and Nageleisen clearly describe the danger and that they are
    injured or aggrieved because of the immediate and present danger to their
    school children. Meitzen and Nageleisen state in the complaint that the danger
    is to “our” children. Our is defined as “[t]hat or those belonging to us.”
    Webster’s II New Riverside University Dictionary (1984). Since the immediate
    and present danger alleged is to the school children of Meitzen and Nageleisen,
    they have alleged that they are injured or aggrieved.
    The circuit court complaint in this case is distinguishable from that in
    Spencer County Preservation. The facts as related in the Spencer County
    Preservation opinion are sparse; however, it seems clear that very little was
    alleged in Spencer County Preservation’s (“SCP”) circuit court complaint. The
    Court of Appeals noted that “[i]n its complaint, SCP asserted that it was
    comprised of owners of property located near” the property at issue.
    Id. at 329.
    The court went on to state that SCP neither “claim[ed] that it had been injured
    or aggrieved by the final action of the Spencer Court Fiscal Court” nor “offer[ed]
    any factual allegation to support such a claim.”
    Id. at 330.
    In making these
    observations about SCP’s complaint, the court acknowledged SCP’s two-fold
    argument. First, SCP argued “that merely filing the complaint is sufficient to
    perfect the appeal.”
    Id. n.4. Second, it
    argued “that the planning commission
    heard evidence of how members of SCP were aggrieved by the rezoning.”
    Id. By implication, therefore,
    it seems that SCP acknowledged that it did not allege
    in its complaint that it was injured or aggrieved, nor did it plead facts that
    would support such a claim.
    Furthermore, even if Meitzen and Nageleisen failed to properly raise their
    claim, the trial court should have allowed them to amend their claim, as the
    22
    statute’s “claim” requirements constitute a standing requirement rather than a
    jurisdictional one. As we have held, “[s]tanding requires that a party have a
    judicially recognizable interest in the subject matter of the suit.”
    Commonwealth v. Yamaha Motor Mfg. Corp., 
    237 S.W.3d 203
    , 205 (Ky. 2007)
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In discussing “statutory
    standing,” we have stated: “Standing in this sense has to do with whether a
    statute creating a private right of action authorizes a particular plaintiff to avail
    herself of that right of action.” Lawson v. Office of Atty. Gen., 
    415 S.W.3d 59
    ,
    67 (Ky. 2013) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In Lawson, we
    made it clear that “[t]he question is whether the plaintiff is among the class of
    persons authorized by the statute to bring suit, and as such ‘statutory
    standing’ is not a jurisdictional question, but is essentially a matter of
    statutory construction.”
    Here, the majority cites Spencer County Preservation, Inc. v. Beacon Hill,
    LLC, 
    214 S.W.3d 327
    (Ky. App. 2007), for the proposition that the statutory
    requirements regarding who may bring suit pursuant to the statute are
    jurisdictional. However, in Spencer, the Court of Appeals incorrectly expanded
    this Court’s interpretation of KRS 100.347. I would overrule Spencer insofar as
    it holds that whether a party has pleaded that they are “injured or aggrieved” is
    a jurisdictional question. In reaching its holding that “the circuit court was
    required to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction,” the Spencer court cited
    one of this Court’s cases, Board of Adjustments v. Flood, 
    581 S.W.2d 1
    (Ky.
    1978). However, upon closer examination, this Court did not rule that a party
    must assert that he is injured or aggrieved in order for a circuit court to have
    jurisdiction in Flood; rather, that case dealt with the requirement that the suit
    23
    be brought within thirty days—an issue which is jurisdictional as discussed
    below.
    Kentucky Revised Statute (“KRS”) 100.347(1) states, in full, the following:
    Any person or entity claiming to be injured or aggrieved by any
    final action of the board of adjustment shall appeal from the action
    to the Circuit Court of the county in which the property, which is
    the subject of the action of the board of adjustment, lies. Such
    appeal shall be taken within thirty (30) days after the final action
    of the board. All final actions which have not been appealed within
    thirty (30) days shall not be subject to judicial review. The board
    of adjustment shall be a party in any such appeal filed in the
    Circuit Court.
    The language “[a]ny person or entity claiming to be injured or aggrieved” is best
    understood as a standing requirement as opposed to a jurisdictional
    requirement. Only those requirements following the word “shall” are
    jurisdictional in nature: (1) The appeal shall be prosecuted in the county in
    which the subject property lies; (2) the appeal shall be taken within thirty days
    after the final action of the board; and (3) the board of adjustment shall be
    named as a party.
    My interpretation of the statute is consistent with that of many
    practitioners. In fact, the Kentucky Practice Series on Real Estate Transactions
    informs its readers that “[t]o be ‘injured or aggrieved,’ . . . is what is required in
    order to have standing to appeal a planning commission, local legislative body,
    or court of adjustment ‘final action.’” § 31:8 (emphasis added).
    Because Meitzen and Nageleisen satisfied the jurisdictional requirements
    in their complaint, even assuming Meitzen and Nageleisen’s complaint was
    insufficient when filed, the circuit court erred in denying their motion to amend
    their complaint under Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (“CR”) 15.01.
    24
    The practical effect of the majority’s opinion today is that it makes it
    virtually impossible for a party appealing under KRS 100.347 to ever correct a
    drafting mistake. Because the party could not amend his complaint, he would
    be required to dismiss his original complaint and file a new complaint.
    Practically speaking, it would be nearly impossible for a party to draft and file a
    complaint, become aware a mistake has been made, draft and file a motion to
    dismiss his complaint, have a judge grant his motion to dismiss his complaint,
    and then draft and file a new complaint within the thirty-day window allowed
    under KRS 100.347. The majority today gives a party only one bite at the
    apple and leaves no room for error.
    Consequently, I would affirm the Court of Appeals. Appellees’ pleading
    complies with KRS 100.347(1), as it alleges a proper claim of aggrievement to
    allow an appeal to the circuit court; even if it failed to do so, the trial court
    erred in denying Appellees’ motion to amend.
    Keller, J., joins.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANTS:
    Garry L. Edmondson
    EDMONDSON & ASSOCIATES
    Thomas R. Nienaber
    SKEES, WILSON & NIENABER, PLLC
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES
    IAN MEITZEN AND DONALD L. NAGELEISEN:
    Sherrill P. Hondorf
    HONDORF LAW OFFICE
    Donald L. Nageleisen
    25
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES
    JESSICA SWOPE AND AIMEE GLOVER:
    Thomas L. Rouse
    THOMAS ROUSE LAW
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    VIRGINIA DUPONT:
    Virginia Dupont
    26