United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
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No. 06-1118
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Minnesota Towers, Inc., et al., *
*
Plaintiffs - Appellees, *
* Appeal from the United States
v. * District Court for the
* District of Minnesota.
City of Duluth, *
*
Defendant - Appellant. *
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Submitted: September 25, 2006
Filed: January 10, 2007
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Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, BEAM and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
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LOKEN, Chief Judge.
Duluth property owner James Bechthold leased a commercial site to Minnesota
Towers, Inc., for the construction of a 195-foot telecommunications tower. American
Cellular Corporation and other wireless cell phone service providers planned to use
the tower to better serve the Piedmont Heights area of Duluth. Minnesota Towers and
Bechthold (hereafter collectively referred to as Minnesota Towers) applied to the City
of Duluth for a special use permit to construct the tower, as required by the City’s
zoning laws. The Duluth Planning Commission recommended approval, but the
Duluth City Council, the City’s final decision-maker, rejected the Commission’s
approval resolution. Minnesota Towers then filed this action challenging the City’s
adverse action under federal and state law. The district court denied Minnesota
Towers summary judgment on its federal claims but granted summary judgment on
the ground that the City’s denial was untimely and therefore the application must be
deemed approved as a matter of state law. The City appeals. We reverse.
I. The Governing Minnesota Statute
In 1995, the Minnesota Legislature passed a statute providing that a city must
approve or deny a request for a zoning permit within sixty days unless the applicant
is given written notice that the period has been extended an additional sixty days.
1995 Minn. Laws ch. 248, art. 18, § 1, codified at Minn. Stat. § 15.99, subd. 2, 3(f)
(1996). Subdivision 2 further provided that failure to deny a request within sixty days
“is approval of the request.” In addition, if a city denies a request, “it must state in
writing the reasons for the denial at the time that it denies the request.” Minnesota
courts have rigorously enforced these requirements against non-complying cities in
cases such as Demolition Landfill Servs., LLC v. City of Duluth, 609 N.W.2d 278
(Minn. App. 2000).
In Demolition Landfill, the City voted down a resolution approving a permit
application. Though the vote in Demolition Landfill was taken within the statutory
deadline, the court held that the application was approved by operation of § 15.99, as
initially enacted, because (i) voting down a resolution approving an application was
not a denial for purposes of subdivision 2, and (ii) in any event the City did not
provide contemporaneous written reasons for its action, as subdivision 2 required.
609 N.W.2d at 281. The Legislature responded by amending subdivision 2, making
the original provision subdivision 2(a) and adding subdivisions 2(b) and 2(c), which
provide in relevant part:
(b) When a vote on a resolution or properly made motion to approve
a request fails for any reason, the failure shall constitute a denial of the
request provided that those voting against the motion state on the record
the reasons why they oppose the request. . . .
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(c) Except as provided in paragraph (b), if an agency, other than a
multimember governing body, denies the request, it must state in writing
the reasons for the denial at the time that it denies the request. If a
multimember governing body denies a request, it must state the reasons
for denial on the record and provide the applicant in writing a statement
of the reasons for the denial. If the written statement is not adopted at
the same time as the denial, it must be adopted at the next meeting
following the denial . . . but before the expiration of the time allowed for
making a decision under this section. The written statement must be
consistent with the reasons stated in the record at the time of the denial.
2003 Minn. Laws ch. 41, § 1, codified at Minn. Stat. § 15.99, subd. 2(b), (c).
After the statute was amended, a multi-member governing body voted in favor
of a proposed denial resolution on the last day of the sixty-day period but failed to
provide the applicant with the timely written statement of reasons that subdivision 2(c)
requires. The Minnesota Court of Appeals held that the application was deemed
approved as a matter of law because new subdivision 2(c) did not overrule the
Demolition Landfill holding that a timely written statement of reasons is mandatory.
Veit Co. v. Lake County, 707 N.W.2d 725, 729-30 (Minn. App. 2006).
II. Background
In this case, Minnesota Towers applied for the special use permit on September
29, 2004. The Planning Commission voted to approve the application on November
9 and forwarded a proposed approval resolution to the City Council. The City
Council voted 8-0 to reject the approval resolution on November 22, fifty-four days
after Minnesota Towers filed the application. Six Council members stated on the
record their reasons for denying the special use permit. On November 23, the Duluth
City Attorney sent a letter notifying Minnesota Towers of the Council’s action and
setting forth numerous reasons why the application was denied. The City Council
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passed a resolution adopting the City Attorney’s statement of reasons on December
6, sixty-eight days after the application was initially filed.
The summary judgment record reflects that it is Planning Commission practice
to extend the statutory sixty-day period to 120 days for every application by mailing
the extension notice § 15.99, subd. 3(f), requires. However, in this case, the Senior
Planner’s secretary drafted an extension letter, but no copy of a signed letter can be
found in the pertinent files of the City, of either applicant, or of Minnesota Towers’s
engineer and land surveyor, who would normally have been sent courtesy copies.
Minnesota Towers argued, and the district court agreed, that the City Attorney’s
November 23 letter to Minnesota Towers was not a written statement of reasons by
the City Council, as subdivision 2(c) requires, and the City Council’s December 6
resolution did not adopt this statement of reasons within the statutory sixty-day period.
Accordingly, the City failed to take proper action denying the application within sixty
days because it did not comply with subdivision 2(c) as construed in Veit. Turning
to the subdivision 3(f) extension issue, the court concluded, after discovery on the
issue, that an extension letter was never sent. Accordingly, the court ruled that the
application was approved by operation of law because the sixty-day deadline in
§ 15.99 was neither met nor extended. On appeal, the City argues that the district
court erred in applying subdivision 2(c) of § 15.99 and also overlooked genuine issues
of material fact precluding summary judgment on the extension issue. Given our
resolution of the first issue, we need not reach the second.
III. Discussion
In this case, as in Demolition Landfill, the City Council took action by voting
down a proposed resolution approving the Minnesota Towers application, rather than
by voting in favor of a resolution denying the requested permit. The City argues that
its actions were therefore taken under and are governed by subdivision 2(b) of
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§ 15.99, not subdivision 2(c). Subdivision 2(b) does not expressly require a written
statement of reasons within the sixty-day period, only that Council members “state on
the record the reasons why they oppose the request.” Therefore, the City contends,
its denial was timely under § 15.99.
Neither Veit nor any other reported Minnesota decision resolves the question
whether the provisions of subdivision 2(c) that drove the result in Veit apply to a
denial governed by subdivision 2(b).1 As a textual matter, the answer is far from
clear. Subdivision 2(b) appears to overrule both aspects of the holding in Demolition
Landfill. Under subdivision 2(b), an action voting down an approval resolution is a
denial of the request for purposes of § 15.99, subd. 2, and the requirement in
subdivision 2(a) that the City provide a written statement of reasons “at the time that
it denies the request” is satisfied if those voting against the resolution “state on the
record the reasons why they oppose the request.” Thus, as the district court
recognized, the issue under the amended statute turns on the proper construction of
subdivision 2(c).
The first sentence of subdivision 2(c) begins, “Except as provided in paragraph
(b).” If that introductory phrase applies to all of subdivision 2(c), then subdivision
2(b) is free standing, and the City’s interpretation is correct. On the other hand,
Minnesota Towers argues that the second, third, and fourth sentences of subdivision
2(c) address the situation covered by subdivision 2(b) and require a multimember
governing body such as the City Council to provide a contemporaneous statement of
reasons for the denial on the record and to follow that action by adopting a written
statement of reasons “at the next meeting following the denial . . . but before the
expiration of the time allowed for making a decision under this section.” Minnesota
1
See Hans Hagen Homes, Inc. v. City of Minnetrista, 713 N.W.2d 916, 922-23
(Minn. App. 2006) (agreeing with Veit’s construction of subd. 2(a) and 2(c) without
discussing subd. 2(b)), review granted, Orders on Petitions for Further Review Filed --
July 19, 2006, Minn. Law. App. Cts. Ed., July 31, 2006, at A21.
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Towers suggests that, unless subdivision 2(b) is construed as being subject to these
requirements, no written statement of reasons will be required when a request is
denied under subdivision 2(b), nullifying one of the statute’s important purposes.
Our resolution of this issue turns on a practical reality, reinforced by a textual
nuance in the statute. When the agenda of a city council meeting includes a proposed
resolution denying a zoning or permit request, the city’s staff know to prepare a
written statement of reasons supporting the denial in advance of the meeting. On the
other hand, when the agenda item is a proposed resolution approving the request but
the city council votes down that proposal, staff will likely not have anticipated that
action and prepared a written statement supporting it before the action is taken. Thus,
if subdivision 2(c) as construed in Veit and Hans Hagen Homes applies to denials
effected under subdivision 2(b), the statutory sixty-day period will be effectively
reduced by whatever time is required under local law to deny the request at one
meeting and adopt a written statement of reasons at the next meeting.
We infer that the Legislature recognized the significance of this practical reality
from a textual nuance in the statute. Subdivision 2(b) provides that, when a request
is denied by voting down an approval resolution, “those voting against the motion
[must] state on the record the reasons why they oppose the request.” But subdivision
2(c) provides that, when a city council “denies a request, it must state the reasons for
denial on the record,” and a written statement of reasons adopted at the next meeting
“must be consistent with the reasons stated in the record at the time of the denial.”
Here, for example, no less than six members of the City Council stated on the record
their personal reasons for voting against the approval resolution. If subdivision 2(c)
applies to such actions, staff must then draft a written statement “consistent with”
what may be disparate reasons stated in the record by individual council members,
virtually guaranteeing that even timely written statements under subdivision 2(b) will
be subject to painstaking judicial review for consistency.
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For these reasons, we conclude that imposing the mandatory written statement
requirements of subdivision 2(c) would effectively defeat the obvious purpose of
subdivision 2(b). We therefore conclude that the Legislature must have intended the
term “denies a request” in the second sentence of subdivision 2(c) to mean actions by
multimember governing bodies approving resolutions to deny a permit or zoning
request. In reaching this conclusion, we agree with Minnesota Towers that requiring
government agencies to provide written statements of reasons for denying zoning
requests was an important purpose of § 15.99. Indeed, we think such a requirement
may fairly be implied from subdivision 2(b)’s statutory origins. But the issue is not
whether the City was required to provide a written statement of reasons within a
reasonable time.2 The issue is whether subdivision 2(c) mandates that a written
statement be provided within § 15.99’s sixty-day period for denials effected in
accordance with subdivision 2(b). Though the question is not free from doubt, we
conclude the Supreme Court of Minnesota would answer it in the negative and uphold
the City’s denial of the Minnesota Towers application.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for
further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
BEAM, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
The court concedes that its conclusions are "not free from doubt." Ante at 7.
I concur in this observation to the point that I agree with the district court's analysis
and would affirm.
Duluth, by its adopted procedures, admits, in essence, that it faced a firm sixty-
day deadline in meeting all of its statutory obligations unless plaintiffs/appellees were
"given written notice that the period has been extended an additional sixty days."
2
Federal law required the City to provide a written decision denying a request
for a permit for a telecommunications tower. See 47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)(B)(iii).
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Ante at 2. It apparently did not do this or, at least, cannot now prove that it followed
this previously established and, in this case, necessary protocol. Duluth now seeks to
use this court as a cat's paw to "pull its burning chestnuts from the fire." Dictionary
of Phrase and Fable (1898). Minnesota law, established both by statute and the
several judicial decisions cited by the court, in conjunction with applicable City
meeting procedures obviously prompted Duluth "to extend the statutory sixty-day
period to 120 days by mailing every applicant the extension notice" referred to above.
Ante at 4 (emphasis added). Thus, the court's resolution of the opposing parties' views
on legislative intent, based on a "textual nuance in the statute" and a perceived
shortening of the legislatively mandated sixty-day period "by whatever time is
required under local law to deny [a] request at one meeting and adopt a written
statement" at the next, loses its force. Ante at 6. The solution for Duluth was to act
within the statutorily mandated sixty-day period or to send the extension notice as
required by the Minnesota lawmakers and thereby elongate the time it had to take
action within the framework of its regularly adopted local meeting schedules. It did
neither. So, the permit should issue as a matter of law.
Accordingly, I dissent.
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