RONALD G. WONDEL, NORMA J. WONDEL, and BETTIE J. HUNNIUS, Petitioners-Appellants/Cross-Respondents and JAMES BROCK CHARTER IV and STEPHANIE CONNELL, Intervenors/Third Party Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Respondents v. CAMDEN COUNTY COMMISSION and GREG HASTY, BEVERLY THOMAS, DON WILLIAMS, Respondents/Defendants-Respondents/Cross-Appellants and CLARK DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC. and ELLIS CLARK, TRUSTEE, Respondents/Defendants-Respondents/Cross-Appellants and THOMAS J. TANNER, Respondent/Defendant-Respondent
RONALD G. WONDEL, NORMA J. WONDEL, )
and BETTIE J. HUNNIUS, )
)
Petitioners-Appellants/Cross-Respondents, 1 )
)
and ) Nos. SD35323, 35324,
) 35337, 35338
JAMES BROCK CHARTER IV and STEPHANIE )
CONNELL, ) Filed: February 26, 2021
)
Intervenors/Third Party Plaintiffs- )
Appellants/Cross-Respondents, )
)
vs. )
)
CAMDEN COUNTY COMMISSION and GREG )
HASTY, BEVERLY THOMAS, DON WILLIAMS,)
)
Respondents/Defendants-Respondents/ )
2
Cross-Appellants, )
)
and )
)
CLARK DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC. )
and ELLIS CLARK, TRUSTEE, )
1
Petitioners in these appeals originally included Calvin E. Hunnius and Marshall Peterson. Mr. Hunnius
died on November 10, 2019, and Mr. Peterson died on January 20, 2020. Their appeals were dismissed on
July 29, 2020.
2
Respondent/Defendant commissioners in these appeals originally included Cliff Luber. Mr. Luber ceased
to be a commissioner and, on August 10, 2020, commissioner Don Williams was substituted in place of Mr.
Luber pursuant to Rule 52.13(d).
1
)
Respondents/Defendants-Respondents/ )
Cross-Appellants, 3 )
)
and THOMAS J. TANNER, )
)
Respondent/Defendant-Respondent. 4 )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CAMDEN COUNTY
Honorable Robert M. Liston, Senior Judge
AFFIRMED
These appeals are appeals and cross appeals from a decision of the trial court that
reversed and remanded back to the Camden County Commission (the “Commission”) its
decisions to vacate under section 71.270 undeveloped roadways and common areas
shown on the plat of Purvis View subdivision – which subdivision was in Camden
County outside the limits of any incorporated municipality. 5
Facts and Procedural Background
Relevant Proceedings Before the Camden County Commission
By letter dated August 22, 2011, counsel, Gregory D. Williams, forwarded to the
Camden County Clerk a “Petition for Vacation of Roadway and Unplatted Common
Area” in “Purvis View Subdivision,” and requested that the “matter” be “set” “for
hearing on October 3, 2011, at 10:00am [sic].” In the petition, Mr. Williams identified
petitioners as Clark Development Company, Inc., Nancy J. Clark, Trustee, and James H.
3
Respondents/Defendants in these appeals originally included Nancy J. Clark, Trustee. Ms. Clark died on
July 20, 2020, and Ellis Clark, Trustee, was substituted for Nancy J. Clark, Trustee, on August 10, 2020.
4
Thomas J. Tanner, who lived in Kansas, acknowledged on October 5, 2016, receipt of a summons and
petition in the trial court. Although named as a respondent/defendant before the trial court, the record does
not show any further participation by Mr. Tanner in the lawsuit in the trial court. Mr. Tanner did not appeal
from the trial court’s judgment, and did not participate in these appeals.
5
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to RSMo 2000, and all rule references are to
Missouri Court Rules (2020).
2
Tanner, 6 and represented that he was attorney for these persons. The petition sought to
vacate “various undeveloped roadways and common areas shown on the [p]lat of Purvis
View Subdivision” and “[a]djoining [p]etitioners [sic] land” pursuant to section 71.270.
The Commission’s October 2011 Term
Publication of notice in a newspaper occurred on September 7, 2011, and gave
notice that the petition was set for hearing on October 3, 2011 at 10 a.m. before the
Commission “at which time interested parties in said subdivision may appear and show
cause why” the petition should not be granted. The petition was “tabled” at the October
3, 2011 hearing.
The Commission’s January 2012 Term
The petition was “tabled” at a hearing on January 10, 2012.
The Commission’s April 2012 Term
A second publication of notice in a newspaper occurred on March 21, 2012, and
gave notice that the petition was set for hearing twelve days later on April 2, 2012 at 10
a.m. before the Commission “at which time interested parties in said subdivision may
appear and show cause why” the petition should not be granted. The Commission then
“t[oo]k[] up” the petition on April 2, 2012 during the Commission’s April term, and
entered an order vacating the “roadways and unplatted common areas” as requested in the
petition. There is no indication in the record that any person (other than Mr. Williams)
interested in the petition appeared at any of these hearings before the Commission. On
April 17, 2012, the Commission held an “informal meeting” with Ronald and Norma
Wondel “to discuss [these individuals’] objections to” the vacation on April 2, 2012.
6
James H. Tanner appears to have died previously on October 21, 2010.
3
The Commission’s July 2012 Term
On June 21, 2012, Mr. Wondel signed a request that the Commission “set aside”
its April 2, 2012 order on the grounds that “posting requirements” for the order were not
fulfilled, and “required signatures” necessary to support the order “were not obtained.”
On July 12, 2012, Mr. Wondel’s request was granted. 7 The record does not reflect notice
to any person by publication, posting or otherwise that the Commission would take up
Mr. Wondel’s request at the July 12, 2012 hearing before the Commission, and does not
reflect the presence of any interested person at the July 12 hearing.
The Commission’s April 2015 Term
On April 27, 2015, 8 the Commission “t[oo]k[] up” Marshall L. Peterson and
James O’Brien’s request that the Commission “reconsider its prior Order vacating certain
roadways in Purvis View Subdivision.” 9 After setting forth a number of findings of fact
and conclusions of law, the order declared that the Commission’s “actions” on July 12,
2012 “were without jurisdiction, and are null, void and without legal effect,” and the
Commission’s order “on April 2, 2012 was a valid, legal and binding determination of
this Commission and remains in full force and effect.” The order recites that Mr.
Peterson, Mr. O’Brien, and Ellis Clark, corporate representative of Clark Development
Company, Inc., were present for the “open session” of the Commission. The record does
not reflect notice to any person by publication, posting or otherwise that the Commission
7
The record does not show any order by the Commission setting aside its previous April 2, 2012 order, but
a copy of Mr. Wondel’s request that was signed by two of the three commissioners appears to have been
filed with the recorder of deeds.
8
Minutes for April 27, 2015 reflect that the Commission “met with” Marshall Peterson and Ellis Clark but
“no official action” was taken. Minutes for a hearing on May 29, 2015 during the Commission’s April
term appear to reflect the action memorialized in the order.
9
Neither Mr. Peterson nor Mr. O’Brien are a party on appeal as both are deceased and, as stated earlier, the
appeal was dismissed as to decedent Peterson. They are named for clarification of factual events only.
4
would take up Messrs. Peterson and O’Brien’s request at the Commission’s April 27,
2015 “open session.”
The Appellants/Cross-Respondents in these appeals are Wondel et al. and Charter
et al. (designated in this opinion as “Relators” and “Intervenors,” respectively, based on
their roles before the trial court). Relators and Intervenors brought this suit in the trial
court requesting relief from the Commission’s decisions on multiple theories:
Brief Summary of Relators’ Remaining Legal Theories
• Count I – Claim for judicial review of the Commission’s order in April or
May 2015 under the Missouri Administrative Procedure Act (“MAPA”) either
as a contested case or as a noncontested case, and requesting that the order be
reversed.
• Count II – Request for a writ of mandamus under section 536.150 setting
aside the Commission’s order.
• Count III – Claim for declaratory and injunctive relief under section 536.150
including prohibiting vacation in the future.
• Count IV – Claim for declaratory relief on the theory the vacation at issue was
an inverse condemnation. 10
Brief Summary of Intervenors’ Theories (From Second Amended Petition as Amended by
Interlineation)
• Count I (against all defendants) – Claim for judicial review of the
Commission’s order in April 2012 and order in April or May 2015 under the
MAPA on the basis the orders were entered in contested cases, and should be
set aside.
• Count II (against the Clark defendants and Thomas J. Tanner) – Claim for
declaratory relief quieting title to the vacated roadways and unplatted common
areas.
• Counts III and IV (against the Clark defendants and Thomas J. Tanner) –
Claim for declaratory relief under two separate statutes setting aside the two
orders.
• Count V (against the Clark defendants and Thomas J. Tanner) – Claim for an
easement as “a way of strict necessity.”
10
Relators’ first amended petition also included a Count V claiming negligent misrepresentation that
Relators dismissed in December 2016 as to all defendants other than Camden County, and that the trial
court dismissed in January 2017 as to the remaining defendants. Relators do not challenge the trial court’s
dismissal of Count V in this appeal, and we do not reference the count further.
5
• Count VI (against all defendants) – Claim for a writ of mandamus ordering
the Commission to set aside all prior orders vacating roadways and unplatted
common areas within Purvis View subdivision.
Relators and Intervenors prevailed in their request for remand to the Commission
because of “the failure of the County Commission to provide proper notice and to
conduct the hearing into the issue in the manner provided in the cited statute.” However,
the trial court also held that Relators and Intervenors had “failed to show irreparable harm
sufficient to justify the Declaratory Judgment or sufficient significant harm to justify
issuance of the Permanent Writ of Mandamus.” Despite prevailing on their claim that the
Commission failed to provide proper notice and a proper hearing, Relators and
Intervenors sought further declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent the Commission
from entering any orders vacating the roadways at any time in the future.
We affirm the judgment remanding the vacation of the roadways and public areas
to the Commission for further consideration. In light of the fact the trial court denied a
writ of mandamus and declaratory relief because Relators and Intervenors failed to prove
sufficient harm, the trial court did not err in denying Relators’ 11 and Intervenors’ claims
for declaratory and injunctive relief prohibiting the vacation of the roadways at any time
in the future.
Summary of Cross-Appellants’ Remaining Legal Theories
The Respondents/Cross-Appellants in these appeals are the Commission and its
three commissioners, and the original parties who sought to have the roadways and
common areas vacated (Clark Development Company, Inc. and Ellis Clark, Trustee).
11
Relators, the Wondels and Ms. Hunnius, also contend before us that the trial court erred in dismissing
before trial their claim for inverse condemnation; however, because there is no taking of their property by
any governmental authority at this time there can be no suit for a “taking.”
6
These parties are designated in this opinion as “Defendants” based on their roles before
the trial court. In two points, Defendant Commission contends:
• that a notice by publication on September 7, 2011 was sufficient under section
71.270 as the proceedings before the Commission were noncontested cases;
and
• The Commission further claims that the trial court erred in reviewing the
proceedings before the Commission as contested cases under section 536.140.
Although we conclude that the proceedings before the Commission were noncontested
cases because resolution of that issue is necessary to determine our standard of review
and whether we review the trial court’s amended judgment or the Commission’s
decisions, we believe the Commission waived this claim because at trial the Commission
took the position a number of times that the proceedings were contested cases.
In three points, Defendants Clark Development Company, Inc. and Ellis Clark,
Trustee, assert notice by publication on September 7, 2011 was sufficient under section
71.270, and the proceedings before the Commission were contested cases, therefore, a
statute of limitations under section 536.110 barred relief. We disagree that the
proceedings before the Commission were “contested” cases and that there was sufficient
notice by publication on September 7, 2011.
7
Standard of Review
Relevant Proceedings Before the Commission Were Noncontested Cases
To address the parties’ contentions, 12 we must first determine whether the
proceedings before the Commission were noncontested cases or contested cases under the
Missouri Administrative Procedure Act because that determination then will govern our
standard of review and tell us whether we are reviewing the decisions of the Commission
or the amended judgment of the trial court. We believe the proceedings before the
Commission in this matter were noncontested cases under our Supreme Court’s decision
in City of Valley Park v. Armstrong, 273 S.W.3d 504 (Mo. banc 2009). As a result,
Relators and Intervenors properly sought to contest under section 536.150 the
Commission’s actions in vacating “various undeveloped roadways and common areas
shown on the [p]lat of Purvis View Subdivision” pursuant to section 71.270.
“The Missouri Administrative Procedure Act provides for two types of cases:
contested cases and non-contested cases.” Furlong Companies, Inc. v. City of Kansas
City, 189 S.W.3d 157, 165 (Mo. banc 2006); see also section 49.230 (“Appeals from the
decisions, findings and orders of county commissions shall be conducted under the
provisions of chapter 536,” which is the Missouri Administrative Procedure Act.).
Further, in City of Valley Park, our Supreme Court observed the following in the course
12
At trial in June 2017, Relators and Intervenors asserted alternative theories some of which rested on the
proceedings before the Commission being characterized as noncontested cases under the MAPA, and some
of which rested on the proceedings before the Commission being contested cases under the MAPA.
Defendants Clark took the position at trial that the proceedings before the Commission were
contested cases under sections 536.100 through 536.140, and only the Commission’s third order (in April
or May 2015) was appealed to the circuit court timely under section 536.110 (i.e., within thirty days after
the order). Defendants Clark also sought and were granted a continuing objection to the introduction of
evidence not included in the record created before the Commission on the theory that the trial court could
only consider the record before the Commission in reviewing a contested case.
Defendant Commission also took a position at trial that the proceedings before the Commission
were contested cases.
8
of holding that a proceeding before a boundary commission to consider the annexation of
a park pursuant to section 72.403 was a noncontested case:
The classification of a case as “contested” or “noncontested” is
determined as a matter of law. Cade v. State, 990 S.W.2d 32, 36
(Mo.App.1999). As noted in Furlong Companies, Inc. v. City of Kansas
City, 189 S.W.3d 157, 165 (Mo. banc 2006):
Contested case review is controlled by sections
536.100 to 536.140. Contested cases provide the parties
with an opportunity for a formal hearing with the
presentation of evidence, including sworn testimony of
witnesses and cross-examination of witnesses, and require
written findings of fact and conclusions of law. Hagely v.
Board of Education of the Webster Groves School District,
841 S.W.2d 663, 668 (Mo. banc 1992). The review of a
contested case is a review by the trial court of the record
created before the administrative body. Section 536.140.
The trial court's decision upon such review is appealable,
but the appellate court also looks back to the record created
before the administrative body. City of Cabool v. Missouri
State Board of Mediation, 689 S.W.2d 51, 53 (Mo. banc
1985).
Non-contested cases do not require formal
proceedings or hearings before the administrative body.
Farmer's Bank of Antonia v. Kostman, 577 S.W.2d 915,
921 (Mo.App. 1979). As such, there is no record required
for review. Phipps v. School District of Kansas City, 645
S.W.2d 91, 94–95 (Mo.App.1982). In the review of a non-
contested decision, the circuit court does not review the
administrative record, but hears evidence, determines facts,
and adjudges the validity of the agency decision. Id.
Under the procedures of section 536.150, the circuit court
conducts such a hearing as an original action. Id. at 96;
section 536.150.1.
In either a contested or a non-contested case the
private litigant is entitled to challenge the governmental
agency's decision. The difference is simply that in a
contested case the private litigant must try his or her case
before the agency, and judicial review is on the record of
that administrative trial, whereas in a non-contested case
the private litigant tries his or her case to the court.
Depending upon the circumstances, this difference may
result in procedural advantages or disadvantages to the
9
parties, but in either situation, the litigant is entitled to
develop an evidentiary record in one forum or another.
....
The key to the classification of a case as contested or noncontested
is the requirement of a hearing. Cade at 36. The term “hearing,” as used
in section 536.010(2)[] means a proceeding at which a “measure of
procedural formality” is followed. Hagely v. Board of Educ. of Webster
Groves School Dist., 841 S.W.2d 663, 668 (Mo. banc 1992). Procedural
formalities in contested cases generally include: notice of the issues
(section 536.067); oral evidence taken upon oath or affirmation and the
cross-examination of witnesses (section 536.070); the making of a record
(section 536.070); adherence to evidentiary rules (section 536.070); and
written decisions including findings of fact and conclusions of law
(section 536.090). Id.
In determining if a hearing comports with these formalities, the
statute requiring the hearing is examined.
City of Valley Park, 273 S.W.3d at 506-07 (footnote omitted). Further, in determining
whether a hearing with a measure of procedural formality is required, the issue is whether
a sufficient hearing was required by law not whether the agency actually conducted a
sufficient hearing. See Ard v. Shannon County Commission, 424 S.W.3d 468, 472 &
n.3 (Mo.App. S.D. 2014) (issue is whether a hearing was required by law not whether a
hearing actually was conducted).
In City of Valley Park, the operative statute, section 72.403, required much more
than section 71.270. Section 72.403 required (1) written notice to certain persons in
addition to notice by publication, (2) a public hearing, (3) that, at the public hearing, “any
. . . interested person” “may also present evidence,” and (4) the boundary commission
“shall approve the [proposed boundary change] if it finds” certain things after considering
eleven factors. City of Valley Park, 273 S.W.3d at 507-09. However, the statute did not
require “testimony upon oath or affirmation,” “cross-examination of witnesses,” and
“formal adherence to procedural rules of evidence.” Id. at 507. Our Supreme Court held
10
that the proceeding before the boundary commission under section 72.403 was a
noncontested case. Id.
Similarly, section 71.270 did not require testimony under oath, cross-examination
of witnesses, or adherence to rules of evidence. Section 71.270 also did not require the
making of a record. 13 As a result, we believe the proceedings before the Commission in
April 2012, July 2012, and April or May 2015 with respect to the vacation (or not) of
undeveloped roads and common areas in Purvis View subdivision were noncontested
cases.
Based on that conclusion:
The standard of judicial review of noncontested cases is governed
by section 536.150. THF Chesterfield North Development, L.L.C. v. City
of Chesterfield, 106 S.W.3d 13, 18 (Mo.App.2003). The circuit court does
not review the record for competent and substantial evidence, but instead
conducts a de novo review in which it hears evidence on the merits, makes
a record, determines the facts and decides whether the agency’s decision is
unconstitutional, unlawful, unreasonable, arbitrary, capricious or
otherwise involves an abuse of discretion. Id. The circuit court does not
defer to facts found or credibility assessed by the agency and need not
conform doubtful evidence to the agency’s decision. Cade [v. State, 990
S.W.2d 32,] 37 [(Mo.App. 1999)]. The circuit court in a noncontested
case acts to determine the evidence and give judgment from that evidence.
Id.
City of Valley Park, 273 S.W.3d at 508. In turn:
We review the judgment of the circuit court, rather than the decision of the
administrative agency. [State ex rel. Christian Health Care of Springfield,
Inc. v. Missouri Dept. of Health and Senior Services, 229 S.W.3d 270, 275
(Mo.App. 2007)]. An appellate court “reviews the circuit court’s
judgment to determine whether its finding that the agency decision was or
was not unconstitutional, unlawful, unreasonable, arbitrary, capricious, or
13
Even if section 422.1.d of the Camden County Unified Land-Use Code applied to the vacation of platted
but undeveloped roads (i.e., a “road of record) under section 422.1.a as well as the vacation of other
portions of a “subdivision plat” (e.g., a common area) and required the Commission to make specific
findings as argued by Intervenors, that would not convert the proceedings before the Commission under
section 71.270 into a contested case because there still would be no statutory requirement for testimony
under oath, cross-examination, adherence to rules of evidence, or making a record.
11
the product of an abuse of discretion rests on substantial evidence and
correctly declares and applies the law.” Missouri Nat. Educ. Ass'n v.
Missouri State Bd. of Educ., 34 S.W.3d 266, 275 (Mo.App.2000). This
standard requires an appellate court to accept the trial court’s credibility
determinations and view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
judgment, while disregarding all contrary evidence and permissible
inferences. State ex rel. Koster v. Morningland of the Ozarks, LLC, 384
S.W.3d 346, 350 (Mo.App. 2012).
Ard, 424 S.W.3d at 473. Of course, a basic precept is that “no evidence is needed to find
against the party who bore the burden of proof or to uphold that decision on appeal.”
Beaman v. Lowe’s Home Centers, Inc., 601 S.W.3d 330, 331 (Mo.App. S.D. 2020).
Proceedings in Trial Court
Relevant Pleadings
In June 2015, Ronald G. and Norma J. Wondel, Marshall Peterson, and Calvin E.
and Bettie J. Hunnius (collectively “Relators” before the trial court) filed a petition for a
writ of mandamus against the Camden County Commission, its three commissioners in
their official capacity, and Clark Development Co. Inc. Thereafter, in January 2016,
James Charter IV and Stephanie Connell (collectively “Intervenors” before the trial
court) filed a petition in intervention for a writ of mandamus against the same defendants.
Relators and Intervenors subsequently added Nancy J. Clark, Trustee, and Thomas J.
Tanner (successor to James H. Tanner) as defendants (we refer to the defendants
collectively as “Defendants” before the trial court).
Relators’ Pleadings at Trial
With the exception of Count IV that was dismissed before trial, 14 Relators went to
trial on their first amended petition filed July 27, 2016, which asserted four claims:
14
Relators dismissed Count IV in December 2016 as to all defendants other than Camden County, and the
trial court dismissed Count IV in January 2017 as to the remaining defendants. Relators challenge the trial
court’s dismissal of Count IV in these appeals.
12
• Count I – a claim that Relators are entitled to judicial review of the
Commission’s order purporting to reflect action taken on April 27, 2015 on
the basis that the order was entered either in a contested case under sections
536.100 through 536.140, or in a noncontested case under section 536.150,
and, in either event, that the order should be reversed.
• Count II – a request for a writ of mandamus pursuant to section 536.150
“set[ting] aside” the Commission’s purported April 27, 2015 order.
• Count III – a claim for declaratory and injunctive relief pursuant to section
536.150 and the statutes and rules relating to declaratory judgments and
injunctions, and a declaration that the “roadways at issue” “be open and not
vacated” and an injunction “prohibiting any respondent from closing the
same.”
• Count IV – a claim for “declaratory relief” that the Commission “be denied
ability to vacate the roadways and unplatted common area” at issue on the
theory that the vacation “operat[ed] as a regulatory taking without just
compensation” (i.e., an inverse condemnation).
Intervenors’ Pleadings at Trial
Intervenors went to trial on a second amended petition (as amended by
interlineation) filed on June 2, 2017. In their second amended petition, Intervenors
asserted six claims:
• Count I (against all Defendants) – a claim for judicial review of the
Commission’s April 2, 2012 and purported April 27, 2015 orders pursuant to
sections 536.100 through 536.140 on the basis the orders were entered in a
contested case or cases, and requesting that the two orders be set aside and the
vacated “roadways and unplatted common areas” be returned to their pre-
vacation condition.
• Count II (against Clark Development Co. Inc., Nancy Clark, and Thomas J.
Tanner) – a claim for a declaratory judgment pursuant to section 527.150
(suits to determine interest and quiet title) setting aside the two orders and
quieting title, and requiring the vacated “roadways and unplatted common
areas” be returned to their pre-vacation condition.
• Count III (against Clark Development Co. Inc., Nancy Clark, and Thomas J.
Tanner) – a claim for a declaratory judgment pursuant to section 527.020
(power to construe) setting aside the two orders, and requiring the vacated
“roadways and unplatted common areas” be returned to their pre-vacation
condition.
• Count IV (against Clark Development Co. Inc., Nancy Clark, and Thomas J.
Tanner) – a claim for declaratory judgment pursuant to section 527.050
(enumeration of specific powers does not limit general powers) setting aside
the two orders, and requiring the vacated “roadways and unplatted common
areas” be returned to their pre-vacation condition.
13
• Count V (against Clark Development Co. Inc., Nancy Clark, and Thomas J.
Tanner) – a claim for a judgment pursuant to section 228.342 (establishing or
widening a private road where the private road “is a way of strict necessity”)
granting Intervenors authority to use one of the vacated roadways. In a
scrivener’s error, the trial court indicated in its amended judgment that the
parties agreed to reserve Intervenors’ “statutory easement” count (i.e., Count
V). The trial court, on September 27, 2017, after trial, specifically dismissed
Count V of Intervenors’ second amended petition (as amended by
interlineation) without prejudice when Intervenors “advised” the count “may
be dismissed.” No party challenges the record’s accuracy in showing the trial
court’s action on September 27, 2017. As a result, Relators’ and Intervenors’
claim before us that the trial court’s amended judgment is not final because
the amended judgment does not resolve Intervenors’ Count V is rejected. 15
• Count VI (against all Defendants) – a claim for a writ of mandamus ordering
the Commission to “once and forever vacat[e] all prior orders” that vacated
“roadways and unplatted common areas located within Purvis View
Subdivision.”
The Trial Court’s Amended Judgment
In an amended judgment entered on December 5, 2017, the trial court (1) ruled
that the Commission’s order issued on April 2, 2012 and the Commission’s order
purporting to reflect action taken on April 27, 2015 were “void as to the roadways and
public areas” at issue “due to the failure of [the] Commission to provide the procedures
required by Section 71.270,” and are vacated; (2) ruled that the “record” does “not
adequately support[]” a finding that the Commission’s actions were “arbitrary;” and (3)
denied a writ of mandamus and vacated a temporary writ previously entered; (4) denied
the “Counts” requesting declaratory judgment; and (5) denied all other claims not
“expressly addressed.”
The amended judgment also contains the following findings of fact and
conclusions of law: (1) Section 71.270 applies even though “the dedication of the
subdivision is to the use of the lot owners of the subdivision rather than the general
15
Appellants’/Cross-Respondents’ Motion to Dismiss the Appeal, which raised the same issue and was
taken with the case, is likewise denied.
14
public.” (2) Section 71.270 “requires a full 15 day[s] notice.” (3) The failure to give the
notice required under section 71.270 “invalidates” the Commission’s order on April 2,
2012 and the order that purports to reflect the Commission’s actions on April 27, 2015. 16
“[The September 2011 notice] was a notice of more than 15 days before the term in
which the matter was first taken up, and tabled, by the Commission. . . . The September
notice did not result in a determination of the question and the matter was taken up in the
following term of the Commission. . . . [T]he Court finds and believes that Section
71.270 . . . applies to the term of the Commission in which the order is ‘presented’ for
consideration and no notice of sufficient length was [made] prior to the April 2012
term[.] . . . The notice made in September, 2011 pertained to a consideration in a different
term than the term in which it was actually presented for consideration. The record of the
Commission does not detail that the road vacation issue was actually presented for
determination in October[.] . . . Notice of consideration of the matter in the April 2012
[sic] is believed to have been required.” (4) The parties did not challenge whether section
71.270 is constitutional, and the “police power of the state to regulate the private roads . .
. was not made an issue in the pleadings . . ., and was, therefore, not considered by” the
trial court. (5) Although not directly stated, the trial court appears to have determined
that the proceedings before the Commission under section 71.270 were a “contested
case.” (6) The trial court denied the issuance of a permanent writ of mandamus because
Plaintiffs 17 failed to meet their burden to show “great injury[.] . . . Plaintiffs have the
burden of proving sufficient harm to the Court’s satisfaction. The Court does not believe
The trial court believed the validity of the Commission’s actions on July 12, 2012 was “not before the
16
Court.”
17
Early in the amended judgment, the trial court defined “Plaintiffs” as including Relators and Intervenors.
15
the record sufficient to justify the issuance of the permanent Writ requested.” (7) The
amended judgment was rendered solely against the Commission and its commissioners.
“No allegation of liability has been adequately established against Defendants Clark. The
Judgments herein entered are solely for the failure of the County Commission to provide
proper notice and to conduct the hearing into the issue in the manner provided in the cited
statute. The Plaintiffs have failed to show irreparable harm sufficient to justify the
Declaratory Judgment or sufficient significant harm to justify issuance of the Permanent
Writ of Mandamus.”
Analysis
As noted above,
We review the judgment of the circuit court, rather than the decision of the
administrative agency. An appellate court “reviews the circuit court’s
judgment to determine whether its finding that the agency decision was or
was not unconstitutional, unlawful, unreasonable, arbitrary, capricious, or
the product of an abuse of discretion rests on substantial evidence and
correctly declares and applies the law.
Ard, 424 S.W.3d at 473 (internal citations omitted).
Defendants 18 challenge the trial court’s ruling that the Commission’s order issued
on April 2, 2012 and the Commission’s order regarding actions taken on April 27, 2015
failed to follow proper procedure in holding hearings. The trial court basically placed the
parties in the position they were in prior to the initial petition to vacate the roadways.
Relators 19 and Intervenors collectively challenge the trial court’s rulings denying the
additional relief sought in Plaintiffs first amended petition, and in Intervenors’ second
amended petition (as amended by interlineation).
18
Thomas J. Tanner is an exception as he is not participating in this appeal.
Those whose appeals have not been dismissed, i.e., Ronald G. and Norma J. Wondel, and Bettie J.
19
Hunnius.
16
The Trial Court Properly Concluded That the Notice Provision of Section 71.270 Was
Specific to a Term of the Commission with the Result That the Commission’s Actions in
April 2012, July 2012 and April or May 2015 Were Unlawful and Void
The Commission had four terms each year “commencing on the first Mondays in
January, April, July, and October.” Section 49.170, RSMo Cum.Supp. 2003. Under
section 71.270.1, the Commission “upon petition of” certain land owners “may vacate the
streets, alleys, roads, public easements, public square or common or part of either”
“marked on the recorded plat of [a] subdivision” that lies “outside the limits of any
incorporated town, village or city.”
Under section 71.270.2, “[n]o such vacation shall be ordered until proof shall be
made to the commission of [notice by publication or posting], at least fifteen days prior to
the term of the commission at which such petition shall be presented, that application
would be made at that term of the commission for the [proposed] vacation[.]” (Emphasis
added.) Although a panel of our Supreme Court in Rose v. Kansas City & G.A. Ry. Co.,
30 S.W. 518, 520 (Mo. 1895), indicated that adjournments within a county court’s (the
predecessor to our current county commissions) regular, three-month term beginning in
May “were but continuances of the regular May term,” we do not believe that rule applies
to new terms of the Commission. We believe that the phrase “at that term of the
commission” makes the required notice specific to each term of the Commission at which
the petition is “presented” or application is “made.”
From its minutes and April 2012 order, the Commission appears to have
interpreted the notice required under 71.270.2 consistently with our interpretation. The
minutes from the Commission’s October 3, 2011 “meeting” state “[t]his was the first time
for this petition to be presented” and the petition was “table[d]”; the minutes from the
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January 10, 2012 “meeting” state a motion to “table the request for vacation” “passed”;
the minutes from the April 2, 2012 “meeting” state a motion to “accept the petition for
vacation as presented” “passed”; and the Commission’s April 2 order recites notice for
the April 2 “public hearing”; however, the notice was defective for the April 2, 2012
hearing because it was given on March 21, 2012, which was less than fifteen days before
April 2, 2012.
Because the notice required under section 71.270 is specific to a term of the
Commission and the notice was defective for the Commission’s order on April 2, 2012
since only twelve days notice was given rather fifteen days, the Commission’s April 2,
2012 order was unlawful and “void.” See Evans v. Andres, 42 S.W.2d 32, 34 (Mo.App.
Spfld.D. 1931) (failure to give the required notice renders a county court’s order “null
and void” because the notice is “jurisdictional” for the county court). The record does
not reveal any notice for the Commission’s July 12, 2012 and April or May 2015 actions
with the result that those actions also were unlawful and void.
The Trial Court Properly Denied Relators’ and Intervenors’ Requested Additional
Mandamus, Declaratory, Injunctive and Other Relief
The trial court properly denied Relators’ and Intervenors’ requested additional
relief. Some of the additional relief requested was based on Relators’ and Intervenors’
theory that the proceedings before the Commission were contested cases. Denial of that
relief was proper because the proceedings before the Commission were noncontested
cases. The trial court found that Relators and Intervenors failed to meet their burden of
proof to establish their right to the additional relief sought in mandamus, declaratory and
injunctive causes of action. As the parties with the burden of proof as to these theories in
their original suit in the trial court, no evidence was necessary for the trial court to find
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against them on that basis or for us to uphold the trial court’s decision on appeal. As
previously mentioned, we also reject (1) Relators’ claim for inverse condemnation since
at this time there is no taking of Relators’ property by any governmental authority; and
(2) Relators’ and Intervenors’ claim that the trial court’s amended judgement is not a
final judgment because it does not resolve Intervenors’ claim for an easement of “strict
necessity” because the trial court dismissed that claim after trial with Intervenors’
agreement. In light of the trial court’s denial of a writ of mandamus and declaratory
relief because Relators and Intervenors failed to prove sufficient harm, the trial court did
not err in denying Relators’ and Intervenors’ claims for declaratory and injunctive relief
prohibiting the vacation at any time in the future of the undeveloped roadways at issue.
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Nancy Steffen Rahmeyer, P.J. – Opinion Author
William W. Francis, Jr., J. – Concurs
Daniel E. Scott, S.J. – Concurs
19