SUPREME COURT OF ARIZONA
En Banc
STEPHAN G. ZAJAC, a single man, ) Arizona Supreme Court
and EVELIA S. ZAJAC, a single ) No. CV-03-0397-PR
woman, )
) Court of Appeals
Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) Division Two
) No. 2 CA-CV 03-0077
v. )
) Pinal County Superior
CITY OF CASA GRANDE, an Arizona ) Court
municipal corporation; WAL-MART ) No. CV200200932
INCORPORATED, )
)
Defendants-Appellees. ) O P I N I O N
)
__________________________________)
No. CV200200932
Pinal County Superior Court
The Honorable Kenneth L. Fields, Judge
JUDGMENT REINSTATED
No. 2 CA-CV 03-0077
Court of Appeals, Division Two
VACATED
Morrill & Aronson, P.L.C. Phoenix
By John T. Moshier
Scott D. Larmore
and
Cole, Massey & Finley Casa Grande
By A. Thomas Cole
Attorneys for Plaintiffs-Appellants
Casa Grande City Attorney’s Office Casa Grande
By Kay Bigelow
Attorneys for Defendant/Appellee City of Casa Grande
Bryan Cave LLP Phoenix
By Steven A. Hirsch
Stanley B. Lutz
Attorneys for Defendant/Appellee Wal-Mart Incorporated
__________________________________________________________________
J O N E S, Chief Justice
¶1 The City of Casa Grande, after several hearings before
the Planning and Zoning Commission and the City Council, rezoned
certain property by municipal ordinance. The rezoning ordinance
was subsequently upheld by the local electorate in a referendum
election. The plaintiffs, two Casa Grande residents, allege that
the city failed to comply with notice requirements applicable to
the hearing and enactment process and ask that we nullify the
referendum and invalidate the ordinance. Because the plaintiffs
failed to assert a timely claim, we hold they are now barred from
obtaining the relief sought.
I.
¶2 In September 2001, Wal-Mart, Inc. filed an application
with the City requesting rezoning for approximately twenty-eight
acres of property on the southeast corner of Florence Boulevard
and Arizona Road in Casa Grande. Wal-Mart asked the City to
change the property zone from “Urban Ranch” to “Planned Area
Development.” See Casa Grande City Code (“City Code”) § 17.16.010
(2001) (designating zoning classifications). On October 4, 2001,
a hearing took place before the Casa Grande Planning and Zoning
Commission to consider Wal-Mart’s request. At the hearing, the
Commission decided by a five-to-two vote to recommend that Wal-
Mart’s request be denied. Wal-Mart appealed the recommendation to
the City Council and, at a November 5, 2001 hearing, the Council
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granted Wal-Mart’s rezoning request by a four-to-three vote. In a
subsequent meeting, November 19, 2001, the City Council formally
adopted the rezoning request as Ordinance No. 1178.167. Finally,
on December 6, 2001, the Planning and Zoning Commission, by a
five-to-two vote, approved Wal-Mart’s proposed major site plan.
¶3 Some time after city approval of the Wal-Mart plan, a
group of residents opposed to the rezoning circulated a petition
to refer the ordinance to the voters in a special election. See
Ariz. Rev. Stat. (“A.R.S.”) §§ 19-101 to 19-143 (2001).
Sufficient signatures were obtained, and the referendum was held
May 21, 2002. Casa Grande voters approved the rezoning ordinance
by a vote of 1,784 to 1,466.
¶4 More than three months later, on September 12, 2002,
Stephan G. Zajac and his mother, Evelia S. Zajac (collectively,
“Zajac”), filed a complaint in superior court against the City and
Wal-Mart challenging the validity of the rezoning ordinance.
Zajac, the owner of property located at least in part within 200
feet of the proposed Wal-Mart, charges the City with failure to
give notice of the public hearings as required by Arizona law.
¶5 Zajac’s suit is grounded in both the Casa Grande City
Code, and in state statutory rezoning requirements imposed on all
municipalities when addressing requests to rezone property. See
City Code §§ 17.68-480 to -550 (2001); A.R.S. § 9-462.04 (Supp.
2003). The statutes require a municipality to “adopt by ordinance
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a citizen review process that applies to all rezoning and specific
plan applications that require a public hearing.” A.R.S. § 9-
462.03(A) (Supp. 2000). Pursuant to this requirement, the City
enacted a citizen review process which expressly includes
procedures for notice and hearing when property is being rezoned.
Notice of the time, date, place, and purpose of the hearing must
be provided to the general public by publication in a newspaper of
general circulation at least fifteen days prior to the first
hearing. City Code § 17.68.500(B). The parties do not dispute
that the City complied with these procedures. The City Code also
requires that a “similar notice shall be made at least fifteen
days before the day of the first hearing to each owner of property
situated wholly or partly within two hundred feet of the property
to which the rezoning relates.” City Code § 17.68.500(C).
¶6 Cities are required by law to “follow[] the procedure
prescribed in the citizen review process” any time consideration
of a plan is undertaken to adopt a “zoning ordinance that changes
any property from one zone to another.” A.R.S. § 9-462.03(B).
Thus, by reason of § 9-462.03, a failure to notify the owners of
property located within the 200-foot limit results in not only a
violation of the City Code but also a violation of state law.
¶7 The City mailed the requisite notice of the hearings to
the adjacent property owners. Although Zajac’s name appeared on
title records as the owner of property located within 200 feet of
4
the proposed building site, he resided with his mother elsewhere
in Casa Grande. The notice or notices were apparently mailed to
the subject property which, at all times relevant, was leased to a
tenant. One can conclude from the record that neither Zajac nor
his mother received the mailed notice.
¶8 Nevertheless, as noted, the hearings occurred, the
ordinance was adopted, and the referendum took place. Then, more
than three months after the referendum, Zajac filed the instant
suit in superior court alleging that the City failed to give
notice, that the rezoning ordinance was void ab initio, and that
no change in the property zoning ever occurred. The suit
requested that the court enjoin the City from issuing construction
permits or approvals to Wal-Mart.
¶9 On February 18, 2003, the superior court issued a minute
entry dismissing Zajac’s claim. The court held that the City and
Wal-Mart “complied in all respects” with statutory notice
requirements and “substantially complied” with the requirements of
the City Code. Finding substantial compliance to be “all that is
required” under Schwarz v. City of Glendale, 190 Ariz. 508, 950
P.2d 167 (App. 1997), the trial court denied Zajac’s request for
relief.1
1
The trial court upheld the ordinance on the theory of
“substantial compliance” with the notice requirements. Our
disposition of this case in today’s opinion makes it unnecessary
for us to address the compliance issue.
5
¶10 Zajac appealed and, in a memorandum decision, the court
of appeals reversed, rejecting the “substantial compliance”
standard and holding that Hart v. Bayless Investment & Trading
Co., 86 Ariz. 379, 346 P.2d 1101 (1959) and its progeny demand
“strict compliance” with the notice requirements for public
hearings on proposed zoning changes. Zajac v. City of Casa
Grande, 2 CA-CV 2003-0077 ¶ 25 (Ariz. App. Oct. 6, 2003) (mem.
dec.). The appellate court further found that by not mailing
notice to the address of Zajac’s actual residence, the City and
Wal-Mart “negligent[ly] fail[ed] to comply with the city’s own
notice by mail requirement.” Zajac, 2 CA-CV 2003-0077, slip op.
at ¶ 40. The court also rejected additional arguments made by
Wal-Mart, expressly finding the referendum and Zajac’s prior
knowledge of the referendum to be irrelevant. Zajac, 2 CA-CV
2003-0077, slip op. at ¶¶ 43-44. The court declared the rezoning
ordinance null and void. Zajac, 2 CA-CV 2003-0077, slip op. at ¶
46.
¶11 Wal-Mart and the City of Casa Grande jointly petitioned
this court for review of the appellate decision. We granted
review and directed specifically that the parties submit
supplemental briefs on the effect, if any, of the zoning ordinance
referendum on plaintiffs’ right to sue. Our jurisdiction is
established by Article VI, Section 5(3) of the Arizona
6
Constitution, A.R.S. § 12-120.24 (2003), and Rule 23 of the
Arizona Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure.
II.
¶12 Adoption of a city ordinance by the city’s governing
authority, the city council, is an exercise of legislative power.
Our courts have consistently refrained from ajudicating
substantive attacks on new city ordinances prior to completion of
the adoption process; that is, until the ordinance becomes law.
But in cases in which procedural defects in the adoption process
are alleged, our decisions have invalidated city and county
ordinances for failure to follow statutorily required procedures.
See, e.g., Hart, 86 Ariz. 379, 346 P.2d 1101 (invalidating county
ordinance for failure to comply with procedural requirement of
state Zoning Act); Hyland v. City of Mesa, 112 Ariz. 66, 537 P.2d
936 (1975) (invalidating city ordinance for failure to comply with
procedural requirements of state law).
¶13 Today’s case arises in the context of a law that had
been approved by the voters of Casa Grande in a referendum
election, and requires that we focus on when challenges to the
procedures by which this law was adopted must be made. Early in
our state’s history, this court considered a challenge similar to
that presented by Zajac. In Allen v. State, 14 Ariz. 458, 130 P.
1114 (1913), the legislature enacted a statute making it a crime
to kill a quail without a license. Id. at 459-60, 130 P. at 1114-
7
15. After a sufficient number of the voters signed referendum
petitions, a state referendum followed in which voters approved
the law. Id. at 464, 130 P. at 1116. The defendant, who was
charged under the statute and admitted killing the quail, argued
that the statute was invalid, not as to its substance, but because
the matter was allegedly not submitted to the voters at the proper
election, and because pre-referendum publicity required by the
state constitution had not been provided. Id. at 461, 130 P. at
1115. This court addressed these procedural challenges and held
that the defendant’s failure to raise the objections before the
referendum election barred his suit:
If objections had been made in the early stages of the
process of submission for the reasons now assigned, the
questions would have been subjects of judicial
investigation and determination. . . . Timely appeal to
the courts upon the questions now raised, if
meritorious, would have settled the matter before the
election was had. However, the measure was submitted to
the voters without question. They were invited to
believe that the formalities of the law pertaining to
the submission of the measure had been fully met. The
expense of the election was incurred, and the electors,
imbued with the conviction that they were performing one
of the highest functions of citizenship, and not going
through a mere hollow form, we may assume, investigated
the question and went to the polls and voted thereon.
Id. at 461-62, 130 P. at 1115.
III.
¶14 This court has consistently followed Allen when
considering challenges to the procedures leading up to initiative
and referendum elections. See Fairness & Accountability in Ins.
8
Reform v. Greene, 180 Ariz. 582, 587, 886 P.2d 1338, 1343 (1994)
(“[T]he procedures ‘leading up to an election cannot be
questioned’ after the vote but ‘must be challenged before the
election is held.’”) (quoting Tilson v. Mofford, 153 Ariz. 468,
470, 737 P.2d 1367, 1369 (1987)); see also Hernandez v.
Frohmiller, 68 Ariz. 242, 259, 204 P.2d 854, 865 (1949) (refusing,
after the vote, to invalidate a ballot initiative alleging defects
that occurred in the process prior to the election); Renck v.
Superior Court, 66 Ariz. 320, 326-27, 187 P.2d 656, 660-61
(1947)(same); Kerby v. Griffin, 48 Ariz. 434, 444, 62 P.2d 1131,
1135 (1936) (“[I]f parties allow an election to proceed in
violation of the law which prescribes the manner in which it shall
be held, they may not, after the people have voted, then question
the procedure.”); Abbey v. Green, 28 Ariz. 53, 68, 235 P. 150,
155 (1925) (“[A] duty is imposed upon one who would question the
correctness or regularity of an election to act promptly, and, if
he has information before the election of any defects in the
proceedings, he must take steps to prevent the election . . . , or
he will be regarded as having waived them.”).
¶15 Zajac’s argument — that he was harmed by the City’s
failure to give notice — unmistakably raises a procedural not a
substantive issue. See Winkle v. City of Tucson, 190 Ariz. 413,
416, 949 P.2d 502, 505 (1997) (stating that “fail[ures] to comply
with publication requirements” in initiative petitions are
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“procedural defects”); Hart, 86 Ariz. at 391, 346 P.2d at 1110
(identifying failures to comply with notice requirements as
“procedural infirmities”). Zajac does not assert that the City
lacked the substantive power to rezone property within its
jurisdiction or that the ordinance violates the Constitution or a
statute.2
¶16 Zajac does contend, however, that the failure to notify
pertained to the rezoning hearings, not the subsequent referendum,
and that the City therefore lacked jurisdiction to enact the
2
Although Zajac does not expressly argue that notice
requirements are substantive, he cites Hart as stating that a
failure to provide proper notice is a “jurisdictional” defect.
To the extent this argument implies that notice requirements are
not procedural, Hart is unsupportive. The issue whether the
defects were “jurisdictional” arose in Hart only after the court
determined the defects that had occurred were in fact procedural:
It is clear from this record that the mandate of the
Zoning Act was ignored. The question then arises
whether these procedural defects are of such gravity
that the ordinances must be invalidated.
. . . [S]uch ordinance will not be set aside unless
defects are shown which are jurisdictional in nature.
The remaining question, then, is whether the failure to
comply with the notice and hearing conditions of the
Zoning Act left the Commission and Board without
jurisdiction to adopt either or both of the ordinances
in question.
Hart v. Bayless Inv. & Trading Co., 86 Ariz. 379, 390, 346 P.2d
1101, 1109 (1960).
Our analysis in the instant case, therefore, is not whether
defects occurred or whether existing defects are “jurisdictional.”
Rather, as a preliminary matter, we ask only whether the alleged
defects were procedural.
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ordinance at the rezoning stage.3 But even if his argument were
correct as to the rezoning hearings, his complaint is really no
different from the complaint asserted in Allen and its progeny –
that procedural defects prior to the referendum election
invalidated the election.
¶17 The Allen principle applies here. Allen, like Zajac,
failed to assert his objection until after the referendum had
occurred. 14 Ariz. at 465-66, 130 P. at 1116-17. Like Allen,
Zajac could have raised an objection prior to the referendum
election. The record is clear that Zajac had actual knowledge
prior to the election that the proposed rezoning ordinance had
been adopted by the City and would be referred to the voters in an
election. He placed a sign in his yard manifesting opposition to
the rezoning and, indeed, cast his personal vote against the
rezoning ordinance in the referendum. As a result of his failure
to challenge alleged procedural defects before the election,
Zajac, like Allen, has waived his right to object.
¶18 Finally, the record indicates Zajac actually recognized
the validity of the referendum he now challenges. Having had
actual notice of the impending election, he claims to have
“await[ed] the results of [the] referendum” to file suit because
“if [the election had been] decided in [his] favor [, it] would
3
The Zajacs, in fact, expressly argue that the referendum
should never have taken place and was therefore of no effect.
11
have mooted th[e] lawsuit.” In other words, he effectively
recognized the election as legitimate, but did so only if the
ordinance were defeated. Dissatisfied with the election results,
Zajac now argues that voters lacked authority to act on the
matter. He cannot have it both ways; that is, he cannot allow the
election to proceed without objection, and then be permitted
thereafter to assert his protest. The Allen court employed
similar reasoning in an analogue to the doctrine of estoppel:
While estoppel may not technically bind either party to
an election, yet where a mere defect of form exists,
which may, if presented seasonably, be fully corrected,
and is not suggested until after the election is over,
there is eminent justice in applying the principles of
estoppel, and holding that they who have gone to trial
on the merits shall not, when beaten there, go back to
an amendable defect in the preliminary proceedings.
14 Ariz. at 480, 130 P. at 1123 (quoting Prohibitory Amendment
Cases, 24 Kan. 700 (1881)); see also Renck, 66 Ariz. at 325, 187
P.2d at 659 (“[I]f parties allow an election to proceed in
violation of the law . . . they may not, after the people have
voted, then question the procedure.”) (quoting Kerby v. Griffin,
48 Ariz. 434, 444, 62 P.2d 1131, 1135 (1936) (citations omitted)).
IV.
¶19 Like the Allen court, we perceive justice in declining
to upset the stated will of the voters of Casa Grande. For the
foregoing reasons, we hold that Zajac, having failed to file a
timely complaint, has waived his right of action. Clearly, the
post-referendum filing is subject to the doctrine of waiver, a
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doctrine frequently referred to as the equitable doctrine of
estoppel by laches. We therefore vacate the memorandum decision of
the court of appeals and order reinstatement of the judgment of
the trial court.
____________________________________
Charles E. Jones
Chief Justice
CONCURRING:
____________________________________
Ruth V. McGregor, Vice Chief Justice
____________________________________
Rebecca White Berch, Justice
____________________________________
Michael D. Ryan, Justice
____________________________________
Andrew D. Hurwitz, Justice
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