110. 82-299
IJ THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
T
1983
RICHARD R. BUTTINGA, et al.,
Plaintiffs and Respondents,
-vs-
GARY W. PRITJGLE, et al.,
Defendants and Appellants.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighteenth Judicial District,
In and for the County of Gallatin,
The Honorable Joseph B. Gary, Judge presiding.
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellants:
Robert R. Throssell, Deputy County Attorney, argued,
Bozeman, Montana
Eleanor A. Parker, Dept. of Health, argued, Helena,
Montana
For Respondents:
Page Wellcome; argued, Bozeman, &Tontana
-
Submitted: June 6 , 1983
Decided: September 8, 1983
Filed: SEP 8 - 1983
L-
Clerk
Mr. Justice Fred J. Weber delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Defendants appeal from a judgment of the Eighteenth
Judicial District Court, Gallatin County, granting a writ of
mandamus to the plaintiffs directing Montana Department of
Health and Environmental Sciences (DHES) to certify property
described in a deed as not subject to sanitary restrictions,
and directing the Clerk and Recorder of Gallatin County to
record the deed. We reverse the judgment.
Following are the dispositive issues:
1. Did the Clerk and Recorder fail to perform a clear
legal duty in refusing to file plaintiffs' certificate of
survey and to record their warranty deed?
2. Did the Gallatin County Health Department (GCHD) act
as an agent of the DHES when it denied a county subsurface
sewage disposal system permit to plaintiffs?
3. Did the DHES violate a clear legal duty to grant
plaintiffs approval of their subdivision?
The key facts are contained in the uncontested findings
of fact which include the following: In 1971 the plaintiffs
planned to purchase five acres of land from J. Huttinga,
father of Richard, for the purpose of erecting a home for the
plaintiffs. Notwithstanding that the five acres was not a
subdivision under the laws of Montana in 1971, plaintiffs
filed an application for an individual sewage disposal
installation permit with the GCHD. An inspection of the
ground was made by Emery Nelson, Gallatin County Sanitarian.
After the inspection, plaintiffs were never notified by the
GCHD that the septic tank and sewage disposal system did not
comply with the requirements of state law or the regulations
of the County or the State Board of Health, predecessor to
DHES. The District Court further found that at the time
Emery Nelson inspected the installation, it was in the
process of being constructed. At no time in the following
six years did anyone notify plaintiffs that the installation
would not be approved.
The District Court next found that in 1978 the
plaintiffs applied to the County Clerk and Recorder for the
recording of a deed, which was refused without the sanitary
restrictions being either approved or removed. Plaintiffs
then consulted with GCHD and discovered that the department
contended the system was not approved, even though it had
been installed and used for seven years. Tests made in 1979
showed no evidence of contamination of the water in the well.
While not included in the District Court finding of
facts, the uncontested evidence is that the Gallatin County
Sanitarian assisted the plaintiffs with the design and
specifications for the sewage system in 1971, and the
plaintiffs installed the system in accordance with those
plans. Although Sanitarian Nelson testified at trial that
the system could not be approved because there was ground
water in the drainfield trenches in 1971, and that the
drainfield therefore violated the County regulations
requiring a 2-foot separation between the bottom of the
trench and the highest water table, the District Court
specifically found that any such disapproval was not
communicated to the plaintiffs. Mr. Huttinga, Richard's
father, testified that one of the County sanitarians had
"said it was ok to go ahead and fill it." The trench was
then covered. Plaintiffs occupied the trailer house and used
the completed septic system for over seven years.
After the County Clerk and Recorder refused to record
the deed in 1978, plaintiff Richard Huttinga and Sanitarian
Nelson obtained water samples from above and below the septic
system to test whether the system was polluting the water.
Nelson testified he believed the State might approve an
existing system "if it could be shown that water, the water
table, was not being degraded." Nelson subsequently returned
the $4.00 testing fee to the plaintiffs, explaining that the
DHES would not pass the system for State subdivision review
as it lacked County approval. In addition, without County
approval, the DHES would not conduct subdivision review and
would not issue its own certificate of approval indicating
there were no sanitary restrictions.
In May of 1979, plaintiffs attempted to file the
certificate of survey and to record the deed of the 5.002
acres. The Gallatin County Clerk and Recorder refused to
file the same without the DHES certificate stating there were
no sanitary restrictions. Without a filed survey, the deed
itself could not be recorded by the County.
In July of 1979, a tapwater sample was taken by the
plaintiffs, tested by DHES, and found not to be contaminated.
DHES informed the plaintiffs that "these results cannot be
relied upon as indicating the safety of the water at all
times unless the source is properly located and maintained."
In August of 1979, GCHD notified plaintiffs that unless they
complied with current, more stringent requirements for
subsurface sewage disposal systems, GCHD would not approve
the plaintiffs' system.
On January 31, 1980, plaintiffs petitioned the District
Court for a writ of mandamus ordering the Clerk and Recorder
to file the certificate of survey and record the deed.
Following a hearing, the District Court joined DHES as a
party defendant and set a new hearing date. Prior to that
hearing, the parties stipulated that no additional testimony
would be given and the transcript from the first hearing
would suffice.
On April 5, 1982, the District Court entered judgment
for the plaintiffs and issued a writ of mandamus ordering the
defendants to certify that the property was subject to no
sanitary restrictions and requiring the Clerk and Recorder to
record the deed. By subsequent order, the Court awarded
attorneys' fees of $1,539.13 to be borne equally by DHES and
Gallatin County. Defendants appeal.
During the pendency of this action, Gary W. Pringle
succeeded Lucille Bridges as Clerk and Recorder of Gallatin
County. Because the suit is against the Clerk and Recorder
in his or her official capacity, Pringle has been substituted
for Bridges as a party defendant pursuant to Rule 37(c) (I),
M.R.App.Civ.P.
Based upon the previously described findings of fact,
which are not contested by the defendants, the District Court
concluded that it was incumbent upon the Gallatin County
Health Department to advise the plaintiffs of any
disapproval, and that the failure to notify the plaintiffs
for a period of six years after installation of the
drainfield constituted grounds for estoppel under the law.
While the parties agree that Gallatin County is estopped from
disapproving the system, the defendants argue that it is not
appropriate to estop either the Clerk and Recorder, who only
has a duty to file and record or the DHES, which has not
actually participated because no application has been made to
it.
The issue raised by the Clerk and Recorder is whether
the Clerk and Recorder failed to perform a clear legal duty
by refusing to file the certificate of survey and to record
the deed of the plaintiffs. Our conclusion is determined by
the statutes. Sections 76-3-101 through 76-3-614, MCA
constitute the chapter entitled "Montana Subdivision and
Platting Act." This chapter controls the survey required in
the present case. Under section 76-3-104, MCA, a subdivision
comprises a parcel less than 20 acres which has been
separated from the original tract. Section 76-3-207(1), MCA
provides that certain divisions of land, even though less
than 20 acres, are not subdivisions under this particular
chapter but are subject to surveying requirements. The
Huttinga property meets one of these exceptions, that being a
division outside of a platted subdivision for the purpose of
a gift or sale to a member of the landowner's immediate
family. Section 76-3-207(1) (b), MCA. As a result, the tract
here involved is required to be surveyed under section
76-3-401, MCA. Under this chapter, there is no specific
requirement for sanitary restrictions.
Sections 76-4-101 through 76-4-1251, MCA control sanitation
restrictions in subdivisions. Section 76-4-102 (7), MCA
defines subdivisions under this chapter as parcels containing
less than 20 acres of land. The key provision is section
76-4-122, MCA, which in relevant part provides:
"(1) The county clerk and recorder shall not file
or record any map or plat showing a subdivision
unless it complies with the provisions of this
wart.
"(2) A county clerk and recorder may not accept a
subdivision plat for filing until one of the
following conditions has been met:
"(a) The person wishing to file the plat has
obtained approval of the local health officer
having jurisdiction and has filed the approval with
the department [DHES], and the department has
indicated by stamp or certificate that it has
approved the plat and plans and specifications and
that the subdivision is subject to no sanitary
restriction . . .."
While the survey here involved is not a plat under the
Montana Subdivision and Platting Act, it covers a tract
defined as a subdivision under section 76-4-102(7), MCA which
comes within the recording provisions referred to in section
76-4-122, MCA. In addition, under section 76-4-125(2), MCA,
the survey must be submitted for review by the DHES. We
conclude that in the present case, before the plaintiffs
could file their survey, they were required to obtain the
approval of the local health officer having jurisdiction and
the DHES was required to certify that the division was not
subject to sanitary restrictions.
The plaintiffs chose not to proceed by requesting
approval of the local health officer or of the DHES, and
instead have argued that all parties are estopped from any
position other than an admission that the survey and plat are
subject to - sanitary restrictions.
no
The statutes are sufficiently specific so that no
contention can be made that the Clerk and Recorder was under
a duty to file the survey and record the deed under the facts
of this case. The Clerk and Recorder was statutorily
required to refuse to file the survey and, in the absence of
such a survey, to refuse to record the deed. In the absence
of the required approvals from the appropriate health officer
and DHES, the statutory obligation of the Clerk and Recorder
to refuse a survey or plat should be enforced. The Clerk and
Recorder lacks discretion to accept a survey absent
compliance with the specific requirements of section
76-4-122, MCA. We therefore hold that the Clerk and Recorder
did not fail to perform a clear legal duty in refusing to
file the plaintiffs' certificate of survey and to record
their deed.
Did the Gallatin County Health Department act as an
agent of the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences
when it denied a county subsurface sewage disposal system
permit to the plaintiffs? Finding IX of the District Court
in substance held that the GCHD was a representative and
in substance held that the GCHD was a representative and
agent of the DHES. As such, the Court found that if the
septic tank and drainfield did not meet sanitary
requirements, the defendants had a duty to notify plaintiffs
when the system was being installed and to stop the
installation. This was not done. The DHES contends there
was no statute or legal principle which would make the GCHD
an agent for the State in 1971.
In 1971 when the application for the county permit was
made by the plaintiffs, no subdivision review question was
raised. All that the plaintiffs did was to seek a county
permit from the GCHD. Plaintiffs have not cited and we have
not located any statute or decision which establishes that in
1971 the GCHD could be classed as agent for the DHES or its
predecessor. It was not until 1977 that section 76-4-128,
MCA was amended to allow the DHES to delegate to a local
government the authority to review a subdivision if the local
government has qualified personnel to review adequately the
water supply and sewage disposal facilities. In State v.
District Court of Thirteenth Jud. Dist. (1976), 170 Mont. 15,
550 P.2d 382, this Court held that police officers are
servants of the city and cannot be classed as servants or
agents of the State. We reasoned that the State exercises no
direct, detailed or daily supervision over a police officer
and is powerless to avoid or prevent negligent acts by them.
We pointed out that the State does not pay, hire or fire the
policemen. In a similar manner, there is no indication here
that the GCHD was in any way a servant or agent of the DHES,
its predecessor or the State of Montana. The statutes show
that the State and its agencies could not exercise any
direct, detailed or daily supervision, or hire or fire
employees, or otherwise provide the services, which were the
function of the GCHD in 1971. The record does not show that
the GCHD in any way acted as agent for the DHES in 1971.
We hold that the GCHD did not act as an agent of the
DHES when it denied the county sewage disposal system permit
requested in 1971.
The last issue is whether the DHES violated a clear
legal duty to grant the plaintiffs approval of their
subdivision. As previously discussed, sections 76-4-121 to
76-4-123, MCA prohibit the filing of a map or plat with the
Clerk and Recorder until DHES has certified that the
subdivision is not subject to sanitary restrictions. Under
the statutes, DHES has the authority and responsibility to
set standards by rules for determining whether a given
subdivision should be approved. Section 76-4-104, MCA sets
forth the rules and standards to be adopted by the DHES,
which include requiring that a copy of the plat or other
documentation be furnished to DHES; evidence that a water
supply is sufficient in terms of quality, quantity and
dependability; evidence that the potability of water has been
met; evidence that a sewage disposal facility is sufficient
in terms of capacity and dependability; and standards and
technical procedures applicable to sanitary sewer plans and
designs, including soil percolation, testing and similar
items for on-lot sewage disposal systems.
As pointed out by the DHES, no application has ever been
submitted to it. Thus, the DHES has no actual knowledge of
the nature of plaintiffs' system, nor of the plaintiffs'
answer to any of the information which is required to be
furnished to the DHES prior to its determination regarding
sanitary restrictions. Absent an appropriate application to
the DHES, there is no factual or statutory basis for
estopping the DHES. The plaintiffs have yet to apply to the
DHES. We hold that the DHES has not violated a clear legal
duty by failing to approve the plaintiffs' survey.
We therefore reverse the judgment of the District Court
which determined that the plaintiffs are entitled to a writ
of mandamus directing the Montana Department of Health and
Environmental Sciences to certify that the property described
in the deed is subject to no sanitary restriction and
requiring the Clerk and Recorder to record the deed. We also
reverse the order granting attorneys' fees to the plaintiffs.
While we do not give advisory opinions, we make the
following comments with the aim of reducing further legal
proceedings. With its briefs, DHES furnished to the parties
a form E.S. 91B. That form describes the information
required to be submitted to the DHES in connection with the
sanitary facilities here in question, and requires the
furnishing of a copy of the survey and other documents
designed to allow assessment of the application. An
application should now be made by the plaintiffs on form E.S
9 1 B to GCHD and DHES. GCHD properly may give its approval by
virtue of the basis for estoppel shown in the trial of the
present case. DHES then can proceed to complete the
examination of the facilities in question and determine
whether under all of the facts, an approval of the system is
appropriate so far as it is concerned.
We concur:
%dQ,
Chief Justice
&e
Justices
Justice John C. Sheehy concurring and dissenting:
I agree that Gallatin County Health Department is
estopped from refusing to approve the Huttinga's sewage
system. It is idle for this Court to suggest a new application
addressed to the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences.
It will automatically refuse to approve the new application.
We should not allow the Huttingas here to suffer further
from bureaucratic bungling.