#30287-r-MES
2024 S.D. 2
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
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BERNARD STOCKWELL, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
MCCOOK COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS, MCCOOK COUNTY
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT, and
MCCOOK COUNTY ZONING
ADMINISTRATOR, Defendants and Appellees.
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APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
MCCOOK COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
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THE HONORABLE CHRIS S. GILES
Judge
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MICHAEL F. NADOLSKI
DANA VAN BEEK PALMER of
Lynn, Jackson, Shultz & Lebrun, P.C.
Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and
appellant.
MIKE C. FINK
McCook County State’s Attorney
Bridgewater, South Dakota Attorneys for defendants and
appellees.
****
CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS
AUGUST 29, 2023
OPINION FILED 01/10/2024
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SALTER, Justice
[¶1.] The McCook County Board of Adjustment determined that five lots
owned by Bernard Stockwell in an area zoned for agricultural use did not include
individual building eligibilities under the 2014 McCook County Zoning Ordinance
(2014 ordinance). Stockwell petitioned for a writ of certiorari and sought
declaratory relief in a single action, naming the McCook County Board of
Commissioners (BOC), the Board of Adjustment (BOA), and the McCook County
Zoning Administrator as adverse parties. As to both of Stockwell’s requests for
relief, the collective group of McCook County entities (the County) sought summary
judgment, which the circuit court granted. Stockwell now appeals to this Court.
We reverse.
Factual and Procedural Background
[¶2.] In December 1999, the BOC approved a replat of Stockwell’s
agriculturally zoned McCook County property that resulted in five individual lots
ranging in size from 3.8 to 5.4 acres. The replat was promptly filed with the
register of deeds that same month. In 2000, the BOC approved Stockwell’s request
to rezone his lots as “rural residential,” but residents referred the decision and
defeated it in a subsequent election. Twenty-two years later, in 2022, Stockwell
made a second rezoning request, which the BOC denied.
[¶3.] This prompted Stockwell to seek an opinion from the McCook County
Zoning Administrator regarding the number of building eligibilities for his lots.
Based on her interpretation of McCook County’s zoning ordinance, the zoning
administrator determined that Stockwell’s five lots shared a single building
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eligibility. Stockwell appealed this determination to the BOA, arguing that each of
the five affected lots should have a building eligibility under McCook County’s
zoning ordinance.
[¶4.] The operative ordinance was enacted in 2014, and as is relevant here,
lists a single-family dwelling among the permitted uses within an area zoned for
agricultural use, provided the dwelling was located on a “lot of record.” The 2014
ordinance allows one building eligibility for each lot of record that is a minimum of
one acre and less than 80 acres in size and has no other dwellings located on it.
[¶5.] At issue before the BOA was whether Stockwell’s lots were lots of
record which the 2014 ordinance defines as follows:
A lot of record is a lot which is part of a subdivision or a certified
survey map which has been recorded in the office of the County
Register of Deeds; or a parcel of land, the deed to which was
recorded in the office of said Register of Deeds prior to the
effective date of this ordinance.
(Emphasis added.)
[¶6.] The zoning administrator argued to the BOA that the definition’s
reference to “this ordinance” meant McCook County’s first zoning ordinance enacted
in 1989, not the 2014 ordinance in which it was contained. And because Stockwell
platted his lots after the effective date of the 1989 ordinance, the zoning
administrator concluded his five lots were not lots of record and not, therefore,
entitled to individual building eligibilities.
[¶7.] However, Stockwell advanced a textual argument, using not only the
language defining a lot of record in the 2014 ordinance, but also the plainly stated
“[e]ffective [d]ate” of October 29, 2014, which appears on the first page of the
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ordinance. Under the plain reading of the 2014 ordinance, Stockwell argued each
parcel was unquestionably a “lot of record” because all of them were reflected in a
replatted subdivision that was recorded in 1999—long before the effective date of
the 2014 ordinance.
[¶8.] The BOA agreed with the zoning administrator and affirmed the
determination that Stockwell’s five lots shared one building eligibility. Stockwell
then petitioned the circuit court for a writ of certiorari and also sought declaratory
relief. The County filed a motion for summary judgment seeking denial of both the
petition and the declaratory judgment action.
[¶9.] At the related hearing, both Stockwell and the County raised the same
arguments to the court that they had made before the BOA—Stockwell arguing for
a textual interpretation of the ordinance, and the County arguing that the 1989
ordinance remained operative. The BOC’s intent, the County asserted, was to
maintain the agricultural nature of the district where Stockwell’s lots were located,
and the “lot of record” definition served as a “grandfathering” provision to allow
building eligibilities for those lots that existed prior to the first enactment of the
zoning ordinance in 1989. 1 It argued that the language of each successive
ordinance enactment, including the 2014 ordinance, indicated prior ordinances were
1. The County’s brief in support of summary judgment seemed to cite to a
nonconforming use provision, not related to agriculturally zoned land, in the
1989 ordinance to support its grandfathering argument. However, the
County left rather undeveloped the applicability of that provision, which
stated, in relevant part, that “[o]n any single lot of record at the effective date
of adoption or amendment of these regulations, in any district in which
single-family dwellings are permitted, a single-family dwelling . . . may be
erected notwithstanding lot area and width requirements . . . .”
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only repealed to the extent that the ordinances conflicted and that the “lot of record
definition” had remained “substantially unchanged since 1989.” Therefore, a
textual application of the 2014 ordinance, it contended, would be at odds with the
definition’s intended purpose. 2
[¶10.] The County also made a second “grandfathering” argument based on
subsequent ordinance reenactments that allowed for “clustering” building
eligibilities. 3 The County suggested that when Stockwell replatted his lots in 1999,
he intended to cluster the lots, but Stockwell did not obtain building permits. In
2002, the ordinance was reenacted yet again. This iteration required the execution
and recording of a legal document evidencing the transfer of a building eligibility to
allow for clustering. Stockwell did not record any such document. Therefore, the
County argued, Stockwell’s noncompliance with the clustering requirements
resulted in unperfected building eligibilities for his lots and, thus, when clustering
was removed by the 2007 ordinance, Stockwell’s lots could not qualify as a
grandfathered nonconforming use.
[¶11.] In an oral ruling, the circuit court granted the County’s motion, despite
concluding that the 2014 ordinance’s lot of record definition applied and stating that
“each of these five lots, they are definitely, by the plain language, lots of record now
2. The County first enacted its zoning ordinance in 1981, which was then
explicitly repealed by the 1989 ordinance. And in 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002,
2007, and 2014, the County again revised its ordinance. But instead of
simply amending particular provisions and leaving the others intact, the
County reenacted its entire zoning ordinance. Critically, for each reenacted
zoning ordinance compilation, the effective date did not relate back to 1989
but, rather, specified a date within the particular year of reenactment.
3. The County first allowed for clustering in 1998.
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by what the ordinances say[.]” But the court diverted from the text and gave
preeminence to what it believed to be the overall purpose and intent of the
ordinance’s agricultural zoning regulations. The court stated, “It’s clear . . . that the
overall intent during each of these different [ordinance] passages over time has
been to allow fewer building eligibilities in the ag district,” and so, “[t]he Stockwells
are asking the Court to adopt an interpretation which this Court believes runs
contrary to the purpose of the comprehensive zoning regulations as a whole.” The
circuit court determined that even though Stockwell’s lots were lots of record under
the 2014 ordinance, that “does not necessarily mean they automatically became
buildable lots.”
[¶12.] In the circuit court’s view, the lots could have become buildable lots
had Stockwell done something more. The court agreed with the County’s position
that the purpose of the “lot of record” language was to serve as a grandfathering
provision and stated that the language was an attempt to “grandfather in” lots that
had acquired buildable status prior to the most recent zoning enactment. Based on
this view, the court suggested that had Stockwell recorded documentation of an
intent to transfer building eligibilities as mandated by the 2001 and 2002
ordinances’ clustering requirements, his lots would have acquired buildable status
and, thus, would be grandfathered. Failing to do so, the circuit court concluded,
meant the lots could not now receive building eligibilities.
[¶13.] After explaining that its interpretation of the plain text of the 2014
ordinance was also informed by its view of what the court believed the BOC actually
intended, the circuit court cited the portion of SDCL 11-2-61.1 that provides, “The
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court shall give deference to the decision of the approving authority in interpreting
the authority’s ordinances.” 4 In doing so, the court endorsed the zoning
administrator’s interpretation, recognizing it to be consistent with the historic
understanding that with each passage of the zoning ordinance, the County sought
to further preserve the agricultural nature of the district.
[¶14.] Stockwell appeals the circuit court’s decision, arguing that the court
erred when it failed to apply the plain text of the 2014 ordinance and granted the
County’s motion for summary judgment. The County claims, as it did before the
BOA and circuit court, that Stockwell’s lots do not meet the “lot of record” definition
under the 1989 ordinance.
Standard of Review
[¶15.] We will not disturb the BOA’s decision under a writ of certiorari unless
it did not have jurisdiction, did not pursue “in a regular manner the authority
conferred upon it[,]” or “did some act forbidden by law or neglected to do some act
required by law.” Ehlebracht v. Deuel Cnty. Plan. Comm’n, 2022 S.D. 18, ¶¶ 12–13,
972 N.W.2d 464, 470 (citations omitted). Here, we must determine whether the
BOA’s decision contravenes the text of the 2014 ordinance, which as we explain
4. In its entirety, SDCL 11-2-61.1 provides:
Any appeal of a decision of granting or denying a conditional use
permit shall be brought under a petition, duly verified, for a writ
of certiorari directed to the approving authority and,
notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, shall be
determined under a writ of certiorari standard regardless of the
form of the approving authority. The court shall give deference
to the decision of the approving authority in interpreting the
authority’s ordinances.
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below, is a legal question we review de novo. Croell Redi-Mix, Inc. v. Pennington
Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs, 2017 S.D. 87, ¶ 26, 905 N.W.2d 344, 351. The request for
declaratory relief also turns on the legal question of ordinance interpretation and is
not entitled to deference. Luze v. New FB Co., 2020 S.D. 70, ¶ 14, 952 N.W.2d 264,
269 (“We review declaratory judgments as we would any other order, judgment, or
decree. We therefore review de novo the circuit court’s interpretation of a statute.”).
Analysis and Decision
[¶16.] The circuit court relied on the provisions of SDCL 11-2-61.1 for the
proposition that a court undertaking certiorari review must “give deference to the
decision of the approving authority in interpreting the authority’s ordinances.” But
this was problematic for two reasons—(1) SDCL 11-2-61.1 does not apply in this
case and (2) the similar common law rule that does apply does not permit deference
here.
[¶17.] Strictly speaking, SDCL 11-2-61.1 only applies to certiorari
proceedings involving “[a]ny appeal of a decision of granting or denying a
conditional use permit[.]” See e.g. Dakota Constructors, Inc. v. Hanson Cnty. Bd. of
Adjustment, 2023 S.D. 38, 994 N.W.2d 222 (applying SDCL 11-2-61.1 to challenge
involving a conditional use permit). Here, Stockwell argues his lots should receive
building eligibilities as permitted uses, not conditional ones.
[¶18.] However, even instances like this one, a rule similar to SDCL 11-2-
61.1 applies by virtue of our decisional law, but it does not permit deference in the
absence of an ordinance’s textual ambiguity. In Wegner Auto Co., Inc. v. Ballard,
353 N.W.2d 57 (S.D. 1984), we affirmed a circuit court’s decision to grant summary
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judgment based upon its interpretation of a zoning ordinance that established a
party’s use was not permitted. We acknowledged but ultimately rejected an
argument for deference, reasoning as follows:
Appellants correctly argue that in passing on the meaning of a
zoning ordinance, the courts will consider and give weight to the
construction of the ordinance by those administering the
ordinance. However, an administrative construction is not
binding on the court, which is free to overrule the construction if
it is deemed to be wrong or erroneous.
Wegner Auto, 353 N.W.2d at 58.
[¶19.] Before the enactment of SDCL 11-2-61.1, we quoted this rule in Croell
Redi-Mix and held that “[w]hen the meaning of an ordinance is unambiguous, the
contrary interpretation of those administering the ordinance is not entitled to
deference.” 2017 S.D. 87, ¶ 20, 905 N.W.2d at 350 (quoting Wegner Auto, 353
N.W.2d at 58). 5 We specifically recognized the relationship between this common
law rule and the one now contained in SDCL 11-2-61.1 in our recent Dakota
Constructors decision. See Dakota Constructors, 2023 S.D. 38, ¶ 11, 994 N.W.2d at
226.
[¶20.] Here, the circuit court did not identify any ambiguity in the 2014
ordinance that would justify deferential review, and the County has not argued that
the 2014 ordinance was ambiguous. In fact, as Stockwell notes, the County did not
respond to the central argument in Stockwell’s opening appellate brief that the
portions of the 2014 ordinance at issue here are not ambiguous. We agree with the
5. An “[a]mbiguity exists when something is capable of being understood by
reasonably well-informed persons in either of two or more senses.” Healy
Ranch, Inc. v. Healy, 2022 S.D. 43, ¶ 30 n.6, 978 N.W.2d 786, 796 n.6
(quoting Kling v. Stern, 2007 S.D. 51, ¶ 6, 733 N.W.2d 615, 617 (cleaned up)).
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view that these textual provisions are unambiguous, and, consequently, the BOA’s
interpretation of the 2014 ordinance is not entitled to deference. The correctness of
the circuit court’s decision must instead be determined as a legal question using our
well-settled rules for interpreting text.
[¶21.] “Zoning ordinances are interpreted according to the rules of statutory
construction and any rules of construction included in the ordinances themselves.”
Hoffman v. Van Wyk, 2017 S.D. 48, ¶ 8, 900 N.W.2d 596, 598 (quoting Even v. City
of Parker, 1999 S.D. 72, ¶ 8, 597 N.W.2d 670, 673). When confronted with an issue
of statutory interpretation, we “necessarily begin[] with an analysis of the statute’s
text.” In re Implicated Individual, 2021 S.D. 61, ¶ 16, 966 N.W.2d 578, 583. If this
inquiry reveals language that “is clear, certain and unambiguous, our only function
is to declare the meaning of the ordinance as expressed.” City of Sioux Falls v.
Strizheus, 2022 S.D. 81, ¶ 19, 984 N.W.2d 119, 124 (quoting Peters v. Spearfish ETJ
Plan. Comm’n, 1997 S.D. 105, ¶ 8, 567 N.W.2d 880, 884). We must, in other words,
apply “the cardinal rule of statutory interpretation—simply read the text and apply
it.” In re Implicated Individual, 2021 S.D. 61, ¶ 28, 966 N.W.2d at 586.
[¶22.] Intent “is determined from what [a legislative body] said, rather than
what we think it should have said.” Reck v. S.D. Bd. of Pardons & Paroles, 2019
S.D. 42, ¶ 11, 932 N.W.2d 135, 139 (citation omitted). We “must confine [ourselves]
to the language used.” Rhines v. S.D. Dep’t of Corrs., 2019 S.D. 59, ¶ 13, 935
N.W.2d 541, 545. Only when an ordinance is ambiguous do we “look to ‘the
legislative history, title, and the total content of the legislation[.]’” Zoss v. Shaefers,
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1999 S.D. 105, ¶ 6, 598 N.W.2d 550, 552 (alteration in original) (quoting LaBore v.
Muth, 473 N.W.2d 485, 488 (S.D. 1991)).
[¶23.] The circuit court erred by deviating from these well-established rules
of statutory construction in favor of its effort to ascertain what it believed to be the
broader “intent of the zoning regulations.” In so doing, the court failed to apply the
unambiguous text of the 2014 ordinance, which the court acknowledged made clear
that Stockwell’s lots were, indeed, lots of record.
[¶24.] The text at issue, “effective date of this ordinance,” can only be subject
to one meaning—the effective date of the 2014 ordinance. On its first page, the
ordinance itself expressly states, “Effective Date: October 29, 2014 (20 days after
2nd publication date)[.]” There is no way to read this effective date to relate to
another, earlier version of the McCook County zoning ordinance. Put simply, “it
means what it says[.]” In re Implicated Individual, 2021 S.D. 61, ¶ 28, 966 N.W.2d
at 586.
[¶25.] The circuit court recognized as much and acknowledged the
unmistakable meaning and effect of the 2014 ordinance:
When it was initially recorded, it was not a lot of record under
the 1998 ordinance. Now, when the 1999 ordinance and
subsequent ordinances were passed, these platted lots then did
become lots of record because they were properly recorded when
each of the new ordinances were passed.
****
When the Court looks at each of these five lots, they are
definitely, by the plain language, lots of record now by what the
ordinances say . . . .
(Emphasis added.)
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[¶26.] But despite this correct reading of the 2014 ordinance, the circuit court
ultimately did not apply it. Although Stockwell’s lots had become lots of record
under the plain provisions of the 1999, 2001, 2002, 2007, and 2014 ordinances, the
court reasoned they had never become “buildable lots.” Reading the term in context
with the court’s analysis, it appears the court perceived that Stockwell’s lots could
have effectively been grandfathered in as buildable lots but only if Stockwell
complied with the clustering requirements mandated by the long-since superseded
2001 and 2002 versions of the zoning ordinance. 6
[¶27.] The circuit court also considered what it believed the BOC intended
with its lot of record definition. The court noted, in this regard, that residential
uses within agriculturally zoned areas had become more restricted with successive
iterations of the zoning ordinance. Still too, the court mentioned Stockwell’s
previous unsuccessful efforts to rezone his lots to permit residential development.
And though the court credited Stockwell with “com[ing] up with a very creative
argument[,]” it stated:
Interpreting the zoning ordinances in a manner as requested by
the Stockwells would produce an absurd result, inconsistent
with the ordinances as a whole and how they have been
interpreted and applied in the past.
[¶28.] We cannot agree with the circuit court’s absurd-result characterization
or the court’s conclusion that more is required for Stockwell’s lots before they could
be considered buildable. As to the former, applying the plain language of the 2014
6. In the court’s view, “the language [of the 2014 ordinance] definitely creates”
what it described as “a loophole for the lots at issue to now argue that they
should become buildable sites.”
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ordinance does not lead to an absurd result. Given our role as a court and not a
policy-making body, we have held that “our standard for relative absurdity should
be high.” In re Implicated Individual, 2021 S.D. 61, ¶ 25, 966 N.W.2d at 585
(citation omitted). Something that may seem unwise or improvident is not
necessarily absurd. Id. ¶ 26 (citing Antonin Scalia & Bryan Garner, Reading Law:
The Interpretation of Legal Texts 237 (2012)). Here, there is nothing absurd about
Stockwell having individual building eligibilities for his lots. It may be exceptional
within the agriculturally zoned area, but it does not satisfy the high threshold for
absurdity.
[¶29.] And as to the circuit court’s conclusion that more was required for
Stockwell’s lots to become buildable, there is no requirement under the 2014
ordinance that Stockwell seek approval to cluster his lots and building eligibilities.
The requirement to seek approval to group, or cluster, building eligibilities for
single-family dwellings in an area zoned for agricultural use was eliminated in the
2007 ordinance and no longer exists. 7
7. The circuit court seemed to combine the County’s “lot of record” and
“clustering” arguments. Instead of determining that Stockwell could acquire
building eligibilities by either meeting the 1989 ordinance’s lot of record
definition or by qualifying as a nonconforming use if he had met the
clustering requirements of the 2001 and 2002 ordinances, the court
determined that Stockwell had to meet both the 2014 ordinance’s lot of record
definition and the clustering requirements. But this is not what the
ordinance language requires. In fact, the 2007 ordinance, which removed the
clustering requirements, is the first time “lot of record” is used in connection
with an agriculturally zoned area, where the category “Single Family
Dwelling located on a Lot of Record” is listed among the permitted uses.
Thus, “lot of record” was never used in conjunction with the clustering
requirements.
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[¶30.] The County, for its part, continues to argue that the lot of record
definition of the 1989 ordinance should apply using the language from the
conditional repealer provision restated in the various versions of the zoning
ordinances: “That this Ordinance . . . repeals any other ordinance or parts thereof in
conflict with this Ordinance.” In the County’s view, the lot of record definition in
the 2014 ordinance is not in conflict with the 1989 version and, therefore, cannot be
viewed as repealing it. But this claim is unsustainable.
[¶31.] Initially, there is some question as to whether the County’s claim that
the 1989 lot of record definition applies is properly before us. Even though it
ultimately denied relief, the circuit court decided that the 2014 ordinance’s
definition applied and that Stockwell’s lots were lots of record. Stockwell argues
that the County cannot logically advance its argument on appeal—the 1989
ordinance applies because the 2014 ordinance did not repeal it—without first
challenging the circuit court’s determination that the 2014 ordinance’s lot of record
definition does apply. See SDCL 15-26A-22 (authorizing an appellee to “obtain
review of a judgment or order entered in the same action which may adversely
affect him by filing a notice of review”). However, we think it is unnecessary to
resolve this issue given our disposition of the merits of the County’s argument.
[¶32.] Indeed, even if the County had preserved its argument that the 1989
ordinance applied, we think it is not supportable. First, the 2014 ordinance
definition is precise—a lot of record is a lot that is recorded prior to the effective date
of this ordinance. The phrase, “this Ordinance,” in turn, is the “2014 Revised
Zoning Ordinance for McCook County,” which, according to the text of its first page,
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is October 29, 2014. The language is so clear and unambiguous that the circuit
court needed only to apply it.
[¶33.] The County does not argue that an ambiguity exists within the text of
the 2014 ordinance. The County does suggest that “[a]t best, Stockwell’s argument
points out an inconsistency in the language.” But this assertion seems to
contemplate inconsistency between the lot of record definitions contained in the
1989 and 2014 ordinances—“prior to the adoption of these regulations” vs. “prior to
the effective date of this ordinance.” Or perhaps the County is suggesting
inconsistency in the 1989 ordinance’s lot of record definition and the designation of
October 29, 2014, as the effective date of “this ordinance.” In either event, this sort
of conflict does not create an ambiguity for which we would defer to the County’s
interpretation; it implicates the repealer language which is conditioned upon
conflict and requires the application of the most recent version over a prior
conflicting one.
[¶34.] Finally, though not bearing upon our decision, we note that the County
has a clear remedial course outside of this litigation. As a local governmental body
exercising legislative power, the BOC may utilize its authority to amend or repeal
any part of its zoning ordinance to clarify its intent. For now, however, it cannot
enact an unambiguous ordinance that says one thing only to say it should not apply
because it intended something different. If the circuit court was accurate when it
described the lot of record definition as a “loophole,” it is better closed by the
governmental body which created it—not the courts. See Signori v. Fed. Nat’l
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Mortg. Ass’n, 934 F. Supp. 2d 1364, 1368 (S.D. Fla. 2013) (“If the statute, as written,
creates a loophole . . ., it is up to Congress, not this Court, to close that loophole.”).
Conclusion
[¶35.] The 2014 ordinance’s lot of record definition unambiguously refers to
the effective date of the 2014 ordinance. Despite recognizing that Stockwell’s lots
satisfy this definition, the circuit court erroneously supplanted a plain application of
the text with a determination of the BOC’s intent to hold Stockwell’s lots were in
fact not buildable. We reverse.
[¶36.] JENSEN, Chief Justice, and MYREN, Justice, concur.
[¶37.] KERN and DEVANEY, Justices, dissent.
DEVANEY, Justice (dissenting).
[¶38.] When reviewing whether the circuit court erred in granting the
County’s motion for summary judgment, the majority opinion focuses on the circuit
court’s oral statements explaining its reasons for granting summary judgment.
However, this Court’s review concerns whether the Board of Adjustment failed to
“pursue[] in a regular manner the authority conferred upon it” or “did some act
forbidden by law or neglected to do some act required by law.” See Ehlebracht v.
Deuel Cnty. Plan. Comm’n, 2022 S.D. 18, ¶¶ 12–13, 972 N.W.2d 464, 470 (citations
omitted); Grant Cnty. Concerned Citizens v. Grant Cnty. Bd. of Adjustment, 2015
S.D. 54, ¶ 41, 866 N.W.2d 149, 163 (noting that both the circuit court and this Court
review whether the board regularly pursued its authority). We therefore must
review the Board’s decision that the zoning administrator correctly determined that
“this ordinance” refers “to the enactment of the ordinances generally, which
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occurred prior to the time the subject parcels of land were platted.” 8 Notably, the
Board specifically rejected Stockwell’s argument that the phrase “this ordinance”
means the 2014 revised ordinance
[¶39.] I disagree with the majority opinion’s determination that the County’s
argument that the 1989 definition applies is not supportable because “the 2014
ordinance definition is precise—a lot of record is a lot that is recorded prior to the
effective date of this ordinance.” The source of this “precise” definition, according to
the majority opinion, is a single notation on the first page of the 2014 revised
ordinance identifying the effective date of the revised ordinance as October 29,
2014. Relying on this single effective date statement, the majority opinion reasons
that “‘the effective date of this ordinance’ [in the definition of lot of record] can only
mean the effective date of the then-enacted iteration—in this instance, the 2014
ordinance” and “[t]here is no way to read this effective date to relate to another,
earlier version of the McCook County zoning ordinance.” (Emphasis added.) I
disagree and therefore respectfully dissent for the following reasons.
8. Even if the circuit court’s analysis had any bearing on this Court’s review, I
disagree with the majority opinion’s characterization of the circuit court’s
ruling; in particular, the statement that “the circuit court decided that the
2014 ordinance’s definition applied and that Stockwell’s lots were lots of
record.” While the court said that Stockwell’s lots are “lots of record now by
what the ordinance says[,]” the court also said: “but these lots have never
been entitled to more than one building eligibility.” To be entitled to a
“building eligibility,” Chapter 3.01 (governing the agricultural district)
requires that a lot be a qualifying “lot of record.” Thus, when the court said
that Stockwell’s “lots have never been entitled to more than one building
eligibility,” the court necessarily concluded that the 2014 revised ordinance
definition did not apply to Stockwell’s lots. In fact, the court stated that
Stockwell’s “interpretation is contrary to the overall scope and intent of the
zoning ordinances as a whole.”
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[¶40.] First, there is nothing about the effective date notation on the first
page of the 2014 revised ordinance evincing the County’s intent that “this
ordinance” in the definition of lot of record means the 2014 revised ordinance.
Rather, the effective date statement (“Effective Date: October 29, 2014 (20 days
after 2nd publication date)”) is just that—an indication of the date on which the
2014 revised ordinance goes into effect. See SDCL 9-19-13 (providing in part that
“every resolution or ordinance passed by the governing body shall take effect on the
twentieth day after its publication unless suspended by operation of a referendum”
(emphasis added)).
[¶41.] Second, in concluding, based on the October 29, 2014 effective date
notation, that the County intended the phrase “this ordinance” in the general
definition of lot of record to mean the 2014 revised ordinance, the majority opinion
violates the fundamental rule of interpretation that we read provisions “in their
context and with the view to their place in the overall statutory scheme.” 9 U.S.
9. The majority opinion quotes language from Zoss v. Shaefers for the
proposition that ambiguity is required before this Court can “look to ‘the
legislative history, title, and the total content of the legislation[.]’” 1999 S.D.
105, ¶ 6, 598 N.W.2d 550, 552. While ambiguity is required to look at
legislative history, see In re Petition of Famous Brands, 347 N.W.2d 882, 885
(S.D. 1984), there need not be ambiguity before a court can discern intent by
looking at the total content of the legislation and the particular enactment in
context. Notably, the Court in Zoss cited LaBore v. Muth as authority for the
phrase the majority opinion quotes, but in LaBore, the Court looked at
legislative history despite finding no ambiguity. 473 N.W.2d 485 (S.D. 1991).
In any event, Zoss does not override the well-established principle that
because “statutes must be construed according to their intent, the intent
must be determined from the statute as a whole, as well as enactments
relating to the same subject.” U.S. Bank Nat’l Assoc., 2022 S.D. 59, ¶ 38, 980
N.W.2d at 945 (quoting Hayes v. Rosenbaum Signs & Outdoor Advert., Inc.,
2014 S.D. 64, ¶ 28, 853 N.W.2d 878, 885).
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Bank Nat’l Assoc. v. S.D. Dep’t of Rev., 2022 S.D. 59, ¶ 35, 980 N.W.2d 936, 944
(quoting In re Hunt Cos., Inc., 2019 S.D. 26, ¶ 24, 927 N.W.2d 894, 900). The
requirement that we read enactments as a whole applies with equal force to the
interpretation of ordinances adopted as part of a comprehensive plan. See City of
Rapid City v. Estes, 2011 S.D. 75, ¶ 12, 805 N.W.2d 714, 718–19 (reading all the
ordinances together to determine the City’s intent); City of Marion v. Schoenwald,
2001 S.D. 95, ¶ 12, 631 N.W.2d 213, 218 (reading comprehensive ordinances as a
whole). This Court has also stated that when determining the intent of a law, we
must refrain from reading words or phrases in isolation. Klein v. Sanford USD
Med. Ctr., 2015 S.D. 95, ¶ 13, 872 N.W.2d 802, 806 (noting that we do not read
words or phrases in isolation); Expungement of Oliver, 2012 S.D. 9, ¶ 9, 810 N.W.2d
at 352 (noting that “[i]t is a ‘fundamental canon of statutory construction that the
words of a statute must be read in their context and with a view to their place in the
overall statutory scheme’” (citation omitted)); City of Rapid City v. Anderson, 2000
S.D. 77, ¶ 20, 612 N.W.2d 289, 295.
[¶42.] Applying our well-settled rules of interpretation here, it is evident that
the phrase “the effective date of this ordinance” in the definition of lot of record does
not perforce mean the effective date of the 2014 revised ordinance. On the contrary,
while the first page contains the effective date statement relied on by the majority
opinion, the first page also states that the 2014 revised ordinance “adopts the
revised zoning regulations” contained therein and only “repeals any other ordinance
or parts thereof in conflict with” the 2014 revised ordinance. Further, the 2014
revised ordinance specifically identifies “the McCook County Comprehensive Plan”
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and provides that “[t]hese regulations are designed to carry out the goals,
objectives, and policies of the Comprehensive Plan.” Finally, Chapter 1.04 provides
that “where these regulations and other regulations . . . conflict or overlap
whichever imposes the more stringent restrictions shall prevail[,]” and “[a]ll other
regulations inconsistent with these regulations are hereby repealed to the extent of
inconsistency only.” Thus, the meaning of “this ordinance” depends on the
provisions contained in the County’s prior ordinance enactments.
[¶43.] Looking then to the County’s Comprehensive Zoning Plan enacted in
1989, 10 the County defined “lot of record” as:
A lot which is part of a subdivision, the plat of which has been
recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of McCook
County, South Dakota; or a parcel of land, the deed of which was
recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of McCook
County, South Dakota, prior to the adoption of these regulations.
(Emphasis added.) The County adopted revised ordinances in 1998 and 1999;
however, those revised ordinances similarly defined “lot of record” to mean “[a] lot
or parcel of land” platted with the County “prior to the adoption of these
regulations.” (Emphasis added.) In its 2001 revised ordinance, the County defined
“lot of record” as:
A lot of record is a lot which is part of a subdivision or a certified
survey map which has been recorded in the office of the County
Register of Deeds, or a parcel of land, the deed to which was
recorded in the office of said Register of Deeds prior to the
effective date of this ordinance.
10. According to the County, it first enacted its comprehensive zoning plan in
1979, although identified as taking effect in 1981. However, this ordinance
was repealed in its entirety, and a new comprehensive plan was adopted in
1989. Thus, the County’s Comprehensive Zoning Plan is the 1989 ordinance.
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(Emphasis added.) The 2002, 2007, and 2014 revised ordinances contain the same
“lot of record” definition, referring to the “effective date of this ordinance.”
[¶44.] Although the 1989 through 1999 definitions use the phrase “these
regulations” and the 2001 definition first used the phrase “this ordinance,” it
appears from the 1989 ordinance and subsequent revised ordinances, including the
2014 revised ordinance, that words “ordinance” and “regulation” are used
interchangeably. More importantly, however, there is no language in the 2001
revised ordinance to support that the change in phrasing to “this ordinance” meant
the County intended to repeal the prior meaning of lot of record or to create a new
(and always changing) effective date for determining whether a particular lot is a of
lot of record. There is also nothing in the 2002, 2007, or 2014 revised ordinances
indicating that the continued use of “this ordinance” in the definition of lot of record
means something other than that intended by the County’s Comprehensive Zoning
Plan adopted in 1989.
[¶45.] We often state that our preeminent goal when interpreting text is
discerning intent. Adhering to this, it is important to consider the definition of “lot
of record” within the context of the County’s Comprehensive Zoning Plan as a
whole. Tellingly, the County’s stated purpose in the 2001, 2002, 2007, and 2014
revised ordinances for land in “the agricultural district is to provide for a vigorous
agricultural industry by preserving for agricultural production those agricultural
lands beyond areas of planned development.” And consistent with this goal, the
County has, through its revised ordinances, enacted more restrictive regulations
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over the years, specifically minimizing the number of residential dwellings allowed
in its agriculturally zoned land. 11
[¶46.] The majority opinion seems to acknowledge that its interpretation that
“this ordinance” means the then-enacted iteration is contrary to the County’s intent,
noting that “[i]t may be exceptional within the agriculturally zoned area” to allow
Stockwell individual building eligibilities. The majority opinion nevertheless
dismisses the incongruity because, in its view, such an interpretation is not absurd,
and if the County intended something different, then the Board of Adjustment can
amend or repeal its zoning ordinance to clarify its intent. But the County’s intent is
evident when the definition of “lot of record” is read in context and in light of the
2014 revised ordinances as a whole—“the effective date of this ordinance” is
referring to the County’s Comprehensive Zoning Plan enacted in 1989.
[¶47.] Because it is apparent from an application of our well-settled rules of
interpreting text that the Board of Adjustment properly concluded that the phrase
“effective date of this ordinance” in the definition of “lot of record” means the 1989
ordinance, I would affirm the circuit court’s order granting the County summary
judgment.
[¶48.] KERN, Justice, joins this writing.
11. For example, in the 1998 revised ordinance, the County increased the
number of acres needed to qualify for a building eligibility in the agricultural
district from 1 acre to 20 acres, and then in 2007, the County further
restricted the eligibility from 20 acres to 40 acres.
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