FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS
: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
JEFFREY S. McQUARY ALAN S. TOWNSEND
Office of Corporation Counsel GEORGE T. PATTON, JR.
For The City of Indianapolis, Indiana PAUL D. VINK
Indianapolis, Indiana Bose McKinney & Evans, LLP
Indianapolis, Indiana
METROPOLITAN DEVELOPMENT )
COMMISSION OF MARION COUNTY, et al, )
)
Appellants-Defendants, )
)
vs. ) No. 49A05-0309-CV-465
)
PINNACLE MEDIA, LLC, )
)
Appellee-Plaintiff. )
FRIEDLANDER, Judge
Did the trial court abuse its discretion in awarding attorney fees to Pinnacle
pursuant to Ind. Code Ann. § 34-52-1-1 (West 1999)?
We affirm in part and reverse in part.See footnote
The parties do not dispute the material facts. Pinnacles primary business is
the erection of outdoor advertising signs (sign(s)). In a typical transaction, Pinnacle
leases land from a landowner, obtains the necessary permits from state and/or local
authorities, erects a sign, and then leases space on the sign to various
entities. Embarking on such a transaction, Pinnacle entered into leases with the
Hoosier Heritage Port Authority (HHPA), which authorized Pinnacle to build two signs on
HHPA property that consisted of a railroad corridor located near I-465. Pinnacle
then sought to obtain any necessary permits.
In July 1999, Pinnacle contacted the DMD to request permits to build two
signs on the HHPA property. After careful consideration of the issue by
several DMD officials, the agency responded to Pinnacles request with a letter dated
July 26, 1999.See footnote The letter provided in relevant part:
Based on the location of the proposed sign, to be located on the
parcel described in the attached legal description, being located within right-of-way owned and
controlled by the State of Indiana, and the fact that the I-465 right-of-way
is not within a zoning district, this office lacks jurisdiction to issue, or
to require an improvement location permit.
Appellants Appendix at 31. The DMD further recommended that Pinnacle contact the
State regarding these issues. Upon receiving this letter, Pinnacle requested clarification from
the DMD in light of the fact that the property was owned by
HHPA, not the State.
See footnote The next day, on July 27, the DMD
reiterated that the City lacked jurisdiction over Pinnacles proposed signs because they were
to be located on unzoned property:
This letter clarifies my letter to you dated July 26, 1999. [Pinnacle]
has restated that the property, upon which the sign is proposed to be
located is owned by [HHPA], an entity established pursuant to IC 8-10-5.
Regardless of the ownership of the property, due to the fact that the
I-465 right-of-way is not designated as within a zoning district on the zoning
maps, this office lacks jurisdiction to issue, or to require an improvement location
permit.
Any approvals required by the State of Indiana, however, must be obtained.
Appellants Appendix at 32 (emphasis supplied). At the time of the letters,
the only unzoned areas in Marion County were the interstate rights-of-way.
After receiving the July 1999 letters, Pinnacle requested and obtained permits from the
Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) and then built the two signs in accordance
with its leases with HHPA. The City did not object to the
construction of these signs. Soon after the signs were erected, however, the
DMD began receiving complaints from neighborhood organizations that were upset about the signs
and worried about proliferation of more signs on the unzoned rights-of-way within the
I-465 loop.
After building the signs on the HHPA property, Pinnacle pursued more leases on
similarly situated unzoned property within Marion County. Pursuant to these leases, the
property owners authorized Pinnacle to construct signs at fifteen separate locations. Between
February 29 and April 19, 2000, Pinnacle submitted fifteen applications for sign permits
to INDOT, one for each of the fifteen leased locations.
See footnote Pinnacle did
not apply for permits from the DMD, as the land remained unzoned.
While Pinnacle was applying for additional permits from INDOT, City officials began, in
March 2000, discussing proposals to zone the land under the interstates. Maury
Plambeck, then the DMDs Administrator of Current Planning and now the Director of
the DMD, drafted a proposed ordinance to zone the interstate rights-of-way. On
March 21, 2000, along with a draft of the proposed ordinance, Plambeck circulated
an internal memorandum to five individuals that provided in part:
Yesterday, we discussed the problem of advertising signs located within the interstate right-of-way,
on railroad right-of-way. Two advertising signs were located within the Interstate 465
right-of-way, in northeast Marion County, because the interstates are not zoned. Current
Planning provided a map which showed that the only unzoned areas in Marion
County are the interstate rights-of-way. The map also showed the locations of
railroad rights-of-way that intersect interstate rights-of-way. There is the potential for many
more advertising signs to be located within interstate rights-of-way, without approval or review
by the City staff.
We determined that the best way to solve the problem would be to
zone the interstate rights-of-way. Attached is a draft of a proposed ordinance
to zone the interstate rights-of-way. . . . If the draft is
acceptable, I would like to take the ordinance to public hearing as soon
as possible.
Bd. of Zoning Appeals of Fort Wayne v. Shell Oil Co., 329 N.E.2d
at 642 (citations omitted) (emphasis supplied).
The City asserts a novel argument, and one of first impression in Indiana,
that the doctrine of vested rights only applies with respect to the governmental
unit with which the permit application was filed.
See footnote We agree with the
Citys proposition in situations where two or more governmental units concurrently have their
own permitting process. Indeed, this is the case under the amended zoning
laws with respect to signs constructed on interstate rights-of-way, as a sign company
must apply for a permit from INDOT and a permit from the DMD.
Thus, under the amended law, a sign companys rights would not vest
against the City until an application was filed with the City, irrespective of
whether an application had been filed with INDOT. We are confronted here,
however, with a much different situation.
At the time Pinnacle filed its applications with INDOT, the City, by its
own admission, lacked jurisdiction to issue or require permits for signs on unzoned
property. The July 1999 letters to Pinnacle clearly reflect this. When
Pinnacle filed its permit applications with INDOT in February and April 2000, nothing
had changed and the City still had no similar permitting process in place.
In fact, when the last applications were filed with INDOT on April
19, the record reveals that the amended ordinance had yet to be proposed
to the Commission and was not enacted in its revised form by the
City-County Council for nearly three more months. Thus, any attempt to apply
for a permit from the City on or before April 19, 2000 would
have been futile because the land remained unzoned. As Stephen Spencer testified,
if Pinnacle had come and filed these applications at that time, he might
have thought it somewhat odd because it would be unnecessary in light of
the policy expressed in the July 1999 letters.
Appellees Appendix at 182.
Spencer further testified that he would have likely responded with letters consistent
to the July 1999 letters.
See footnote
Under the specific circumstances presented in the instant case, we conclude that the
vested rights doctrine applies to estop the Citys belated effort to acquire jurisdiction
over construction of the signs in question. Consistent with the doctrine, a
property owner should have the ability to survey the zoning laws as they
exist at a particular time and determine with certainty which permitting authorities require
an application. Once a property owner applies for the relevant building permits
under the prevailing zoning laws, the owners rights vest as against other government
units who subsequently attempt to intervene by enacting laws to assert jurisdiction (i.e.,
to require permits) over the subject matter of the pending permit applications.
As our supreme court observed in a slightly different context, A government which
exercises such police power over the property of its citizens without any fixed
standards which are known to the citizens and the enforcing officials is a
government by men, and not by law.
Knutson v. State, 160 N.E.2d
at 202.
The City alternatively argues that even if the doctrine of vested rights applies
in this instance, the law in existence at the time Pinnacle applied for
permits from INDOT forbade the erection of billboards on unzoned land. Over
two years after the July 1999 letters and just before Pinnacle initiated litigation,
the City notified Pinnacle that it now believed that the position expressed in
the July 1999 letters was incorrect, as the City had previously not recognized
the applicability of Indianapolis Rev. Code § 730-505(a)(1). The City argues that
§ 730-505(a)(1) applies to both unzoned land and zoned land.
Interpretation of a zoning ordinance is a question of law. Discovery House,
Inc. v. Metro. Bd. of Zoning Appeals, 701 N.E.2d 577 (Ind. Ct. App.
1998), trans. denied. When we interpret the language of a zoning ordinance,
we follow the ordinary rules of statutory construction. Johnson Oil Co, Inc.
v. Area Plan Commn of Evansville & Vanderburgh County, 715 N.E.2d 1011 (Ind.
Ct. App. 1999). We interpret the ordinance as a whole and give
its words their plain, ordinary, and usual meaning. Id. All language
is deemed to have been used intentionally. Preston v. State, 735 N.E.2d
330 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000). Zoning regulations that inhibit the use of
real property, however, are in derogation of the common law and are to
be strictly construed. Discovery House, Inc. v. Metro. Bd. of Zoning Appeals,
701 N.E.2d 577.
Indianapolis Rev. Code § 730-505, entitled Civil zoning violations, provides in relevant part:
It shall be unlawful for any person who is the owner or contract
vendee of, or who has a possessory interest in, real property located in
Marion County to cause, suffer or allow any of the following civil zoning
violations to occur on such property:
The location, erection, or maintenance of any sign not specifically permitted by Chapter
734 of this Code;
A defense is frivolous if it is made primarily to harass or maliciously
injure another, if counsel is unable to make a good faith and rational
argument on the merits of the action, or if counsel is unable to
support the action by a good faith and rational argument for extension, modification,
or reversal of existing law. Brademas v. South Bend Cmty. Sch. Corp.,
783 N.E.2d 745 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans. denied. A defense is
unreasonable if, based upon the totality of the circumstances, including the law and
the facts known at the time, no reasonable attorney would consider the defense
justified or worthy of litigation. Id. Finally, a defense is groundless
if no facts exist which support the claim relied upon and supported by
the losing party. Id. An award of attorney fees is not
justified merely because a party loses on the merits. Id.
When reviewing an award of attorney fees under Indiana Code section 34-52-1-1, we
first review the trial courts findings of fact under a clearly erroneous standard
and review the legal conclusions of the trial court de novo. Finally,
we review the trial courts decision to award attorney fees and the amount
thereof under an abuse of discretion standard. An abuse of discretion occurs
when the trial courts decision is clearly against the logic and effect of
the facts and circumstances before the court, or if the court has misinterpreted
the law.
Brademas v. South Bend Cmty. Sch. Corp., 783 N.E.2d at 750 (citations omitted).
The trial court made the following findings and conclusions with regard to the
award of attorney fees:
Ind. Code § 34-52-1-1 permits the prevailing party to recover attorneys fees if
a party either brought a defense on a claim that is frivolous, unreasonable,
or groundless or continued to litigate a defense after it became frivolous, unreasonable,
or groundless.
The following undisputed facts, among others, demonstrate that the Development Commission and the
DMD are engaging in frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless litigation.
When first confronted with the issue of whether outdoor advertising signs are authorized
on unzoned property in Marion County, the DMD carefully studied the issue and
advised Pinnacle that the DMD lacks jurisdiction to issue, or to require an
improvement location permit on unzoned property in Marion County.
When the DMD understood the practical application of its statement . . .,
it rushed to enact the Amendment. Before the Amendment was enacted, however,
Pinnacle had submitted permit applications to INDOT to build another fifteen (15) outdoor
advertising signs in Marion County, ultimately acquiring ten (10).
When Pinnacle started to build the first of the ten (10) outdoor advertising
signs, the DMD issued the Work Stop Order stopping construction. The DMD
issued the Work Stop Order even though Pinnacle had provided the DMD with
legal authority demonstrating that the Amendment did not apply to the ten (10)
permits acquired from INDOT. Pinnacle even met with the legal counsel for
the Development Commission and the DMD and personally handed them the legal research.
Once Pinnacle initiated this lawsuit, the Development Commission and the DMD reversed their
position and argued that the Amendment was not necessary to halt Pinnacles efforts.
Instead, they argued that outdoor advertising signs have always been prohibited on
unzoned property in Marion County. In their argument to this Court, the
Development Commission and the DMD labeled Stephen Spencer as a bureaucratic know nothing,
claiming that the Amendment simply reiterated the long standing prohibition on outdoor advertising
signs in Marion County. All along, however, the Development Commission and the
DMD knew this argument was inaccurate. In March of 2000, the Director
of the DMD, Maury Plambeck, authored an internal Memorandum in which he acknowledged
that Pinnacle had tapped into an area where There is the potential for
many more advertising signs to be located within interstate rights-of-way, without approval or
review by the City staff.
Appellants Appendix at 19-20 (emphases in original).
The facts cited by the trial court are for the most part accurate.
We would note, however, that the City informed Pinnacle of its belated
discovery of Indianapolis Rev. Code § 730-505 and its interpretation of the provisions
applicability to the situation at hand on October 1, 2001, after litigation had
been threatened but three months before Pinnacle commenced litigation. Moreover, we cannot
agree that the record reflects the City knew all along that this argument
was inaccurate, as Plambeck (not yet the Director of the DMD) authored the
internal memorandum cited by the trial court in March 2000, before all but
one of the applications had been filed with INDOT and well before litigation
had been threatened or the City had considered the applicability of § 730-505.
This obscure loophole found by Pinnacle had not previously been recognized or
dealt with by the City. Therefore, the City should be given some
leeway in determining how to defend this case and should not be limited
to presenting only its initial position articulated before the issue had been fully
developed in litigation.
That leaves us with the fact that the DMD issued the Stop Work
Order even though Pinnacle had provided the City with legal authority (Yater and
Shell Oil) concerning the doctrine of vested rights, which Pinnacle asserted was controlling.
Further, two months prior to initiating litigation, Pinnacles counsel met with Plambeck
(then Director of the DMD) and counsel for the City and provided them
with a copy of the Chemical Waste case. Despite the fact that
Pinnacle explicitly presented the City with its position that it had obtained a
vested right, the City was not required to bow to Pinnacles interpretation of
the law. The application of the doctrine of vested rights in this
unusual context had not been addressed in Indiana and the cases supplied by
Pinnacle were not directly on point. While the City ultimately lost on
the merits, its defense that the doctrine does not apply between governmental units
was not unreasonable, frivolous, or groundless.
We conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by awarding attorney fees
to Pinnacle. We reverse that portion of the judgment, and affirm the
award of summary judgment in favor of Pinnacle.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
KIRSCH, C.J., and BARNES, J., concur.