COUNTY OF ADAMS, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Irene ROMEO and Matthew T. Romeo, Defendants-Appellants-Petitioners.
No. 93-0781
Supreme Court
Oral argument October 11, 1994.—Decided March 14, 1995.
528 N.W.2d 418
For the plaintiff-respondent there was a brief by Michael J. McKenna, Adams County Corporation Counsel, Friendship and oral argument by Michael J. McKenna.
Amicus curiae was filed by Robert W. Mulcahy, William F. White and Michael, Best & Friedrich, Madison for the Wisconsin Counties Association and Wisconsin Towns Association.
Amicus curiae was filed by Lorraine C. Stoltzfus, assistant attorney general, with whom on the brief was James E. Doyle, attorney general, for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Wisconsin Public Intervenor and Wisconsin‘s Environmental Decade, Inc.
STEINMETZ, J. Irene and Matthew Romeo seek review of a decision of the court of appeals, which affirmed a decision of the circuit court for Adams county, the Honorable Duane H. Polivka, imposing a forfeiture on the Romeos for violating the Adams County Shoreland Protection Ordinance (ordinance)
There are two issues in this case. The first issue is whether the ordinance prohibits the Romeos from charging the public a fee to fish from ponds that are located on property within a conservancy district. Because the ordinance expressly permits fishing in a conservancy district, we hold that the Romeos may charge the public to fish from their ponds. The second issue is whether the ordinance prohibits the Romeos from using a non-residential building that is located on property within a conservancy district to sell fresh fish, smoked fish, and jams. Because the ordinance does not expressly permit the use of a building to sell these items, we hold that they may not be sold within a conservancy district. Accordingly, we reverse in part and affirm in part the decision of the court of appeals.
The Adams County Shoreland Protection Ordinance lists several land uses that are permitted in any area designated as a conservancy district. The Romeos own land that is located in a conservancy district. On this land, the Romeos raise fish and stock them in various ponds. For a fee, the public is permitted to fish from these ponds. Persons who catch fish can purchase them and have them cleaned. The cleaning takes place in a 480 square foot, nonresidential building that is located on the premises. This building is also used as a general fish market where the Romeos sell fresh fish, smoked fish, and jams. The Romeos have signs posted to advertise their business to the public.
Adams county issued citations to the Romeos for allegedly engaging in prohibited activities under the ordinance. Based on these citations, the county subsequently filed a complaint in circuit court seeking a judgment against the Romeos and seeking to enjoin
In a published opinion, the court of appeals affirmed the circuit court‘s decision. County of Adams v. Romeo, 181 Wis. 2d 183, 510 N.W.2d 693 (Ct. App. 1993). Distinguishing between commercial and noncommercial activities, the court of appeals held that the ordinance prohibits the operation of a commercial fee-fishing business and the retail sale of fish and other products from a building located on property within a conservancy district. Id. at 191. The court noted that under the ordinance, the Romeos may use their building solely in conjunction with the raising of fish. Id. at 189-90. However, according to the appellate court, selling fish and other products from the building transforms the building‘s use from agricultural to commercial, and to the extent that the building‘s use is commercial, its use is prohibited under the ordinance. Id. The Romeos petitioned this court for review, which was granted.
To resolve the two issues at bar, this court must interpret an ordinance and apply it to undisputed facts. The interpretation of an ordinance and its application to undisputed facts is a question of law, which this court decides without deference to the lower courts.
Adams county promulgated the Adams County Shoreland Protection Ordinance in 1990. The ordinance mirrors the language of
Section 9 of the ordinance regulates the use of land that is located within a conservancy district. Section 9.41 provides that property located within a conservancy district may not be put to any use that is prohibited under sec. 8.4 of the ordinance. Section 8.4 provides that “any use not listed in Sections 8.31, 8.32, or 8.33 is prohibited.”
The county urges this court to draw a distinction between commercial and noncommercial uses and then hold that the ordinance prohibits commercial uses. However, the ordinance does not make such a distinction. Nor has the county demonstrated that the commercial aspect of charging a fee creates a greater
With respect to the second issue, the Romeos argue that secs. 8.31(5) and 8.33(2) of the ordinance expressly permit the use of a nonresidential building to sell fish and other related products. We disagree. Section 8.31(5) of the ordinance4 provides that the “cultivation of agricultural crops” is a permitted use of property within a conservancy district. The Romeos contend that this language permits them to raise and sell fish. The premise of their argument is that raising fish is an agricultural use of property, which is permitted under sec. 8.31(5). However, agriculture and aquaculture entail two vastly different uses of property. Whereas the typical farmer must till the soil and fertilize the land, the fish farmer must work with bodies of water to enrich the environment for fish spawning. We recognize that the ordinance expressly seeks to protect fish spawning grounds. See Adams County, WI, Ordinance sec. 9.2. However, this only strengthens our conclusion that aquaculture and agriculture were not intended to be synonymous, because it shows that where the ordinance intended to speak to fish spawning, it did so specifically, not through some vague reference to agriculture.
A fundamental rule of statutory interpretation is that, if possible, statutes are to be construed in a manner such that no word is rendered surplusage and every word is given effect. Donaldson v. State, 93 Wis. 2d 306, 286 N.W.2d 817 (1980). The rules governing the interpretation of ordinances and statutes are the same. State v. Ozaukee Board of Adjustment, 152 Wis. 2d 552, 559, 449 N.W.2d 47 (Ct. App. 1989). Thus, if possible, this court must give effect to each word used in the ordinance, including the words “solely” and “raising.”
The Romeos argue that it is anomalous to allow them to use their building to raise fish but prohibit them from using it to sell the fish. They argue that such a holding would have the negative effect of prohibiting
Section 8.31(5) and sec. 8.33(2) are totally different. First, sec. 8.31(5) applies only to those activities that do not require a zoning permit, whereas sec. 8.33(2) applies only to those activities that do require a zoning permit. We note that the parties have not briefed this court on whether a farmer would require a zoning permit to sell produce along the roadside. Second, sec. 8.31(5) does not contain any limiting language in regard to the cultivation of agricultural crops. In contrast, as previously discussed, sec. 8.33(2) contains language that limits the use of a building to only those activities that assist in the breeding and growth of aquatic animals. As a result of these differences between sec. 8.31(5) and 8.33(2), we are not persuaded that our holding will have the negative effect on farmers that the Romeos posit.7
The Romeos admit that they use their building as a market to sell fresh fish, smoked fish, and jams. We have already concluded that the Romeos may not use the building to sell fish because the connection between raising fish and selling fish is too attenuated. There simply is no connection between raising fish and selling jams. Accordingly, the Romeos may not use their building to sell fresh fish, smoked fish, or jams.
In summary, we hold that the ordinance expressly permits the Romeos to charge the public a fee to fish from ponds within a conservancy district. We therefore reverse the court of appeals’ holding that the Romeos may not operate a fee-fishing business, and we remand the case to the trial court with instructions to reduce the forfeiture entered against the Romeos by the amount imposed upon them for charging the public a fee to fish from ponds on their property. However, we affirm the court of appeals’ holding that the Romeos may not use their building to sell fresh fish, smoked fish, or jams. The signs posted to advertise the Romeos’ prohibited activities are to be removed since they are within the conservancy district.
By the Court.—The decision of the court of appeals is reversed in part, affirmed in part, and remanded.
SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, J. (concurring and dissenting). Fishing as used in the ordinance must be interpreted to mean fishing as used in the statutes for purposes of licensing and regulation. The fee fishing in this case is not fishing for purposes of licensing and
I am authorized to state that Chief Justice NATHAN S. HEFFERNAN joins this opinion.
WILLIAM A. BABLITCH, J. (concurring and dissenting). I respectfully disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that commercial fee fishing in an artificially constructed pond is a permitted activity in a shoreland conservancy district.
At times, the syllogisms of legal analysis must bend to the spirit that emanates from within. This is one of those times. Simply put, this is not fishing.
Fishing is many things, the least of which to many who indulge is the catching of fish.
It is, in the winter doldrums, the casual browsing through the fishing catalogues, the fisherperson‘s equivalent of the gardener‘s seed catalogues, contemplating the coming renewal;
It is the snap of a twig across the lake on a dew filled morning signalling the approach of a deer taking the first sip of the dawn;
It is the desolate cry of a loon signalling its mate in a most haunting communion indecipherable to mere humans;
It is the screech of the owl ten feet above the river bend warning the invader of its displeasure as we approach at dusk to witness the fleetingly hypnotic hatch of the mayfly, ironically renewing itself at the moment of its demise;
It is the swish swish swish of the giant wings of the heron as it rises reluctantly from its shallow water
It is all of this, and more, that brings us back again and again. This is fishing; the catching of a fish is merely ancillary.
And it is this, I submit, that the authors of the legislation establishing conservancy districts were referring to when they specifically enumerated “fishing” as a permitted activity. The statute speaks to this when it states as its purpose to “further the maintenance of safe and healthful conditions; prevent and control water pollution; protect spawning grounds, fish and aquatic life; control building sites, placement of structure and land uses and reserve shore cover and natural beauty.”
An artificially constructed pond within yards of a natural waterway, 100 feet long, 30 feet wide, and 3 feet deep into which is put a corn or pellet baited hook with sufficient strength of line to water ski a polar bear is not fishing. Commercial fee fishing requires no license, carries with it no restrictions as to time, amount of equipment or other regulation. It simply is not fishing within the meaning contemplated.
I have no objection to this activity. But not within a conservancy district.
I am authorized to state that Chief Justice NATHAN S. HEFFERNAN joins this opinion.
Notes
Permitted Uses. The following uses shall be allowed, subject to the general shoreland zoning regulations in this ordinance, the provisions of Sections 30 and 31 of the Wisconsin Statutes, and the provisions of other state and federal laws, if applicable:
8.31 Activities and uses which do not require the issuance of a zoning permit, but which must be carried out without filling, flooding, draining, dredging, ditching, tiling, or excavating:
- Hiking, fishing, trapping, hunting, swimming and boating;
- The cultivation of agricultural crops;
...
...
The licensing and regulation statute,
Uses which are allowed upon the issuance of a zoning (land use) permitted: . . .
- The construction and maintenance of nonresidential buildings used solely in conjunction with raising of waterfowl, minnows or other wetland or aquatic animals or used solely for some other purpose which is compatible with wetland preservation, if such building cannot as a practical matter be located outside the wetland, provided that:
- Any such building does not exceed five hundred (500) square feet in floor area; . . .
