EXCHANGE INVESTMENTS, INC., et al., Appellant,
v.
ALACHUA COUNTY, Etc., et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*1224 Herbert T. Schwartz of Schwartz & Wilson, Gainesville, for appellant.
Thomas A. Bustin, Gainesville, and Dennis R. Long of Wilson, Wilson & Long, Palm Harbor, for appellee Alachua County.
Frederick D. Smith of McGalliard, Mills, deMontmollin, Smith & Monaco, Gainesville, for appellee Interstate.
BARFIELD, Judge.
Appellants, plaintiffs below, appeal from an order granting a motion to dismiss. The complaint challenges Alachua County's rezoning of property owned by Interstate Management Corporation. The issues presented on appeal are whether the trial court erred in dismissing Count I of the complaint, which alleged that the rezoning decision was void due to procedural irregularities, on grounds that plaintiffs' lacked standing; and, whether the trial court erred in dismissing Count II of the complaint, which alleged that the rezoning decision was arbitrary, unreasonable, and unlawful, also on standing grounds. We hold that the trial court erred and reverse.
Appellants are owners of real property in Alachua County located on South West Archer Road. According to the complaint, their properties are "located within one mile of the parcel owned by defendant [appellee] Interstate... ." This is the area where Shands and the VA hospitals and the University of Florida health colleges are located. There are severe traffic and parking problems in the area.
Alachua County had long adhered to zoning which prohibited commercial development in the area. In September, 1983, however, the county approved rezoning of Interstate's seven acre parcel as a Planned Unit Development (P.U.D.). According to the complaint, Interstate plans to construct a hotel and convention facility on the site.
Later in 1983, the appellants challenged the rezoning decision in circuit court. The complaint was dismissed on grounds that plaintiffs lacked standing. This court affirmed, per curiam, without opinion. Exchange Investments, Inc. v. Alachua County,
In September of 1984, Interstate went back to the county and asked for several changes to its approved plan. Of primary interest is the request to reduce the number of parking places from 392 (as required by the Alachua County zoning ordinance) to 304. The county approved the changes *1225 and the appellants sought relief in circuit court. The essence of their complaint was similar to that of the previous suit: that the action was procedurally defective (Count I) and that it was "arbitrary unreasonable and unlawful" because it violated the parking requirements of the zoning ordinance. Plaintiffs alleged that they would suffer special injuries in the form of "severely aggravated traffic congestion and parking overflow."[1] The county sought to dismiss the complaint on standing grounds. The court granted the motion with leave to amend. The plaintiffs chose not to amend but instead undertook an appeal to this court.
In their first count, the plaintiffs alleged that the rezoning decision "was adopted without due notice as required by section 20 of Alachua County Ordinance 80-3 and other applicable law, or otherwise violated procedural requirements for the adoption of such zoning decisions." According to Renard v. Dade County,
The dismissal of Count II on the basis of lack of standing presents a closer and more complex question.
Because of the three standards announced in Renard, the first step in the analysis is to determine in which category a particular complaint or count falls. Skaggs-Albertson's v. ABC Liquors, Inc.,
There is no controlling precedent, but Florida cases suggest that appellants have properly pled standing. Appellees heavily rely on Skaggs-Albertson's Properties, Inc. v. Michels Belleair Bluffs Pharmacy, Inc.,
In Thompson v. Planning Commission,
Inasmuch as we find no Florida precedent to control our disposition of this appeal, we have examined other authorities for guidance. We find that these authorities suggest the trial court erred in dismissing the complaint.
In reality, two questions are presented: (1) is off-street parking a legally recognizable interest and, if so, (2) are appellants close enough to appellee's development that their own parking interests could be adversely affected by any overflow caused by a "shortage" of spaces in the development.
Thompson suggests that off-street parking is a legally-recognizable interest. It is not difficult to understand how the interests of commercial and residential property owners in an urban environment are closely tied to the parking available to those who intend to use the property. Overflow from a nearby landowner can obviously have an adverse effect. Other jurisdictions have permitted neighbors to challenge off-street parking variances without even discussing the standing issue. Siller v. Board of Supervisors,
The more difficult question is whether appellants are close enough to the development to be adversely affected by a parking overflow. Professor Anderson states: "While the essential element of standing is the special damage which will be suffered, the ease with which this can be established appears to vary with the distance between the property subject to the decision and the land of the plaintiff... . The factual problem of whether the decision affects certain land becomes more difficult as the distance between the land subject to the decision and the land of the petitioner increases." 4 Anderson, American Law of Zoning § 25.18 (2d ed. 1977). See Dillon Cos. v. City of Boulder,
The only case located where the distance question was an issue in the off-street parking context is Gaona v. Town of Huntington Zoning Board of Appeals, 106 App.Div.2d 638,
We conclude that there is ample authority that off-street parking is a legally recognizable interest. The issue of distance is more difficult, but it is not impossible to imagine a situation where parking is so scarce that overflow could affect properties as much as a mile distant. People might park a mile away and walk if that was the closest place available, or there *1227 could be a "domino effect" where the overflow from one lot goes into the next lot, creating shortage and overflow there and so on, until it reached plaintiffs' property. Since, for purpose of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action, the allegations of the complaint are assumed to be true and all reasonable inferences are allowed in plaintiffs' favor, Orlando Sports Stadium, Inc. v. State ex rel. Powell,
REVERSED.
JOANOS, J., concurs.
ERVIN, J., concurs in part and dissents in part, with written opinion.
ERVIN, Judge, Concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Were it not for this court's prior per curiam affirmance (PCA), without opinion, involving the same parties, I could agree without hesitation to all of Judge Barfield's fine opinion for the court. My difficulty in doing so, however, is that a portion of one of the issues now raised on appeal was previously considered and disposed of by our prior PCA. In that an appellate court can take judicial notice of its own records, Department of Legal Affairs v. District Court of Appeal, 5th District,
The doctrines of estoppel by judgment or res judicata are not undermined by reason of the fact that our prior affirmance was without opinion. While a PCA has no precedential value, it becomes the law of the case as to the same parties and can be used for res judicata purposes. Department of Legal Affairs v. District Court of Appeal, 5th District; State Commission on Ethics v. Sullivan,
The remaining allegations in count II of appellants' complaint now on review essentially allege that the county's decision will cause "parking overflow". Since parking overflow was neither alleged nor considered on appeal in Exchange I, appellants are not now barred from using it to allege a "legally recognizable interest". I therefore concur with the majority's opinion as it relates to such allegations.
I also agree with the majority in reversing the lower court's order of dismissal of count I. Count I alleges that the county's decision to decrease the number of parking spaces in the subject PUD was adopted without due notice as required by ordinance, and "otherwise violated procedural requirements for the adoption of such zoning decisions." While the complaint in Exchange I had also alleged that the county's decisions were made without due notice, those decisions concerned the initial rezoning *1228 of the parcel to PUD status. Because the decisions contested in the two cases are different, and, unlike Exchange I, there is no allegation in Exchange II that appellants waived their right to raise the notice issue, the PCA in Exchange I does not bar appellants' theory espoused under count I in the complaint before us. Under Renard v. Dade County, appellants clearly have standing as to that count.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The appellants' complaint in their first action alleged the values of their properties were threatened by economic development that would aggravate traffic congestion and create an area of economic blight.
[2] On appeal after remand,
