Lead Opinion
Thе trial court ruled that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to review a decision of a county zoning board. The holding was based on the timing of the district court challenge, which the court determined to have been brought prematurely. The question is presented on facts that seem almost ludicrous. A statute provides for court review by way of a petition fоr certiorari within a period set from the board’s final action. The statutory scheme for this particular board’s operation seems to contemplate that the board’s public records can be kept in a private residence, and they were here. Although there was certainly nothing surreptitious about the record keeping in the present case, or any suggestion that the parties could not have inquired into them, the challenged ruling seems to present something of an anomaly. The parties lost a statutory right to challenge administrative action because it was, it turned out, not really final — but only as revealed in records kept in the zoning board’s administrator’s private residence. We reverse.
I. Before reciting the facts, we point out that the trial court did not lack subject matter jurisdiction in this controversy. For several years we have sought to correct a formerly widespread misimpression that often confused a court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction with a court’s lack of authority to act in a particular matter. There is a certain poetic justice in placing this task on us because the confusion can be traced at least in part to some of our own past cases.
We hope the distinction is now clear as it is important: the term subject matter jurisdiction refers to the power of a eourt to hear and determine the class of cases to which the proceedings in question belong. Where subject matter jurisdiction exists, it does not necessarily follow that a court has authority to act in a specific case included within that general class. We have tried to make this distinction clear in numerous more recent eases. See, e.g., Christie v. Rolscreen Co.,
II. Giese Construction Company, Inc., Kent E. Klopfenstein, Karen A. Klоpfenstein, James Heinz, and Jeanine Heinz (interve-nors) filed an application for a conditional use permit to operate a sand and gravel pit on a tract of land in Franklin County. The Franklin County board of adjustment (the board) held a hearing on the application on March 21, 1995. The application was tabled until a June 6, 1995, hearing because of protests from area residents. At the June 6 hearing the board passed a resolution grant
The plaintiffs filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the district court on July 5, 1995. This was after the final decision of the board was announced at the public hearing on June 6, but before the resolution was officially signed and filed by the board on July 21. The board answered and the permit applicants intervened.
The intervenors and board moved to dismiss. The court noted that the board did not have an оffice in the courthouse, had not officially designated an office, and that the board delivered the resolution to the zoning administrator at his personal residence, where it was kept on the board’s behalf. The court ruled there was no statutory requirement that the board designate an office, and no impediment to its office being located outside a public building. The court then ruled the zoning administrator’s personal residence was the board’s office. The district court sustained the motion to dismiss.
The matter is before us on plaintiffs’ appeal. Our review is de novo. Iowa R.App. P. 4. Issues of the jurisdiction, authority, and venue of the district court are legal issues reviewed on error. In re Marriage of Engler,
III. Iowa Code chapter 335 (1995) governs county zoning and county boards of adjustment. Section 335.10 provides for the appointment of a county board of adjustment by the county board of supervisors. Section 335.12 governs the operations of county boards оf adjustment. This section directs the board to adopt rules and provide for meetings, all of which shall be open to the public. The section goes on to specify:
The board shall keep minutes of its proceedings, showing the vote of each member upon each question, or if absent or failing to vote, indicating such fact, and shall keep records of its examinations and other officiаl actions, all of which shall be immediately filed in the office of the board and shall be a public record.
Iowa Code § 335.12 (emphasis added). Code section 335.18 grants an aggrieved party the right to appeal a decision of the board of adjustment to the district court. This section provides:
Any person or persons, jointly or severally, aggrieved by аny decision of the board of adjustment under the provisions of this chapter ... may present to the court of record a petition, duly verified, setting forth that such decision is illegal, in whole or in part, specifying the grounds of the illegality. Such petition shall be presented to the court within thirty days after the filing of the decision in the office of the board.
Iowa Code § 335.18 (emphasis added).
Because the board’s resolutions are public records, Iowa Code chapter 22 (public right to examine public records) is implicated. The purpose of chapter 22 is to obviate “unnecessary secrecy in conducting the public’s business.” US West Communications, Inc. v. Office of Consumer Advocate,
Like the district court, we find nothing in Code chapter 335 that requires zoning board records to be kept in a public building. This is in contrast to a requirement for board records in an unrelated statute. Iowa Code section 468.173, concerning records of county levy and drainage districts, are specifically required to bе kept in. the office of the county auditor. See National Properties Corp. v. Polk County,
IV. We do think the records’ location calls for a liberal approach in assessing the procedural requirements of the chapter. In this light we think it is reasonable to find compliance with the time requirements for asserting the present challenge.
The present case illustrates why the informality surrounding the private possession of public records cries out against a strict interpretation of these timing requirements. It is clear that all parties attending the June 6 board meeting considered the board’s action at the time to be the official grant of the application. Those attending, including the plaintiffs, had a right to assume the “filing” would be done immediately as required by statute. Iowa Code § 385.12 (providing a record of the board’s official acts “shall be immediately filed in the office of the board”). Finally, it is important that the “flaw” relied on here relates to the beginning — not the end — of the period appropriate for filing.
Under the circumstances we think it is appropriate to interpret the thirty-day time requirement for filing a petition under Iowa Code section 335.18 (within thirty days after filing the decision) as we did in a somewhat analogous statute in Tombergs v. City of Eldridge,
We emphasize that this interpretation is demanded by the two special circumstances, already mentioned, that are peculiar to the present case. One is the keeping of the public records in a private residence. The other is the ability of the plaintiffs to rely on the board secretary’s compliance with the statutory duty to file the board action forthwith. If this had been done, the judicial proceeding in question would have complied with the time requirements for filing. The fact that the immediate filing requirement was violated was not a matter susceptible to public knowledge. Our interpretation should not be taken as precedent except in cases in which both these peculiar circumstances exist.
The judgment of the trial court is therefore reversed and the case remanded to district court for consideration of the plaintiffs’ challenge on its merits.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. We point out that the private storage of public records does not alter the statutory mandate that they be available to the public for examination. See Iowa Code §§ 22.2, 22.4.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring specially).
I concur in the result reached by the majority, but for a different reason. Statutes and our procedural rules should be interpreted and applied to sanction parties who are late in their filings, not those who are early. Conversely, we should not reward parties who withhold their complaints about the procedural posture of a case until it is too late for the offending party to correct the mistake.
In fairness, the board should have filed a pre-answer motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted under Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 104(b). See Tombergs v. City of Eldridge,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. Iowa Code section 335.18 (1995) clearly provides that a challenge to a decision of a board of adjustment “shall be presented to the court within thirty days after the filing of the decision in the office of the board.” (Emphasis added.) The plaintiffs’ petition for writ of certiorari was taken before the decision of the board was filed. An exаmination of the common meaning of the words “after” and “before” should convincingly demonstrate that the plaintiffs have failed to comply with the statutory requirements for a challenge to the board’s decision. Compare Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 38 (1993) (“after” defined as “later than a particular time”) with id. at 197 (“before” defined as preceding a point in time). Nevertheless, the majority cоncludes the plaintiffs have complied with the statute. This conclusion is based on an unsupportable “interpretation” of section 335.18.
Although section 335.18 requires any challenge to be “presented to the court within thirty days after filing of the [board’s] decision,” the majority interprets the statute “to allow a challenge to the board’s action by filing a petitiоn for certiorari anytime until thirty days after filing of the board’s decision.” (Emphasis added.) My first disagreement with the majority is the way it characterizes its rationale. If the majority were really interpreting section 335.18 based on the meaning of the words used in the statute, one would assume the statute would have the same meaning under various factual scenarios. The statute either allows challenges “anytime until” thirty days after the board’s decision has been filed or it does not. But the majority has limited its “interpretation” to cases in which the “two peculiar circumstances” present in this case exist. Consequently, the majority is really creating an exception to the statutory requirements for eases like this one. The majority apparently believes the statute means what it says under any other set of circumstances — namely, that a challenge to the board’s action must be taken “within’-’ thirty days after the record of the board’s action has been filed.
Regardless of whether the majority has interpreted the statute or created an exception, the rationale employed does not withstand scrutiny. The majority claims its “interpretation” of section 335.18 “is demanded” by “two special circumstances” “peculiar to the present case.” These circumstances are (1) the board’s records were filed in a private residence, and (2) the plaintiffs were entitled to rely on the board secretary’s compliance with the statutory duty to file records of the board’s official actions “immediately.” See Iowa Code § 335.12. I remain unconvinced that these circumstances justify an exception to the statutory requirements for filing a petition for writ of certiorari.
The location of the board’s records cannot excuse the plaintiffs’ noncompliance with the statute. Whether the board’s decision was filed in the zoning administrator’s office, in the county recorder’s office, or with the clerk of court, it was the plaintiffs’ obligation to determine when the decision was filed. The plaintiffs merely claim “there was no way to determine when the appeal date would run.” Yet they could have contacted the zoning board members or the zoning administrator to make this determination. The plaintiffs make no claim that any action of the county officials prevented them from learning when the decision was filed.
The fact is the premature filing of the plaintiffs’ petition did not result from any ambiguity in the statutory time for presenting the petition or from the location of the records in a privаte residence. The plaintiffs’ failure to comply with section 335.18 arose from their assumption that the board’s decision was filed shortly after the board voted on the conditional use permit. Notwithstanding the board’s duty to record its decision “immediately,” the decision was not filed for several weeks while county officials drafted the resolution setting forth the board’s findings and detailing the conditions to which the permit was subject. To rely on the board’s tardy filing of its decision to excuse the premature filing of the plaintiffs’ petition is in reality an estoppel-type rationale. In the past, we have never allowed a
[w]e [concede] that the operation of the statute might seem harsh, especially where, as here, a party might have been misled by the nullity of a later filing [by the agency]. Nevertheless, we believe that the statutory scheme is neither absurd nor unfair....
... The legislature obviously had the broader public interest in mind in adopting the statute.
Ford Motor Co.,
We also should have thе broader public interest in mind because there are serious problems in allowing appeals from or challenges to agency action that is not yet final. Clearly, the governing statutes contemplate that the board will make a written record of its decision that will be filed for public review. If an appeal is taken before this written decisiоn is filed, what agency action is to be reviewed on appeal — the simple vote taken at the board’s meeting, or its written decision, supported by factual findings and legal conclusions? And does the agency even have jurisdiction to issue a written decision once an appeal on the very subject of its decision has been perfeсted? These concerns illustrate the legitimate, practical reasons supporting the legislature’s decision to compute the time for a challenge of the board’s action from the date of the board’s final decision. We should honor the legislature’s intent and give effect to the statute as written.
I would affirm the district court and dismiss the plaintiffs’ petition for writ of certio-rari.
LAVORATO, J., joins this dissent.
