{1 Sand Springs Materials LLC (SSM), appeals from the judgment of the district court upholding the decision of the City of Sand Springs to deny SSM a specific use
BACKGROUND
"2 SSM owns approximately 1,000 acres of property within the City of Sand Springs. In order to develop the property for residential and commercial use, SSM contends it is first necessary to remove rock and valuable limestone aggregate from the property. SSM applied to the Sand Springs Planning Commission for a permit to operate a quarry to remove the rock. After public hearings and the submission of substantial evidence, the Planning Commission by unanimous vote denied SSM's request. SSM appealed that decision to the Sand Springs City Council. With one abstention and no dissenting votes, the City Council denied the appeal. SSM appealed the City Council's decision to the district court. The district court affirmed the decision of the City Council.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
$3 SSM appealed to the district court. District court review of the City's decision is authorized by 12 0.S$.2001 § 951(a): "A judgment rendered, or final order made, by any tribunal, board or officer exercising judicial functions, and inferior in Jurisdiction to the district court, may be reversed, vacated or modified by the district court except where an appeal to some other court is provided by law." Despite SSM's position, section 951 "does not provide for a trial de novo by the district court." In re White,
In reviewing the judgment of the district court, [the appellate court] must look beyond the district court's conclusions and consider the basic, physical facts appearing in the record so as to ascertain whether the zoning decision is "fairly debatable." The district court's independent conclusion as to whether there is a "fairly debatable" basis for the challenged zoning ordinance will be sustained unless it is against the clear weight of the evidence.
Mid-Continent Life Ins. Co. v. City of Oklahoma City,
ANALYSIS
' 4 SSM raises essentially three arguments in this appeal: (1) the district court erred in refusing to hold a hearing for the purpose of receiving additional evidence; (2) the City's use permit ordinance does not comply with state law; and (8) the denial of SSM's application was arbitrary and eapricious.
I. The District Court Was Not Permitted To Hold An Evidentiary Hearing
T5 SSM argued that the district court could not make an independent conclu
T6 First, as the City notes, SSM did not offer alternative transcriptions to the 91 transcribed pages that the City provided documenting the Planning Commission's meetings. Second, the audio tapes were provided by SSM to the district court, without objection, so that the trial judge could listen to the proceedings in addition to reviewing the Planning Commission meeting minutes. Third, the written reports of SSM's expert witnesses were provided to the district court. Fourth, SSM has pointed to no specific fact missing from the transcriptions, nor has it proposed to supplement the record with any missing testimony.
T7 Although SSM does "not suggest that the parties should be permitted to introduce new or different evidence, or conduct a new trial," that is precisely what it seeks in this proposition, to present again its expert witnesses for "live testimony" before the district court. SSM invoked the district court's appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 12 0.8.2001 § 951.
The precedents and the nature of the proceedings in this jurisdiction have been that where the appeal is not taken by trial de novo, the appellate court treats the appeal in the nature of the old common-law "writ of error"; that is, the appellate court does not hear additional evidence, but confines itself to error appearing in the record, and sometimes, when the question is properly raised, as to whether or not the findings of fact of the inferior tribunal are supported by the evidence as taken and heard by it.
In re Gruber,
a clear and uninterrupted pattern of decisions ... to keep judicial intermeddling with the legislative functions of municipalities at a minimum. The only legitimate basis for interference by the courts is when the municipality has acted unreasonably, arbitrarily or in such a way as to constitute a violation of the constitutional guarantees of equal protection or due process.
McConnell v. Town Clerk of Tipton,
II. The City's Special Use Ordinance Complies With State Law
18 The City's authority to issue or deny the public use permit requested by SSM is derived from 11 0.8. Supp.2008 § 43-113.
3
A public use permit is "a permit granted by a municipal governing body, after no
The designation of a specific use as possible on the specific use list shall not constitute an authorization or an assurance that such use will be permitted. Rather, each specific use permit application shall be viewed as to its probable effect on the adjacent properties and community welfare and may be approved or denied as the findings indicate appropriate.
11 O.S. Supp.2008 § 483-113(C). the City's ordinance provides: Likewise,
The designation of a Specific Use Permit as possible on the Specific Use Permit List does not constitute an authorization or an assurance that such use will be permitted. Rather, each Specific Use Permit application shall be valued as to its probable effect on the adjacent property and community welfare and may be approved or denied as the findings indicate appropriate.
Zoning Code of the City of Sand Springs, ch. 25, § 25.01(C).
T9 Nonetheless, SSM argues that the City was required by state law to specify in its ordinance the regulations and standards governing its approval or denial of a special use permit. Title 11 0.8. Supp.2008 § 48-114(A) provides, in part; "If a municipal zoning ordinance authorizes the consideration and approval of a specific use permit pursuant to the provisions of this act, the regulations and standards upon which those decisions are made shall be specified in the ordinance." Citing section 25.01(C) of the City's zoning code, SSM contends the only standards capable of inclusion in the City's ordinance are the "probable effect on the adjacent property and community welfare." Therefore, SSM argues it was error to consider any impact of the proposed quarry on public facilities or infrastructure.
10 SSM's argument lacks support in traditional methods of statutory construction. The "probable effect" language of the City's ordinance is identical to the language in seetion 48-118(C), authorizing the adoption of a specific use ordinance, which provides that "each specific use permit application shall be viewed as to its probable effect on the adjacent properties and community welfare...." If only two standards are permitted, the Legislature would have limited the available "regulations and standards" in section 43-114(A) to those specified in section 48-118(C). It did not. See Ledbetter v. Oklahoma Alcoholic Beverage Laws Enforcement Comm'n,
The standards [specified in the ordinance] shall be consistent with, and promote the intent and purpose of the comprehensive plan and/or ordinances, and promote the land use or activity so as to be compatible with adjacent uses of land, the natural environment, and the planned capacities of public services and facilities affected by the land use. The standards shall also ensure that the land use or activity is consistent with the public health, safety, and welfare of the municipality.
11 0.8. Supp.2008 § 48-114(A).
[ 11 The City acted pursuant to this statutory authority in adopting section 25.02(C) of its zoning code:
The City Council may, in the interest of the public welfare and to assure compliance with the intent of this ordinance and the Sand Springs Comprehensive Plan, require such development standards and operational conditions and safeguards as are indicated to be important to the welfare and protection of adjacent property and the community as a whole and be compatible with the natural environment and theplanned capacities of public services and facilities affected by the land use.
SSM does not argue that the standards considered by the City exceeded the matters described in this provision. In fact, SSM does not address this provision at all. And, SSM does not point to any authority requiring the City to confine its regulations and standards to one subparagraph of a special use ordinance. The language of the ordinance is not as limited as SSM contends. It provides that consideration of the natural environment, the capacity of public services and facilities and the welfare of the community as a whole are standards that also govern the approval or denial of special use permits. The effect of the proposed quarry on public facilities, parks, roads, utilities and infrastructure is within any reasonable construction of the regulations and standards included in the City's special use ordinance. Consequently, the ordinance satisfies State law.
III. Evidence Supporting The District Court's Decision
112 SSM's challenge to the evidence supporting the City's decision is directed at three general areas, the effect of the quarry on adjacent property, community welfare and public facilities. SSM's property is currently located in a part of the City zoned for agricultural use. Mining and quarry operations are a special use permitted by the City's zoning code within that zoning classification. SSM argues that removing the rock in the proposed quarry is necessary for future commercial and residential development, absent which the property is worthless. SSM claimed that during its operation the quarry would provide a net economic benefit to the community and that adverse effects of quarry operations would be minimal. SSM introduced evidence supporting these claims. However, SSM's assertion that it refuted all of the opposing evidence, or that the adverse evidence concerned only the fear of potential effects rather than evidence of actual effects, is not supported by the record.
{13 For example, SSM argues that because its expert concluded that quarry operations would not adversely affect the Compass Landfill, that is the only evidence in the record on this issue. SSM confuses the burden of presenting evidence with the burden of persuading the trier of fact. See Johnson v. Bd. of Governors of Registered Dentists,
T14 The City's attention to the EPA's concerns is not unwarranted. As a result of federal court litigation in which a judgment was entered against the City, the EPA established a plan requiring the City to remediate environmental hazards at the Compass Landfill site and maintain the site pursuant to the
115 Further, SSM's reliance on In re Volunteers of America, Inc.,
$16 Finally, although it was the opinion of SSM's expert that blasting operations would not physically damage nearby residential structures, he also stated that there was "no doubt" that occupants would feel the vibrations caused by the proposed blasting. A home owner is qualified to testify regarding the value of the owner's property. H.D. Youngman Contractor v. Girdner,
T17 The Planning Commission conducted eight public hearings on SSM's application, heard from thirty-five witnesses, and considered additional evidentiary material submitted by interested parties including seven expert reports. Although SSM submitted evidence that supported its application, the evidence submitted in opposition to the application was diverse and substantial. There are approximately 1,650 property owners in the affected area. Approximately 150 of those property owners expressed opposition to the application. No property owner appeared at the Planning Commission hearings in support of SSM's application. A local realtor testified concerning the negative impact the quarry would have on real estate values. Evidence from two engineers was considered showing the impact on local traffic, the life expectancy of affected roads and the cost to the City from the anticipated increase in traffic resulting from quarry operations. Further, a portion of the Arkansas River along the southeast
{18 The quarry proposed by SSM would be in operation for 20-25 years. It would permanently and substantially change the landscape of the area. The City determined that this use would have a substantial adverse impact on adjacent property, community welfare and public facilities. The district court concluded that the City's decision was supported by substantial and competent evi-denee. Conducting our independent review of the record, we conclude that the decision of the City to deny SSM's application for a special use permit is fairly debatable.
CONCLUSION
T19 In its appeal to the district court of the denial of its application for a special use permit to operate a rock quarry, SSM was not entitled to present additional evidence or to a de novo trial of the City's action. SSM has established no constitutional infirmity in the record on which the district court decided SSM's appeal. The physical facts in this record show that the decision of the City to deny SSM's application for a special use permit is fairly debatable. The decision of the district court affirming that denial is not against the clear weight of the evidence. Therefore, we affirm the decision of the district court.
T 20 AFFIRMED.
Notes
. "The 'fairly debatable' rule initially was recognized in Village of Euclid, Ohio v. Ambler Realty Co.,
.0 SSM's reliance on Griffith Realty Co. v. City of Oklahoma City,
. For convenience, we cite to the 2008 version of the statute because in relevant part it is identical to the version of the statute in effect when SSM filed its application.
. As the City points out, Volunteers involved a "special exception," as distinguished from a "variance" to a city ordinance. A "special exception use is a valid zoning mechanism that delegates to an administrative board a limited authority to allow enumerated uses, which the legislature has determined to be permissible, absent any fact or circumstance negating the presumption." Volunteers,
