Attorneys claim doughnut lawsuit is over
Attorneys for Whitefish and Flathead
County agree in their response to intervenors in the city’s lawsuit
against the county over the two-mile planning and zoning “doughnut”
area that the city’s lawsuit is to all intents over and done.
But in a brief filed Jan. 29, proposed
intervenors Richard Hildner, Dan Wein-berg and Ed McGrew, all city
residents, claim their interests are not represented by the city
and argue their case for continuing the lawsuit.
Flathead County District Court Judge
Katherine Curtis has not yet ruled on whether the three will be
accepted as intervenors in the case.
The city sued the county in March 2008
after the commissioners voted to unilaterally withdraw from the
2005 interlocal agreement that created the doughnut area. In the
past year, however, the two sides have negotiated a restatement of
the interlocal agreement and agreed to end the lawsuit.
Heiko and Elizabeth Arndt and Westridge
Investments LLC, however, recognized intervenors in the city’s
lawsuit, want the lawsuit to proceed. In their “notice of
nonsettlement” and request for a ruling in December, Whitefish
attorney Sean Frampton claimed “substantial issues involving
fundamental rights of citizens remain at issue” — namely
representation for doughnut area residents.
Beyond representation, Frampton
claimed, other unresolved issues remain, including whether the
interlocal agreement exceeds the scope of state law, whether the
doughnut residents’ constitutional rights have been infringed upon
by allowing another local government to adopt laws against them,
whether the interlocal agreement infringes on the citizens’
constitutional rights of initiative and referendum, and whether the
agreement fails because it does not provide for an administrator to
administer the interlocal activity.
In their Jan. 27 response to Arndt and
Westridge Investments’ request for a ruling, Whitefish city
attorney Mary VanBuskirk and Missoula attorney Alan McCormick,
representing the county, claim the intervenors don’t have a
“justiciable” claim. The issues before a court are moot if they
have ceased to exist or if the court is unable to grant effective
relief due to changes in circumstances, they said.
“Despite the intervenors’ attempt to
minimize the 2010 Interlocal Agreement as a mere ‘refinement’ of
the 2005 Interlocal Agreement, the 2010 Interlocal Agreement
includes significant, substantive changes that allow the city and
county to dismiss this lawsuit and move forward,” the response
said. “While all of the intervenors’ questions may not have been
answered, any controversy over the 2005 Interlocal Agreement is now
moot, and any ruling on that agreement is merely academic.”
VanBuskirk and McCor-mick claim the
inclusion of clauses allowing for termination and duration make the
2010 interlocal agreement “substantively different.” Under the new
agreement, the city or the county can withdraw with advance
notice.
“From the county’s perspective, this
clause actually restores representation and statutory authority
which had been lacking in the 2005 Interlocal Agreement,” the
response said.
As to the intervenors’ claim that the
2005 interlocal agreement is contrary to Montana law and
unconstitutional due to issues of representation and delegation of
legislative authority, VanBuskirk and McCormick point out that the
2005 agreement is no longer in effect.
“The city and county agree that the
2010 Interlocal Agreement is in effect and fully operational and
resolves the issues between them,” the city and county’s response
said.
Kalispell attorney John Lacey,
representing Hildner, Weinberg and McGrew, agree with the other
intervenors in calling for the lawsuit to continue — but for
different reasons.
Lacey says his clients want the city to
continue its planning and zoning authority over the doughnut as
provided by the 2005 Interlocal Agreement, rather than hand it off
to the county, in order to protect water quality and “the city’s
small-town character” in the doughnut area.
Hildner, Weinberg and McGrew recently
initiated a petition for a referendum that would repeal the city’s
resolution approving the 2010 Interlocal Agreement. The three are
gathering signatures to get the referendum on the city ballot this
fall and, citing opposition at public hearings, are confident it
will be approved by city voters.
In that case, their motion to intervene
argues, parties to the lawsuit will be confronted with the same
issues. Hildner, Weinberg and McGrew are not advancing any new
arguments, however — they just want the city to stick with the
lawsuit until it is resolved in court.
“As sad as it is to say, the
intervenors intend here and are now able to argue the validity of
the 2005 Interlocal Agreement ‘more vigorously’ than the city
merely by advocating for any substantive ruling from the court that
goes beyond mootness,” their motion to intervene says.