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10-24-2007 Additions
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1^,.ances: A Lock at ':he Ei"iCJ i `ice <br />3Y: ;AVID O. 3c__3RGR =fit <br />Winter 2001 <br />Property owners and developers know that from time to time a project does not quite "fit" the parameters of a zoning <br />code. A variance from the problem zoning requirement is sometimes the only means by which a project can move <br />forward. A tough variance standard in an ordinance can appear insurmountable. Recent court decisions in Minnesota <br />provide some comfort to property owners who need variances. <br />There are two types of variances: use variances and area or performance standard variances. Use variances which <br />seek to alter permissible uses in a zoning district, are illegal in Minnesota. Only area or performance standard <br />variances, which seek relief from a specific requirement in a zoning code such as a setback requirement, are permitted <br />in Minnesota. <br />In 1989, Moorhead's Trinity Church sought a variance to setback requirements in order to construct an addition on its <br />property. Despite vocal opposition from local residents and their attorneys, the City approved the variance request. A <br />neighbor then filed suit to challenge the variance. The Minnesota Court of Appeals upheld the City's approval of the <br />variance. The City of Moorhead's ordinance utilized Minnesota Statutes § 462.357 verbatim with respect to the legal <br />standard for granting variances. Both the statute and the ordinance provide for variances in cases of "undue hardship" <br />where: "the property in question cannot be put to a reasonable use if used under conditions allowed by the official <br />controls, the plight of the landowner is due to circumstances unique to the property not created by the landowner, and <br />the variance, if granted, will not alter the essential character of the locality." In interpreting this standard, the Minnesota <br />Court of Appeals stated: <br />"The first requirement is that property cannot be put to a reasonable use without the variance. This provision <br />does not mean that a property owner must show the land cannot be put to any reasonable use without the <br />variance. In such a case the constitution would compel a variance regardless of the statute. (Citations <br />omitted). The statute is clearly intended to allow cities the flexibility to grant variances in cases where the <br />constitution does not compel it. Thus, we read the first part of the definition of "undue hardship" as requiring a <br />showing that the property owner would like to use the property in a reasonable manner that is prohibited by <br />the ordinance." Rowell v. Board of Adjustment of the City of Moorhead, 446 N.W.2d 917 (Minn. Ct. App. <br />1989). <br />This decision substantially softens the interpretation of many city planners, attorneys, and city officials of the statutory <br />requirements for granting variances. <br />In 1995, the Minnesota Court of Appeals restated the softer standard. In determining whether a property "cannot be <br />put to a reasonable use" the Court stated: <br />"This court has previously construed this language to mean the landowner would like to put the land to a <br />reasonable use, but that the proposed reasonable use is prohibited under the strict provisions of the code." <br />Sagstetter v. City of St. Paul, 529 N.W. 2d 488 (Minn. Ct. App. 1995). <br />Finally, in May 2000, the Minnesota Court of Appeals heard Nolan v. City of Eden Prairie, 610 N.W.2d 697 (Minn. Ct. <br />App. 2000), in which a property owner sought numerous variances to accomplish a subdivision of its property into <br />three residential lots. The granting of the variances was challenged by an adjacent landowner. In once again affirming <br />the granting of the variances, the Nolan Court stated, <br />"In Rowell, this court squarely addressed the question and explained that the statutory undue hardship <br />requirement 'does not mean that a property owner must show the land cannot be put to any reasonable use <br />without the variance.' Rather, the undue hardship standard requires a showing that the property owner would <br />like to use their property in a reasonable manner that is prohibited by ordinance." <br />The Nolan Court then went on to state: <br />"Rowell makes clear that the three statutory requirements for granting of variance under the undue hardship <br />standard are (1) reasonableness, (2) unique circumstances, and (3) essential character of the locality." <br />The Minnesota Court of Appeals' unwavering dedication to the interpretation it first announced in 1989, and the <br />Minnesota Supreme Court's unwillingness to hear and reverse that interpretation, provides much more flexibility for <br />property owners and developers. The apparently rigid "undue hardship" standard is less onerous than many think. <br />Rather than proving that no reasonable use at all exists for a property without the variance, under this standard a <br />landowner must only prove that the proposed use that is disallowed under the controlling regulations is reasonable. <br />- 3 3 - <br />
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