Haney v. Tooele County
Haney v. Tooele County
2025 UT 30
Haney v. Tooele County
Opinion
This opinion is subject to revision before final
publication in the Pacific Reporter
2025 UT 30
IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
KYLE MATHEWS, DIANE HANEY, and KATHLEEN MALLIS,
Appellants,
v.
TOOELE COUNTY and SPENCER COX, in his official capacity as the
Governor of Utah,
Appellees.
No. 20240274
Heard January 15, 2025
Supplemental Briefing Received March 11, 2025
Filed August 7, 2025
On Direct Appeal
Third District Court, Tooele County
The Honorable L. Douglas Hogan
No. 200301717
Attorneys:
Janet M. Conway, Wanship, for appellants
Nathanael J. Mitchell, Salt Lake City, for appellee Tooele County
Derek E. Brown, Att’y Gen., Andrew Dymek, Asst. Solic. Gen.,
Salt Lake City, for appellee Spencer Cox
JUSTICE PETERSEN authored the opinion of the Court, in which
CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE HAGEN, JUSTICE POHLMAN, and
JUDGE HOWELL joined.
Having recused himself, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE PEARCE does not
participate herein; DISTRICT COURT JUDGE SHAWN R. HOWELL sat.
HANEY v. TOOELE COUNTY
Opinion of the Court
JUSTICE PETERSEN, opinion of the Court:
INTRODUCTION
¶1 This case grew out of a citizen-led effort to refer a Tooele
County zoning ordinance (Ordinance) to the voters of Tooele
County. When the site-specific Ordinance was enacted, it applied
to an agricultural parcel of property (Property) in an
unincorporated area of Tooele County called Erda. The Ordinance
rezoned the Property from agricultural to planned-community
zoning, which allowed the Property to be developed. The
referendum sponsors (Sponsors) sought to preserve the
agricultural nature of the Property by repealing the Ordinance,
with its new zoning designation. But the County Clerk rejected the
referendum petition, determining that the Sponsors had not
gathered enough signatures to put the measure on the ballot.
¶2 The Sponsors filed suit against the County and the
Governor in the hope of getting the measure before the voters of
Tooele County. Around that time, the Ordinance went into effect.
And while the lawsuit progressed, the area in which the Property
is located became part of the newly incorporated City of Erda.
Thus, during the litigation, land-use authority over the Property
changed hands from Tooele County to the City of Erda.
¶3 The Sponsors ultimately lost in the district court. The court
ruled that the County Clerk had correctly determined that the
Sponsors had not obtained the requisite number of signatures to
place the referendum on the ballot.
¶4 The Sponsors appeal that decision to us. But we are
prevented from reaching the merits of the issues they raise because
we conclude that the case is moot. Even if the Sponsors prevailed
in this case and obtained the remedy they seek—referring the
Ordinance to Tooele County voters in a future election—and even
if the referendum were successful and the Ordinance were
repealed, this would not impact the existing zoning of the Property
because it is no longer within Tooele County’s zoning authority.
Instead, Erda can enact its own zoning regulations for the Property.
And indeed, it has done so for more than three years. We conclude
that this change deprives this court of the ability to provide the
Sponsors with meaningful relief. Accordingly, we dismiss the
appeal as moot.
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Opinion of the Court
BACKGROUND1
¶5 This case centers on a Tooele County zoning ordinance
governing property located in a then-unincorporated area of
Tooele County. Enacted in September 2020, the Ordinance rezoned
the Property from agricultural to planned-community zoning,
allowing for development of the Property.
¶6 A week after the County passed the Ordinance, a group of
residents filed an application to begin the process of repealing it by
referendum. See UTAH CODE §§ 20A-7-601 to -613 (2020) (outlining
procedures for local referenda).2 As part of that process, the
Sponsors needed to gather signatures from residents. See id. § 20A-
7-601(2)–(4) (2020) (establishing signature requirements for local
referenda). Before they started doing so, the Tooele County Clerk
informed the Sponsors that she intended to impose a sixteen-
percent signature threshold on their referendum petition. See id.
§ 20A-7-601(3)(a) (2020) (imposing sixteen-percent signature
threshold for certain referendum petitions). The Sponsors objected
to the Clerk’s interpretation of the law but nevertheless began
gathering signatures.
¶7 The signature-gathering window opened October 9, 2020
and closed November 23, 2020, overlapping with the COVID-19
pandemic. About two weeks before the window closed, the
Governor issued an executive order that imposed temporary
restrictions in response to the pandemic. See Utah Exec. Order 2020-
73 (Nov. 8, 2020). According to the Sponsors, the executive order
impeded their ability to gather signatures for their petition. To
overcome these perceived challenges, the Sponsors contacted the
offices of the Lieutenant Governor and Governor, requesting
permission to use electronic signatures—in lieu of signatures
gathered in person—for the petition. The Sponsors stated that the
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1 When reviewing a district court’s decisions on both a motion
for summary judgment and a motion for judgment on the
pleadings, we view the facts and all reasonable inferences in the
light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Burton v. Chen, 2023
UT 14, ¶ 5 n.2, 532 P.3d 1005 (reviewing grant of motion for
summary judgment); Hammons v. Weber Cnty., 2018 UT 16, ¶ 9, 417
P.3d 624 (reviewing grant of motion for judgment on the
pleadings). We recite the facts accordingly.
2 The parties agree that the September 2020 version of the Utah
Code applies to the case. We cite the version in effect at that time.
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Opinion of the Court
“Governor’s COVID restrictions ma[d]e it impossible . . . to freely
obtain signatures for” the referendum, and they pointed out that a
prior executive order had allowed referendum sponsors to
“distribute and gather referendum packets and physically signed
signature sheets electronically, including by fax or e-mail.”
¶8 The Sponsors’ entreaties were denied. So they continued
collecting signatures in person, ultimately compiling 3,376 valid
signatures. But this was short of the number required to meet the
sixteen-percent threshold. The County Clerk informed the
Sponsors that their referendum petition failed because they had not
gathered enough signatures. See UTAH CODE § 20A-7-607(2)(c)
(2020) (instructing local clerk on when to mark a referendum packet
“insufficient”). As a result, the County Clerk declined to place the
referendum measure on the ballot.
¶9 Soon after, the Sponsors sued Tooele County and the
Governor in the district court, invoking a statutory right of action
that authorizes voters to apply for an extraordinary writ
compelling a local clerk to accept and file a referendum petition.
See id. § 20A-7-607(4)(a) (2020) (“If the local clerk refuses to accept
and file any referendum petition, any voter may apply to a court
for an extraordinary writ to compel the local clerk to do so within
10 days after the refusal.”).
¶10 In their claims against the County, the Sponsors alleged
that the County Clerk was wrong to impose the sixteen-percent
signature threshold. They argued that, properly viewed, the
referendum petition was subject to a nine-and-a-half-percent
signature threshold. See id. § 20A-7-601(2)(e) (2020) (imposing nine-
and-a-half-percent signature threshold for certain referendum
petitions). Because the Sponsors collected enough signatures to
meet the lower threshold, they asked the district court to declare
the petition legally sufficient and order the County Clerk to place
the referendum measure on the ballot.
¶11 In their claims against the Governor, the Sponsors alleged
that the Governor’s refusal to allow for electronic signature
gathering violated their rights under the United States Constitution
and the Utah Constitution. The Governor’s refusal, they contended,
rendered “[c]ertain provisions of Utah’s election code . . .
unconstitutional as applied to [the Sponsors] because of the
COVID-19 pandemic and the State’s ensuing response.” For relief,
the Sponsors sought a declaration that the Governor’s actions
violated their constitutional rights.
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Opinion of the Court
¶12 Near the time the lawsuit was initiated, the Ordinance
took effect.3 Additionally, just under a year later, the previously
unincorporated area in which the Property is located became part
of the City of Erda. The Lieutenant Governor certified the
incorporation of the new city in January 2022.
¶13 Meanwhile, in the ongoing litigation, the County moved
for summary judgment on the claims against it. And the changed
status of the Property—from being part of unincorporated Tooele
County to part of the City of Erda—informed one of the County’s
arguments. In addition to arguing on the merits that the County
Clerk had correctly determined the Sponsors had not met the
required signature threshold, the County also argued that the
Sponsors lacked standing to sue. In support of this argument, the
County alerted the district court to the incorporation of the City of
Erda and argued that this impacted the court’s ability to redress the
Sponsors’ claimed injuries. The County argued that Erda’s
incorporation was relevant because the Property was no longer
within the County’s land-use authority. Instead, it was within the
land-use jurisdiction of Erda. And the County noted that Erda had
begun to exercise its land-use authority by enacting ordinances that
affected the Property and its zoning. Given these developments, the
County contended that the Sponsors’ requested relief—a
referendum on the Tooele County Ordinance—was unlikely to
redress their claimed injury; so the Sponsors no longer had
standing to litigate their claims.
¶14 The district court granted summary judgment in the
County’s favor. In its order, the court noted the County’s challenge
to the Sponsors’ standing but declined to resolve it. The court
determined that even if the Sponsors had standing, their claims
failed as a matter of law because the County Clerk properly
imposed the sixteen-percent signature threshold, which the
Sponsors conceded they had not satisfied.
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3 The Sponsors assert that the Ordinance’s effective date was
“forestalled” during the referendum process but that the
Ordinance took effect the day after the County Clerk rejected their
referendum petition, on December 1, 2020. The County notes that
the Ordinance was to take effect when it was published, which it
says occurred on February 25, 2021. Because this discrepancy does
not alter our analysis, we do not resolve it.
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Opinion of the Court
¶15 The Governor then moved for judgment on the pleadings,
arguing that his actions did not violate the Sponsors’ constitutional
rights. The district court agreed and granted the motion, and the
Sponsors appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶16 The Sponsors argue that the district court’s ruling was
legally incorrect, and they raise a number of issues in support of
that contention. However, because we determine this case is moot,
we do not reach those issues on the merits. Instead, we explain our
conclusion that the case has become moot. Because the district court
did not rule on this issue, “our decision is not governed by any
standard of review, and we decide the matter as a question of law
in the first instance.” Grewal v. Junction Mkt. Fairview, L.C., 2024 UT
20, ¶ 12, 554 P.3d 863 (cleaned up).
ANALYSIS
¶17 The Sponsors appeal the district court’s dismissal of their
case. In response, the County and the Governor address the merits
of the Sponsors’ arguments, and the County also argues that the
Sponsors lack standing to pursue their claims because they can no
longer obtain effective relief. We agree with the County on the
latter point. However, this presents an issue of mootness, not
standing.
¶18 The County has argued, both in the district court and on
appeal, that the Sponsors lack standing to pursue their claims. The
County observes that when Erda was incorporated, Tooele County
lost land-use authority over the Property and that authority was
transferred to the City of Erda. See UTAH CODE § 17-27a-102(1)(b)
(2020) (authorizing counties to “enact all ordinances, resolutions,
and rules” and to “enter into other forms of land use controls and
development agreements that the county considers necessary or
appropriate for the use and development of land within the
unincorporated area of the county” (emphasis added)). The County
asserts that this deprives the Sponsors of standing to assert their
claims.
¶19 The County does not question that the Sponsors meet the
first two requirements of traditional standing—injury and
causation. See Natalie R. v. State, 2025 UT 5, ¶ 17 n.4, 567 P.3d 550
(“Simply put, traditional standing requires a claimant to show
injury, causation, and redressability.” (cleaned up)). But the
County argues that the courts can no longer redress the Sponsors’
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Opinion of the Court
claimed injuries now that Erda, not Tooele County, oversees the
Property’s zoning. See id. ¶ 30 (“[P]laintiffs cannot establish
standing unless the requested relief is substantially likely to redress
the injury claimed.” (cleaned up)). The County maintains that even
if the court ordered the referendum measure to be placed on the
ballot, and even if the measure successfully repealed the
Ordinance, it is unlikely that the repeal “would have retroactive
and meaningful effect” given that Tooele County’s ordinances no
longer govern the Property.
¶20 We agree. But here, that presents a problem of mootness
rather than standing.4 Both standing and mootness concern, in part,
whether the court can provide adequate relief. See id. (“[P]laintiffs
cannot establish standing unless the requested relief is
substantially likely to redress the injury claimed.” (cleaned up));
Grewal v. Junction Mkt. Fairview, L.C., 2024 UT 20, ¶ 25, 554 P.3d 863
(“A case is moot when the relief requested is rendered impossible
or of no legal effect.” (cleaned up)). But the two doctrines differ in
other ways, including timing. A party’s standing is generally
“determined as of the time the action is brought.” Cedar Mountain
Env’t, Inc. v. Tooele Cnty. ex rel. Tooele Cnty. Comm’n, 2009 UT 48,
¶ 10, 214 P.3d 95 (cleaned up), abrogated on other grounds by
McKitrick v. Gibson, 2021 UT 48, 496 P.3d 147. A case may “become[]
moot,” however, at any point if a change in circumstances
eliminates the legal controversy between the parties. Salt Lake City
Corp. v. Utah Inland Port Auth., 2022 UT 27, ¶ 21, 524 P.3d 573.
¶21 “A case becomes moot when the controversy is eliminated,
thereby rendering the relief requested impossible or of no legal
__________________________________________________________
4 At oral argument, we asked the parties whether the County’s
jurisdictional challenge was better characterized as one of
mootness rather than standing. We note that, although the County
did not invoke the doctrine of mootness in its initial briefing,
“courts have a sua sponte obligation to carefully consider the
propriety of their own jurisdiction.” Midwest Fam. Mut. Ins. v.
Hinton, 2025 UT 4, ¶ 25, 567 P.3d 524 (cleaned up). The parties
acknowledged at oral argument that because the County’s
challenge relates to a change in circumstances that arose after the
Sponsors brought the action—Erda’s incorporation and subsequent
exercise of land-use authority—the challenge implicates mootness,
not standing. Because the parties had not briefed the issue, we
requested supplemental briefing so they would have an
opportunity to do so.
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Opinion of the Court
effect, or in other words when there remains no meaningful relief
that this court could offer, such that anything we might say about
the issues would be purely advisory.” Teamsters Loc. 222 v. Utah
Transit Auth., 2018 UT 33, ¶ 9, 424 P.3d 892 (cleaned up). To
determine whether this case is moot, then, we must ask whether
the court can provide the Sponsors with meaningful relief now that
the Property falls under Erda’s land-use authority. If no such relief
remains, then the case is moot and must be dismissed.
¶22 The Sponsors seek three forms of relief aimed at one goal.
They ask the district court to: 1) declare their referendum petition
“legally sufficient,” 2) declare that the Governor’s actions violated
their constitutional rights, and 3) order the County Clerk to accept
the petition and place the referendum measure on the ballot in a
future election. The Sponsors ultimately hope to repeal the
Ordinance through a successful referendum vote, thereby
removing Tooele County’s planned-community zoning from the
Property and reinstating its prior agricultural zoning.
¶23 But the Sponsors have not explained how this is legally
possible under the current circumstances. The Sponsors do not
dispute that Erda was incorporated or that the Property is now
within its boundaries. And they do not dispute that Erda now holds
the authority to regulate the Property’s zoning. To the contrary,
they recognize that Erda has exercised that authority. Indeed, the
parties recount that in the months following Erda’s January 2022
incorporation, Erda enacted a slate of ordinances, several of which
affect the Property and its zoning.5 And although the precise details
and legal effects of those ordinances are not before us, one thing is
clear: for over three years, Erda—not Tooele County—has been the
entity regulating the Property.
¶24 Thus, the Sponsors have reached an obstacle in their quest
to return the Property to an agricultural zoning designation by
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5 See Erda, Utah, Ordinance No. 22-07 (Jan. 27, 2022) (adopting
Tooele County Code as it “existed on January 5, 2022,” including
the “zoning map . . . covering areas within the City”); Erda, Utah,
Ordinance No. 22-09 (Feb. 17, 2022) (readopting Tooele County
Code but changing the Property’s zoning to agricultural); Erda,
Utah, Ordinance No. 22-10 (Feb. 17, 2022) (reinstating planned-
community zoning for the Property); Erda, Utah, Ordinance No.
22-29 (Jul. 28, 2022) (adopting comprehensive land-use code and
zoning map).
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Opinion of the Court
referring and repealing the Tooele County Ordinance. It is unclear
how Tooele County voters could effectively change the zoning
designation of land that is now within the City of Erda by repealing
the Ordinance, which no longer governs that land. The Sponsors
have not offered a legal basis for their assumption that this is
possible. Nor do they explain how repealing the Ordinance would
affect the subsequent zoning regulations on the Property that Erda
has enacted since its incorporation.
¶25 Even so, the Sponsors offer one way in which they believe
the court could still provide them with effective relief. They
contend the case would not be moot if repealing the Ordinance
would extinguish any vested rights that a specific developer might
have accrued in the planned-community zoning designation. As
described in our caselaw, the vested-rights doctrine dictates when
an applicant for a subdivision approval or building permit may
rely on existing zoning ordinances. See W. Land Equities, Inc. v. City
of Logan, 617 P.2d 388, 396 (Utah 1980). Such an applicant is
“entitled to a building permit or subdivision approval” if the
proposal “meets the zoning requirements in existence at the time”
of the application and the applicant “proceeds with reasonable
diligence, absent a compelling, countervailing public interest.” Id.
However, an applicant may not rely on existing zoning ordinances
if “a city or county has initiated proceedings to amend its zoning
ordinances.” Id.
¶26 The Sponsors assert that the developer has appeared at
Erda City Council meetings claiming to be entitled to vested
development rights and has threatened litigation against Erda.
According to the Sponsors, Erda has concluded that it must honor
those claimed rights “unless the Ordinance is repealed by
referendum.”6
¶27 The Sponsors assert that to determine whether this case is
moot, the issue of whether the developer has vested rights in the
planned-community designation must be resolved in this litigation.
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6 Erda’s conclusion was apparently based in part on a provision
of the Utah Municipal Land Use, Development, and Management
Act, under which “[a] subsequent incorporation of a municipality
or a petition that proposes the incorporation of a municipality does
not affect a land use application approved by a county.” UTAH
CODE § 10-9a-509(d). We express no opinion on whether Erda’s
conclusion is legally correct.
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Opinion of the Court
They reason that if the developer does not have vested rights, then
this case can be dismissed as moot. They acknowledge that in those
circumstances, their remedy would be the political process—in
other words, attempting to persuade the Erda City Council to
adopt agricultural use zoning over the Property. But if the
developer does have vested rights, then the Sponsors assert that the
case is not moot. The premise of their argument is that repealing
the Tooele County Ordinance through a referendum would
extinguish the developer’s vested rights. The Sponsors ask that we
remand the case so the district court can conduct additional
factfinding on the vested rights question.
¶28 There are two problems with the Sponsors’ reasoning.
First, neither the developer nor Erda is a party here, and the issue
of whether the nonparty developer has vested rights in the
planned-community zoning designation is not before us on appeal.
So there is no option for us or the district court to address that
question in this litigation.
¶29 Second, even assuming for the sake of argument that the
developer has accrued vested rights in the County zoning
designation,7 the Sponsors have not explained how a future
successful referendum repealing the Ordinance would extinguish
those vested rights. The parties agree that the Ordinance took effect
sometime between December 2020 and February 2021.8 Although
Utah law creates a process for preventing a law or ordinance from
taking effect until the referendum process is completed—stopping
a law from going into effect if “a referendum petition has been
declared sufficient”—the Sponsors concede that did not happen
here, as the County Clerk did not declare the Sponsors’ petition
“sufficient.” See UTAH CODE § 20A-7-601(5)(b) (2020) (“[W]hen a
referendum petition has been declared sufficient, the local law that
is the subject of the petition does not take effect unless and until the
local law is approved by a vote of the people.”); UTAH CONST. art.
VI, § 1(2)(b)(ii) (“The legal voters of any county, city, or town . . .
may . . . require any law or ordinance passed by the law making
body of the county, city, or town to be submitted to the voters
thereof, as provided by statute, before the law or ordinance may
__________________________________________________________
7 Nothing we have said in this opinion should be construed to
comment in any way on whether the developer has vested rights in
the planned-community zoning designation.
8 See supra ¶ 12 n.3.
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Opinion of the Court
take effect.”). Nor does the record reflect that the Sponsors ever
asked the district court to stop the Ordinance from taking effect
until the court resolved the case. So, the Ordinance became effective
by February 2021 at the latest.
¶30 If the developer accrued vested rights in the Ordinance’s
zoning designation sometime after February 2021, the Sponsors
seem to assume that a future successful referendum would strip the
developer of these rights. But they make no legal argument in
support of that assumption. If the referendum would repeal the
Ordinance prospectively only, the Sponsors have not explained
why any vested rights would not remain intact.
¶31 And a successful referendum would not have retroactive
effect. If a local law is successfully challenged by referendum, the
law “is repealed as of the date of the election.” UTAH CODE § 20A-
7-611(1) (2025). So here, if the court gave the Sponsors the relief they
request, declaring the referendum petition legally sufficient and
ordering the County Clerk to put the referendum measure on the
ballot, a successful referendum vote would repeal the Ordinance
“as of the date of the election.” Id. The Sponsors have not explained
how the future prospective repeal of the Ordinance would have
any effect on the developer’s vested rights—assuming it has any.
¶32 In sum, the Sponsors have not explained how the court can
provide them with meaningful relief, even if we grant them the
remedy they seek. Accordingly, we conclude that the case is moot.
CONCLUSION
¶33 Tooele County no longer holds land-use authority over the
Property. Erda now has that authority, which it has exercised since
2022. And the Sponsors have not explained how a referendum on
the Tooele County Ordinance could have any impact on the current
zoning of the Property. Although they posit that the case might not
be moot because a referendum could extinguish any vested
development rights that the Ordinance might have sparked, they
have provided no legal basis for that premise. Thus, this court has
no ability to provide legally effective relief to the Sponsors, which
renders this case moot. We dismiss the appeal.
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Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.