Defective Zoning Appeals Are Not Jurisdictional and the “Fairly Debatable” Standard Reaffirmed: Commentary on Elliott Land Developments v. Jackson County Board of Supervisors
I. Introduction
The Mississippi Supreme Court’s decision in Elliott Land Developments, LLC, Michael Aguzin and Winona Aguzin v. Board of Supervisors of Jackson County, Mississippi and Marisa Lamey (decided October 30, 2025) is a significant reaffirmation of two foundational principles in Mississippi zoning law:
- Procedural Defects in Administrative Zoning Appeals Are Not Jurisdictional where the governing ordinance vests discretionary screening authority in an administrative official.
- Local zoning decisions remain highly insulated from judicial interference under the “fairly debatable” and “substantial evidence” standards, even when a developer presents robust expert evidence of changed conditions and public need.
The case arises out of a dispute over the proposed rezoning of approximately 31.8 acres of agricultural land in Jackson County, Mississippi, from an A‑1 (general agriculture) to an R‑1 (single-family residential) classification. Elliott Land Developments, acting in concert with landowners Michael and Winona Aguzin, sought to develop the property as smaller-lot, single-family homes. A neighboring landowner, Marisa Lamey, and other residents opposed the change, voicing concerns over drainage, traffic, and the loss of the area’s “country feel.”
After the Jackson County Planning Commission recommended approval of the rezoning, Lamey appealed to the Jackson County Board of Supervisors. The Board reversed the Planning Commission and denied the rezoning by a 4–1 vote. The circuit court affirmed. Elliott Land then appealed to the Mississippi Supreme Court, advancing three key contentions:
- The neighbor’s appeal to the Board was procedurally defective and therefore deprived the Board of subject-matter jurisdiction.
- The developer established, by clear and convincing evidence, both a change in the character of the neighborhood and a public need for the rezoning.
- The Board’s denial was arbitrary and capricious, allegedly driven by one supervisor’s personal vow never to support rezoning of the property.
The Supreme Court rejected all three arguments and affirmed. In doing so, it clarified the effect of a defective appeal under Jackson County’s zoning ordinance and strongly reiterated Mississippi’s deferential approach to local zoning authorities.
II. Summary of the Opinion
The Court’s holdings can be succinctly stated:
- Appeal to the Board was properly before it. Even assuming defects in the initial notice of appeal from the Planning Commission to the Board, Jackson County Zoning Ordinance § 9.19.02 gives the planning director discretion to request dismissal of a noncompliant appeal. Because the planning director did not invoke that remedy, the Board properly exercised jurisdiction over the appeal (¶¶ 29–31).
- The rezoning question was “fairly debatable.” Elliott Land presented substantial, expert-supported evidence of changes in the neighborhood and public need; the opposing residents presented substantial evidence related to drainage, traffic, preservation of rural character, and reliance on existing zoning. This clash made the matter “fairly debatable” (¶¶ 36–39).
- The Board’s denial was not arbitrary or capricious. Because the Board’s decision rested on substantial evidence and legitimate planning considerations, the courts could not substitute their judgment. The Board’s written order and record of deliberations showed a reasoned decision based on the evidentiary record (¶¶ 37–40).
- A supervisor’s personal comment did not taint the decision. Supervisor Bosarge’s post-vote statement that he would “never support or vote for a zoning change” on that property did not render the denial arbitrary or capricious. The comment came after the vote, did not control the Board’s collective reasoning, and the decision would have been the same even without his vote (¶¶ 40–41).
On that basis, the Court affirmed the circuit court’s decision, which in turn had affirmed the Board’s denial of the rezoning application (¶42).
III. Factual and Procedural Background
A. The Property and the Proposed Rezoning
The property at issue consists of approximately 31.777 acres owned by Michael and Winona Aguzin, zoned A‑1 general agriculture (¶4). Elliott Land Developments applied on November 14, 2023, to rezone the property to R‑1 single-family residential. This would allow smaller lots and a denser, more conventional subdivision layout than typically seen in agricultural zoning.
B. Proceedings Before the Planning Commission
The Jackson County Planning Commission held a hearing on December 20, 2023 (¶5). Key features of this stage included:
- Opposing residents’ testimony. Six adjacent homeowners argued:
- There had been some change in the area, but not enough to justify rezoning.
- Concerns over drainage and traffic.
- A desire to preserve the “country setting.”
- Reliance on the existing zoning ordinance in deciding to purchase homes there.
- Reference to previous unsuccessful rezoning attempts—two residents pointed out that similar applications had been denied three times in the prior year, with no material changes since (¶5).
-
Developer’s expert evidence. Elliott Land presented a Land Use Report prepared by planning consultant Donovan Scruggs (¶6–¶9):
- Maps of existing zoning: the subject property is surrounded by a mixture of R‑1 residential, R‑4 higher-density residential (apartments/townhouses), A‑1 agricultural, and A‑2 agricultural-reserve zones.
- Evidence of recent rezonings from agricultural to residential, demonstrating a changed neighborhood character.
- Google Earth imagery showing substantial development over twenty years, including about 160 new homes in the immediate area in just the last three years (¶7).
- Upgraded water and sewer infrastructure, eliminating the necessity of large lots for septic systems (¶7).
- Purported public needs: proximity to employment centers and campuses, availability of affordable housing, and transportation access via I‑10 and Highway 90. The report emphasized that the area had been a major locus of new housing in Jackson County over the past decade (¶8–¶9).
- Consistency with the County’s Comprehensive Plan, based on access to urban centers, developable land, transportation, and improved utilities, while acknowledging wetlands that would require conservation (¶9).
After considering this evidence, the Planning Commission voted 4–1 to recommend approval of the rezoning (¶10).
C. Appeal from the Planning Commission to the Board of Supervisors
On the same day as the Commission’s vote, adjacent property owner Marisa Lamey filed a notice of appeal to the Board of Supervisors (¶11). The first notice was minimalist: a short letter stating that it was a written appeal regarding the specific rezoning matter, and providing her contact information and the cause number. It did not expressly identify particular errors allegedly committed by the Planning Commission.
Later, Lamey submitted a second notice of appeal that elaborated her objections (¶12):
- No public need for additional homes on the subject property because “numerous subdivisions south of McClelland … are not complete.”
- A preference of adjacent neighbors to keep the property A‑1 for:
- Agricultural purposes,
- Low-density growth, and
- Protection of wetlands and protected species.
In response, Elliott Land argued that:
- The initial notice failed to comply with Jackson County Zoning Ordinance § 9.19.02(a)(3), which requires “a brief statement of each particular error which the appellant contends was committed by the Planning Commission.”
- The second notice, which did articulate reasons, was untimely because it was filed more than seven days after the Planning Commission’s decision (¶13).
- Therefore, the Board lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal.
Elliott Land also pressed the merits, contending that the neighbor’s factual contentions were incorrect or incomplete and that the developer’s evidence satisfied the legal standard for rezoning (¶14). The Board, however, chose to hear the appeal (¶14).
D. Hearing Before the Board of Supervisors
On February 20, 2024, the Board conducted a de novo-type hearing on the rezoning (¶15–¶17). The record reflects:
- Public opposition expanded. Thirteen adjacent property owners spoke in opposition, reiterating and elaborating the themes raised at the Planning Commission:
- Concerns regarding drainage and the adequacy of surrounding roads.
- Desire to maintain a rural, “country feel.
- Concessions that some change had occurred, coupled with arguments that:
- The changes were undesired; and
- The degree of change was insufficient to justify rezoning.
- Preference for larger A‑1 lots over smaller R‑1 lots placed “closer together” (¶15).
- Developer’s renewed presentation. Elliott Land reiterated its Land Use Report-based arguments (¶16), emphasizing:
- Objectors’ own concessions regarding neighborhood change and housing demand.
- Consumer preferences for smaller lots and closer proximity to work and retail.
- Commitments not to clear all trees and to preserve wetlands through a conservation easement or functional protection (¶16).
At the close of the hearing, Supervisor Bosarge moved to overturn the Planning Commission’s recommendation and deny the rezoning “based on [the fact that he did not] believe there [was] enough change to warrant the zoning change” (¶17). Supervisor Ross expressed concern with managing growth and preserving rural areas, but ultimately joined the motion. Supervisor Taylor dissented, stating there was “ample reason” to grant the rezoning (¶17). The Board voted 4–1 to deny, issuing an order stating that:
- The Board had considered detailed presentations and submissions.
- It applied the standard requiring clear and convincing evidence of:
- A sufficient change in neighborhood character; and
- The existence of a public need for rezoning.
- The Board found that such clear and convincing evidence had not been presented (¶17).
After the vote, Supervisor Bosarge told Elliott Land that the Aguzin property had been before the Board for rezoning “either the second or third” time, and remarked that “as long as [he is] Supervisor of that area, [he will] never support or vote for a zoning change” (¶18). This statement later became central to Elliott Land’s arbitrariness argument.
E. Circuit Court Appeal
Elliott Land appealed to the Jackson County Circuit Court (¶19), arguing:
- The denial was not grounded in law or evidence but in Supervisor Bosarge’s permanent personal opposition.
- The developer had clearly and convincingly proven both changed neighborhood character and public need.
- Lamey’s notices of appeal were defective and thus deprived the Board of jurisdiction; in addition, for the first time, Elliott Land argued that because Lamey did not appear at the Planning Commission hearing, she lacked standing to appeal (¶19–¶20).
The Board of Supervisors countered that:
- Elliott Land cited no authority for its jurisdictional theory (¶21).
- Section 9.19.02 of the ordinance expressly provides that the planning director “may” request dismissal of a defective appeal; the planning director had elected not to do so (¶21).
- Section 9.19.02(a) does not require that an appellant speak at the Planning Commission hearing as a prerequisite to appeal (¶21).
- The Board’s decision was at least fairly debatable, as evidenced by:
- Thirteen opposing residents’ testimony;
- Disagreement between the Planning Commission and the Board; and
- Elliott Land’s own acknowledgment that the decision was difficult and that “the numbers were not on its side” in terms of public opposition (¶22).
On October 8, 2024, the circuit court affirmed the Board’s decision, finding:
- The Board had expressly found that clear and convincing evidence of sufficient change and public need was lacking.
- The Board sought to prevent changes to the surrounding “country environment” and to avoid potential drainage issues.
- The decision rested on substantial evidence in the form of:
- Residents’ testimony about drainage and objections to small, “cookie-cutter” lots; and
- The Board’s consideration of the area’s existing character (¶23).
Elliott Land then appealed to the Mississippi Supreme Court (¶24).
IV. Precedents and Doctrinal Framework
A. Standard of Review and Deference to Local Zoning Bodies
The Court situates its analysis within a well-established body of Mississippi zoning jurisprudence, drawing extensively on Thomas v. Board of Supervisors of Panola County, 45 So. 3d 1173 (Miss. 2010).
In Thomas, and as reiterated here (¶25–¶28), the Court emphasizes:
- The circuit court acts as an appellate court, not a fact-finder, in zoning cases (¶25).
- The appellate courts (including the Supreme Court) review “the same record that was made at the agency” and apply the same standard regardless of whether the circuit court affirmed or reversed (¶25).
- A zoning decision must be upheld unless it is:
- Arbitrary,
- Capricious,
- Discriminatory,
- Illegal, or
- Without substantial evidentiary basis.
Key definitions drawn from Gentry v. City of Baldwyn, 821 So. 2d 870 (Miss. Ct. App. 2002), and reiterated via Thomas are (¶27):
- “Arbitrary” – an act “not done according to reason or judgment, but depending on the will alone.”
- “Capricious” – an act done without reason, in a whimsical manner, implying either a lack of understanding of or disregard for the surrounding facts and controlling principles.
- “Substantial evidence” – “more than a mere scintilla of evidence” but less than a preponderance; it must be more than a “scintilla or glimmer” (quoting Miss. Dep’t of Env’t Quality v. Weems, 653 So. 2d 266, 280–81 (Miss. 1995)).
The burden of proof is also grounded in Childs v. Hancock County Board of Supervisors, 1 So. 3d 855 (Miss. 2009):
- The party challenging the zoning decision bears the burden of showing invalidity; the Board’s actions are presumed valid (¶28).
- Appellate courts cannot substitute their judgment for the Board’s (¶28).
- If the issue is “fairly debatable,” the Board’s decision must stand (¶28).
B. The “Change or Mistake” Rule and “Public Need” Requirement
Rezoning in Mississippi is governed by the “change or mistake” rule, as summarized in Bridge v. Mayor & Board of Aldermen of Oxford, 995 So. 2d 81 (Miss. 2008), and reiterated in Childs and this case:
“An applicant seeking rezoning must prove by clear and convincing evidence either that (1) there was a mistake in the original zoning, or (2) the character of the neighborhood has changed to such an extent to justify rezoning and that a public need exists to rezone.” (¶32, quoting Childs and Bridge).
Here, Elliott Land did not claim a “mistake in the original zoning,” so the case turns on whether there was:
- A sufficient change in neighborhood character; and
- A corresponding public need for the rezoning.
And both of those must be proven by clear and convincing evidence
The Court draws on Roundstone Development, LLC v. City of Natchez, 105 So. 3d 317 (Miss. 2013), which in turn relies on Board of Aldermen of Bay Springs v. Jenkins, 423 So. 2d 1323 (Miss. 1982):
This line of authority underpins the Court’s acceptance of lay testimony about drainage, traffic, and neighborhood character as substantial evidence.
Outside the zoning context, the Court briefly references Mississippi Department of Corrections v. Harris, 831 So. 2d 1190 (Miss. Ct. App. 2002), for the general principle that appellate courts review the same administrative record as the circuit court and apply the same standard of review (¶25). This reinforces the conception of local zoning boards as administrative bodies within the broader Mississippi administrative law framework.
Elliott Land’s procedural attack centered on Jackson County Zoning Ordinance § 9.19.02(a), which governs appeals from the Planning Commission to the Board. The ordinance requires that a notice of appeal:
Elliott Land argued:
The Board countered with two principal points (¶21):
The Board also noted that nothing in § 9.19.02 required Lamey to have spoken at the Planning Commission hearing as a prerequisite to appeal (¶21), undercutting Elliott Land’s alternative “standing” argument.
The Supreme Court’s analysis is concise but significant:
This holding is doctrinally important: it draws a line between jurisdictional defects (which courts must police and which cannot be waived) and waivable procedural defects subject to an agency’s internal administrative discretion. By recognizing the ordinance’s explicit grant of discretion to the planning director, the Court establishes that such defects do not by themselves divest the Board of subject-matter jurisdiction.
The ruling signals:
The Court does not explicitly rule on Elliott Land’s late-raised contention that Lamey lacked standing because she had not appeared at the Planning Commission hearing. But by affirming that the appeal was properly before the Board, and by noting that the ordinance does not require prior appearance (¶21), the Court effectively rejects that contention as well.
The Court reiterates the multi-layered burden facing a party seeking to overturn a rezoning denial:
Elliott Land’s presentation was comprehensive and, in many respects, compelling:
Given this evidence, Elliott Land argued that the Board’s denial was unsupported by substantial evidence and therefore arbitrary and capricious (¶34).
On the other side of the scale, thirteen adjacent property owners provided testimony that the Court characterizes as substantial (¶38). Their points included:
The Board was also explicitly entitled to draw on “its own common knowledge and experience” with the locality (¶33, ¶38), a right reaffirmed by Roundstone and Jenkins.
Faced with substantial evidence on both sides, the Court applies the “fairly debatable” doctrine in a textbook manner:
On this record, the Court concludes that:
Once the Court characterizes the dispute as “fairly debatable,” its role essentially ends. It reiterates that:
This is a powerful reaffirmation that Mississippi appellate courts do not reweigh zoning evidence; they ask only whether the Board’s decision had a substantial evidentiary basis and fell within the realm of reasoned discretionary choice.
Elliott Land highlighted Supervisor Bosarge’s remark that he would “never support or vote for a zoning change” for the property as evidence of arbitrariness and personal bias (¶34, ¶18). The Court scrutinizes that assertion under the definitions of “arbitrary” and “capricious” (¶27, ¶40–¶41):
In combination, these points lead the Court to hold that:
Doctrinally, the case does not revolutionize Mississippi zoning law but fortifies several key principles:
This is a heighted standard of proof. Imagine three levels of proof:
Rezoning applicants in Mississippi must meet the clear and convincing standard when trying to show that conditions justify changing established zoning classifications.
Mississippi treats zoning maps as relatively stable. To change zoning, one must show either:
In Elliott Land, only the second route—change plus public need—was at issue (¶32).
“Substantial evidence” is a middle-ground concept:
If reasonable people could accept the evidence as adequate to support the conclusion, it counts as substantial. The Court stresses that both developers’ expert evidence and neighbors’ lay testimony can qualify as substantial evidence (¶27, ¶36–¶38).
If the evidence in favor of and against a zoning decision is such that reasonable minds could differ, then the decision is “fairly debatable.” Under Mississippi law:
These terms describe decisions that fail basic standards of rational governance:
The Court held that the Board’s decision here was neither:
Subject-matter jurisdiction is a court or body’s legal power to hear a particular type of case. If a body lacks subject-matter jurisdiction, its decisions are void.
By contrast, procedural compliance concerns whether parties followed the required steps (e.g., filing deadlines, content requirements for notices). Violations of such rules:
In Elliott Land, the Court firmly treats notice defects as procedural matters entrusted to the planning director, not as jurisdictional defects that invalidate the Board’s authority (¶31).
This decision sends several clear messages to developers:
For objectors like Lamey and the residents who testified:
Jackson County and other Mississippi localities can draw several lessons:
Going forward, litigants may test:
Elliott Land Developments v. Board of Supervisors of Jackson County is best understood as a consolidating rather than revolutionary decision. It:
In the broader legal context, the decision reinforces Mississippi’s strong preference for local control in land use matters, with appellate courts stepping in only when local authorities truly stray beyond the bounds of reason, evidence, or lawful process. Developers must therefore understand that even well-prepared, data-rich rezoning proposals can fail—and remain unreviewable—if local opposition and planning judgments supply substantial evidence in support of denial.
C. Consideration of Citizen Testimony and Board Knowledge
“[The Board] may consider ‘the statements expressed by all the landowners at the hearing’ and may ‘call upon their own common knowledge and experience in their town.’ Such considerations are ‘sound and practical’ and should be respected unless the findings are arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable.” (¶33, quoting Roundstone and Jenkins).
D. Administrative Law Context
V. Detailed Analysis of the Court’s Reasoning
A. Issue I: Was the Neighbor’s Appeal Defective and Jurisdictionally Fatal?
1. The Developer’s Argument
2. The Board’s Response and the Ordinance’s Discretionary Dismissal Provision
“In the event an appellant disregards or fails to comply with the procedure set out in Section 9.19 of this article hereof, the Planning Director or his/her designee may by motion, request the Board of Supervisors dismiss the appellant’s appeal.” (¶31, emphasis added).
This language clearly makes dismissal discretionary, triggered only if the Planning Director seeks it. Here, Planning Director Marcus Catchot chose not to move for dismissal (¶21, ¶31).
3. The Court’s Resolution
4. Practical Consequences
B. Issue II: Did Elliott Land Meet Its Burden and Was the Denial Arbitrary or Capricious?
1. The Applicable Legal Standard
2. Evidence Presented by the Developer
3. Evidence Presented by Opponents and Considered by the Board
4. The Court’s “Fairly Debatable” Assessment
“We conclude that the issues of whether there has been a sufficient change in the character of the neighborhood and whether a public need exists to warrant rezoning are fairly debatable because both sides presented substantial evidence.” (¶36).
5. Treatment of Supervisor Bosarge’s “Never Rezoning” Comment
“Supervisor Bosarge heard the residents’ testimony, considered his familiarity with and knowledge of his own district, and then made a motion to overturn the Planning Commission’s decision based on the fact that he did not ‘believe there [was] enough change to warrant the zoning change.’” (¶40).
This is a legitimate planning judgment under Roundstone and Jenkins.
C. Overall Doctrinal Significance
VI. Complex Concepts Simplified
1. “Clear and Convincing Evidence”
2. “Change or Mistake” Rule
3. “Substantial Evidence”
4. “Fairly Debatable” Standard
5. “Arbitrary” and “Capricious” Decisions
6. Subject-Matter Jurisdiction vs. Procedural Compliance
VII. Impact and Future Implications
A. For Developers and Landowners
B. For Opposing Neighbors and Citizen Objectors
C. For Local Governments and Zoning Authorities
D. Possible Future Litigation Themes
VIII. Conclusion
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