Alderman v. Chatham County

366 S.E.2d 885, 89 N.C. App. 610, 1988 N.C. App. LEXIS 361
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 1988
Docket8715SC401
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 366 S.E.2d 885 (Alderman v. Chatham County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alderman v. Chatham County, 366 S.E.2d 885, 89 N.C. App. 610, 1988 N.C. App. LEXIS 361 (N.C. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

Plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that defendant Chatham County and its Board of County Commissioners had acted unlawfully in rezoning Calvin and Mary C. Roberson’s 14.2 acre tract from Residential Agricultural 40-30 (RA 40-30) to Mobile Home District (MH District) for 14 lots and sought the court’s declaratory judgment that defendant commissioners’ 17 March 1986 action in that regard was illegal, invalid, and void, on grounds, inter alia, that the action of the County Commissioners constituted spot zoning and contract zoning.

The trial court’s findings of fact established the following: The Robersons are owners of 14.2 acres of land located south of State Road 1700 and west of Mount Gilead Baptist Church Road. The 14.2 acre tract is adjacent to the south side of Parker’s Creek which flows into the Parker’s Creek impoundment on Jordan Lake, where the Parker’s Creek campground and recreation areas are located. Some of the plaintiffs are owners of single family homes located on lots which are contiguous with and adjoin the southern boundary of the Robersons’ 14.2 acre property, and the remaining plaintiffs are owners of single family residences located on lots in the same nearby vicinity and generally south and west of the 14.2 acre tract.

Plaintiffs’ lands and the Robersons’ 14.2 acre tract are a small part of a much larger area of land totalling 500 acres which *612 was originally zoned Residential Agricultural 20 (RA-20) when the county first adopted its zoning ordinance in 1968.

Prior to defendants’ 30 January 1986 rezoning request for the 14.2 acre tract, defendant Calvin Roberson had sought to have their land (including the 14.2 acre tract) rezoned from low density residential use to mobile home park use on six different occasions. On 23 July 1973, defendant Calvin Roberson requested that the county rezone 40 acres then zoned RA-20 (including the 14.2 acre tract at issue) for a trailer park. On 1 October 1973, this request was denied by unanimous vote of the defendant Chatham County Commissioners.

On 17 October 1974, defendant Calvin Roberson sought to have 20 acres (adjacent to the 14.2 acre tract at issue) rezoned to mobile home use for a trailer park of 40 mobile homes. The County Planning Board opposed the rezoning on grounds that such use could jeopardize the planned Parker’s Creek impoundment and recreation area at the Jordan Reservoir. However, on 9 June 1975, the County Commissioners, by a 3-2 vote, voted to rezone 16 of the 20 acres for a mobile home park at a density of not more than two trailers per acre.

On 13 September 1983, the Chatham County Planning Board considered the Robersons’ request to expand their trailer park from the 16 acres rezoned on 9 June 1975, into the adjacent portion of their property south of Parker’s Creek, which included the 14.2 acre tract at issue. Neither the Planning Board nor the County Commissioners took further action on this request because they failed to present any survey or other evidence to support their claim that the land was located in an unzoned township. On 29 September 1983, defendant Calvin Roberson requested that their 20 acres located west of Mount Gilead Church Road (including the 14.2 acres at issue) be rezoned from RA 40-30 to Mobile Home District.

On 11 October 1983, before the Planning Board, defendant Calvin Roberson stated that the purpose of the request was to spread out the existing thirty-two trailer lots and add 18 more on larger lots, which on its south side bordered the plaintiffs’ lots and homes. In addition, he stated that he had State approval for a package treatment plant to serve the trailer park.

*613 On 8 November 1983, the Planning Board considered the request again. Plans submitted at the meeting showed that the parcel for which rezoning was requested contained 16 acres. It was learned that no approval for a package treatment plant to serve the proposed trailer park had been given by the State. After the County Planner advised the Board that the rezoning request (for 24 units on 16 acres) did not conform to the density recommended in the Land Development Plan, the Board voted 5-3 to deny the request.

On 9 January 1984, the Chatham County Commissioners again considered the rezoning request. At that meeting, defendant Commissioner Carl Thompson made the motion to deny the rezoning request, and “strongly recommended” that the Rober-sons submit a plan that would provide an adequate buffer between their property and the adjoining property owners. Two commissioners voted to approve the rezoning request and two voted to deny the request. Defendant Chairman Earl Thompson broke the tie and voted against the rezoning request, stating that his concern was a larger buffer zone and the potential density in the proposed trailer park.

On 9 April 1985, the Planning Board considered their request that a 16.2 acre tract (including the 14.2 acre tract at issue) be rezoned from RA 40-30 to MH District for 24 mobile homes. The Planning Board tabled this request pending State action on the Robersons’ permit application for a package sewage treatment plant. On 14 January 1986, before the Planning Board, defendant Calvin Roberson asked that the rezoning request not be taken off the table.

On 30 January 1986, the Robersons submitted the rezoning request at issue, asking that the 14.2 acres (adjacent on its south side to plaintiffs’ lands, which was the tract that was part of the property considered in the five previous rezoning requests) be rezoned from RA 40-30 to MH District for 14 mobile home lots. On 11 February 1986, the Planning Board considered the request. At that meeting, defendant Calvin Roberson stated that they had changed their request from 24 lots to 14 lots because they felt that the 14 lots would be more in line with the Land Development Plan. He also stated that they were trying to get a package treatment plant approved by the State to serve the property, in- *614 eluding the 32 units already approved on the 16 acres which he and his wife owned.

Plaintiff John Alderman stated that he had purchased his lot (adjacent to the 14.2 acre tract’s south boundary) from the Rober-sons. Plaintiff Alderman stated that at the time he purchased his lot, Calvin Roberson had verbally promised him that no mobile homes would be placed behind Alderman’s lot. The Planning Board voted to recommend that the 14.2 acres be rezoned from RA 40-30 to MH District for 14 lots.

On 13 March 1986, the Chatham County Commissioners held a public hearing to hear public comment on the Robersons’ request. Defendant Calvin Roberson stated that they sought to have the 14.2 acres rezoned so that they could expand their existing trailer park. He stated that the Planning Board had approved their request and that they had met all requirements such as buffer zones, low density, and sewage systems.

Many persons spoke in opposition to the requested rezoning change. Plaintiff Alderman reiterated his position that he would not have purchased his lot but for the Robersons’ assurance that they would not build on the 14.2 acres unless they decided to build for their children. Other persons had opposition to trailer parks being built but not individual mobile homes.

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Bluebook (online)
366 S.E.2d 885, 89 N.C. App. 610, 1988 N.C. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alderman-v-chatham-county-ncctapp-1988.