Board of Supervisors of Prince Edward County, Virginia v. Carolyn F. Bowman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 8, 2025
Docket0490232
StatusUnpublished

This text of Board of Supervisors of Prince Edward County, Virginia v. Carolyn F. Bowman (Board of Supervisors of Prince Edward County, Virginia v. Carolyn F. Bowman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors of Prince Edward County, Virginia v. Carolyn F. Bowman, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges AtLee, Friedman and Callins Argued at Richmond, Virginia

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY, VIRGINIA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0490-23-2 JUDGE DOMINIQUE A. CALLINS APRIL 8, 2025 CAROLYN F. BOWMAN, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY J. Leyburn Mosby, Jr., Judge Designate

Andrew McRoberts (Maxwell C. Hlavin; Andrew P. Selman; Sands Anderson PC, on brief), for appellant.

Bradley D. Foster (Robert E. Hawthorne; Derrick P. Fellows; Hawthorne & Hawthorne, P.C., on brief), for appellees.

This dispute centers on Carolyn and Corbett Bowman’s construction of a flagpole on their

property in Prince Edward County, Virginia (the “County”). Following the County’s issuance of a

notice of violation to the Bowmans concerning their flagpole, the Bowmans appealed to the Board

of Zoning Appeals (the “BZA”). The BZA granted the Bowmans’ appeal and invalidated the notice

of violation, finding that the Bowmans’ rights in the flagpole had vested pursuant to Code

§ 15.2-2311(C). The Board of Supervisors of Prince Edward County (the “Board”) appealed the

BZA’s decision to the Circuit Court of Prince Edward County, which affirmed the decision of

the BZA.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). On appeal, the Board contends that the circuit court erred by finding that the Bowmans’

rights in the flagpole had vested pursuant to Code § 15.2-2311(C). We disagree. Accordingly,

and for the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

BACKGROUND

The Bowmans own property in Prince Edward County known as Tax Map Parcel No.

039-A-30. According to the property tax card issued by the County, the designated “Use/Class” of

the Bowmans’ property is solely “Agricultural.”

In November 2021, Susan Holyfield, a friend of the Bowmans, emailed Robert Love, the

assistant zoning administrator for the County, inquiring on behalf of the Bowmans about the

requirements to install a flagpole. Holyfield did not disclose the Bowmans’ identity, the details of

the project, nor the location of their property. Holyfield did, however, state that the Bowmans’

“property is zoned A2.” Love responded to the email, informing Holyfield that there were no height

restrictions in zone A2 and that the “Building Code Office” would need to answer whether a

building permit was required.

Following Holyfield’s communication with Love, the Bowmans submitted a building

application to the then-building official for the County, Coy W. Leatherwood. The application

listed the work description as “[f]lag pole installation” and included “turn by turn directions” to the

job site. The Bowmans’ application identified their address and tax-map parcel number, but it did

not identify their property zoning.

On December 15, 2021, Leatherwood issued a building permit to the Bowmans for the

flagpole installation. Sixty days from December 15, 2021, would have fallen on February 14, 2022.

Under the permit number and date of issuance is a statement typed in prominent lettering: “THIS

PERMIT IS ISSUED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE ORDINANCE ON BUILDING PERMITS

AND THE ZONING ORDINANCE OF Prince Edward County.” The permit also includes

-2- directions to the building site, a description of the nature of the work to be done (“FLAG POLE

INSTALLATION”) and reference to a “plot plan” submitted with the building permit application.

Leatherwood’s secretary signed Leatherwood’s name on the Bowmans’ building permit.

Thereafter, the Bowmans began installing the flagpole. In January 2022, the County certified that

the flagpole’s concrete footing passed inspection. The inspection certificate also identified the

Bowmans’ property zoning as “Agricultural Conservation.”

Once construction was completed, the Bowmans displayed a flag1 on their flagpole. After

receiving complaints from area residents, Love issued a notice of violation to the Bowmans

regarding the flagpole. The notice stated that the Bowmans’ property was in the “General

Commercial (C1)” zoning district and that their property could have a flagpole as an “accessory use,

but only along with a principal use of the site permitted under the zoning ordinance.” The notice

further stated that the property was being used for agricultural purposes, “which is not allowed in

the C1 zoning district,” and that the flagpole’s 60-foot height2 exceeded the maximum allowable

height of 25 feet in the C1 district. The notice demanded that the Bowmans remove the flagpole

within thirty days and informed them that they had the right to appeal.

The Bowmans appealed the notice to the BZA, arguing that their rights in the flagpole had

vested pursuant to Code § 15.2-2311(C) and that removal of the flagpole was in violation of their

First Amendment rights.3 The day of the BZA hearing, Phillip Moore, who succeeded Leatherwood

as building official, issued an internal memorandum “modify[ing] all previously-issued and future

building permits” to “exclude the words, ‘and the zoning ordinance’” from the statement about the

1 The Bowmans displayed a confederate flag on their flagpole. 2 In a Facebook post, Mrs. Bowman stated that the flag was 85 feet tall. 3 Whether removal of the flagpole violated the Bowmans’ First Amendment rights is not an issue raised in this appeal. -3- permits’ compliance with ordinances. He also struck the same language on a copy of the Bowmans’

previously-issued permit, initialing the modification.

At the hearing before the BZA, Love testified for the Board that the property where the

Bowmans’ flagpole was located was zoned C1. The remainder of the property was zoned “A2

Agricultural conservation.” Love also testified that the flagpole was taller than 25 feet.

Love continued that only he and the zoning administrator, Doug Stanley, had authority to

review, issue, and deny zoning permits, and a building official did not have such authority. Love

had neither reviewed the Bowmans’ building permit application nor “signed off on [the permit]

including the language on the building permit that talks about compliance with zoning.” Finally,

Love testified that the zoning compliance language was a “clerical error.”

Stanley likewise testified that only he and Love had the authority to determine zoning

compliance. Stanley stated that the building permit had a clerical error, which he described as

“approving something with unintended consequences” or “approving something you did not

mean to approve.” He further characterized the issuance of the Bowmans’ building permit as “a

non-[z]oning [a]dministrator or [a]ssistant [z]oning [a]dministrator approving the zoning for a

building permit.”

Moore, Leatherwood’s successor and the County’s current building official, testified that

he is not authorized to “sign-off on zoning compliance.” Moore conducted the Bowmans’

footing inspection; he did not know the flagpole height when he inspected the footing but

testified that the footing was “very large.” According to Moore, it was not Leatherwood but his

secretary who signed the Bowmans’ building permit. Moore did not know whether Leatherwood

had authorized his secretary to sign the building permit in question but acknowledged that the

building official’s secretary was authorized to sign building permits.

-4- Following testimony, the Board argued that the building permit was not issued by a

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Board of Supervisors of Prince Edward County, Virginia v. Carolyn F. Bowman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-of-prince-edward-county-virginia-v-carolyn-f-bowman-vactapp-2025.