Chappell v. Zoning Appeals Board

65 Va. Cir. 142
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedJune 17, 2004
DocketCase No. (Law) 212517
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Va. Cir. 142 (Chappell v. Zoning Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chappell v. Zoning Appeals Board, 65 Va. Cir. 142 (Va. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

By Judge Jane Marum Roush

This matter came on for a hearing on March 23,2004, on the petitioners’ appeal of the decision of the City of Fairfax Board of Zoning Appeals (the “BZA” ). At that time, the court took the matter under advisement. I have now had the opportunity fully to consider the pleadings, exhibits, and testimony of the witnesses. For the reasons stated below, pursuant to Va. Code § 15.2-2314, the BZA’s decision will be reversed.

Facts

This case involves the interpretation of Virginia’s Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act, Va. Code Ann. §§ 10.1-2100, etseq., and the provisions of the Code of the City of Fairfax enacted pursuant to that act, City of Fairfax Code §§ 110-77, etseq.1 The petitioners are Carolyn Chappell, Duston Grefe, and Lauren Jennings, siblings who own a parcel of land in the City of Fairfax. The Petitioners challenge the BZA’s decision affirming the zoning administrator’s determination that the Petitioners’ property includes a [143]*143“Resource Protection Area” (“ RPA” ) under Virginia’s Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act and the City’s Chesapeake Bay Preservation ordinance. The issue is important to the parties because the existence of RPA on the property negatively affects the Petitioners’ ability to develop the property and reduces the property’s fair market value. Because the City has indicated its intention to condemn the property to prevent its development, the value of the property is of interest to both the Petitioners and the City.

The area now designated as RPA on the Petitioners ’ property consists of a “735 linear feet stream bed identified on [Unites States Geological Survey] maps as a portion of an unnamed intermittent tributary to Rabbit Run, coursing generally southward across the Property emanating from a culvert on the northern end of the land and that varies from some six feet wide, down to three to four feet.” See Petition, & 5. It is undisputed that this is an intermittent, and not perennial, stream. Petition, & 5; Response to Petition, & 5. There is also a small area of4,286 square feet (slightly less than 0.10 acre) of what are referred to as nontidal wetlands, subject to federal jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act. Petition, & 5.

In 1999, when the City originally mapped its RPA under its Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act, no area of the Petitioners’ property was shown as containing RPA. Later, the City remapped its RPA and determined that there was RPA on the property. After the Petitioners questioned the inclusion of RPA on their property, representatives of the City told the Petitioners that the RPA had been mapped on the property in error. The tax assessment on the property was increased to reflect the absence of RPA on the property and, consequently, its higher fair market value.

Assured that there was no RPA on the property, the Petitioners began in earnest the preliminary studies needed to subdivide the property for single family residences. At the suggestion of the City, the Petitioners wrote the zoning administrator asking for a formal ruling that there was no RPA on the property. The zoning administrator took the request under advisement.

The Petitioners submitted a subdivision plan to the City. Included in that submission was a study prepared by Wetlands Studies and Solutions, Inc., that concluded that there is no RPA on the property. Also submitted in connection with the subdivision plan were two permits: one from the Army Corps of Engineers and one from the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. The import of those two permits was that, although there is a small area of nontidal wetlands on the property, it is so small that it may be disturbed pursuant to a “nationwide” permit, no “individual permit” is required, nor is any “compensatory mitigation” required if the area is disturbed. Petition, & 17; Opposition to Petition, & 17.

[144]*144The Petitioners’ proposed subdivision of the property-was. met with opposition from neighbors who preferred that the property be.kept as open space. For example, one neighbor wrote to the City opposing the development of the property because “our neighborhood has always used that as a park and enjoyed it as a nature preserve. It is an area where children play and people walk their dogs.” Record, p. 15. On November 12, 2002, the City Council voted to condemn the property, because, to quote the Mayor, “if we didn’t go the condemnation route, [the property] would have been redeveloped by right.” 2

On November 22, 2002, the zoning administrator issued her determination that there is RPA on the property. In December 20Ó2, the City’s planning commission disapproved the Petitioners’ subdivision, citing the presence of RPA on the property. Finally, in March 2003, the BZA affirmed the zoning administrator’s decision that the property contains RPA.

Standard of Review

The standard of review for this appeal is as set forth in Va. Code § 15.2-2314: In the case of an appeal from the board of zoning appeals to the circuit court of an order, requirement, decision, or determination of a zoning administrator or other administrative officer in the administration or enforcement of any ordinance or provision of state law, the decision of the board of zoning appeals shall be presumed to be correct. The appealing party may rebut that presumption by proving by a preponderance of the evidence, including the record before the board of zoning appeals, that the board of zoning appeals erred in its decision. Any party may introduce evidence in the proceedings in the court. Virginia Code § 15.2-2314 (Repl. Vol. 2003).

The above-quoted paragraph of the statute was added to Va. Code § 15.2-2314 by the General Assembly in 2003. Before that amendment, the appellant in an appeal from any BZA action was required to show that the BZA applied erroneous principals of law or that its decision .was .plainly wrong and in violation of the purpose and intent of the. zoning ordinance. City of Suffolk v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 266 Va. 137, 580 S.E.2d 796 (2003). That more stringent standard has been codified for appeals from “any decision of the board of zoning appeals that deniefs] or grant[s] an application for a variance or application for a special exception.” In a case such as this case, however, involving “an appeal from the board of zoning appeals to the circuit court of an order, requirement, decision, or determination of a zoning administrator or other administrative officer in the administration or enforcement of any ordinance or provision of state law,” the appellant may [145]*145rebut the presumption of correctness by showing, by a preponderance of evidence, that the BZA “erred in its decision.”

Applicable Law

Regulations promulgated by the Chesapeake Bay Local Assistance Board pursuant to Virginia’s Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act define RPA as:

That component of the Chesapeake Bay Preservation Area comprised of lands adj acent to water bodies with perennial flow that have an intrinsic water quality value due to ecological or biological processes they perform or are sensitive to impacts which may result in significant degradation to the quality of state waters.

9 VAC 10-20-40, Definitions.

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Related

City of Suffolk Ex Rel. Herbert v. Board of Zoning Appeals
580 S.E.2d 796 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Va. Cir. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chappell-v-zoning-appeals-board-vaccfairfax-2004.