City of Charlottesville v. Payne

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 1, 2021
Docket200790
StatusPublished

This text of City of Charlottesville v. Payne (City of Charlottesville v. Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Charlottesville v. Payne, (Va. 2021).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE, ET AL. OPINION BY v. Record No. 200790 JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN April 1, 2021 FREDERICK W. PAYNE, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE Richard E. Moore, Judge

In this appeal, we consider whether the circuit court erred in awarding declaratory relief,

injunctive relief, and attorneys’ fees pursuant to Code §§ 15.2-1812 and -1812.1. 1

BACKGROUND

In 1918, the City of Charlottesville accepted a citizen’s offer to donate land for a park in

the city and to erect a statue of Robert E. Lee (Lee Statue) in that park (Lee Park). The next

year, the City of Charlottesville accepted another offer from the same citizen to donate separate

land for another park in the city and to erect a statue of Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson (Jackson

Statue) in that park (Jackson Park). The Jackson Statue was erected in Jackson Park in 1921 and

the Lee Statue was erected in Lee Park in 1924 (collectively, the Statues).

In February 2017, the Charlottesville City Council (the Council) approved resolutions to

remove the Lee Statue from Lee Park, to rename and redesign Lee Park, and to support the

renaming, redesign, and transformation of Jackson Park. The Council also directed staff to write

and issue requests for proposals regarding redesigning both Lee Park and Jackson Park.

1 The General Assembly amended Code §§ 15.2-1812, -1812.1, and relatedly 18.2-137, effective July 2020. However, unless otherwise noted, every reference to such statutes in this opinion refers to Code § 15.2-1812 (2010), Code § 15.2-1812.1 (2000), and Code § 18.2-137 (1999), which were in effect at the time this action was filed and litigated in the circuit court. On March 20, 2017, before the Council and the City of Charlottesville acted in

furtherance of the resolutions, Frederick W. Payne, John Bosley Yellott, Jr., Edward D. Tayloe,

II, Betty Jane Franklin Phillips, Edward Bergen Fry, Virginia C. Amiss, Stefanie Marshall,

Charles L. Weber, Jr., Lloyd Thomas Smith, Jr., 2 Anthony M. Griffin, and Britton Franklin

Earnest, Sr., (collectively, the Individual Plaintiffs), along with the Virginia Division of the Sons

of Confederate Veterans, Inc., and The Monument Fund, Inc., (all together with the Individual

Plaintiffs, the Plaintiffs) filed a complaint (the Original Complaint) in the Circuit Court of the

City of Charlottesville. The Plaintiffs named, as the defendants, the City of Charlottesville, the

Council, (together, the City) and the five individual members of the Council (the Council

Members). 3 In the Original Complaint, it is alleged that the actions of the City violated

Code § 15.2-1812 (1997), and Plaintiffs requested (1) that the resolutions passed by the Council

relating to the Statues and the parks be declared void; (2) that the City be temporarily and

permanently enjoined from removing the Lee Statue as well as from redesigning and renaming

the parks; (3) recovery of monetary judgments against the Council Members; and (4) an award

for costs and attorneys’ fees. The City and the Council Members filed responsive pleadings

including a demurrer. In the demurrer, the City argued that the Plaintiffs failed to state a cause

of action for statutory violations because the statute that the City allegedly violated,

Code § 15.2-1812, was not in existence at the time the Statues were erected. The City asserted

2 Lloyd Thomas Smith, Jr., was one of the original plaintiffs, but he later passed away and, as such, is not a party to this appeal. 3 The Council Members moved for summary judgment arguing that they were entitled to statutory immunity under Code § 15.2-1405. On July 8, 2019, the circuit court granted the summary judgment motion and dismissed the claims against the Council Members, ruling that the Council Members were entitled to immunity from the suit pursuant to Code § 15.2-1405. That ruling was not appealed and the Council Members are not parties to this appeal. They did, however, file an amicus brief in the present appeal.

2 that Code § 15.2-1812, which was enacted in 1997, had no retroactive applicability and did not

apply to statues erected by independent cities prior to 1997.

On August 24, 2017, the City placed black tarp coverings (the tarps) over the Statues.

The City took this action pursuant to a previously approved motion directing that the Statues be

covered with black fabric, in mourning for the lives lost in Charlottesville during the so-called

“Unite the Right” rally and associated protests regarding the Statues, which occurred during the

weekend of August 12, 2017.

Subsequently, on September 5, 2017, the Council approved a resolution to remove both

Statues from their respective parks as soon as possible “pending [] the successful resolution of

the current court case in favor of the City.”

On October 3, 2017, in ruling on the demurrer, the circuit court concluded that

Code § 15.2-1812, passed by the General Assembly in 1997, was applicable regarding the Lee

and Jackson Statues that were erected in the 1920s. The circuit court noted that Code

§ 15.2-1812, along with Code §§ 15.2-1812.1 and 18.2-137, gave protection to memorials and

monuments to several past wars, with the earliest being the Algonquin War which occurred in

1622. Acknowledging that a “strictly technical reading of the statute and its legislative history”

could lead to a different conclusion, and that the Circuit Court of the City of Danville and an

opinion of the Attorney General of the Commonwealth had reached that contrary conclusion, the

circuit court explained that, in its view, the General Assembly must have intended all of the

previously erected statues to the wars and conflicts enumerated in Code § 15.2-1812 to be

protected by the prohibitions stated in Code § 15.2-1812. Observing that if the statute was given

its strictly technical reading, there would still be no prohibition on localities, other than counties,

moving, disturbing, or interfering with monuments and memorials erected prior to the passage of

3 Code § 15.2-1812, the circuit court viewed such a result as absurd, because “the General

Assembly had to have had in mind those monuments and memorials already erected,” which the

circuit court believed would far outnumber the prospective monuments and memorials that might

be dedicated to wars that took place long ago.

Subsequently, on February 19, 2018, the Plaintiffs filed a Revised Second Amended

Complaint. 4 The Revised Second Amended Complaint alleged that Payne, Yellott, Tayloe, and

Amiss are residents of Charlottesville who all pay personal property taxes, and that some of them

also pay real estate taxes. It stated that Phillips is a “collateral descendant” of the citizen who

donated the land and the Statues and that she represents the interests of the family. The Revised

Second Amended Complaint asserted that Fry is the great-nephew of the sculptor who created

the Lee Statue and that he has “an interest in protecting the Lee [Statue] on account of his

ancestral connection to the sculptor.” It stated that Marshall is the chairman of the Monument

Fund and “personally expended money and effort in cleaning and removing graffiti from the Lee

[Statue] in 2011 and 2015.” As for the last individual plaintiff, Weber, the Revised Amended

Second Complaint stated that Weber pays real estate and personal property taxes in

Charlottesville, and that he “has a special interest in the protection and preservation of war

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