Jenney v. Durham

707 A.2d 752, 1997 Del. Super. LEXIS 11, 1997 WL 828406
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 17, 1997
DocketC.A. 96A-08-004-NAB
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 707 A.2d 752 (Jenney v. Durham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenney v. Durham, 707 A.2d 752, 1997 Del. Super. LEXIS 11, 1997 WL 828406 (Del. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

BARRON, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

In April 1996, Davis G. Durham (“Durham” or “Respondent”) filed an application with the Board of Adjustment for New Castle County (“Board”) for a variance from the New Castle County Steep Slope Ordinance (“the Steep Slope Ordinance” or “the Ordinance”). 1 After a public hearing, the Board granted the variance, over the objections of John Jenney, Jr. (“Petitioner” or “Jenney”), a neighbor. Jenney filed a timely petition for writ of certiorari with this Court. Having reviewed the parties’ submissions as well as the record below, the Court concludes that the Board’s decision must be Reversed.

FACTS

On April 1, 1996, Durham filed an application with the Board for a variance to build two homes for his sons on a five-acre portion of the ten-acre parcel of land known as 901 Mt. Lebanon Road, located in New Castle County, Delaware. Durham could not proceed to build without the variance because the proposed construction sites are located in an erosion-prone, steep slope district protected by the Steep Slope Ordinance, Code Sections 40-301 through 40-309.

The Board held a public hearing on the application on July 11, 1996, at which time the chairman noted that Durham’s was the first variance application the Board had considered under the Steep Slope Ordinance, which was enacted in 1990. Testifying on behalf of the respondent were Durham; his son, Andrew Durham; James R. Nelson, a registered architect; and Herbert Bláck-welder, New Castle County Department of Planning. Jenney, a neighbor, appeared and testified in opposition to the variance.

The evidence showed that there are currently two structures on the parcel (Durham’s residence and a small cabin) and that he desires to build two additional houses for his sons. Durham acknowledged that both proposed homes would be located on a pro- *754 Mbitive steep slope district and that at least one home could be built on a level portion outside the prohibitive district. The angle of the slope is between 25 and 80 percent in most areas, with certain areas somewhat steeper. 2

As part of the proposed arrangement, Durham offered to convey a conservation easement to the County to protect the public view of his property from the Brandywine Creek State Park, which abuts his land. The proposed easement would include level land which could accommodate at least one house without violating the steep slope ordinance; conveying the land to the County would in turn force Durham to build on the prohibitive steep slope area. When questioned by a Board member, Durham acknowledged that he would withdraw his offer of the easement if the Board approved the construction of only one structure.

Durham testified that he had contacted his neighbors to obtain their approval, as well as state officials and conservation groups. He explained the procedures to be used to minimize erosion and earth movement and submitted a written plan outlining those procedures. James Nelson, a registered Delaware architect, further explained these proposals.

Herbert Blackwelder, New Castle County Department of Planning, testified as to the County’s concerns as well as Durham’s “sensitivity” to the environmental issues. He confirmed that Durham bad submitted'the documentation required under Sec. 40-307 and that the construction plans were in compliance with Sec. 40-806. He did not address the question of whether the proposed use (that is, residences) was permitted or otherwise allowed under Sec. 40-305, which provides a limited list of permitted and conditional uses in a steep slope district.

John Jenney, the Petitioner, opposed the granting of the variance. Jenney lives across the Brandywine River from Durham on a parcel of land set back from the River. He testified that he objects to the impact of the proposed construction on his view and asked the Board to uphold the Ordinance.

Prior to the hearing, the Board referred Durham’s application to the New Castle County Department of Planning (“Department” or “Department of Planning”) for evaluation and a written recommendation to be entered into the record, as required in Sec. 40-308. The Department’s Memorandum states at the outset that “[djevelopment of single-family homes is not permitted by right or by conditional use in the prohibitive slope district.” Department of Planning Memorandum, May 17, 1996, at 1. (Hereinafter “Mem. at page number ”). In its conclusion the Department stated that

there is sufficient public benefit from the preservation of the view to warrant the construction of one dwelling which would have been allowed by right on the preserved site. Any additional construction would seem to lack an offsetting public benefit.

Mem. at 3 (emphasis added). The emphasized portion of the conclusion clearly approves construction of only one structure which was “allowed by right,” that is, outside the perimeters of the steep slope district. Neither of Durham’s proposed structures fell outside the steep slope district.

However, the recommendation section of the Department’s Memorandum is worded differently, leaving out altogether the significant phrase “allowed as of right”:

The Department recommends approval of the application on the condition that only one dwelling be constructed and that approval be conditioned on recordation of the conservation easement.

Mem. at 3. The recommendation also presents four conditions for approval, all of which *755 pertain to environmental controls specific to steep slope conservation.

In summary, the Department’s analysis proceeds as follows: residential homes may not be built by right or by conditional use on steep slope land; Durham’s offer of a conservation easement warrants the construction of one budding allowed as of right (not the buildings proposed by Durham); the construction of one budding is recommended conditioned upon compliance with controls designed to preserve the steep slope ecology. The Board did not attempt to clarify the contradiction inherent in this rationale. At the hearing, Blackwelder explained the Department’s position as fodows:

In this particular case, Mr. Durham could by right construct a home on the pre-cautionaiy slope there. He would need to obtain a conditional use application for it but we confidently believe that he would be able to effectively show that he could do that. So by right, he could subdivide the property and get at least one lot for the construction of a house.
The overriding public benefit was that he was proposing to protect his valuable view shed by shifting the house into an area where the only way he could construct the house was with the variance. And we thought that there was some offsetting public benefit that should warrant consideration of the first house. We don’t find that that public benefit extends to the construction of a second home.

Transcript of Hearing, July 11, 1996, at 20 (emphasis added). (Hereinafter “Tr. at page number”).

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Bluebook (online)
707 A.2d 752, 1997 Del. Super. LEXIS 11, 1997 WL 828406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenney-v-durham-delsuperct-1997.