Jerry Kittrell v. Wilson County, Tennessee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 3, 2011
DocketM2010-00792-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry Kittrell v. Wilson County, Tennessee (Jerry Kittrell v. Wilson County, Tennessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerry Kittrell v. Wilson County, Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE January 18, 2011 Session

JERRY KITTRELL v. WILSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Wilson County No. 09020 Charles K. Smith, Chancellor

No. M2010-00792-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 3, 2011

The owner of a piece of rural property in Wilson County applied for a “permissible use” permit that would allow him to display vehicles for sale on the property. The County planning staff recommended against issuance of a permit, reasoning that the proposed use was not consistent with other uses permitted in an A-1 (agricultural) zoning district. The owner appealed to the Board of Zoning Appeals, which agreed to issue the permit, but limited the use to “no more than 10 serviceable items being on the property at any given time.” The owner challenged the limitation by filing a petition for writ of certiorari in the Wilson County Chancery Court. The court determined that the BZA had acted arbitrarily and had exceeded its authority by placing a condition on the owner’s use of the property of a type not contemplated by the controlling ordinance, and it removed that condition. We affirm the removal of the condition, but we reverse the trial court’s holding that the BZA had violated the property owner’s substantive due process rights.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed In Part, Reversed In Part

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R. and A NDY D. B ENNETT, JJ., joined.

Michael Ray Jennings, Lebanon, Tennessee, for the appellants, Wilson County, Tennessee and the Wilson County Board of Zoning Appeals.

Michael W. Ferrell, Mt. Juliet, Tennessee, for the appellee, Jerry Kittrell. OPINION

I. P ROCEEDINGS B EFORE THE B OARD OF Z ONING A PPEALS

Plaintiff Jerry Kittrell owned a 1.4 acre lot of irregular shape in a rural area of Wilson County. The lot has road frontage on two of its opposite sides and was zoned A-1 for agricultural use. Mr. Kittrell, who described himself as a retired home builder, had owned the property for eleven years, but he had concluded that it was not suitable for a residence, and he wanted to get some benefit from it. He asked the Wilson County Building Inspector for permission to display vehicles for sale on the land, but permission was denied.

On November 4, 2008, Mr. Kittrell appealed the Building Inspector’s decision by submitting an application for a permissible use permit to the Wilson County Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA). The BZA planning staff declined to recommend approval of the application because “the proposed use does not conform with the intent of the A-1 district and is not permitted or permitted on appeal in this district nor is it similar to those allowed.”

Under the Wilson County Zoning Ordinances, a “permitted use” within a particular zoning category is one that does not require approval by the BZA. Conversely, a “use permissible on appeal” is one that is only allowed if the proposal for such a use is approved by the BZA. The use proposed by Mr. Kittrell was not one of those specifically included in the list of permissible uses on appeal in an A-1 district, but it possibly falls under the general category of “other similar uses as reviewed and approved by the Board of Zoning Appeals.” 1

Mr. Kittrell’s application stated “Wish to use property occasional or ongoing use of a portion of my property to display a trailer, any type vehicle, not to exceed farm equipment, implement, RV and boats for sale.” He submitted a site plan, which included a semi-circular driveway and a sales area, but no building on the property. His application was considered during the regularly scheduled BZA meeting of November 21, 2008. The transcript of that meeting includes lengthy discussions between the members of the Board and Mr. Kittrell as to his intentions for the land.

1 Permitted uses in an A-1 district under the Wilson County Zoning Ordinance include farming, single family housing, home occupations and roadside produce stands. Uses permissible on appeal and specifically set out in the ordinance include aircraft landing fields, barber and beauty shops, bed and breakfast facilities, cemeteries, churches, convenience markets, country clubs, daycare centers, service stations, golf courses, schools, hospitals. libraries, nursing homes, and public recreational facilities.

-2- Mr. Kittrell showed the BZA photographs of a number of enterprises located on property near his own, including a grocery, a fire station, a septic tank storage lot, a tent for firework sales, and a trailer sales lot which was directly across the road from his property. He asserted that his proposal was not so different from what was already there. Several citizens spoke in favor of Mr. Kittrell’s proposal, including the County Commissioner in whose district the Kittrell property is located.

But several long-time homeowners in the area declared that they were opposed to any further commercial uses near their property. They complained that they were already burdened by the presence of the existing businesses near their homes and that Mr. Kittrell’s proposal would increase their burden. Among other things, they stated that traffic associated with those businesses raised legitimate safety concerns, including in particular dangers arising from trucks pulling into their driveways to turn around.

The Board questioned Mr. Kittrell closely about his plans. He admitted that he wanted to make a profit from selling vehicles, but declared that it was for the purpose of paying the taxes on his property. He denied that he was interested in operating a business. He stated instead that he enjoyed going to vehicle and farm equipment auctions and that for him, the buying and selling of vehicles was “a part-time hobby.”

One Board member asked Mr. Kittrell how many vehicles he expected to sell from his property. His first response was to minimize the scale of his plans: “It is such a small little thing that I want to do, that there may be like a boat, or maybe one RV and one trailer, you know, may sit over there or something.” But after further questioning as to the maximum number of pieces of equipment he expected to have on the property at any one time, he responded that “20 would be more than adequate for anything I could conceive right now.”

Another Board member stated that he wanted to avoid the possibility that a junkyard or an automobile dealership might be put on the property, and he moved that Mr. Kittrell’s proposal be approved with the stipulation “that there be no more than 10 vehicles, utility trailers, farm equipment, boats or what have you at any one time on that property.” An amendment was proposed that any items on the property be “serviceable and in a condition ready to go.” The motion and amendment were approved by a vote of four to one.

II. T RIAL C OURT P ROCEEDINGS

Although the BZA had acted in a way that appeared to be favorable to Mr. Kittrell, he nonetheless filed a Petition for Writ of Certiorari in the Chancery Court of Wilson County on January 15, 2009, naming Wilson County and the Wilson County Board of Zoning Appeals as defendants. He argued that no evidence was presented to the BZA to justify the

-3- ten vehicle limitation it placed on his use of the property and that the Board’s action was therefore arbitrary, capricious, illegal, and in violation of his constitutional rights to due process. He also contended that since the owner of a nearby 5.41 acre property was allowed to sell and service farm implements and utility trailers without limitations as to numbers, the BZA’s action violated his constitutional right to equal protection under the law.

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