Landfill One, Inc. v. Bailey

21 Va. Cir. 318, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 321
CourtCircuit Court of the 20th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Lee County
DecidedOctober 3, 1990
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 9008-160
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Va. Cir. 318 (Landfill One, Inc. v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 20th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Lee County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landfill One, Inc. v. Bailey, 21 Va. Cir. 318, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 321 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

By JUDGE J. ROBERT STUMP

This case involves an application for a permit to operate a landfill in Lee County, Virginia. New state statutes and county ordinances were enacted after the application was filed, which significantly affected the rights of all parties. The issues include whether the Lee County Board of Supervisors by its failure to act waived its objection to compliance by the applicant with its land use ordinances and whether those local ordinances are constitutional.

On October 11, 1989, Landfill One, Inc., filed a bill of complaint, "action for injunction," against Cynthia Bailey, Executive Director, Department of Waste Management (Director/DWM), and three employees of DWM (subsequently dismissed as party defendants), requesting the court order the Director to consider its application for a landfill [319]*319operation permit to be complete without the necessity for a "certification" from the governing body of Lee County per 8 10.1*1408.1 that the proposed solid waste management facility complies with all local ordinances.

On February 7, 1990, Lee County Board of Supervisors filed a motion to intervene, which the court allowed over objection of Landfill One. Landfill One filed an amended bill of complaint against the Director/DWM and Lee County Board of Supervisors, as intervening party defendant. Landfill One requested that the court: (1) mandate the Director to process its permit without certification of compliance with all local ordinances by the Lee County Board of Supervisors; (2) declare that Lee County Board of Supervisors waived site approval objection to Landfill One's application for permit per Code 8 10.1-1048.1 in effect both before and after July 1, 1989; and (3) declare the Lee County local ordinances unconstitutional.

The Director filed a demurrer and motion to dismiss. Both Landfill One and Lee County Board of Supervisors have filed motions for summary judgment, alleging no disputed facts. All parties have admitted as true plaintiff's exhibits A through E and 1 through IS.

Upon considering the file, pleadings, exhibits, case and statutory laws and voluminous briefs of counsel, the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

1. Pursuant to Virginia Code Sections 10-271 and 10.1-1408.1 in effect prior to July 1, 1989, Lee County failed to timely object before and after the adoption of its two landfill ordinances and therefore waived its right to object to the issuance of "Part A Application," site approval, of Landfill One's permit.

On May 4, 1988, Landfill One filed with the Director/DWM an application for a permit for a sanitary landfill facility in Lee County, Virginia. Virginia Code 8 10-271 was in effect at this time but was repealed and reenacted as § Í0.1-1408.1 effective July 1, 1988, but contained the same legal language. The statute required the Director (which she did) to notify the governing body of Lee County of the pending application; and provided that no permit could be issued until the county notified the Director [320]*320within thirty days that the location of the proposed facility was consistent with all ordinances governing the local use of land. 8 10.1-1408.1 (as well as 8 10-271) further provided that the failure of the locality to provide notification within this thirty-day period constituted a waiver of any objection the local governing body may have had to the issuance of the permit on the basis of a conflict with a local land use ordinance.

The Lee County Board of Supervisors failed within thirty days and has never notified the Director per Section 10-271 or § 10.1-1408.1. Therefore, plaintiff argues Lee County waived its objections.

Lée County admits and argues that on August 1, 1973, the Board of Supervisors adopted a zoning ordinance establishing two zoning districts in Lee County, neither of which permitted as a matter of right a public or private landfill. Therefore, Lee County had a zoning ordinance in existence at the time of the required certification and owed a duty to object to the Director within thirty days of the notification, which it failed to do. Therefore, pursuant to, 8 10-271 and 8 10.1-1408.1(8), the governing body of Lee County waived its "objections to issuance of a permit which are based on conflict With a local ordinance."

The court’s opinion above is based on the Virginia Supreme Court case of Notestein v. Board of Supervisors of Appomattox County, 240 Va. 146 (1990), which facts and conclusion are different but controlling herein, as hereafter discussed in detail.

At the time of notification in May of 1988, Lee County did not have any ordinances positively prohibiting nor allowing a private landfill under certain conditions. It could be argued that since Lee County had no ordinances prohibiting a landfill at the time of notification that Lee County could not waive a right which did not exist. "The County cannot be deemed to have waived its right to object to the issuance of a permit because no zoning ordinance existed at the time of the required certification." Notestein, supra, 240 Va. at p. 154. But this court arrives at the same opinion as stated above because after Lee County enacted ordinances, prohibiting and/or restricting private landfills, it continued to fail to object to the Director per 8 10.1-1408.1(6).

[321]*321On August 25, 1988, Lee County by emergency legislation per i 15.1-504 adopted two ordinances: "Solid Waste Ordinance # 1-1988,” which made it "unlawful to establish, maintain, or operate a private dump or landfill in the territorial boundaries of Lee County, Virginia, after August 25j 1988"; and "Waste Ordinance # 2-1988,” which made it "unlawful for any private person to establish, operate or maintain any solid waste disposal facility without the expressed approval of the Lee County Board of Supervisors," and specified seven pages of regulations for approval. These two ordinances were readopted November 10, 1988, and permanently adopted December 9, 1988.

Upon adoption of these two somewhat conflicting local ordinances - prohibiting and allowing private landfills under certain conditions — did the Lee County Board of Supervisors owe a continuing legal duty per 9 10.1-1048.1(8) to notify the Director of the newly-enacted ordinances? This court is of opinion that Lee County owed this duty and, having failed to do so, constituted "a waiver of the governing body’s objections to issuance of a permit which are based on conflict with a local ordinance."

The facts in Notestein, supra, were that the applicant filed for a landfill permit per 9 10.1-1408.1 with DWM in February, 1988. The Director advised Appomattox County by letter dated February 17, 1988, that the County must notify her within thirty days and its failure would constitute a waiver of objections. On August 22, 1988, the County adopted a zoning ordinance which placed the Notesteins' property in an agricultural classification in which a landfill is not a permitted use. "After the enactment of the zoning ordinance, the County sent a letter to the Director of the Department and informed her of the newly-enacted ordinance. The County advised the Department that operation of the landfill on the Notesteins* property was now inconsistent with the County's zoning ordinance and requested that the Department deny the Notesteins' application." 240 Va. at p. 150.

The facts in Notestein and this case are significantly different, but the law and application of the facts control this opinion. Notestein

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21 Va. Cir. 318, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landfill-one-inc-v-bailey-flacirct20lee-1990.