Lewis v. Bedford County Board of Zoning Appeals

174 S.W.3d 241, 2004 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 13, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 174 S.W.3d 241 (Lewis v. Bedford County Board of Zoning Appeals) 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
Lewis v. Bedford County Board of Zoning Appeals, 174 S.W.3d 241, 2004 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN, J., joined.

OPINION

The local board of zoning appeals denied the landowners’ application for a special exception or conditional use permit to allow them to develop and operate an RV park. After a remand for the board to clarify its minutes as to the grounds for the denial, the court determined that the grounds stated in the amended minutes provided a lawful basis for the denial. The trial court also determined that the record filed by the board was not sufficient for the court to determine whether the board’s decision was supported by material evidence. Because the trial court found that the burden to ensure an adequate record is prepared and filed lay with the landowners, the court affirmed the board’s denial of the permit. We reverse because in a common law writ of certiorari proceeding challenging a decision by a board or commission, the duty to prepare and transmit a record that includes a transcript of the evidence lies with the board or commission.

This appeal presents the question of whether a local zoning board is required to make a record of evidence presented before it so as to provide effective judicial review of a decision of the board, or whether that burden falls on the applicant before the board who later seeks such judicial review.

I. BACKGROUND

Edward and Shelley Lewis sought from the Bedford County Board of Zoning Appeals a conditional use permit (or special exception) to allow them to build and operate a private recreational facility, including a recreational vehicle (RV) park and a bed and breakfast on their land which was zoned for agricultural uses. The land was in the county’s A-l Zoning District, Agriculture-Forestry, which is described in the Zoning Resolution as “primarily areas where growth of an urban or non-rural nature is deemed undesirable.... ” The uses permitted as of right under Agriculture-Forestry zoning do not include the uses proposed by the Lewises. Consequently, the Lewises were required to obtain a special exception, also known as a conditional use permit, for each of the uses they proposed.

The County Zoning Resolution includes a list of special exceptions that can be allowed in an A-l Zoning District. The Zoning Resolution also sets out the procedure for the Board to use in deciding whether to grant a special exception. That portion of the resolution provides:

General Requirements. A conditional use permit (a special exception) shall be granted provided the Board finds that it:
*244 a. Is so designed, located, and proposed to be operated so that the public health, safety, and welfare will be protected.
b. Will not adversely affect other property in the area in which it is located.
c. Is within the provision of “Special Exceptions” as set forth in this ordinance.
d. Conforms to all applicable provisions of this ordinance for the district in which it is to be located as well as the provisions cited in Section 8.060 and is necessary for public convenience in the location planned.

Zoning Resolution of Bedford County § 8.060(B).

The Board approved the bed and breakfast part of the request at its September 20, 2001 meeting. The RV park proposal was deferred at a subsequent meeting and was considered at the Board’s January 24, 2002 meeting. The Board denied the Lew-ises’ request to operate an RV park as a special exception. The minutes for that meeting contain the following notation reflecting the Board’s action:

3. Approve request by Ed and Shelly Lewis, 681 Rabbit Branch Rd. to run an RV Park based on the attached list of details (see below). (Donegan, Threet). Voice vote called for: Threet (yes), Yockey (no), Donegan (yes), Butler (no) Lee (no) — motion denied. Note — “No” votes were cast due to continued objections of immediate neighbors, (emphasis in original.)

The Lewises filed a petition for common law writ of certiorari seeking judicial review of the Board’s denial of their requested special exception. The record of the proceedings before the Board consisted of an affidavit of the Zoning Compliance Officer, a letter from the Lewises, a petition from neighbors opposing the RV park, plans for the park, a “List of Items Agreed,” a “List of Terms for Motion,” and the minutes of three Board meetings. There was no transcript or tape recording of these meetings and no statement of the evidence or proceedings that provided more detail than the minutes excerpt set out above.

The trial court remanded the matter to the Board “for the purpose of amending and approving the minutes of the Board’s meeting of January 24, 2002, for the purpose of accurately reflecting in the minutes which of the requirements set out in Zoning Resolution Section 8.060(B), if any, were found at the meeting ... not to have been met.” The court’s decision was based upon its determination that, according to the Zoning Resolution, the Board was required to grant the special exception if all four of the general requirements were met, but the minutes did not include enough information to determine what the grounds for denial of the exception actually were. . The court further observed that “continued objections of the immediate neighbors” was not a lawful basis for denying the exception, whereas an adverse effect on the adjoining property would be, because one of the general requirements for a special exception was the absence of such an effect.

The trial court also found that parties seeking review of an administrative decision through common law writ of certiorari have the burden of “seeing that the inferi- or tribunal makes a complete record and transfers all papers” to the reviewing court if the writ is issued, citing Grandt v. Trousdale County Commissioners and Trousdale County Board of Zoning Appeals, No. 01A019001-CH-00034,1990 WL 73919, at *4 (Tenn.Ct.App. June 6, 1990) (no Tenn. R.App. P. 11 application filed). However, the trial court also found that the Board had the obligation to take and preserve, adequate minutes or otherwise *245 memorialize their actions, stating, “To allow a zoning board to keep inadequate minutes and thereby deny any court review of board actions would indeed deny due process.”

The remand specifically did not include taking additional evidence or re-considering the application; it was for the limited purpose of adopting a set of minutes that accurately reflected the basis for the Board’s denial of the application. After remand, the Board, at its November 14, 2002, meeting, according to the minutes of that meeting “accept[ed] the entire court order ... as part of the minutes” and amended the January 24, 2002 minutes on the item of the Lewises’ request, as follows:

Yockey — I voted “no” based on Section 8.060 B.b. that the request would adversely affect other property in the area in which it is located and on Section 8.060 B.c. that the request is not within the provision of “Special Exceptions” as set forth in this ordinance.

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174 S.W.3d 241, 2004 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-bedford-county-board-of-zoning-appeals-tennctapp-2004.