Lyles v. Town of Purcellville

49 Va. Cir. 59, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 271
CourtLoudoun County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 23, 1999
DocketCase No. (Law) 20985
StatusPublished

This text of 49 Va. Cir. 59 (Lyles v. Town of Purcellville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Loudoun County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyles v. Town of Purcellville, 49 Va. Cir. 59, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 271 (Va. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

By Judge James H. Chamblin

This case came before the Court on March 31, 1999, for argument on the Plea in Bar and Demurrer filed by the Town of Purcellville, John Marsh, Lisa Payne, Paul D. Arbogast, Beverly MacDonald, George Grob, and Loren Kropat (the individual defendants being respectively the Mayor, Vice Mayor, and members of die Town Council of the Town of Purcellville) to the Second Amended Motion for Judgment filed by Eric Sheldon Lyles. Mr. Lyles asks the Court “to order the Defendants to either make Plaintiffs [commercially zoned] property a part of the Comprehensive Plan [as commercial rather than residential as it is currently shown on die Plan] and pay damages for its willful refusal to include said subject property on the Comprehension Plan as agreed by counsel and judicially decreed and pay such damages as justly due.” I have considered the memoranda subsequently filed by counsel.

For the reasons that follow, the Plea in Bar and the Demurrer are sustained, and the Second Amended Motion for Judgment is dismissed with prejudice.

Mr. Lyles requests that this Court declare that the adoption of the Comprehensive Plan by the Town Council on June 9, 1998, is an unconstitutional taking of his property and/or direct that his property be designated as commercial in the Plan and award actual and punitive damages.

[60]*60The Plea in Bar asserts that the claim against the individual defendants is barred by the doctrine of sovereign immunity. The Demurrer asserts that no cause of action has been stated against die Defendants in die Second Amended Motion for Judgment.

In ruling on the Plea in Bar and the Demurrer, I must consider as true the facts alleged in the Second Amended Motion for Judgment, as well as all frets that can be reasonably inferred from the facts actually alleged therein.

Facts Alleged and Inferred from the Facts Alleged In the Second Amended Motion for Judgment

Mr. Lyles is African-American and a former member of the Town Council. He is the owner of several parcels of real property located on South 20th Street in the Town. The property has been used for commercial purposes since the 1940s. Mr. Lyles currently operates a funeral home on the property.

The property was annexed into the Town and continued its commercial status, although it was zoned residential. In 1985, at Mr. Lyle’s request, the Town Council rezoned the property from residential to commercial zoning. This commercial zoning was reaffirmed by the Town Council in 1989 when it deleted certain proffers from the 1985 rezoning.

In 1991 the Town Council considered proposed revisions to the Town zoning ordinance. The proposed revisions did not include all of the property as being commercially zoned. Mr. Lyle, who was then a member of the Town Council, advised the Council of this, but it failed to include all of Mir. Lyle’s property as commercially zoned.

In March 1991 Mr. Lyles brought suit in this Court against the Mayor, Vice Mayor, members of the Town Council, the Town Manager, and the Zoning Administrator of the Town of Purcellville. The suit was settled by a consent order entered January 24,1992.

Although the Town agreed that the property would be zoned commercial under the consent order, it did not include a commercial use for the property in its Comprehensive Plan. In 1998 the Town Council considered revisions to the Plan. Despite Mr. Lyles’ request and being warned by him “of the dire consequences” if the Town Council did not include his property as commercial in the Plan revisions, the Town Council voted to designate the property as residential in the Plan.

Although there are no actual facts alleged concerning the following facts, I think that such facts are inferred from the actual facts alleged.

1. The property had a commercial use; it was zoned residential until it was rezoned to commercial in 1985.

[61]*612. All the land surrounding the property is zoned residential. The properly was rezoned commercial to validate its actual use predating a zoning ordinance for the Town and its annexation into the Town.

3. The property has always been included in the Town’s Comprehensive Plan for future residential use.

With these factual allegations, Mr. Lyles goes forward with the following allegations.

A. The actions of die Defendants were “taken with malicious, capricious, and arbitrary disregard for the rights of the Plaintiff [Mr. Lyles] with the intent to continually cause irreparable harm to the future use of the Plaintiffs property.”

B. The Defendants “knew and were put on notice that this property, by Order of Court, was judicially decreed that this property would receive full commercial zoning without any limitations.”

C. The Defendants “arbitrarily refused to address” the issue of a commercial use designation for die property in die Plan.

D. By refusing to designate the property for a commercial use in the Plan, the members of the Town Council, individually and in their respective capacity, have caused “economic damage” to Mr. Lyles. He alleges no specifics of such damages.

E. The Defendants took on a course of action adverse to the interests of Mr. Lyles with total disregard to his business and economic interest in his business.

F. The Defendants were fully advised that their actions had caused Mr. Lyles harm in the past and that their new course of conduct would cause “dire consequences.” He alleges no specifics of such past harm.

G. The Defendant’s only interest was to harm Mr. Lyles and arbitrarily force this suit to the detriment of Mr. Lyles.

H. The actions of the Defendants were malicious because they knew from letters from Mr. Lyles’ attorney that their actions would cause this suit.

I. The individual Defendants, in their individual capacities, took deliberate actions against the interests of Mr. Lyles who is African-American “for racially motivated and racially discriminatory reasons with a view to harm him and his business economically and with rite intent to destroy or render it ineffective to compete in the mortuary and funeral business in the community.”

[62]*62 The Order Entered January 24,1992

Mr. Lyles alleges that the order entered January 24, 1992, required the Town Council to designate his property for a commercial use in the 1998 Town Comprehensive Plan. In other words, Mr. Lyles feels that the order carried with it not only an agreed zoning of his property as commercial, but also a requirement that the property be designated as commercial in the Comprehensive Plan. I do not agree with Mr. Lyles.

A defensive pleading such as a plea in bar or a demurrer does not admit the correctness of conclusions of law. Mr. Lyles alleges as a conclusion of law that he is entitled by virtue of the order to a commercial designation for his property in the 1998 Plan.

The order is completely silent as to the Town Comprehensive Plan. It is elementary that a Comprehensive Plan is not a zoning ordinance but is only a guideline for zoning ordinances. See, e.g., Fairfax County v. Snell Corp., 214 Va. 655, 660 (1974).

A consent order such as the one entered January 24, 1992, is a contract among the parties to the litigation. Therefore, I must apply the same rules of interpretation applicable to contracts generally.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Berkley v. Common Council of City of Charleston
63 F.3d 295 (Fourth Circuit, 1995)
Board of Supervisors v. Snell Construction Corp.
202 S.E.2d 889 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1974)
CaterCorp, Inc. v. Catering Concepts, Inc.
431 S.E.2d 277 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Va. Cir. 59, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyles-v-town-of-purcellville-vaccloudoun-1999.