Marcie D. Weyer and Tomar Rentals v. Wood County Commission

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 2015
Docket14-1167
StatusPublished

This text of Marcie D. Weyer and Tomar Rentals v. Wood County Commission (Marcie D. Weyer and Tomar Rentals v. Wood County Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marcie D. Weyer and Tomar Rentals v. Wood County Commission, (W. Va. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA

SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Marcie D. Weyer and Tomar Rentals, LLC, FILED Plaintiffs Below, Petitioners November 6, 2015 RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS vs) No. 14-1167 (Wood County 10-C-345) OF WEST VIRGINIA

Wood County Commission, Defendant Below, Respondent

MEMORANDUM DECISION Petitioners Marcie D. Weyer and Tomar Rentals, LLC, by counsel Timothy J. LaFon and Keisha D. May, appeal the order of the Circuit Court of Wood County, entered on October 14, 2014, granting summary judgment in favor of Respondent Wood County Commission (“Commission”) and rejecting petitioners’ claim that the Commission’s Floodplain Ordinance constitutes an unconstitutional taking of petitioners’ property. The Commission, by counsel Wendy E. Greve and Drannon L. Adkins, filed a response. Petitioners filed a reply.

This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons, a memorandum decision affirming the circuit court’s order is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

Petitioner Marcie D. Weyer is the owner of real property located in Wood County, West Virginia, which she purchased in 1999. The Commission adopted the subject Floodplain Ordinance in 1977 and enacted revisions thereto in 1985, 1990, and 2007. Petitioner Tomar Rentals, LLC, leased the property from Petitioner Weyer and operates upon it a business known as the Meadowbrook Acres Mobile Home Park. Ms. Weyer’s husband, Thomas Weyer, is the sole member of Tomar Rentals, LLC. At the time Ms. Weyer purchased the property and leased it to Tomar Rentals, LLC, the property was already developed as a mobile home park. The property is located entirely within the floodplain zone.

This case centers on the application of the 2007 revision to the Floodplain Ordinance, which applies to new construction, substantial improvements, repair of substantial damage, or placement or relocation of any structure within Wood County.1 The Ordinance requires that a

1 The circuit court found that the 2007 revision was modeled after a draft ordinance that had been prepared and circulated by the West Virginia Division of Homeland Security and (continued . . .) 1

permit or certificate of compliance be obtained from the Floodplain Administrator before beginning any new construction or substantial improvement. In order for a site plan for new construction or substantial improvements to be approved, residential developments must be elevated two feet above the Base Flood Elevation. Therefore, all manufactured homes to be installed or substantially improved must be elevated two feet above the Base Flood Elevation, resulting in (1) significantly greater set-up costs than would be incurred outside of the floodplain, and (2) a substantial reduction of the marketability and economic longevity of the property.

In or around July of 2010, the Commission’s Floodplain Manager notified Thomas Weyer in writing that it was discovered during an inspection that two mobile homes had been placed on the property in violation of the Floodplain Ordinance. The Commission’s letter directed petitioners to stop work and remove the two mobile homes or to obtain the required permits within thirty days. Rather than comply with either directive, in August of 2010, petitioners filed a civil action against the Commission alleging that the passage and enforcement of the Floodplain Ordinance constituted an unconstitutional taking of petitioners’ property; seeking declaratory judgment that the Floodplain Ordinance is unconstitutional; and seeking to enjoin the Commission’s enforcement of the Floodplain Ordinance against then-existing mobile home lots.2

On June 1, 2012, the circuit court entered a “Declaratory Judgment Order,” finding that “the Ordinance does restrict the use of [petitioners’] property indirectly because compliance increases the economic cost in the installation of new mobile homes.”3 However, the circuit court concluded that the Ordinance “substantially advances a legitimate state interest, which is the protection of our people and property in our state” and that it “is a legitimate exercise of government power . . . fully applicable to [petitioners].” Citing syllabus point six of McFillan v. Berkeley County Planning Commission, 190 W.Va. 458, 438 S.E.2d 801 (1993), the circuit court directed that the parties proceed with discovery to determine whether the application of the Ordinance destroys all economic uses of the property, and, therefore, rises to an impermissible taking of property under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and section 9 of article III of the West Virginia Constitution.4

Emergency Management, which draft was “intended to promote the general health and safety of the community and to prevent or minimize flood damage to the public.” 2 After a November 2010, hearing, the circuit court granted petitioners’ motion for a temporary injunction. 3 Petitioner’s expert testified that the new mobile home set-up costs caused by the Ordinance would be between $3,500 and $5,000 for each mobile home. 4 “Land-use regulations will not constitute an impermissible taking of property under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Section 9 of Article III of the West Virginia Constitution if such regulations can be reasonably found to promote the health, safety, morals, or general welfare of the public and the regulations do not destroy all economic uses of (continued . . .) 2

Thereafter, the Commission moved for summary judgment on petitioners’ remaining takings claim. By order entered on October 14, 2014, the court found, in relevant part, that “[a]lthough the property’s marketability is substantially, even profoundly, diminished the consequences are more uncertain as to the extent of diminution of its economic longevity.” The circuit court found that, from Tomar Rentals, LLC’s profit and loss statements from January 2002 through December 2011, the property retained its economic use with positive cash flow and income. The court further found that

[w]hile the record shows that at some point in the future the property may not be economically viable as potential residents may not choose to install mobile homes on the property due to increased set up costs, future supply and demand conditions as well as the degree to which these costs may be reduced will affect the timing and intensity of the impact on the property’s future economic use.

The circuit court determined that there was no genuine issue of fact, but rather, there was an issue as to whether the facts “constituted sufficient governmental interference either in kind or degree to warrant compensation for the economic impact of the Ordinance on [petitioners].” The circuit court looked to the decision of United States Supreme Court in Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City of New York, 438 U.S. 104 (1978), in which the Court stated that

[t]he question of what constitutes a “taking” for purposes of the Fifth Amendment has proved to be a problem of considerable difficulty. While this Court has recognized that the “Fifth Amendment’s guarantee . . . [is] designed to bar Government from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole,” Armstrong v.

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Marcie D. Weyer and Tomar Rentals v. Wood County Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcie-d-weyer-and-tomar-rentals-v-wood-county-commission-wva-2015.