Montgomery v. Zoning Appeals Board

45 Va. Cir. 126, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 149
CourtNorfolk County Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1998
DocketCase No. (Chancery) CH97-878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 Va. Cir. 126 (Montgomery v. Zoning Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Norfolk County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Zoning Appeals Board, 45 Va. Cir. 126, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 149 (Va. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

By Judge Lydia Calvert Taylor

This case was before the court on January 29, 1998, for arguments on an appeal of a ruling of the Board of Zoning Appeals of the City of Norfolk (hereafter “BZA” or “Board”). By agreement of counsel, with the concurrence of the court, no further evidence was taken, and the matter was to be decided on the record. The parties having submitted briefs earlier to the court, after argument was held, an order was entered, reflecting the court’s ruling in favor of the respondents in the case, the BZA and the landowner, Fred W. Kroll. In ruling for respondents, the court upheld the BZA’s reversal of a decision of a zoning administrator; the BZA had found that the landowner, who was grandfathered for the nonconforming use of his property as a duplex, had not discontinued that nonconforming use and thus had not lost its grandfathered status. This letter opinion will serve to record the rationale behind that decision.

[127]*127Judicial review of a decision by the BZA is governed by clear legal principles. “The BZA’s decision is presumed to be correct and can be reversed or modified only if the trial court determines that the BZA applied erroneous principles of law or was plainly wrong and in violation of the purposes and intent of the zoning ordinance.” Foster v. Geller, 248 Va. 563, 566 (1994) (decided under prior law) (citations omitted). “[Jjudicial interference is permissible only if the Board’s action is arbitrary and capricious, constituting a clear abuse of its discretion.” National Mem. Park v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 232 Va. 89, 92 (1986) (decided under prior law) (citations omitted). “The person challenging the BZA’s decision has the burden of proof on these issues.” Foster, 248 Va. at 566 (citation omitted). “The review of a decision of a BZA on a petition for writ of certiorari is limited to the scope of the BZA proceeding.”/#, at 567.

A stipulation of facts in this case was agreed upon for the court’s use at trial. The building at issue in this case is located at 627 West 34th Street in Norfolk, Virginia, and currently is owned by respondent Kroll; it has been configured and operated as a duplex since at least 1948. The building has separate entrances for its two halves, with separate utilities and meters, and no shared internal living space. On June 26, 1989, the Norfolk Redevelopment and Housing Authority (hereafter “NRHA”) made a rehabilitation loan to Alexander & Jones for rehabilitation of the property as it existed, that is, as duplex units, pursuant to building permits issued March 7, 1989. The loan went into default, and on August 31, 1994, the NRHA foreclosed on the property; at that time, one unit had become vacant. The petitioner’s claim that the landowner “discontinued” its use as a duplex for two years and thus lost such nonconforming use dates the beginning of the alleged discontinuance from that point, August 31,1994.

On January 22, 1995, the remaining tenant vacated his unit. On July 26, 1995, the NRHA advertised the property for sale as a duplex. Kroll, as a potential purchaser, told the NRHA that he had met with City of Norfolk planners; he had been informed that he could repair the property as a duplex as it was but could not increase the living space. Kroll thereafter purchased the property as a nonconforming duplex on July 16, 1996, and received a rehabilitation loan from the NRHA on August 2, 1996, to renovate the property as a duplex. At some point after that, the adjacent landowner called to complain to the city zoning inspectors that he believed that the duplex’s use as such had been discontinued for two years and thus its right to a nonconforming use had been lost. In response, the zoning administrator denied Kroll a building permit to renovate the property as a duplex, on [128]*128October 15,1996, on the grounds that the property had lost its nonconformity exemption from the zoning ordinances because one of the units in the duplex had been vacant for more than two years.

Kroll and the NRHA filed a joint appeal to the BZA from that administrative zoning decision on February 19, 1997.1 Two hearings were held. At the first hearing, the BZA heard evidence from both sides and the legal position of the NRHA as to the proper interpretation of the zoning law. At the second, the BZA in addition heard advice it had sought from the City Attorney’s Office. After hearing legal arguments for both sides and discussing the issues at length, the BZA voted, on April 17,1997, to overturn the zoning administrator’s decision. A petition for writ of certiorari from the BZA’s ruling was filed with this court on May 16,1997.

The general preference in zoning law is for strict construction of statutes which might involve a taking of private property. Balanced against the municipality’s desire to achieve an overall harmonious plan of development, without nonconforming uses, is the need to scrutinize carefully any taking of property; such a taking is inherent in removing an existing (grandfathered) right to use one’s property for a purpose that was permissible in that district before a zoning change took that right away prospectively, but allowed those then-existing buildings and uses to be continued. These two principles, which courts must harmonize in interpreting laws extinguishing grandfathered rights to nonconforming building or uses, protect conflicting interests. One leading expert on zoning laws describes the tension between the two guides to interpreting such zoning laws as follows:

It has been stated generally that, where legislative enactments interfere with private property rights or are in derogation of rights of individual ownership, such enactments are most often subject to a strict construction. In addition, it is a well-established general rule that legislative measures in derogation of the common law are to be strictly construed ... . [I]t has sometimes been indicated, as a general proposition, that zoning measures, being in derogation of the common law and of rights usually inhering in the ownership of property, should [129]*129be strictly construed, and, more specifically, that provisions of zoning measures allowing the continuance or resumption of nonconforming uses are to be constructed strictly against such continuance or resumption.

Douglas Hale Gross, Annotation, Zoning: Right to Resume Nonconforming Use of Premises After Involuntary Break in the Continuity of Nonconforming Use Caused by Difficulties Unrelated to Governmental Activity, 56 A.L.R. 3d 14, 51-52 (1974) (footnotes omitted) (hereafter “Zoning I”). “[Z]oning measures should be strictly construed both with regard to provisions in derogation of common-law rights of property owners and with regard to provisions tending to allow the continuance of nonconforming user. The first position would appear to generally aid those holding a right to exercise a nonconforming use while the second would appear to generally favor the zoning authorities.” Douglas Hale Gross, Annotation, Zoning: Right to Resume Nonconforming Use of Premises After Involuntary Break in the Continuity of Nonconforming Use Caused by Governmental Activity, 56 A.L.R. 3d 138, 168 (1974) (footnote omitted). In a similar vein, the Norfolk City Code succinctly states the dual, sometimes conflicting purposes: “It is the intent of this chapter to permit such nonconformities to continue until they are removed but not to encourage their continuation over time.” Norfolk City Code, Appendix A: Zoning Ordinance, § 12-1 (emphasis supplied).

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Related

King v. Azalea Realty & Development Corp.
92 Va. Cir. 246 (Chesapeake County Circuit Court, 2015)
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65 Va. Cir. 281 (Norfolk County Circuit Court, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Va. Cir. 126, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-zoning-appeals-board-vaccnorfolk-1998.