NAACP (Hanover Chapter) v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 26, 2022
Docket0260222
StatusPublished

This text of NAACP (Hanover Chapter) v. Commonwealth of Virginia (NAACP (Hanover Chapter) v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NAACP (Hanover Chapter) v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

VIRGINIA: PUBLISHED

In the Court of Appeals of Virginia on Tuesday the 26th day of April, 2022.

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (Hanover County Chapter), Protect Hanover, Inc., Carolyn Charlene Blake, Michelle Lynn Braxton, Charles Alfred Morris, Betty Lozano, Larry Ellsworth Cotman, Bonnica Harris Cotman, McKinley Harris, Martha Anderson, Kenneth Leon Coleman, Mary Alda Wilson, Juanita Cash, Melinda Tyler Spurlock, Andrea M. Morgan, Roderick A. Morgan, Kathryn Woodcock, Timothy Miller and Robert C. French, Petitioners,

v. Record No. 0260-22-2 Circuit Court No. CL-21-1776-6 Commonwealth of Virginia, ex rel. Virginia State Water Control Board, Virginia Department of Environmental Quality, Originally David K. Paylor now Michael Rolband in his Official Capacity as Director of the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality and Agency Secretary of the State Water Control Board and Wegmans Food Markets, Inc., Respondents.

Upon a Petition for Review Under Code § 8.01-626

Before Judges Russell, Raphael and Senior Judge Clements

Invoking this Court’s jurisdiction under Code § 8.01-626, the National Association for

the Advancement of Colored People (Hanover County Chapter) and numerous other parties seek

review of an order of the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond denying a motion for

intermediate relief under Code § 2.2-4028. We directed the parties to file supplemental briefs

addressing whether Code § 8.01-626 confers subject-matter jurisdiction for this Court to consider

the denial of such intermediate relief.

Upon review of the petition, responses, the record, and the parties’ supplemental briefs,

we conclude that we have subject-matter jurisdiction because petitioners are seeking review of an order of a circuit court that “refuses an injunction.” Code § 8.01-626. While the parties have

disputed whether an injunction is an available remedy under Code § 2.2-4028, that question goes

to the merits of the relief petitioners seek, not whether we have appellate jurisdiction to consider

the question. Assuming without deciding that Code § 2.2-4028 permits the issuance of an

interlocutory injunction, we conclude that petitioners are not entitled to such extraordinary relief

because they have not shown that the usual relief under Code § 2.2-4028—a stay of the permit—

would be inadequate.

BACKGROUND

On March 1, 2021, the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (“DEQ”) issued a

Virginia Water Protection (VWP) Permit to Wegmans Food Markets, Inc. to construct a

distribution center in Hanover County. On April 23, 2021, petitioners filed a petition for appeal

under Code §§ 2.2-4025 through -4030. On October 25, 2021, petitioners filed a motion for

intermediate relief under Code § 2.2-4028. The motion sought “an [o]rder granting Petitioners

‘Intermediate Relief’ by ordering the suspension of all construction activities at the Wegmans

site, except for any stabilization activities necessary . . . until such time as the Court may make a

final decision on the merits.”

On February 2, 2022, the circuit court denied the motion. In a sixteen-page letter

opinion, the court implicitly assumed that an injunction was available under Code § 2.2-4028.

The court concluded, however, that petitioners had “not shown (1) that there is an immediate,

unavoidable, and irreparable injury or (2) that there is probable cause to anticipate a likelihood of

reversible error.”

Petitioners timely filed a petition for review, invoking this Court’s jurisdiction under

Code § 8.01-626. Petitioners ask this Court “to grant . . . intermediate injunctive relief until final

review of the . . . Permit decision can be completed by the court below.” “Alternatively,”

-2- petitioners ask that, “if” work has already begun, “then Wegmans should be required to restore

the damaged wetlands pending the outcome of litigation.”

We directed the parties to file supplemental briefs addressing the distinction between a

stay and an injunction, whether Code § 2.2-4028 permits injunctive relief, and whether we have

subject-matter jurisdiction under Code § 8.01-626 to consider the petition for review.1 The

supplemental briefs have been filed and the question is ripe for adjudication.

ANALYSIS

Our disposition of this petition for review turns on the interpretation of two statutes:

Code § 2.2-4028 and Code § 8.01-626. When a party seeks judicial review of an administrative-

agency decision under the Administrative Process Act (APA), Code § 2.2-4028 permits the

circuit court to grant certain “intermediate relief.” The court is empowered to

issue all necessary and appropriate process to postpone the effective dates or preserve existing status or rights pending conclusion of the review proceedings if the court finds the same to be required to prevent immediate, unavoidable, and irreparable injury and that the issues of law or fact presented are not only substantial but that there is probable cause for it to anticipate a likelihood of reversible error in accordance with § 2.2-4027. Actions by the court may include (i) the stay of operation of agency decisions of an injunctive nature or those requiring the payment of money or suspending or revoking a license or other benefit and (ii) continuation of previous licenses in effect until timely applications for renewal are duly determined by the agency.

1 “[A] court always has jurisdiction to determine whether it has subject matter jurisdiction.” Parrish v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n, 292 Va. 44, 52 (2016) (quoting Morrison v. Bestler, 239 Va. 166, 170 (1990)); accord Barrett v. Minor, 299 Va. 27, 28 (2020). “[T]he lack of subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any time in the proceedings, even for the first time on appeal by the court sua sponte.” Porter v. Commonwealth, 276 Va. 203, 228 (2008). When considering a question of subject-matter jurisdiction sua sponte, a court may direct the parties to file supplemental briefs addressing the question. Id. at 225.

-3- Code § 2.2-4028. The parties agree that such “intermediate relief” may include an order staying

the action of the administrative agency—in this case, a stay of the VWP permit. But they

disagree about whether Code § 2.2-4028 empowers the circuit court to issue an injunction.

Petitioners insist that an injunction is authorized. The Commonwealth and Wegmans argue that

only a stay is permitted.

That disagreement forms the backdrop of the jurisdictional question presented here: if

Code § 2.2-4028 permits only a stay, not an injunction, then do we have appellate jurisdiction

over the petition for review under Code § 8.01-626? Code § 8.01-626 grants us appellate

jurisdiction over a petition for review of an order adjudicating a request for injunctive relief; it

does not reference jurisdiction over circuit-court stays of administrative-agency decisions. The

Commonwealth and Wegmans say that we lack jurisdiction under Code § 8.01-626 because the

circuit court’s authority under § 2.2-4028 was limited to granting a stay, not an injunction, so its

order cannot be appealed. Petitioners disagree.

We find that we have jurisdiction under Code § 8.01-626 because petitioners seek review

of an order denying injunctive relief. On the merits, we assume without deciding that Code

§ 2.2-4028 authorizes injunctive relief in an extraordinary case when a stay of the agency action

would be insufficient. But we find that petitioners have failed to make that showing here. We

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Bluebook (online)
NAACP (Hanover Chapter) v. Commonwealth of Virginia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naacp-hanover-chapter-v-commonwealth-of-virginia-vactapp-2022.