Outdoor West of Tennessee, Inc. v. City of Johnson City

39 S.W.3d 131, 2000 Tenn. App. LEXIS 414
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 26, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 39 S.W.3d 131 (Outdoor West of Tennessee, Inc. v. City of Johnson City) 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
Outdoor West of Tennessee, Inc. v. City of Johnson City, 39 S.W.3d 131, 2000 Tenn. App. LEXIS 414 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

SWINEY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which GODDARD, P.J., and SUSANO, J., joined.

The City of Johnson City appeals the Trial Court’s Order requiring the City to issue eleven permits to Outdoor West of Tennessee, Inc. (Lamar Advertising of Tri-Cities), permitting Outdoor West to increase the size and/or double-face eleven billboards, some of which previously had only one face. We affirm the Judgment of the Trial Court.

Background

Appellee, Lamar Advertising of Tri-Cit-ies (“Lamar”), filed eleven Applications for Sign Permits with Appellant, the City of Johnson City (“the City”), seeking to enlarge the size of eleven billboards and/or to change those billboards from single-faced to double-faced, so as to provide more advertising space on each sign. Mr. Richard Drummond testified that he was general manager of Outdoor West of Tennessee, Inc., the original company that filed requests and obtained State permits for ten out of the eleven signs which are at issue in this case. 1 That company then became Outdoor Communications, Inc., and Drummond was general manager of the new company. Outdoor Communications, Inc., then merged with Lamar Advertising, a national billboard advertising company, and became Lamar Advertising of Tri-Cities, Inc. Drummond is currently Vice-President and General Manager of that company. The gross revenue of Lamar exceeds $5 million annually. From the record before us, there are one hundred and one billboards currently erected in Johnson City. Lamar owns eighty of those billboards. No additional billboards will be constructed in Johnson City, because in 1988 the city enacted a local ordinance prohibiting new billboards.

The eleven billboards at issue were built before the enactment of the 1988 ordinance. Lamar contends that those billboards were permitted uses at the time they were constructed under the then-existing city ordinances, and that the requested sign permits for upgrading those signs are authorized under T.C.A. § 13-7-208, the Grandfather Statute. Mr. John Campbell, City Manager of the City of Johnson City, declined to issue the requested sign permits. By letter of Janu *134 ary 26,1996, Mr. Campbell advised counsel for Lamar:

I am in receipt of various applications which have been tendered on behalf of Outdoor West, Inc. for permits to expand the billboards located at each of the above referenced locations. After careful consideration, I must respectfully deny Outdoor West’s request for those permits.
It is the opinion of the City of Johnson City that Outdoor West’s proposed construction does not comply with the City’s sign ordinance, and that T.C.A. Section 13-7-208 does not prevent the sign ordinance from being applicable.

At trial, Mr. Campbell testified that the sole basis for the City’s denial of the requested sign permits was that the current zoning ordinance, enacted in 1988, prohibits additional billboards. There has been no finding that the proposed expansions constitute a nuisance to adjoining landowners or exceeds the property lines on which the signs are now located. Mr. Campbell testified he doesn’t know whether all of the signs applied for have State permits or whether the signs comply with earlier zoning ordinances in effect in the City prior to the 1988 zoning ordinance banning billboards. He did not investigate these issues, and does not think anyone else investigated them for the City. He testified that, from 1981 until 1988, the zoning ordinance permitted billboards not larger than 672 sq. ft.

Mr. Drummond testified that billboards are produced in two standard sizes, a 300 sq. ft. size for surface roads throughout a city, and a 672 sq. ft. size for freeway systems and other major thoroughfares. Mr. Drummond testified that these requested eleven sign permits, requesting upgrades to signs which have been present in Johnson City since 1981 or before, were necessary for several reasons:

One reason is to modernize the existing structures to 1999 requirements for the industry. The industry is a standardized industry where production has to be produced that will fit here and Nashville, and Dallas, etc., just like thirty second TV spots. They need to be 30 seconds no matter where they’re at. So sizing here needs to be conforming — to be conforming on a national level.
⅝ ⅜ *
[Another reason is] Safety issues. One of these has been held in abeyance since 1981. There are safety concerns that we need to upgrade. In addition, is that we’ve been frozen in time since ’81. And as everybody knows, the City has grown rapidly since then, and we are running out of inventory to satisfy the demand from our clients. So we have to maximize our existing inventory to accept clients that request coverage in Johnson City. And right now, we can’t do that in all the times and we are losing financial revenue because of that.

Mr. Drummond also testified that the size of the signs was to be enlarged so that, “as opposed to having one advertiser, we can have two. And that’s our intent, is to be able to offer our services to an additional advertiser, which we can’t now with the smaller sign.” He intends to upgrade “a great number” of Lamar’s signs to 672 feet, and he filed these eleven sign permit applications first, with “several others waiting once we know the outcome [of this litigation].”

The Trial Court reviewed the eleven sign permit Applications, Mr. Campbell’s letter denying the eleven requests for sign permits, the Johnson City Zoning Ordinances for 1963, 1972, 1981 and 1988, and heard the testimony of the two above-quoted witnesses. The Trial Court then took the case under advisement and, on September 27, 1999, filed a Memorandum Opinion and Final Order. The Trial Court found that “T.C.A. § 13-7-208(c) permits, or grandfathers, the subject billboards as a non-conforming use.” The Trial Court then found that “[t]he Defendant’s City Ordinances, Article VII, Signs Regulations, 7.41, banning ‘Off-premise Advertís- *135 ing Signs’ is inapplicable ... [because it] ... is prospective only; therefore the ban does not apply to the subject billboards that were existing at the time of the Defendant’s ban of billboards.” Accordingly, the Trial Court ordered that the City of Johnson City issue the requested sign permits.

Discussion

Our review is de novo upon the record, accompanied by a presumption of the correctness of the findings of fact of the Trial Court, unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise. Rule 13(d), T.R.A.P.; Davis v. Inman, 974 S.W.2d 689, 692 (Tenn.1998). The Trial Court’s conclusions of law are subject to a de novo review with no presumption of correctness. Ganzevoort v. Russell, 949 S.W.2d 293 (Tenn.1997).

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.3d 131, 2000 Tenn. App. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/outdoor-west-of-tennessee-inc-v-city-of-johnson-city-tennctapp-2000.