Save Diamond Head Waters LLC v. Hans Hedemann Surf, Inc.

198 P.3d 715, 119 Haw. 452, 2008 Haw. App. LEXIS 769
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 2008
Docket27804
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 198 P.3d 715 (Save Diamond Head Waters LLC v. Hans Hedemann Surf, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Save Diamond Head Waters LLC v. Hans Hedemann Surf, Inc., 198 P.3d 715, 119 Haw. 452, 2008 Haw. App. LEXIS 769 (hawapp 2008).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

FUJISE, J.

Appellee-Appellant Hans Hedemann Surf, Inc. (Hedemann) appeals from the April 19, 2006 Amended Final Judgment on Administrative Appeal, Vacating and Modifying Decision of the Zoning Board of Appeals in Zoning Board of Appeal Matter Number 2004/ ZBA-04, prohibiting Hedemann’s operation of a surfing school out of the New Otani Kaimana Beach Hotel (the Hotel). Upon a careful review of the issues raised by Hede-mann, the brief in opposition, the record, and the'relevant authority, we reverse the decision of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit court). 1

I.

The essential facts in this case are undisputed and are taken largely from the circuit court’s April 16, 2006 Amended Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, Decision and Order. 2 Hedemann operates Hans Hedemann *455 Surf School (Surf School), a commercial surfing school, at four 0‘ahu locations. This dispute relates to the Surf School located on the ground floor (Shop #7) of the Hotel. The Hotel consists of 124 units and is situated on Waikiki beach, in the area makai 3 of Kapiolani Park and Kalakaua Avenue and between Kaimana Beach Park on the ‘Ewa 4 side and various other properties on the opposite side.

The Hotel was constructed in 1950 and expanded in 1962. At the time it was built, the property underlying the Hotel was zoned as part of the Hotel and Apartment District “L.” This zoning district did not allow for commercial uses other than businesses that primarily served the tenants and occupants of the buildings in which they were located, known as “accessory uses.” 5

On January 2, 1969, the Comprehensive Zoning Code took effect. This placed the Hotel into an A-4 Apartment District, which did not allow hotels. Again, only accessory commercial uses were permitted in buildings containing a minimum of 50 dwelling or lodging units and no external evidence of the existence of the accessory use was permissible.

On December 23, 1982, Ordinance 82-58 (the Land Use Ordinance (LUO) codified as ROH Chapter 21) changed the zoning of the Hotel to its current A-2 Medium Density Apartment District designation. Hotel and accessory uses are not permitted in A-2 districts. However, because hotel use was acceptable at the time of the Hotel’s construction and the Hotel has continued to be used as a hotel, hotel use survives as a nonconforming use. 6

*456 The record is unclear as to when the Hotel’s use of Shop #7 ended and its use for commercial purposes began. As early as 1993, other commercial tenants used Shop # 7 to rent out kayaks, body boards, surfing and other beach equipment. The record fails to establish whether the prior rental businesses constituted an accessory use or a non-accessory use, i.e., whether the customers of these businesses were primarily hotel guests or the general public.

Hedemann began renting Shop #7 on January 1, 2002. Hedemann both rents and sells equipment but primarily uses the space as “an assembly point for its clients.” A “substantial portion” of Hedemann’s customers are brought to the location via shuttle from other Waikiki locations. At Shop # 7, students are issued surfboards and they use the Hotel’s property outside Shop #7 to reach the ocean, where surfing lessons are conducted. 7

Although Shop # 7 had been previously used to rent ocean equipment, Hedemann’s use of Shop # 7 generated “widespread local opposition.” It is unclear from the record when that opposition began, but a petition signed by approximately 700 people objecting to the Surf School’s activities was submitted during these proceedings. In particular, area residents complained of noise, congestion, parking issues, vandalism, trespassing and “other ills” caused by the Surf School. Appellants-Appellees Save Diamond Head Waters LLC (a community organization including neighborhood residents), Kapiolani Park Preservation Society LLC (another community organization which also includes neighborhood residents), 8 Mike Beason and Richard K. Quinn (both residents of the Tropic Seas Condominium situated approximately 750 feet from the property) (collectively SDHW) filed a petition with the Director. The petition is not of record. The Director stated that a declaratory ruling was sought 9 on the question of whether the Surf School’s operation was “in compliance with the regulations of the zoning ordinance for nonconformities. In particular, [SDHW was] concerned that the operation of the Surf School constitute^] an unlawful expansion of a nonconforming use, and/or a change in use to one which has an adverse effect on its neighboring properties.”

After consideration of the parties’ submissions and the observations made by DPP personnel during a site visit, the Director *457 made findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a declaratory ruling dated June 30, 2004.

The Director determined that the Hotel was a nonconforming use and that, as the Surf School’s students were drawn primarily from the general public and not guests of the Hotel, the Surf School’s operation was not an accessory use of the Hotel.

He also found that “[tjhere has been no physical expansion to any of the buildings on the site to accommodate the surf school establishment. There has been no increase in operating hours by the surf school beyond that of the hotel, and no increase in the density on the site as a result of the surf school’s operations.” Thus, the Director concluded, the Surf School qualified as a change in nonconforming use from accessory-hotel to principal-office use.

Finally, the Director also found that the Surf School “can involve greater adverse effects (in particular seawall congestion, noise, and incompatibility with surrounding residential and apartment uses) on surrounding properties within the neighborhood when the size of a surfing classes [sic] is too large.” As a consequence, the Director set class size and number limits on the Surf School’s operation.

SDHW appealed from the Director’s ruling to the ZBA, 10 which conducted a contested-case hearing spanning several sessions. By decision entered on March 28, 2005, the ZBA affirmed the Director’s ruling, stating that the Director’s decision that Hedemann’s use of Shop #7 as an office for surfing instruction, subject to conditions, was not based on an erroneous finding of material fact and was not arbitrary or capricious nor an abuse of diseretion.

SDHW appealed the ZBA decision to the circuit court. 11

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Related

Save Diamond Head Waters LLC. v. Hans Hedemann Surf, Inc.
211 P.3d 74 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 P.3d 715, 119 Haw. 452, 2008 Haw. App. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/save-diamond-head-waters-llc-v-hans-hedemann-surf-inc-hawapp-2008.