Scruby v. Zoning Appeals Board

65 Va. Cir. 89, 2004 Va. Cir. LEXIS 78
CourtAlbemarle County Circuit Court
DecidedJune 1, 2004
DocketCase No. (Law) CL04-9725.00
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Va. Cir. 89 (Scruby v. Zoning Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Albemarle County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scruby v. Zoning Appeals Board, 65 Va. Cir. 89, 2004 Va. Cir. LEXIS 78 (Va. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

By Judge Paul M. Peatross, Jr.

This matter is before the Court on the writ of certiorari issued on March 31, 2004, in this Court under Virginia Code § 15.2-2314 on the question of whether a parcel of land owned by Brian Scruby can now be considered as two separate parcels, thus having two different sets of development rights, when the state physically divided the parcel in half after an eminent domain acquisition of 13.93 acres for a right-of-way for Interstate 64.

Statement of Facts

Petitioner currently owns 43.51 acres of property, known as Parcel 14, which is used as a cattle farm. This parcel was created in 1907 when it contained 57 and 50/160 acres, and the parcel has remained in Petitioner’s family since the 1830s. In 1967, the State Highway Commissioner acquired 13.93 acres for Interstate 64, which now physically divides Parcel 14. The original parcel is still described and recorded by the 1907 deed, and a certificate is also recorded which relates to the State Highway Commissioner’s acquisition of the 13.93 acres for the right-of-way. The certificate does reference road maps that portray the original property lines of Parcel 14, but the maps do not create new property lines along the right-of-way or provide legal descriptions of two pieces of Parcel 14. Furthermore, Parcel 14 has been taxed as a single parcel since 1907, and the County’s tax maps correspond with that assessment.

[90]*90Parcel 14 is controlled by Zoning Ordinance § 10.3 because it is zoned under Rural Areas (RA). Section 10.3 establishes that up to five development rights attach to all “parcels of record” within the RA zoning district existing “at 5:15 p.m., the tenth day of December, 1980.” A development right is a right to create a parcel less than 21 acres in size in the RA zoning district, while a parcel of 21 acres or larger may be created without a development right. Zoning Ordinance § 10.3.1.

On January 20,2004, the Zoning Administrator of Albemarle County, in reference to a request by Petitioner under the county’s Acquisition of Conservation Easements program, determined that Parcel 14, as of December 10, 1980, was a single “parcel of record” with five development rights, as opposed to two parcels with a total of ten development rights. The administrator found, using the definition of “lot of record,” that in order to be considered a “parcel of record,” Parcel 14 had to have more than mere physical separation by Interstate 64, thus requiring legal separation by a plat, deed, or other legally descriptive document lawfully recorded in the Clerk’s Office of the Circuit Court of Albemarle County.

Petitioner appealed this ruling to the Board of Zoning Appeals of Albemarle County (BZA) pursuant to Virginia Code § 15.2-2311 and Albemarle County Code § 18-34.3. On March 2,2004, the BZA affirmed the Zoning Administrator’s ruling in asserting that “the physical separation of the property by Interstate 64 did not legally separate the properly into two parcels of record” because two parcels would have had to be “established by a recorded plat or deed before that time and date [December 10,1980] in order to be recognized as a parcel of record.”

Petitioner contends that the practice of the Zoning Administrator applied during the years 1990 to 2001, which was to determine that parcels physically separated by a public road were separate parcels of record under Zoning Ordinance § 10.3, should be reinstated as the correct practice. Respondent asserts that, after the ruling in County of Chesterfield v. Stigall, 262 Va. 697, 554 S.E.2d 49 (2001), this former practice is no longer a correct application of law and that the current practice of requiring legal separation, accomplished solely by recording a plat, deed, or legal document, should be upheld.

Questions Presented

[91]*91The questions the Court must address are:

(1) Does the Stigall case effectively overrule the Tickle rule as adopted by the Albemarle County Circuit Court’s 1990 decision in Sanford v. Board of Zoning Appeals of Albemarle County?

(2) If so, is the Zoning Administrator’s policy consistent with Stigallt

Discussion of Authority

County of Chesterfield v. Stigall concerned a taxpayer’s challenge to the county’s assessment of roll-back taxes when a parcel of land devoted to a special land use tax program was split in two by the owner in 1999, one part to an inter vivos trust, the other to a family limited partnership. The Court upheld the lower court’s ruling that the rollback taxes should not be assessed because the two parcels were continued in the use for which the original was classified prior to the transfer. The lower court had held that the use was continued when the parcels were effectively separated in 1975 because the Commonwealth exercised an eminent domain taking which physically separated the two parcels. However, the Supreme Court held that the eminent domain taking only constituted a physical separation and, in order for a legal separation to occur, the separation must be an action of the owner. A taking by eminent domain is not an action of the owner. Therefore, it is not a legal separation. The separation by the owner in 1999 constituted legal separation, and the Court found that the use was still continued.

Respondent relies on this case to show why the Zoning Administrator’s policy changed in 2001. After Sanford v. Board of Zoning Appeals of Albemarle County in 1990, the policy was to treat an eminent domain taking as legally separating a parcel into two if the separation occurred before December 10, 1980. The Sanford court adopted a rule articulated in City of Winston Salem v. Tickle, 53 N.C. App. 516, 281 S.E.2d 667, which stated that parcels of land separated by an established city street, in use by the public, are separate and independent as a matter of law. The facts in Sanford mirror the ones before the Court: where a state highway dissected a parcel of land, and the land owner then requested another set of five development rights as a result, which he was then granted under the Tickle rule. However, the rationale in Stigall shadows doubt on the Tickle rule.

Petitioner claims that he is not asking the Court to uphold the rationale of the Tickle court, but only to rely on that used in Sanford. While Petitioner’s argument is duly noted, the Court cannot escape the fact that the brief opinion in Sanford relies entirely on the rule articulated in Tickle. Therefore, it was [92]*92necessary for the Court to look past Sanford in some regards in determining the applicability of the BZA’s policies before and after the ruling in Stigall.

The question in this instance is to decide if the Stigall holding, which concerned the tax consequences of property separation by an eminent domain taking, overrules the Sanford holding, which applies to the creation of a new set of development rights. The Court finds that the Stigall opinion adequately distinguishes between physical separation and legal separation of parcels, the central issue in deciding whether two “parcels of record” exist. Even though Stigall

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Related

Chesterfield County v. Stigall
554 S.E.2d 49 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2001)
City of Winston-Salem v. Tickle
281 S.E.2d 667 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Va. Cir. 89, 2004 Va. Cir. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scruby-v-zoning-appeals-board-vaccalbemarle-2004.