Seymour v. Roanoke County Board of Supervisors

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 9, 2022
Docket210721
StatusPublished

This text of Seymour v. Roanoke County Board of Supervisors (Seymour v. Roanoke County Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seymour v. Roanoke County Board of Supervisors, (Va. 2022).

Opinion

PRESENT: Goodwyn, C.J., Powell, Kelsey, McCullough, and Chafin, JJ., and Russell and Millette, S.JJ.

STAN SEYMOUR, ET AL. OPINION BY v. Record No. 210721 JUSTICE TERESA M. CHAFIN JUNE 9, 2022 ROANOKE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROANOKE COUNTY Charles N. Dorsey, Judge

In their second amended complaint, the appellants challenged a locality’s decision to

grant a special use permit to a wildlife rehabilitation center. The appellants alleged that the

decision to grant the special use permit would cause an increase in traffic on a private easement,

which they claimed would harm them in several ways. The Circuit Court of Roanoke County

sustained the appellees’ demurrer and dismissed the appellants’ second amended complaint with

prejudice, concluding that the appellants lacked standing to pursue their claims. For the

following reasons, we will reverse the circuit court’s judgment and remand this case for further

proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

The Southwest Virginia Wildlife Center of Roanoke, Inc. (the “SVWC”) provides

medical and rehabilitative care to over 2,000 animals each year. The SVWC is located at the end

of a shared private easement. This easement is approximately 476 feet long, and it traverses

properties that are owned by Adrian Maver and Blaine Creasy, and Seymour2, LLC

(“Seymour2”). The SVWC, Maver and Creasy, and Seymour2 properties can only be accessed

by the easement. The easement is an unpaved, “single-lane dirt driveway” that “crosses over the front-

lawns” of the Maver and Creasy and Seymour2 properties. Maver and Creasy’s house is located

within “two car lengths” of the easement. Significantly, the easement is not maintained by any

governmental entity.

On March 9, 2018, the SVWC filed an application for a special use permit that would

authorize the construction of a large “raptor building” on the SVWC property. The SVWC

planned to use the raptor building to rehabilitate birds of prey. In their special use permit

application, the SVWC explained that the raptor building would allow injured birds of prey to

recover more quickly.

During the permit review process, the Roanoke County Zoning Administrator addressed

12 “accessory structures” located on the SVWC property. The SVWC uses these structures to

house small animals and birds. The Zoning Administrator determined that the accessory

structures “were either improperly granted zoning permits or had not been granted permits at

all.” Therefore, the Zoning Administrator concluded that these structures would also need to be

addressed by the pending special use permit.

The Roanoke County Board of Supervisors eventually granted a special use permit to the

SVWC. The special use permit retroactively authorized the accessory structures at issue. 1 The

special use permit also authorized the construction of the raptor building. The Board of

Supervisors, however, required the SVWC to: (1) plant two rows of evergreen trees around the

1 The ordinance granting the special use permit did not expressly reference the accessory structures on the SVWC property. Nevertheless, the Board of Supervisors has adopted the position that the special use permit retroactively authorized these structures. For the purposes of this appeal, which concerns the sufficiency of the appellants’ allegations regarding standing, we will assume without deciding that the special use permit encompassed the accessory structures at issue.

2 raptor building, (2) construct the raptor building an additional 20 feet away from the edge of its

property, and (3) use certain materials (i.e., wood rather than sheet metal) when constructing the

raptor building.

Maver, Creasy, Seymour2, and Stan and Jane Seymour, the owners of Seymour2 and

another property located near the SVWC, (collectively the “appellants”) filed a complaint in the

circuit court that challenged the Board of Supervisors’ decision on several grounds. The

complaint named the Board of Supervisors, the SVWC, and 5985 Coleman Road, LLC, the

owner of the SVWC property, (collectively the “appellees”) as defendants.

The appellees filed demurrers to the appellants’ complaint. Among other things, the

appellees argued that the appellants lacked standing to pursue their claims. The appellees

maintained that the allegations of the complaint failed to establish that the appellants had

standing under the two-part test set forth in Friends of the Rappahannock v. Caroline Cnty. Bd.

of Supervisors, 286 Va. 38 (2013). The circuit court agreed with the appellees and sustained the

demurrers.

With leave from the circuit court, the appellants filed an amended complaint that set forth

more detailed allegations of the harm arising from the proposed expansion of the SVWC. As the

appellants had previously filed an amended complaint when Seymour2 was joined as a party to

the litigation, the appellants referred to their new complaint as the “second amended complaint.”

In the second amended complaint, the appellants explained that traffic on the easement

has increased “20- to 50-fold” since the SVWC began operating in 2014. The appellants claimed

that there were “around 55 car trips per day” over the easement in the summer of 2018. The

second amended complaint alleged that the traffic on the easement causes “congestion, noise,

3 dust, and light pollution.” The complaint also explained how each of the appellants has been

harmed by the traffic on the easement and the resulting conditions.

The complaint alleged that dust from the traffic requires Maver and Creasy to replace the

air filters in their home “three-times more often than is recommended” and “have their home and

deck power-washed more frequently than would otherwise be necessary.” The complaint also

claimed that dust from the traffic contributed to several of Creasy’s asthma attacks. The

complaint further asserted that noise and light from the traffic wake Maver and Creasy up at

night.

Moreover, the complaint alleged that the traffic on the easement poses a danger to Maver

and Creasy’s children. The complaint explained that Maver and Creasy’s children have to walk

along the easement in order to get to their school bus stop. The complaint claimed that the

children were almost hit by “speeding” traffic on the easement on several occasions.

The complaint also asserted that Maver, Creasy, and Seymour2 have incurred additional

maintenance expenses due to the traffic on the easement. The complaint alleged that traffic

going to and from the SVWC has damaged the easement. The complaint explained that Maver,

Creasy, and Seymour2 have been required to replace gravel on the easement that has been

“displaced” by the traffic.

Furthermore, the complaint claimed that the traffic on the easement has lowered both the

fair market and rental value of the Seymour2 property. The complaint observed that the

Seymours sold the Seymour2 property to a third party a “few years earlier.” The complaint then

alleged that the Seymours were able to repurchase the property in 2017 for a reduced price due to

the ongoing operation of the SVWC and the traffic on the easement. The complaint also

4 explained that the conditions caused by the traffic have made the Seymour2 property more

difficult to rent.

The complaint noted that the Seymours live near the SVWC, in the “last house on the

state-maintained road” leading to the easement at issue.

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