Singer v. Davenport

264 S.E.2d 637, 164 W. Va. 665, 1980 W. Va. LEXIS 488
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1980
Docket14199
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 264 S.E.2d 637 (Singer v. Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singer v. Davenport, 264 S.E.2d 637, 164 W. Va. 665, 1980 W. Va. LEXIS 488 (W. Va. 1980).

Opinion

Neely, Chief Justice

The case before us presents an issue well-known across America, namely, the extent to which a community may regulate and control new housing developments. Our Court, however, has never addressed this issue since the regulation and control of new housing developments is a relatively recent problem in West Virginia. *666 The appellees, plaintiffs below, owners of a piece of real estate near Charles Town, West Virginia, prepared a plan for residential development of their property. They applied to the Jefferson County Planning Commission, the appellants and defendants below, for the approval of their plat. The Commission held hearings on the proposal and by letter rejected the application and final plat. The developers brought suit in the Jefferson County Circuit Court challenging the scope of the Planning Commission’s power to deny an application to record a plat. The Circuit Court agreed with the developers, ordering that the Commission approve the plat so that the developers could proceed. We affirm.

The developers initially submitted a plat in June, 1976 which provided for 397 mobile homesites on an 80 acre tract. After encountering opposition to the plan, the developers submitted a revised plat in November, 1976 which called for 397 conventional homes on the same 80 acre tract. Opposition continued, so in January, 1977 the developers submitted the plat in question which called for 295 homes on lots averaging 7100 square feet. The plat provided for developers’ installation of a central water and sewer system, a sewage treatment plant, gravel roads, curbs, sidewalks, fire hydrants, recreational areas and two twenty thousand gallon water storage tanks for additional fire protection. The developers also advised the Planning Commission that they had received the necessary permits from the State Health Department and the Department of Natural Resources and had secured from the State Department of Highways the necessary permits to open up the land to the highway.

The Commission held hearings on the final plat application and determined that the project as proposed: (1) did not adequately provide for a population distribution in a manner creating conditions favorable to health, safety, convenience and the harmonious development of the county; (2) did not adequately provide for schools; and, (3) did not adequately provide for recreational facilities. The Planning Commission relied upon W. Va. Code, *667 8-24-30 [1969] which allows the Commission to determine if the plat provides for “[distribution of population and traffic in a manner tending to create conditions favorable to health, safety, convenience and the harmonious development of the municipality or county.” W. Va. Code, 8-24-30(4) [1969].

The Circuit Court concluded that when a plat is presented to the Planning Commission for approval the applicable state statutes and subdivision regulations confine the Commission’s inquiry to two questions: 1) is the proposed subdivision in harmony with the comprehensive plan, and 2) does the proposed subdivision plan violate any of the subdivision regulations of Jefferson County? The Circuit Court determined that the subdivision did not conflict with the comprehensive plan and that the transcribed record in the proceedings failed to disclose any findings by the Planning Commission of any violation of the Subdivision Ordinance and Regulations of Jefferson County. Thus, the court found that the record below established that the Planning Commission had acted in excess of its jurisdiction, miconstrued the applicable statutes, and abused its discretion.

The Commission argued that the proposed plat conflicts with the comprehensive plan because the agricultural area in which the subdivision is to be located is clearly designated for development in five to fifteen acre parcels, a size some thirty times larger than the lot sizes submitted in the developers’ plat. In addition, the Commission argues that the provisions in W. Va. Code, 8-24-30 [1969] clearly provide authority to disapprove plats upon failure adequately to provide for schools and recreational facilities.

I

The first issue which we must address is whether the developers’ plan conflicts with the Jefferson County Comprehensive Plan. The argument that the subdivision failed to comply with the restrictions on lot size in the comprehensive plan is not compelling since the Commission failed to mention such a problem in their letter of *668 14 March 1977 which rejected the proposal. If indeed the subdivision lot size conflicted fatally with the comprehensive plan one wonders why the Commission allowed the hearings to progress in such detail. However, even if the comprehensive plan were shown directly to conflict with the subdivision, our Court agrees with the lower court’s interpretation of the statutory scheme, namely that the comprehensive plan is to be used by the Planning Commission to aid them in drawing up their subdivision ordinances. The comprehensive plan was never intended to replace definite, specific guidelines; instead, it was to lay the groundwork for the future enactment of zoning laws. Where the lower court’s two-step inquiry into the validity of a rejection of a subdivision proposal seems to suggest that the comprehensive plan has any effect as a legal instrument, we respectfully disagree.

It is stipulated that the voters of Jefferson County have defeated every attempt to enact a county-wide zoning ordinance. When the voters have rejected zoning ordinances, the Planning Commission may not enforce zoning under the guise of the comprehensive plan. It would be absurd to suggest that the consultants who drew up the comprehensive plan were empowered to determine the future land use of Jefferson County. This interpretation is supported in the conclusion of the comprehensive plan when the consultants state that “[t]he single and most important tool for Plan implementation is the zoning ordinance. Immediate consideration should be given to the enactment of the proposed ordinance to provide the county with a legal instrument for controlling development in accordance with the Land Use Plan.” Jefferson County Comprehensive Plan, Phase II, 115 (1971). 1 Thus, the comprehensive plan is merely the foundation for the control of future development and growth in Jefferson County.

*669 II

Subdivision regulations which are permitted under W. Va. Code, 8-24-28 through 35 [1969] should be distinguished from zoning ordinances. The purpose of zoning is to provide an overall comprehensive plan for land use, while subdivision regulations govern the planning of new streets, standards for plotting new neighborhoods, and the protection of the community from financial loss due to poor development. Shoptaugh v. Board of County Comm’rs of El Paso County, 37 Colo. App. 39, 543 P.2d 524 (1975); Smith v. Township Committee of Township of Morris, 101 N.J. Super. 271, 244 A.2d 145 (1968).

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.E.2d 637, 164 W. Va. 665, 1980 W. Va. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-v-davenport-wva-1980.