S.T. Wooten Corp. v. Board of Adjustment

711 S.E.2d 158, 210 N.C. App. 633, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 632
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 5, 2011
DocketCOA10-515
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 711 S.E.2d 158 (S.T. Wooten Corp. v. Board of Adjustment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.T. Wooten Corp. v. Board of Adjustment, 711 S.E.2d 158, 210 N.C. App. 633, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 632 (N.C. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

BEASLEY, Judge.

S.T. Wooten Corporation f/k/a S.T. Wooten Construction Co., Inc. (Petitioner) appeals the superior court’s order affirming the decision of the Board of Adjustment of the Town of Zebulon (Board) requiring Petitioner to apply for and obtain a special use permit to operate a permanent asphalt plant on its property located within the jurisdiction of the Town of Zebulon (Town). The central issue presented in this appeal is whether a specific statement by the Town Planning Director — that, pursuant to the Town zoning code, the proposed asphalt operation is a permitted use by right requiring only a general use permit — is an order, decision, or determination of binding force. See Raleigh Rescue Mission, Inc. v. Board of Adjust, of City of Raleigh (In re Appeal of Soc’y for Pres. of Historic Oakwood), 153 N.C. App. 737, 742-43, 571 S.E.2d 588, 591 (2002). For the reasons discussed herein, we conclude that the 2001 statement of the Planning Director is a determination of binding force, and, because no objection was made to that appealable decision in a timely manner, it is binding on the Town. Therefore, we reverse and remand to the Board for further remand to the Town to allow Petitioner’s operation of the asphalt plant consistent with the Town’s original, binding zoning interpretation that such was a permitted use, eliminating the need for a special use permit.

Petitioner owns a 63-acre parcel of land located at 901 W. Barbee Street (the Property) within the extraterritorial jurisdiction of the Town. The Property is zoned in the “Heavy Industrial” (IH) district, and Petitioner has operated a concrete plant thereon since 1978. In 2001, Petitioner’s Staff Engineer, Richard Bowen, requested a zoning determination letter from Michael Frangos, the Town’s Planning Director and Land Use Administrator (LUA) at the time, as to whether Petitioner’s IH-zoned Property could be used as an asphalt plant. Mr. Frangos responded by letter dated 22 August 2001, confirming the *635 Town’s extraterritorial jurisdiction over the IH-zoned Property and stating that an asphalt plant was a permitted use within the IH district:

In accordance with § 152.129 [of the Town’s Land Use Ordinance] Permitted Uses, clay, stone, concrete and cement processing and sale is a use permitted by right with only a General Use Permit issued by the Zoning Administrator. It is my interpretation, as such, that asphalt plants fall within this description or are similar enough to be grouped together and are therefore also permitted.

The letter also advised that “prior to any construction a site plan must be reviewed by the Zebulon Technical Review Committee and construction plans must be submitted along with an application in pursuit of a building permit.” The Town never appealed Mr. Frangos’ interpretation, and Petitioner proceeded to obtain air quality permits from the State of North Carolina. On 20 November 2001, a representative of engineering company ENSR Consulting and Engineering (NC), Inc. wrote a letter to Mr. Frangos on behalf of Petitioner, requesting that the Town “provide a zoning consistency determination” to the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources (NCDENR), Division of Air Quality. This written “Request for Zoning Consistency Determination” explained that Petitioner was “planning to permit three hot mix asphalt (HMA) plants at a site located on Barbee Street Extension in Zebulon” and sought, pursuant to statutory requirement, a determination that the proposed asphalt facility was consistent with the Town’s zoning ordinance in effect. Mr. Frangos confirmed to NCDENR’s Regional Air Quality Supervisor, by letter dated 3 December 2001, 1 that Petitioner’s property is zoned IH and that the proposed asphalt facility was permitted as of right:

Please accept this letter as confirmation that the Town of Zebulon has received copies of the permit applications for S.T. Wooten Asphalt Mixing Services, LLC .... The site at 901 Barbee Street Extended ... is zoned IH, Heavy Industrial. Therefore such industrial uses and their appurtenant uses are permitted by right.

Also dated 3 December 2001, a “Zoning Consistency Determination” signed by Mr. Frangos, as “Planning/Zoning Director,” verified that the proposed “Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) Plant” was “consistent with applicable zoning and subdivision ordinances.”

*636 According to Petitioner, over the next few years the company, in reliance on Mr. Frangos’ 2001 zoning interpretation, obtained necessary state and local permits, including: (a) the requested air quality permits from NCDENR; (b) driveway permits from the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT); (c) all necessary building permits from Wake County; and (d) all necessary sedimentation and erosion control permits. Petitioner also spent over $300,000 improving the Property for the use of the asphalt plant, including subdividing the Property to separate the asphalt plant area from the concrete plant that had been in existence on the Barbee Street Property since 1978. Petitioner began using its Property for the operation of an asphalt plant when it was awarded an asphalt paving contract by the NCDOT on 29 April 2009. In connection therewith, Petitioner submit- • ted to Wake County two commercial building permit applications— one for the portable asphalt plant itself and another for a portable office/lab trailer to be used on the Property — and a mechanical permit application for electrical work involved in the setup of a portable asphalt plant. On 27 May 2009, the Town of Zebulon Planning Department approved a zoning permit for a “Temporary Asphalt Plant” at the Property, specifying on the Zoning Permit Form that no change of use permit was required. The record also contains a certificate of occupancy issued on 4 June 2009, indicating that all permit requirements were met and occupancy was allowed. From June to October 2009, Petitioner operated a portable or temporary asphalt plant on the Property, and in September 2009, informed Mark A. Hetrick, the Town’s Planning Director at that time, of its intention to replace the portable plant on the Property with a permanent asphalt plant.

On 1 October 2009, counsel for the Town notified Petitioner of Mr. Hetrick’s determination that the “ultimate approval” of the proposed permanent site for an asphalt manufacturing plant was “still to be made by the Board of Commissioners by way of a Special Use Permit.” Mr. Hetrick cited § 152.131 of the Town of Zebulon Land Use Ordinance, which is captioned “Permitted Uses and Specific Exclusions” and provides that

whenever a use is proposed to be established which is not specifically listed in the table of permitted uses, but is similar to a permitted use in the district in which it is proposed to be established, then the Board of Adjustment is authorized to issue a conditional use permit ... if it first finds that the use is indeed similar in nature to one or more of the permitted uses in that district. Provided however, that if the Land Use Administrator finds that *637

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
711 S.E.2d 158, 210 N.C. App. 633, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-wooten-corp-v-board-of-adjustment-ncctapp-2011.