Templeton Properties LP v. TOWN OF BOONE

681 S.E.2d 566, 198 N.C. App. 406, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 1764
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 21, 2009
DocketCOA08-1237
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 681 S.E.2d 566 (Templeton Properties LP v. TOWN OF BOONE) 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
Templeton Properties LP v. TOWN OF BOONE, 681 S.E.2d 566, 198 N.C. App. 406, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 1764 (N.C. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEMPLETON PROPERTIES LP, Petitioner
v.
TOWN OF BOONE and TOWN OF BOONE BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT, Respondents

No. COA08-1237

Court of Appeals of North Carolina

Filed July 21, 2009
This case not for publication

Di Santi Watson Capua & Wilson, by Anthony S. di Santi, for petitioner.

Parker, Poe, Adams, & Bernstein L.L.P., by Anthony Fox & Benjamin Sullivan, for respondents.

WYNN, Judge.

"Whole record" review of a Board of Adjustment decision requires the Superior Court to determine "whether the findings of fact are supported by competent evidence in the record; if so, they are conclusive upon review."[1] Respondents Town of Boone and its Board of Adjustment argue the Superior Court incorrectly applied whole record review to the Board of Adjustment's decision to deny a special use permit. Because the Superior Court's order shows that it reviewed the Board of Adjustment's factual determinations under an incorrect standard of review, we remand to the Superior Court with instructions to remand to the Board of Adjustment for reviewable findings of fact.

Petitioner Templeton Properties, L.P. owns a 2.907-acre lot ("the Parcel") located in Boone, North Carolina. Although the Parcel is zoned for single-family residential use, the structure located on the Parcel has historically been used as a church with a special use permit. The Parcel is situated between State Farm Road and VFW Drive, which are the routes of access to the Parcel. Aside from a VFW (a nonresidential structure) located on the lot immediately north of the Parcel, the surrounding neighborhood is composed of mostly single-family residences.

On 28 September 2006, Petitioner submitted an application to the Town of Boone for a special use permit to remodel the church into a 13,050 square foot medical clinic. When Petitioner submitted its application, the proposed medical clinic was permissible in the residential zoning district with a special use permit. The Board of Adjustment found Petitioner's original application for a special use permit incomplete based on the "lack of lighting and dumpster plans and no clear resolution of an easement."

Petitioner filed a modification renewing its special use permit application on 2 March 2007. The renewed application proposed a clinic of 10,010 square feet and attempted to address the lighting, dumpster, and easement concerns supporting the Board of Adjustment's earlier finding that the application was incomplete. Hearings on Petitioner's renewed special use permit application occurred on 5 April and 1 May 2007. In the interim, the Town of Boone amended its zoning ordinance to eliminate the possibility of medical clinics of any size with or without a special use permit, but Petitioner's application was considered under pre-amendment policy.

At the hearings, Board members heard evidence from many witnesses, including residents of the community surrounding the proposed medical clinic. The proposed clinic would require twenty to twenty-five more parking spaces than the church. In addition to the parking concerns, residents worried that the medical clinic generally would clog access routes on State Farm Road and VFW Drive by generating more traffic, on a more consistent basis, than the existing church. Witnesses were generally in accord that additional clinic traffic would further overwhelm State Farm Road and VFW Drive, particularly during rush hours. Some residents were concerned that emergency vehicles would be unable to access neighborhood residences.

Residents were also commonly concerned about the proposed medical clinic's aesthetic impact on the surrounding residential community. Several residents expressed dissatisfaction with the trees and foliage the proposed clinic would eliminate. Some residents cited the value of the trees, some being century-old maples and oaks, while other residents stated that the trees and foliage served as a buffer between their residences and the proposed clinic's increased lighting and noise. Other residents were further displeased that the proposed clinic's increased waste would require additional dumpsters, potentially drawing rodents and other animals to the neighborhood. While the clinic plans called for waste collection by the same garbage truck serving the residential neighborhood, a "dumpster turn" would be installed to allow the garbage truck to access the clinic's dumpsters, which could be as few as two and as many as ten. The Town of Boone's Mayor, Loretta Clawson, was particularly concerned that the "dumpster turn" would devalue her house, located directly across from the proposed clinic on VFW Drive.

On the other hand, Petitioner introduced evidence that the greater area includes a substantial number of commercial and medical entities, even though the most immediate properties are single-family residences. Petitioner also introduced an appraiser's report stating that the proposed medical clinic would not decrease surrounding residential property values, and moreover, that the topography and road grade of State Farm Road would preserve neighboring residents' privacy.

After the hearings, the Board of Adjustment voted on the application according to the mandated procedures in the Town of Boone's Unified Development Ordinance. The Board of Adjustment voted (1) unanimously, in favor of a motion that Petitioner's application was complete; (2) unanimously, approving a second motion that Petitioner's application complied with all applicable requirements of the Unified Development Ordinance; and (3) five to three opposing a motion to "grant the Special Use Permit subject to. . . restrictions against a substance abuse clinic . . . a mental health facility and restricting it to the hours of the seven until nine o'clock."

Some Board members offered their rationales for voting against the proposal before adjourning on 1 May. Board member Crepeau stated that his vote in opposition was "based on [the clinic's] incompatibility with the Comprehensive Plan. . . . I am placing paramount importance on the residential and continuing residential nature of the neighborhood, and that if this were approved, that this could actually begin the transition of this established, long-established residential neighborhood into something that is no longer residential." Board member Hay agreed with Board member Crepeau, and further stated that "the congestion would be a serious safety concern as well at certain times of the day." Board member Lockett agreed with the traffic safety concern, and also stated: "The expansion to the degree that it would be expanded did not seem to be in keeping with the residential quality of the neighborhood. I do understand that there are medical facilities along State Farm, but that portion of State Farm seems to be primarily single family and to have a character that would be significantly adversely impacted in terms of preserving that [residential] use and character." The hearing adjourned after the Board of Adjustment members' comments.

On 4 May 2007, the Town of Boone informed Petitioner of the hearing's results in a letter stating:

After hearing all input from the applicant and members of the public; a motion was made to approve the project. This motion was not approved by a vote of three ayes and five nays. No other motions were offered. The result of this vote was that the application was denied.

The letter also recapitulated Board members' reasons for voting against the application.

In a letter dated 8 May 2007, Petitioner responded that the Town of Boone was "incorrect that the result of [the Board of Adjustment's third] vote was that the application was denied.

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Related

Templeton Properties LP v. Town of Boone
759 S.E.2d 311 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
681 S.E.2d 566, 198 N.C. App. 406, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 1764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/templeton-properties-lp-v-town-of-boone-ncctapp-2009.