Virginia Marine Resources Commission v. Sarah Harrison

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 20, 2008
Docket1316071
StatusPublished

This text of Virginia Marine Resources Commission v. Sarah Harrison (Virginia Marine Resources Commission v. Sarah Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Marine Resources Commission v. Sarah Harrison, (Va. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Felton, Judges Elder and Kelsey Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia

RONALD W. BOONE

v. Record No. 1315-07-1

SARAH HARRISON AND VIRGINIA MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION OPINION BY JUDGE D. ARTHUR KELSEY VIRGINIA MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION MAY 20, 2008

v. Record No. 1316-07-1

SARAH HARRISON

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK Norman A. Thomas, Judge

Martin A. Thomas (Decker, Cardon, Thomas, Weintraub & Neskis, P.C., on briefs), for Ronald W. Boone.

Carl Josephson, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Robert F. McDonnell, Attorney General, on briefs), for Virginia Marine Resources Commission.

Thomas S. Carnes for Sarah Harrison.

The Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC) and Ronald W. Boone appeal a

circuit court order vacating a VMRC pier permit under the Virginia Administrative Process Act

(VAPA), Code § 2.2-4000 et seq. Agreeing with the VMRC and Boone that the court exceeded

its authority in doing so, we reverse.

I.

In 2003, Hurricane Isabel destroyed the Harrison Fishing Pier. Boone rebuilt the pier

pursuant to special permits authorized by executive order expediting the return of impacted areas

and structures to pre-Hurricane Isabel condition. About a third of the way down the 1,490-foot pier, Boone added a restaurant, gameroom, bar, and an upper deck area on the roof of the

restaurant with a railing and gazebo. These structures were authorized by VMRC permits.

While building the approved structures, Boone also constructed an unapproved 10-by-27⅔ foot

structure on the upper deck to serve as an outdoor bar and catering station as well as a place

where he could do office work. Seven swivel chairs were installed in front of the bar counter. 1

When VMRC officers pointed out to Boone that his prior permits did not include this

particular upper deck bar structure, Boone filed a request for an after-the-fact permit with the

VMRC. At the VMRC hearing, Boone presented his plans for the pier and the upper deck, noted

his considerable ($2.5 million) investment in the rebuilding effort, and apologized for not

securing an amendment to his earlier permits prior to constructing the upper deck bar structure.

Boone also presented other witnesses vouching for the public benefits of the pier generally and

for Boone personally.

The Mayor of the City of Norfolk, Paul Fraim, appeared at the VMRC hearing but had to

leave prior to being able to speak. Boone’s counsel advised the VMRC that Mayor Fraim

authorized him to proffer the mayor’s testimony:

Mayor Fraim indicated that he wished to tell this commission that the City Council held extensive public hearings before enacting the ordinances that authorized the conditional use permits that would allow them to have these facilities on the pier – the restaurant, etc.; that they also consider this an important part of the revitalization of the Willoughby section of Ocean View in the City of Norfolk; that at no time during their consideration did they believe that this structure that’s in question that’s on top was anything other than an entertainment structure. That’s what they’ve always known it would be and always believed it would be a catering and entertainment facility. They, the City Council unanimously approved the project by

1 Boone also increased the size of another upper deck structure, a gazebo, previously approved by the VMRC, and added two other structures, a temporary construction trestle and a fish cleaning station, not previously approved by the VMRC. Harrison has abandoned any contest over these structures.

-2- passing the ordinances allowing the conditional use permits and the Mayor believes that this facility would greatly enhance the ability of the citizens of Norfolk and the rest of the state to enjoy the Chesapeake Bay by being able to have a place where they can sit on this pier, where they can – it’s open to the public – anybody that wants to come in – it’s a restaurant, it’s licensed by the ABC Board, it’s also available for renting out for private functions to anybody that wants to do that, for weddings, etc.

Two citizens appeared at the VMRC hearing objecting to Boone’s pier rebuilding effort.

Sarah Harrison, the appellee in these consolidated cases, said she lived about ten houses down

the shoreline west of the pier. Though difficult to follow, her presentation included complaints

about the decisions of the Norfolk Planning Commission, the Norfolk City Council, and the

Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Board — all of which approved various permits requested

by Boone. Harrison also claimed the VMRC “may have been deceived” by Boone during the

permitting process as to his ultimate intentions for the rebuilt pier. She similarly questioned

Boone’s plans to develop other parcels along the Ocean View shoreline.

Harrison also noted that Boone intended to use the pier for “dining, dancing, live bands

and an arcade.” The old pier, she said, housed only a bait and snack shop. Harrison also

objected to the noise that she anticipated from Boone’s intended uses for the upper deck. She

presented to the commission a “DVD of the sound testing” Boone performed prior to his son’s

wedding reception on the pier.

Early in her remarks, Harrison said she “would like to submit evidence for the record”

and then, throughout her testimony, referred to various documents. Among these were

photographs of the former Harrison Fishing Pier, materials copied from the VMRC file,

advertisements by the City of Norfolk, materials submitted to the Norfolk Planning Commission

and Norfolk City Council, transcript pages from the hearing before the ABC Board, and the like.

After she finished speaking, the VMRC chairman advised Harrison to provide these documents

to the VMRC staff. -3- In reply to Harrison’s testimony, Boone explained the differences between the earlier

construction plans and the structures ultimately constructed on the pier. He acknowledged

having an ownership interest in nearby properties and insisted that he had “never given any kind

of false information” at any time during the permitting process for the rebuilt pier. As for the

sound recording, Boone said it merely recorded a “sound test” he performed with “larger

speakers” in order to “make sure that it was not loud out there.” In non-test conditions, Boone

suggested, he would be using smaller speakers. The VMRC chairman interrupted Boone at that

point stating, “We’re not interested in that.”

The other objector, Benny LeBon, added a complaint not mentioned by Harrison. Living

“just down the street from the pier,” LeBon said that when he gets up at the crack of dawn he

could not see the sunrise “until the sun gets over top of the building — it’s right directly in my

path when the sun comes up.” He thought other waterfront residents would have the same

problem. Like Harrison, LeBon objected to the “restaurant, dancing, dining, and so forth” on the

pier. “There’s got to be a place for people to go fish,” LeBon concluded, “I’m not sure fine

dining and dancing is what we’re thinking about for the Chesapeake Bay.”

The VMRC commissioners then proceeded to discuss the issue before it: whether to

grant the after-the-fact permit for, inter alia, the outdoor bar added by Boone to the already

approved upper deck. The commissioners talked about various aspects of the issue. Several

voiced concerns about the use of the upper deck structure as a bar instead of a catering operation.

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Virginia Marine Resources Commission v. Sarah Harrison, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-marine-resources-commission-v-sarah-harri-vactapp-2008.