Walker v. NC DEPT. OF ENVIR. HEALTH
This text of 433 S.E.2d 767 (Walker v. NC DEPT. OF ENVIR. HEALTH) 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.
Opinion
Richard WALKER, et al., Petitioners,
v.
N.C. DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH AND NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF COASTAL MANAGEMENT, COASTAL RESOURCES COMMISSION, Respondent, and
Oriental Harbor Development Company, Inc., Respondent-Intervenor.
ORIENTAL YACHT CLUB, Joseph H. Cox, et al., Petitioners,
v.
N.C. DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH AND NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF COASTAL MANAGEMENT, COASTAL RESOURCES COMMISSION, Respondent, and
Oriental Harbor Development Company, Inc., Respondent-Intervenor.
Court of Appeals of North Carolina.
Manning, Fulton & Skinner, by Howard E. Manning and Edwin Pate Bailey, Raleigh, for petitioner appellants.
Atty. Gen. Lacy H. Thornburg, by Associate Atty. Gen. David G. Heeter, and Asst. Atty. Gen. Robin W. Smith, Raleigh, for respondent appellee.
Wheatly, Wheatly, Nobles & Weeks, P.A., by C.R. Wheatly, III, Beaufort, for respondent-intervenor appellee.
COZORT, Judge.
The dispositive issue presented by this appeal is whether the Department of Administration must grant an easement for the construction of a commercial marina by a private developer over public trust waters pursuant to N.C.Gen.Stat. § 146-12 (1991) and N.C.Admin.Code tit. 1, r. 6B.0605 (June 1987). We answer in the affirmative and hold the trial court erred in upholding an order of the Coastal Resources Commission issuing a development permit to respondent without the granting of an easement by the Department of Administration.
*768 On or about 25 September 1989, the Oriental Harbor Development Company, Inc. (Oriental Harbor) applied for a Coastal Area Management Act (CAMA) major development/dredge and fill permit to build a commercial marina on Smith Creek in Oriental, North Carolina. The marina site plan calls for approximately 148 boat slips on four floating docks eight feet wide and ranging from 375 to 560 feet long. The docks of the proposed marina would encircle approximately 5.9 acres of public trust waters. Approximately 9 acres of submerged lands would be excavated to construct the marina. The waters near the proposed site of Smith Creek are designated as a primary nursery area by the North Carolina Marine Fisheries Commission. The Commission has closed the waters in the vicinity of the site to shellfishing because of bacterial contamination. Prior to the closing, the area had been used for trawling shrimp and crab, netting fish, and anchoring and launching boats.
As part of the review process for issuance of the CAMA permit, the Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources, Division of Coastal Management, Coastal Resources Commission (CRC) submitted Oriental Harbor's application to the Department of Administration (DOA) with a request for comments. On 6 November 1989, DOA responded in writing: "No Easement Required." The CRC issued permit No. 39-90 (the "permit") to Oriental Harbor on 9 March 1990. Petitioners objected to the issuance of the permit and initiated this action on 9 May 1990 by filing petitions for contested case hearings with the Office of Administrative Hearings, pursuant to N.C.Gen.Stat. § 150B-22, et seq. (1991).
The contested cases were assigned to Administrative Law Judge Fred G. Morrison, Jr., who consolidated the cases. A full evidentiary hearing was held on the matter from 28 August to 30 August 1990. On 11 January 1991, Judge Morrison filed a recommended decision, recommending:
That the CAMA Major Development/Dredge and Fill Permit No. 39-90 be revoked and that no CAMA Permit be issued to the Oriental Harbor Development Company, Inc. as requested in its application filed on September 25, 1989, on the grounds that the Permit allows the conversion of public trust lands and waters to private use, contrary to law, and no easement for use of public trust submerged lands has been granted by the Department of Administration and approved by the Governor and Council of State.
The CRC issued an order on 19 April 1991 rejecting the ALJ's recommended decision, finding that the permit was properly issued, and denying the petitioners' appeals in the contested cases. On 22 May 1991, petitioners filed a petition for judicial review in the Pamlico County Superior Court seeking review of the CRC's order. In their petition, the petitioners specifically raised the issue of "the DOA's non-action regarding an easement." The petition included a lengthy argument contending that "[t]he reply of the DOA to the CRC stating `No easement required' does not comply with the requirements of law and on its face is unlawful."
A hearing was held before Judge G.K. Butterfield in Pamlico County Superior Court. By order entered 20 December 1991, the trial court affirmed the CRC's order upholding issuance of the permit. Petitioners filed timely notice of appeal.
Petitioners advance twenty-two assignments of error on appeal, five of which address the legality of the issuance of the permit without requiring an easement from the DOA. We hold the CRC erred by issuing the permit in this case without the granting of an easement by the DOA.
It is undisputed that the site for the marina approved by the permit is situated in the public trust waters and submerged lands thereunder. Our Supreme Court noted long ago:
The State can no more abdicate its trust over property in which the whole people are interested, like navigable waters and soils under them, so as to leave them entirely under the use and control of private parties, ... than it can abdicate its police powers in the administration of *769 government and the preservation of the peace.
Land Co. v. Hotel, 132 N.C. 517, 527-28, 44 S.E. 39, 42 (1903). According to N.C.Gen. Stat. § 146-3, the State may not convey submerged lands in fee; it may grant easements therein. See N.C.Gen.Stat. § 146-3 (1991). The power to grant such easements is vested as follows:
The Department of Administration may grant, to adjoining riparian owners, easements in lands covered by navigable waters or by the waters of any lake owned by the State for such purposes and upon such conditions as it may deem proper, with the approval of the Governor and Council of State. The Department may, with the approval of the Governor and Council of State, revoke any such easement upon the violation by the grantee or his assigns of the conditions upon which it was granted.
N.C.Gen.Stat. § 146-12 (1991).
The statute does not impose an affirmative duty to grant an easement in every circumstance. However, the regulations promulgated thereunder clearly indicate that a project of the magnitude of the project below requires an easement prior to the issuance of a CAMA and dredge/fill permit. N.C.Admin.Code tit. 1, r. 6B.0605 provides:
(a) Riparian owners may construct piers or docks to gain access to navigable waters without an easement. Such structures may include a weatherproof shelter if the use of the shelter is in keeping with riparian access.
(b) Easements in lands covered by navigable waters are generally required for any structure built over navigable waters for purposes other than gaining riparian access. The Department of Administration may exempt from this provision structures deemed minor in their impact upon the public trust waters of the state. Examples of such exempt structures include boat ramps, duck blinds, small groins, and the like.
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