Wilson County Youth Emergency Shelter, Inc. v. Wilson County

13 S.W.3d 338, 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 608, 1999 WL 685804
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 3, 1999
Docket01A01-9812-CH-00634
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 13 S.W.3d 338 (Wilson County Youth Emergency Shelter, Inc. v. Wilson County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson County Youth Emergency Shelter, Inc. v. Wilson County, 13 S.W.3d 338, 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 608, 1999 WL 685804 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

SUSANO, J.

The Wilson County Board of Zoning Appeals (“the BZA”) denied the petition of Wilson County Youth Emergency Shelter, Inc. (“the Shelter”) for a use on review to construct a group home on 5.46 acres of property in Wilson County. The Shelter proposes to move its existing facility in the county to the new location. On petition for certiorari, the trial court affirmed the action of the BZA. The Shelter appeals, arguing that the BZA’s decision was illegal, arbitrary, and beyond its jurisdiction. By way of a separate issue, the Shelter argues that there is no material evidence to support the BZA’s denial of its petition.

I. The Petition

The Shelter proposes to build a group home as a residence and in-house-schooling facility for up to 12 individuals in an A-1 Zone — being the Agricultural Zone — in Wilson County. The home is designed to accommodate up to 12 individuals and two staff members. 1

Testimony before the BZA reflects that the residents are, and will continue to be, children between the ages of 12 and 18. Some are abused and neglected, while others have been unruly at home. The home is described as a level-one facility — “not a lock-down facility.” Some of the inhabitants have been guilty of “passive delin-quen[cy] charges,” such as burglary and minor larceny, while some have “drug issues.” The home does not take children who have been guilty of violent crimes.

The majority of the children come from the Department of Children Services under a contract with the state. Approximately 25% of the residents are from Wilson County. The average stay is approximately 27 days. In 1996, the existing facility in Wilson County serviced 162 children. The director of the facility testified that there had been runaways in the past but that there were no incidents associated with those individuals. He stated that the Shelter had been at its present location, on a quarter-acre lot, for seven years with no problems regarding crime in the community.

When the children leave the facility, some go to foster homes; some return home; and some go to the Wilson County Youth Ranch, another group home in Wilson County. The home operated by the Shelter is described as a “temporary emergency shelter.” The facility is a United Way agency. It receives $45 per day per child from the state to help defray the daily per-child cost of $56. United Way and private fund-raising make up the difference.

II. The Opposition

The Shelter’s petition was met by a petition in opposition signed by 96 individuals who live in the area of the proposed site. Numerous people spoke in opposition at the hearing before the BZA.

Among the reasons given for opposing the Shelter’s petition were the following: because the “crime rate [is] climbing like it is”; there are elderly people in the community who don’t feel safe “by having this type of shelter put in their community”; the proposed home will depreciate the values of the surrounding properties; at “other facilities,” 2 there “has been a lot of robbery around the area, break-ins”; fear that someone will break out “and rob somebody, or rape[ ] one of the[ ] kids in the neighborhood”; because there is no public sewer “out there”; “won’t feel safe to let the kids roam around”; two people *340 can’t supervise “12 kids with this type background”; a nearby creek will rise and cover up the property in question; problems with sewage because of the composition of the soil; lack of water to the site; and similar complaints.

The neighbors’ vocal opposition was met by statements of the Shelter’s personnel to the effect that there was a water easement to the property; that a fire hydrant had already been purchased; and that the property had been approved by the Health Department for a sanitary septic tank system.

III.Planning Staff’s Recommendation

The Wilson County Planning Commission staff recommended approval of the Shelter’s petition “if it is found by the [BZA] to follow the intent of the A-l district.” The staff suggested that the BZA give “[c]areful consideration ... to the level of services available to” the property, and stated that

there is no public water along this portion of Highway 231 South and fire protection would be restricted accordingly. There’s no fire hydrant, and service would be provided by Emergency Management from a pumper truck. Staff is concerned with the lack of fire protection for this proposed group home.

IV.BZA’s Decision

In a three-to-one decision, the BZA denied the Shelter’s petition. As a basis for its decision, the BZA cited the proposed “location,” lack of fire protection, and the number of people at the group home on a daily basis.

V.The A-l Zone

As pertinent to the issues on this appeal, Wilson County’s A-l Agricultural Zone regulations provide as follows:

SECTION 5.20 AGRICULTURAL (A-1)
5.20.01 GENERAL INTENT
This district is intended to accommodate uses typically conducted in agricultural areas, in addition to rural density residential uses.
Within A-l Agricultural Districts as shown on the Official Zoning Atlas of Wilson County, the following regulations shall apply.
5.20.02 USES PERMITTED
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5.20.03 USES PERMISSIBLE ON APPEAL
The following uses may be permissible on appeal by the Board of Zoning Appeals in accordance with provisions contained in Section 6.40 of these regulations.
A. Aircraft landing field, hangars and equipment.
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B. Automobile graveyard;
C. Bicycle service and repair;
D. Cemetery;
E. Church;
F. Commercial animal facility;
G. Country Club;
H. Dog kennel;
I. Golf course;
J. Group home;
K. Hospital;
L. Library;
M. Livestock holding/feeding area;
N. Manufacturing incidental to retail utilizing no more than 35% of the area of structure for manufacturing;
O. Nursing home;
P. Recreational uses;
Q. Retirement center;
R.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.3d 338, 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 608, 1999 WL 685804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-county-youth-emergency-shelter-inc-v-wilson-county-tennctapp-1999.