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NO. COA02-777
NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
Filed: 15 April 2003
ALAN DEAN LAMBETH,
PETITIONER,
v
.
TOWN OF KURE BEACH; and KURE BEACH BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT,
RESPONDENTS.
Appeal by petitioner from order signed 24 January 2002 by
Judge Paul L. Jones in New Hanover County Superior Court. Heard in
the Court of Appeals 25 March 2003.
Roger Lee Edwards, P.A., by Roger Lee Edwards, for petitioner-
appellant.
Nunalee & Nunalee, L.L.P., by Mary Margaret McEachern Nunalee,
for respondents-appellees.
TYSON, Judge.
I. Background
On 15 March 2001, Alan Dean Lambeth (petitioner) applied for
a permit from Respondent Town of Kure Beach (Town) to widen his
driveway from nineteen feet to twenty-four feet from his residence
to 5th Avenue North. Petitioner sought to widen his driveway to
provide easier access into and out of vehicles for the wheelchair
of his handicapped daughter. Petitioner had previously constructed
a five foot wide concrete walkway extending from his house across
the street right-of-way to L. Avenue.
At the time of petitioner's application, the Town's ordinance,
read as follows:
Except as provided in section 5-62, no
building, building repairs, remodeling,installation, driveway, parking lot, or other
ground covering impervious surface, other
construction or demolition shall begin in the
town until a permit has been obtained from the
building inspector. No permit shall be issued
if the total square footage of the buildings
and impervious ground covering surface will
exceed sixty-five (65) percent of the lot. . .
. Driveways across the town right-of-way
shall be limited to twenty-four (24) feet
wide.
Kure Beach Code § 5-61.
Petitioner's permit was denied by the Town's building
inspector on the basis that the expansion would violate the
ordinance as it had been applied to other landowners. Petitioner
appealed to Respondent Kure Beach Board of Adjustment (Board).
The building inspector testified before the Board to the history
and purpose of the ordinance. Petitioner responded that he was not
seeking a variance and claimed that the building inspector had
wrongly interpreted the ordinance. Petitioner asked the Board to
reverse the inspector's interpretation and to grant his permit.
The Board found as fact that the inspector had interpreted the
ordinance uniformly in cases involving [o]ver two hundred
residences. The Board affirmed the building inspector's decision
on 3 May 2001.
Petitioner petitioned for a writ of certiorari and filed a
complaint on 23 May 2001. On 19 June 2001, the Town amended its
ordinance to limit landowners to twenty-four feet of impervious
surface across any Town right-of-way. Respondents filed an answer
and motion to dismiss on 20 June 2001. On 5 July 2001,
respondents' motion to dismiss was denied and certiorari wasgranted. On 24 January 2002, an order was signed dismissing
petitioner's action and entering judgment in favor of respondents.
Petitioner appeals.
II. Issues
Petitioner argues that (1) the trial court erred by
interpreting the Kure Beach Ordinance to include the area of
sidewalks into the maximum areas for driveways, and (2) that the
trial court applied the wrong standard of review in its
interpretation. Although petitioner alleges in his brief that his
argument concerning standard of review was an assignment of error
in the record, we do not find this assignment of error. We do not
address this argument because it was not preserved pursuant to Rule
10(a) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.
Respondents cross-assign two errors on appeal: (1) whether the
trial court erred in failing to rule on the Town's argument that
certain revisions to the ordinance rendered petitioner's claim
moot, and (2) whether the trial court should have dismissed
petitioner's claims for unripeness because he failed to exhaust all
administrative remedies. We decline to address respondents' second
cross-assignment of error. There is no evidence in the record,
aside from respondents' assigning it as error, that it was argued
at trial and properly preserved for appeal under North Carolina
Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(b)(1). The two issues on appeal are
(1) the threshold question of mootness and (2) whether the trial
court erred in its interpretation of the Kure Beach ordinance.
III. Mootness
Respondents argue that petitioner's claim was rendered moot by
the amendment to the ordinance.
The Board amended the ordinance on 19 June 2001, replacing the
word, driveways, with the phrase, [a]ny type of impervious
surface. Respondents contend that this modification did not
render the ordinance more restrictive, but only clarified the terms
of the prior ordinance.
Respondents rely upon Davis v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 41
N.C. App. 579, 255 S.E.2d 444 (1979) to assert that dismissal of an
appeal is proper where the ordinance was amended to allow the use
petitioner sought during pendency of the appeal. We find Davis
irrelevant at bar. Davis's claim on appeal became moot because the
ordinance modification gave petitioner the relief he sought.
The amendment to the ordinance at bar has not changed
petitioner's position in relying upon the prior ordinance and did
not give him the relief sought. Petitioner's claim and injury
remain viable. The amendment to the ordinance further restricts
petitioner's use of his property. Petitioner was entitled to rely
upon the language of the ordinance in effect at the time he applied
for the permit. See Northwestern Financial Group v. County of
Gaston, 329 N.C. 180, 405 S.E.2d 138 (1991).
Respondents argue that petitioner did not argue or show a
vested right in the ordinance he relied upon.
A party's common law right to develop and/or
construct vests when: (1) the party has made,
prior to the amendment of a zoning ordinance,
expenditures or incurred contractual
obligations substantial in amount, incidental
to or as part of the acquisition of thebuilding site or the construction or equipment
of the proposed building, Town of
Hillsborough v. Smith, 276 N.C. at 55, 170
S.E.2d at 909; (2) the obligations and/or
expenditures are incurred in good faith, Id.;
(3) the obligations and/or expenditures were
made in reasonable reliance on and after the
issuance of a valid building permit, if such
permit is required, authorizing the use
requested by the party, Id. . . . ; and (4)
the amended ordinance is a detriment to the
party. See Russell v. Guilford County, 100
N.C. App. 541, 545, 397 S.E.2d 335, 337
(1990); . . . The burden is on the landowner
to prove each of the above four elements.
Browning-Ferris Industries v. Guilford County Bd. of Adj., 126 N.C.
App. 168, 171-72, 484 S.E.2d 411, 414 (1997).
Presuming petitioner failed to show a vested right in the
original ordinance, it is not fatal to his claim. Petitioner was
never issued the permit required to expand his driveway and did not
apply for another permit or a variance under the amended ordinance.
The building inspector's decision not to grant defendant's permit
was based upon his interpretation of the original ordinance. The
Board and trial court reviewed and affirmed that decision. The
ordinance was not amended until after the Board had acted on
petitioner's application. Respondents' cross-assignment of error
is overruled.
IV. Interpretation of the Ordinance
Petitioner argues that the trial court erred in its
interpretation of the Kure Beach Ordinance. The ordinance requires
the total square footage of the buildings and impervious ground
covering surface to not exceed sixty-five percent of the area of
the lot. The ordinance also limits driveways across town right-of-ways to twenty-four feet in width. The trial court's sole
conclusion of law was that the evidence was insufficient to grant
petitioner relief.
The trial court sits as an appellate court and may review
both (i) sufficiency of the evidence presented to the municipal
board and (ii) whether the record reveals error of law.
Capricorn
Equity Corp. V. Town of Chapel Hill, 334 N.C. 132, 136, 431 S.E.2d
183, 186 (1993). The whole record test applies to findings of fact
and compels a determination of whether the findings of fact of the
Board are supported by competent evidence in the record.
Id.
Questions of law presented are reviewable
de novo. Id. at 137, 431
S.E.2d at 187.
The trial court's order lists the facts of the case but
fails to determine whether the Board's findings of fact were
supported by competent evidence. The trial court's order does not
find facts but merely sets forth a chronology of the case. The
sole conclusion of law holds for the respondents because the
petitioner presented insufficient evidence to warrant relief.
Petitioner appeals from the trial court ruling accepting the
Board's interpretation of the statute.
The Town has authority under N.C.G.S. § 160A-307 to restrict
the width of driveways through ordinances. A city may by
ordinance regulate the size, location, direction of traffic flow,
and manner of construction of driveway connections into any street
or alley. N.C.G.S. § 160A-307 (2001).
Zoning ordinances derogate common law property rights and mustbe strictly construed in favor of the free use of property.
See
Yancey v. Heafner, 268 N.C. 263, 266, 150 S.E.2d 440, 443 (1966);
City of Sanford v. Dandy Signs, Inc., 62 N.C. App. 568, 569, 303
S.E.2d 228, 230 (1983). When statutory language is clear and
unambiguous, 'words in a statute must be construed in accordance
with their plain meaning unless the statute provides an alternative
meaning.'
Proctor v. City of Raleigh Bd. of Adjust., 140 N.C.
App. 784, 85-86, 538 S.E.2d 621, 622 (2000) (quoting
Kirkpatrick v.
Village Council, 138 N.C. App. 79, 86, 530 S.E.2d 338, 343 (2000)).
The plain meaning of the Town's ordinance prior to its
amendment does not support the decision of the Board as affirmed by
the trial court. The ordinance unambiguously states that
[d]riveways across the town right-of-way shall be limited to
twenty-four (24) feet wide. Driveways are by definition and
common usage for driving.
Webster's Third New International
Dictionary 692 (1966) (defining driveway as a private road giving
access from a public way to a building or buildings on abutting
grounds. ) Sidewalks or walkways are for walking.
See Webster's
Third New International Dictionary 2113
, 2572
. Both driveways and
walkways may be considered impervious surfaces if constructed to
prevent water seepage. The ordinance did not limit all impervious
surface across the town right-of-way to twenty-four feet, only
[d]riveways, prior to amendment. Petitioner's driveway measured
nineteen feet wide at the time of application. He was entitled to
an expansion of five additional feet. It is immaterial that
petitioner had previously installed a walkway across the right-of-way of another street. The total impervious area did not and would
not exceed sixty-five percent of the area of the lot with the
driveway extended to twenty-four feet.
While we are cognizant of the ordinance's objective to prevent
flooding, this particular issue will not rise again. The Town's
amending the ordinance after its decision on petitioner's
application is some evidence, if not an implied admission, that the
language of the prior ordinance permitted the expanded driveway.
It was error for the building inspector and Board to deny
petitioner the permit he was entitled to as a matter of law. We
hold that petitioner is entitled to a permit to extend his driveway
under the prior ordinance.
Reversed and Remanded.
Judges WYNN and STEELMAN concur.
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