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WESTMINSTER HOMES, INC.; JOHN AND SUSAN EVANS; BAKULESH AND
VADANA NAIK, Petitioners v. TOWN OF CARY ZONING BOARD OF
ADJUSTMENT, Respondent, and JEFF AND LEIGH THORNE,
Intervenor/Respondents
Zoning--municipal--conditional use permit--subdivision--installation of gates in a fence
The Court of Appeals did not err by concluding that a conditional use municipal zoning
permit may not be construed to allow residents of a subdivision within the municipality to install
gates in a fence that serves as part of a buffer area between the subdivision and an adjoining
neighborhood in order to allow the residents access to portions of their property located within
the buffer, because: (1) the term fence as defined in the ordinance does not specifically provide
for gates, and the term gate is not defined in either the ordinance or the permit itself; (2) only
one gate is expressly mentioned in the permit to allow access to an easement for maintenance of
the sewer by the Town, and petitioner corporation could have easily specified or bargained for
additional individual access gates if it had originally so desired; (3) the permit states that the
fence is to be the same architecturally as two existing fences, neither of which has a gate; (4) the
language in the permit does not suggest the permission of residential access and use when it
states the buffer will remain in its present natural and undisturbed condition except fencing and
planting; (5) the language of the permit describes a desire for complete separation and privacy for
the neighborhood; (6) the drawing of the fence which accompanied the plans submitted to the
Town of Cary for the new subdivision did not include gates or an illustration of a gate; (7) the
requirement of an undisturbed buffer strongly suggests that gates are not permitted; (8) even after
petitioner corporation had subdivided the lots, it did not include gates for the anticipated
homeowners until asked by the individual petitioners; (9) there is no reasonable basis for tort
liability absent some willful action, and lack of access could potentially reduce petitioners' tax
liabilities since the residential area of their lots is reduced in value; (10) as the property has now
been subdivided and developed, residents of the subdivision would be left with substantially less
than the privacy for which they bargained if gates were permitted under the permit after giving
the full benefit of greater development to petitioners; (11) clear notice of the buffer area and
fence was given in petitioners' deeds and the recorded plat; and (12) even if the issue of an
unconstitutional taking of defendants' land was properly preserved, the Board's interpretation of
this permit is not an unconstitutional taking of petitioners' private property since there was no
imposition of new conditions on petitioners' use in this case.
Justice ORR dissenting.
Justice BUTTERFIELD joins in this dissenting opinion.
On discretionary review pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-31 of a
unanimous decision of the Court of Appeals, 140 N.C. App. 99, 535
S.E.2d 415 (2000), reversing and remanding an order signed
24 March 1999 by Cashwell, J., in Superior Court, Wake County.
Heard in the Supreme Court 15 May 2001.
Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard, L.L.P., by
Jim W. Phillips, Jr., and Kathleen M. Thornton, forpetitioner-appellants.
Charles M. Putterman for intervenor/respondent-appellees.
The Brough Law Firm, by William C. Morgan, Jr., on behalf of
the Town of Cary, amicus curiae.
LAKE, Chief Justice.
The question presented for review in this case is whether a
conditional use municipal zoning permit may be construed to allow
residents of a subdivision within the municipality to install
gates in a fence that serves as part of a buffer area between the
subdivision and an adjoining neighborhood, in order to allow the
residents access to portions of their property located within the
buffer. The Court of Appeals held that such gates are not
permitted. Westminster Homes, Inc. v. Town of Cary Zoning Bd. of
Adjust., 140 N.C. App. 99, 106, 535 S.E.2d 415, 419 (2000). For
the reasons hereinafter set forth, we affirm.
In 1992, petitioner Westminster Homes, Inc., a residential
housing developer, petitioned the Town of Cary to rezone various
properties surrounding the Harmony Hill Lane neighborhood to
allow for higher density residential subdivisions. Part of this
property, designated Tract 3 on Wake County Tax Map 543, later
became Westminster's Sherborne subdivision. Homeowners in the
Harmony Hill neighborhood filed protest petitions against
Westminster's request. After negotiations, which resulted in a
formal legal agreement, Harmony Hill residents withdrew their
protests, and Westminster agreed to certain developmental
restrictions on Tract 3.
Westminster petitioned the Town to rezone its property inaccordance with the agreement made with the residents of H
armony
Hill. In February 1993, the Cary Town Council approved some of
these restrictions as conditional use zoning permit Z-664-92-PUD.
This permit provides, in part, as follows:
1. There shall be a 50 foot undisturbed buffer
along the northern boundary of Tract 3 . . . . A
seven-foot treated wood fence shall be constructed and
maintained by the developer along the length of the
undisturbed buffer where it adjoins Parcels 19, 20, 21,
and 22, Wake County Tax Map 515. The fence shall be
the same architecturally and of the same materials as
the fence currently existing between Preston Woods and
the McLaurin Tract. The fence shall be located 45 feet
off the property line . . . and it shall be connected
to the existing gate over the sewer easement. The
fence shall be installed with the minimum of
disturbance to the buffer environment. The fence shall
be connected at each end to the fences to be
constructed under the respective agreements with Hester
and McLaurin in order to preserve continuity and
integrity. The fence will always be 45 feet from the
boundary line or any property corner, and shall
intersect at right angles. This fence will be
constructed at the time that a grading permit is issued
by the Town of Cary and be completed prior to recording
any final plats. The integrity and maintenance of this
fence will be the responsibility of the developer of
Tract 3 or new owner. A deed disclosure and recorded
plat shall be made by the developer so as to inform all
new residents of the placement, integrity and
maintenance of the new fence. Furthermore, a
disclosure as to maintenance responsibility shall be
part of the recorded plat and be subject to approval of
the Town Council of the Town of Cary.
2. There shall be no utility crossings, sewer
lines, or greenways in the 50 foot buffer, except where
the Town of Cary may require street or utility
connections to Parcel 14, Wake County Tax Map 515. The
buffer otherwise will remain in its present natural and
undisturbed condition, except fencing and plantings.
3. . . . Fast growing and evergreen trees such as
Leyland Cypress shall be planted in a type A buffer
standard to provide both optical and acoustical
screening in front of the fence.
Thus, the permit requires, inter alia, that a 50 foot
undisturbed buffer be maintained between the Harmony Hillneighborhood and Tract 3, and that this buffer include a seven-
foot high wooden fence offset forty-five feet from the rear
property line of Tract 3, which abuts Harmony Hill. The
developer of Tract 3 or new owner is responsible for the
integrity and maintenance of the fence, and all new residents
are to be made aware of the fence restriction through a deed
disclosure and the recorded plat.
With the parties having settled their preliminary
differences, plans for the Sherborne development proceeded. On
18 November 1993, the Town of Cary approved a plan for the
Sherborne subdivision. In October 1996, intervenor/respondents
Jeff and Leigh Thorne moved into the adjacent Harmony Hill
neighborhood. On 5 February 1997, Westminster filed the final
subdivision plat for the Sherborne subdivision with the Register
of Deeds. Both the plan approved in 1993 and the plat filed in
1997 showed that all the land in Tract 3, including the buffer
zone, would be subdivided.
(See footnote 1)
In December 1997, petitioners John and Susan Evans and
Bakulesh and Vadana Naik purchased lots and homes from
Westminster in the Sherborne subdivision. Petitioners' lots
abutted the intervenor/respondents' lot in the Harmony Hillneighborhood. Thus, the buffer zone runs along the back of and
through petitioners' properties. Approximately one-half of the
Evanses' lot and one-quarter of the Naiks' lot are part of the
designated buffer area. Even so, these lots, excluding those
portions which are in the buffer, are larger than many others in
the Sherborne development.
(See footnote 2)
After the individual petitioners occupied their lots, they
desired to access the portions of their respective lots located
behind the fence in the buffer zone. In December 1997,
petitioner Westminster, the developer of Sherborne, built a gate
in the fence for the Naiks. On 13 January 1998, the Town staff
with the Division of Planning and Zoning advised Westminster that
gates were not permitted in the fence. In June 1998, the Evanses
installed a gate in that portion of the fence in their backyard.
On 24 June 1998, a zoning enforcement officer for the Town
of Cary sent letters to petitioners informing them that they were
in violation of conditional use zoning permit Z-664-92-PUD
because they had installed gates in the fence. Petitioners filed
an appeal to the Town of Cary Zoning Board of Adjustment. On 10
August 1998, the Board of Adjustment held a hearing and heard
evidence regarding the appeal, and residents of the Harmony Hill
neighborhood, including intervenor/respondents, urged the Board
not to allow gates in the fence. Ultimately, the Board upheld
the zoning enforcement officer's interpretation of theconditional use permit and the determination that petitioners
were in violation of the permit.
Petitioners appealed to Superior Court, Wake County. At
this point, the Thornes formally intervened. After a hearing,
the court overturned the Board's ruling and ordered that the
Sherborne homeowners were permitted to install gates in the fence
in order to access that portion of their property located beyond
the fence in the buffer area. Intervenor/respondents appealed.
The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court, holding that
petitioners are prohibited from installing gates in the fence.
Westminster Homes, 140 N.C. App. at 106, 535 S.E.2d at 419.
The only issue before this Court is whether petitioners, as
residents of the Sherborne subdivision, may install individual
access gates in the fence required under the conditional use
zoning permit. Petitioners contend that the Board and the Court
of Appeals erred in holding that such gates are prohibited under
a proper construction of the conditional use zoning permit. We
disagree.
[C]onditional use zoning occurs when a governmental body,
without committing its own authority, secures a given property
owner's agreement to limit the use of his property to a
particular use or to subject his tract to certain restrictions as
a precondition to any rezoning. Chrismon v. Guilford County,
322 N.C. 611, 618, 370 S.E.2d 579, 583 (1988). [T]he practice
of conditional use zoning is an approved practice in North
Carolina, so long as the action of the local zoning authority in
accomplishing the zoning is reasonable, neither arbitrary norunduly discriminatory, and in the public interest. Id. at 617,
370 S.E.2d at 583; see also N.C.G.S. §§ 160A-381, 160A-382
(1999). [T]he only use which can be made of the land which is
conditionally rezoned is that which is specified in the
conditional use permit. Hall v. City of Durham, 323 N.C. 293,
300, 372 S.E.2d 564, 569 (1988).
Thus, a conditional use zoning permit is a specialized form
of a municipal ordinance, and it follows that the same rules of
construction apply to both. Courts apply the same rules of
construction when construing both statutes and municipal zoning
ordinances. Cogdell v. Taylor, 264 N.C. 424, 428, 142 S.E.2d 36,
39 (1965) (The rules applicable to the construction of statutes
are equally applicable to the construction of municipal
ordinances.); accord Coastal Ready-Mix Concrete Co. v. Board of
Comm'rs of Town of Nags Head, 299 N.C. 620, 629, 265 S.E.2d 379,
385 (1980); George v. Town of Edenton, 294 N.C. 679, 684, 242
S.E.2d 877, 880 (1978). The basic rule is to ascertain and
effectuate the intention of the municipal legislative body.
George, 294 N.C. at 684, 242 S.E.2d at 880.
Intent is determined according to the same general
rules governing statutory construction, that is, by
examining (i) language, (ii) spirit, and (iii) goal of
the ordinance. [Coastal Ready-Mix Concrete Co., 299
N.C. at 629, 265 S.E.2d at 385.] Since zoning
ordinances are in derogation of common-law property
rights, limitations and restrictions not clearly within
the scope of the language employed in such ordinances
should be excluded from the operation thereof. Yancey
v. Heafner, 268 N.C. 263, 266, 150 S.E.2d 440, 443
(1966).
Capricorn Equity Corp. v. Town of Chapel Hill Bd. of Adjust., 334
N.C. 132, 138-39, 431 S.E.2d 183, 188 (1993). We also are mindful of several other principles of general
statutory construction as we examine the issue before us. First,
[i]t is a well established principle of statutory construction
that a section of a statute dealing with a specific situation
controls, with respect to that situation, other sections which
are general in their application. State ex rel. Utils. Comm'n
v. Lumbee River Elec. Membership Corp., 275 N.C. 250, 260, 166
S.E.2d 663, 670 (1969); accord Three Guys Real Estate v. Harnett
County, 345 N.C. 468, 474, 480 S.E.2d 681, 684 (1997); Trustees
of Rowan Technical Coll. v. J. Hyatt Hammond Assocs., 313 N.C.
230, 238, 328 S.E.2d 274, 279 (1985). Second, if the words of a
statute are plain and unambiguous, the court need look no
further. Walker v. Board of Trustees of N.C. Local Governmental
Employees' Ret. Sys., 348 N.C. 63, 65-66, 499 S.E.2d 429, 430-31
(1998); In re Banks, 295 N.C. 236, 239, 244 S.E.2d 386, 388-89
(1978). Finally, if the language is unclear, judicial
construction may be required. Banks, 295 N.C. at 239, 244 S.E.2d
at 388-89.
Petitioners present a number of arguments to support their
position that individual access gates should be allowed in the
fence required under the conditional use permit. Petitioners
first argue that the Board and the Court of Appeals erred by
failing to interpret the term fence consistently throughout the
permit and with the Town of Cary Unified Development Ordinance.
They contend that terms should be interpreted consistently
throughout all zoning authorities and that the ordinance should
provide a context for the conditional use permit, which wouldfavor allowing individual access gates in all fences. Under the
circumstances of this case, we do not agree.
The term fence is defined in the Cary Unified Development
Ordinance as [a] structure used to delineate a boundary or as a
barrier or means of protection, confinement, or screening.
Cary, N.C., Unified Development Ordinance § 2.1.4 (1992)
(emphasis added). The term fence is not expressly defined in
permit Z-664-92-PUD. Neither the ordinance nor the permit
defines the term gate. The ordinance does contain, however,
language which is instructive in this case. The ordinance
states, under the heading General Rules of Construction, that
[i]n the event of any conflict between the limitations,
requirements, or standards contained in different provisions of
this Ordinance and applying to an individual use or structure,
the more restrictive provision shall apply. Unified Development
Ordinance § 2.1.1(b).
We are unable to discover any provision in the Cary Unified
Development Ordinance requiring terms to be defined in the exact
same manner in both the ordinance and conditional use permits.
Moreover, the more specific terms of the conditional use permit,
by design, are meant to place additional restrictions on land use
and control when applicable. Id.; see also Chrismon, 322 N.C. at
618, 370 S.E.2d at 583-84. Thus, the permit may provide for a
fence without gates, even if the ordinance was clear that gates
are usually part of a fence. Such is not the case here, as
gates are not mentioned in the ordinance. The conditional use
permit, relating to specific uses and conditions, does notnecessarily have to be interpreted consistently with the more
general ordinance.
Even if we assume, arguendo, that terms must be defined in
the same manner throughout all zoning authorities, the ordinance
is not specific in this case and thus does not control our
understanding of the term fence. The term fence as defined
in the ordinance does not specifically provide for gates, and the
term gate is not defined in either the ordinance or the permit
itself.
Petitioners claim that, under this interpretation, there are
possible challenges to countless conditional use rezoning
permits. We do not agree. Our interpretation of the conditional
use permit as specifically applied here and in relation to the
ordinance in this regard will not apply more broadly to produce
uncertainty and inconsistencies at the local level. Definitions
found in conditional use zoning permits can be different from
those found for the same terms in general ordinances because
conditional use permits are necessarily more specific in
application and restriction than general provisions. Conditional
use permit inconsistencies with more general ordinances are
normally contemplated as an acceptable means to require more
restrictive uses in a given specific area or location.
Petitioners further contend that, based on the plain
language of the conditional use permit, gates are permitted in
the fence at issue. They believe that nothing in the conditional
use permit suggests that this fence was intended to block an
owner's access to his property. As evidence in support of theirinterpretation, petitioners point to the fact that the Town
approved the subdivision and sale of the buffer to homeowners.
They contend that it is illogical to suggest that the Town
intended to block access to this portion of their land. They
argue that with a gate already allowed for the sewer easement, it
is inconsistent to say that the continuity and integrity of the
fence would be damaged by other gates. However, we believe a
close reading of the entire permit suggests that its clear
intention was to preclude all gates not expressly provided for in
the document.
Thus, we do not agree with petitioners' understanding of the
plain language of the permit. Only one gate is expressly
mentioned in the permit. This gate was placed in the fence to
allow access to an easement for maintenance of the sewer by the
Town. The permit does not suggest a reason for any other gates
in the fence. Westminster could have easily specified or
bargained for additional individual access gates if it had
originally so desired. It did not do so.
In addition, all other requirements in the permit support
our interpretation that additional gates are not permitted. The
permit states that the fence is to be the same architecturally
as two existing fences, neither of which has a gate. The fence,
together with [f]ast growing and evergreen trees, is to provide
both optical and acoustical screening between the neighbors.
The fence also is connected to other existing fences in order to
preserve continuity and integrity. The language that [t]he
buffer otherwise will remain in its present natural andundisturbed condition, except fencing and plantings, likewise
does not suggest the permission of residential access and use;
rather, it implies the opposite. It is true that in 1993 the
Town did approve Westminster's preliminary plan for Sherborne,
which included the subdivision of the buffer area by extension of
lateral boundary lines of lots to be sold into the buffer to the
adjacent boundary with Harmony Hill. This fact, however, is not
a persuasive indication of the intended extent of the permit to
include individual access gates. When examined in context, the
language of the conditional use permit itself describes a desire
for complete separation and privacy for the Harmony Hill
neighborhood. Taken together, these requirements do not lead to
or support petitioners' conclusion. The careful use of terms and
language in the permit conveys a clear desire for privacy through
a wide, comprehensive buffer which includes an architecturally
compatible fence restricting residential access and use.
Several other facts support our interpretation of the zoning
requirements. The drawing of the fence which accompanied the
plans submitted to the Town for the Sherborne subdivision did not
include gates or an illustration of a gate. The permit also
required the fence to be set forty-five feet off the property
line and the buffer itself to be left in an undisturbed state.
The requirement of an undisturbed buffer strongly suggests that
gates are not permitted. Easy access through such gates may
ultimately lead to a change in the fundamental nature of the
buffer area. For example, it is undisputed that the five feet of
buffer zone on the inside, or petitioners' side, of the fence hasnot remained in the intended natural state and has gradually
become part of petitioners' lawns. Allowing additional gates
may, however unintentionally, lead to a gradual degradation of
the environment specified in the permit. Taken together, these
requirements appear entirely contrary to a desire to provide easy
access for Sherborne residents. They do suggest, however, that
additional gates are not to be installed in the fence and,
perhaps, that the buffer was originally inadvertently subdivided
as indicated above.
We also note that the fence, as originally built, contained
only the one gate for the sewer easement. This fact is a strong
indication of the intent and understanding of the nature of both
the fence and the buffer area on the part of the Town and
Westminster. See Preyer v. Parker, 257 N.C. 440, 446, 125 S.E.2d
916, 920 (1962) (stating that the conduct of the parties
indicating the manner in which they themselves construe the
agreement will be given weight in the interpretation of the
instrument by the courts). It is quite unusual to build a fence
with no gates if such gates were originally contemplated, so that
one would have to return and, wastefully, tear the fence apart to
later install gates. Even after Westminster had subdivided the
lots, it did not include gates for the anticipated homeowners
until asked by the individual petitioners. These facts, taken
together with the plain language of the permit, are a strong
indication that the parties themselves originally understood the
permit to exclude individual access gates in the fence.
Petitioners further assert that a non-access interpretationwill lead to absurd or illogical results. They argue th
at they
will own inaccessible property for which they maintain tax and
tort liability. However, without access petitioners will hardly
be inviting or allowing other people to make use of the buffer
area, and only trespassers would likely gain access to this
undisturbed area. We thus conclude that under the circumstances
here, there would be no reasonable basis for tort liability
absent some willful action. See Nelson v. Freeland, 349 N.C.
615, 632, 507 S.E.2d 882, 892 (1998). With regard to tax
liability, the lack of access could potentially reduce
petitioners' tax liabilities, in that the residential area of
their lots is reduced in value.
Next, petitioners contend that the proper interpretation of
the conditional use permit, and zoning ordinances in general,
should favor the free use of property. See Yancey, 268 N.C. at
266, 150 S.E.2d at 443. Petitioners thus assert that zoning
ordinances should be strictly construed in favor of the landowner
and that courts should not presume intent to impose property
restrictions beyond those clearly set forth in the permit. While
ambiguous zoning statutes should be interpreted to permit the
free use of land, as discussed above, no such ambiguity exists
here. Even though the buffer and the fence restrict the use of
part of these lots, this limitation is permitted under the
circumstances. The permit is clear in its restrictions as to use
of the buffer area. It is to be undisturbed.
The permit is a result of a compromise bargain, an agreement
for higher density development by Westminster in exchange foradditional privacy protection for Harmony Hill. Westminster
could not have subdivided the property for the Sherborne
subdivision without this bargain, which removed respondents'
protests to Westminster's proposed rezoning. As the property has
now been subdivided and developed, Harmony Hill residents would
be left with substantially less than the privacy for which they
bargained if gates were permitted under the permit, after giving
the full benefit of greater development to Westminster and
petitioners.
Furthermore, clear notice of the buffer area and fence was
given in petitioners' deeds and the recorded plat. Westminster's
sale of the buffer area, not the Board's interpretation of the
ordinance, resulted in the contended claim which petitioners now
assert. Under the circumstances, the expressed intentions of the
permit for an extensive, composite privacy buffer must control.
Like the Board, we interpret the zoning ordinance as not
permitting additional gates in the fence, even if it restricts
the use of land in the Sherborne subdivision in this case.
Petitioners finally assert that if gates are not permitted,
this amounts to an unconstitutional taking of their land by the
Board. Petitioners raise this issue for the first time on appeal
to this Court. This Court has long held that issues and theories
of a case not raised below will not be considered on appeal, see,
e.g., Smith v. Bonney, 215 N.C. 183, 184-85, 1 S.E.2d 371, 371-72
(1939); Weil v. Herring, 207 N.C. 6, 10, 175 S.E. 836, 838
(1934), and this issue is not properly before this Court. In any
event, we do not consider the Board's interpretation of thispermit to be an unconstitutional taking of petitioners' private
property since there was no imposition of new conditions on
petitioners' use in this case, in that the Board merely applied
already-existing conditions. Further, this permit was not
imposed by a legislative or regulatory body, but was requested
and negotiated by the parties. Here, Westminster voluntarily
assumed these restrictions as a compromise that allowed it to
request a higher density residential zoning. '[O]ne who
voluntarily proceeds under a statute and claims benefits thereby
conferred will not be heard to question its constitutionality in
order to avoid its burdens.' Bailey v. State, 348 N.C. 130,
147, 500 S.E.2d 54, 64 (1998) (quoting Convent of Sisters of St.
Joseph v. City of Winston-Salem, 243 N.C. 316, 324, 90 S.E.2d
879, 885 (1956)).
We conclude that the additional, individual access gates
sought by petitioners are not permitted under conditional use
zoning permit Z-664-92-PUD. The Board has interpreted the
existing conditions of the permit consistently over time,
(See footnote 3)
and we
hold that its interpretation is reasonable in light of all the
circumstances of this case. From the language of the permit, as
well as the surrounding facts and circumstances, it is clear that
gates, other than the one specified for the sewer easement, are
not permitted in the fence. In this case, we are compelled toagree with intervenor/respondents that [g]ood fences make good
neighbors. Robert Frost, Mending Wall, in The Poetry of Robert
Frost 33, 33-34 (Edward Connery Lathem ed., Holt, Rinehart and
Winston 1969) (1914). Thus, for the reasons discussed above, the
decision of the Court of Appeals is
AFFIRMED.
No. 499PA00 - Westminster Homes, Inc. v. Town of Cary Zoning
Bd. of Adjust.
Justice ORR dissenting.
The bottom line of the majority opinion is, in effect, to
totally deprive a property owner of access to a portion of that
owner's land despite the fact that the owner continues to pay
taxes on and be liable for that property. In order to reach this
result, the majority concludes that a clearly ambiguous ordinance
is not ambiguous and that it is permissible for a term to have
different meanings and application within the same ordinance
without the ordinance ever specifying that such is the case. I
conclude for the reasons set forth below that the Cary ordinance
in question does not prohibit the petitioners from putting a gate
in the fence. Furthermore, even though the constitutionality of
this action by the Town of Cary was not raised below, I disagree
with the majority that it is not an unconstitutional taking. I
therefore respectfully dissent from this unwarranted disregard
for private property rights.
The majority holds that the term fence in the conditional
use ordinance has a meaning different from the meaning in the
Cary ordinance and in the language of Z-664-92-PUD itself.
However, such reasoning is contrary to an established canon of
statutory interpretation, which also applies to the
interpretation of municipal ordinances. See Woodhouse v. Board
of Comm'rs of Nags Head, 299 N.C. 211, 225, 261 S.E.2d 882, 891
(1980). The rules of statutory interpretation require statutes
to be construed as a whole, and not by the wording of anyparticular section or part. McLeod v. Board of Comm'rs of
Carthage, 148 N.C. 77, 85, 61 S.E. 605, 607 (1908). Thus, words
that carry a specific definition in one part of a statute are
presumed to carry that same definition in all other parts. As
the intervenor concedes, the conditional use permit is part of
the Cary ordinance. Therefore, unless the language expressly
states otherwise, we must presume that the application of the
definition of fence in the conditional use ordinance is
consistent with its definition in the Cary ordinance. If you can
have a gate in your fence under the Cary ordinance in other
situations, then you can have one under these facts unless
something to the contrary specifically states otherwise.
Following this canon of statutory interpretation, the term
fence in the ordinance must include gates. The term fence as
used throughout the Cary ordinance indicates the Town's intent to
allow gates. For example, the ordinance requires solid fences
around play areas at day-care homes. Cary, N.C., Unified
Development Ordinance §§ 13.1.7, 13.1.8 (1992). These sections
do not mention gates. However, gates must be included in the
term fence; otherwise, children would have to be dropped over
the fence in order to access the playground.
Language included in the Cary ordinance after Z-664-92-PUD
was passed also provides insight on the definition of fence. The
ordinance now provides that [n]o sign or logo shall be permitted
to be located on a fence. Cary, N.C., Unified Development
Ordinance § 13.1.10(d) (1992). This language does not
specifically prohibit signs and logos on gates, but the draftersclearly intended to do so. Any other interpretation would result
in allowing signs and logos on gates but not on fences. The
language of these two sections indicates that the term fence in
the Cary ordinance includes gates installed within a fence.
Because we must construe statutes as a whole and because the
conditional use permit is part of the Cary ordinance, we must
assume that the term fence as used in Z-664-92-PUD is defined
consistent with that term's usage throughout the general zoning
ordinance.
Aside from this established canon of statutory
interpretation, the language of the conditional use ordinance
itself indicates Cary's specific intent to define terms in the
conditional use ordinance consistently with the zoning ordinance.
The conditional use ordinance refers to at least one definition
in the Cary ordinance, providing that trees in the undisturbed
buffer area should be of the type 'A' buffer standard.
Reference to a type 'A' buffer standard is hopelessly unclear
unless it was meant to carry the same meaning as those terms in
the town ordinance. Thus, since Cary meant to use that term
consistently, it follows that, absent language to the contrary,
Cary intended to use fence consistently as well.
The assumption that terms carry the same meaning in the Cary
ordinance and the conditional use ordinance can, however, be
overcome by a clear indication that the terms were meant to have
different meanings. That simply was not done in this case. The
intervenors argue that the language of Z-664-92-PUD clearly
indicates an intent to use a definition of fence that does notinclude gates. I disagree. The intervenors contend that because
the land is an undisturbed buffer, it should not be accessible.
However, the text of Z-664-92-PUD indicates that the Town
anticipated access to the buffer zone. Z-664-92-PUD requires the
fence to be maintained and trees to be planted and replaced if
necessary. Planting trees and maintaining a fence require people
to walk in the buffer zone, thus showing that the Town
anticipated some access to the buffer zone.
Furthermore, after Z-664-92-PUD was passed, Cary defined
undisturbed buffer as a unit of land containing sufficient
quality and quantity of vegetation to meet the requirements of
Chapter 14, Part 1 of this Ordinance. Such buffer shall not be
graded, nor shall any development occur within such buffer.
Cary, N.C., Unified Development Ordinance § 2.1.4 (1992).
Therefore, undisturbed buffer means that the land may not be
graded, or developed, but it does not mean that access to the
land is prohibited.
The intervenors contend that the conditional use ordinance
requires the fence to preserve continuity and that a fence with
gates is not continuous. However, continuity refers to the
requirement that the fence connect at each end to already
existing fences. They also argue that the fence must be the
same architecturally as the Preston Woods fence and that
because the Preston Woods fence has no gates, neither may the
petitioners' fence. However, the installation of gates does not
prevent a fence from being the same architecturally. In fact,
the gates at issue in this case are made of the same materials,are the same size, and are thus identical architecturally to the
rest of the fence.
The intervenors further contend that since Z-664-92-PUD
specifies one gate, additional gates are excluded. They argue
the canon of expressio unius est exclusio alterius -- to express
or include one thing implies the exclusion of the other, Black's
Law Dictionary 602 (7th ed. 1999) -- but this canon applies only
when the thing mentioned and the thing excluded are sufficiently
similar to warrant the inference. The gate mentioned in the
ordinance is for city sewer access and was required, while the
gates at issue here are for private use and are optional. The
gates at issue in this case differ too much from the sewer gates
to apply the canon of expressio unius est exclusio alterius.
Instead of prohibiting other gates, I believe specifying one gate
indicates that gates are permissible. Had the Town intended to
prohibit other gates, it could have easily done so by providing
the appropriate language.
Finally, this Court has held that '[z]oning regulations are
in derogation of common law rights and they cannot be construed
to include or exclude by implication that which is not clearly
their express terms.' Yancey v. Heafner, 268 N.C. 263, 266, 150
S.E.2d 440, 443 (1966) (quoting 1 E.C. Yokley, Zoning Law and
Practice § 184 (2d. ed. Supp. 1962)). Because Z-664-92-PUD
does not expressly prohibit gates, we cannot imply such a
restriction, nor can we guess at what was intended.
While the majority quotes Robert Frost that [g]ood fences
make good neighbors, I fail to see how a solid, seven- foottall, wooden fence with no gates or other means of access to the
owner's property on the other side (short of pole-vaulting over
the fence) is very neighborly. Perhaps the property owners from
Sherborne subdivision can drive around to Harmony Hill
subdivision, stop in front of their neighbors' homes and gaze
longingly at the fifty-foot strip of their property to which they
have no access. Maybe even on a good day, they will be invited
to walk across their neighbor's backyard to actually stand on the
property they own. Under the majority's view, that is their only
hope.
Justice Butterfield joins in this dissenting opinion.
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