It is well recognized in this jurisdiction that [a] circuit court's entry of
summary judgment is reviewed de novo. Syl. pt. 1, Painter v. Peavy, 192 W. Va. 189, 451
S.E.2d 755 (1994). Likewise, [w]here the issue on an appeal from the circuit court is
clearly a question of law or involving an interpretation of a statute, we apply a de novo
standard of review. Syl. Pt. 1, Crystal R.M. v. Charlie A.L., 194 W. Va. 138, 459 S.E.2d
415 (1995). Accordingly, we proceed de novo in this matter.
While the issue before this Court is to be resolved in accordance with the
provisions of W. Va. Code §§ 8-24-1,
et seq. (1969), we must examine not only such urban
and rural planning and zoning provisions and W. Va. Code 8A-7-12 (2004), but also their
context. We must also look at legislation which has preceded and followed the effective
period of those statutes,
i.e., July 1, 1969 to June 11, 2004, which also provided
authorizations to municipalities in West Virginia to plan the development of territory within
their jurisdictions and to classify and regulate through zoning how properties therein may
be used.
West Virginia provided the first legislative authorizations for municipal
planning and zoning in 1931 through the adoption of Chapter 8, Article 5 of the
West
Virginia Code. At that time, municipalities were granted the power:
to regulate and restrict the height, number or stories, and size of
buildings and any other structures, the percentage of lot that
may be occupied, the size of yards, courts, and other open
spaces, the density of population, and the location and use of
buildings, structures, and land for trade, industry, residence, or
other purpose.
W. Va. Code § 8-5-1 (1931). In furtherance of these purposes, municipalities were
permitted to divide their territories into districts of such number, shape and area as may be
deemed best suited to carry out the purposes of this article; and within such districts . . .
regulate and restrict the erection, construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair, or use of
buildings, structures, or land. W. Va. Code § 8-5-2 (1931). Any such regulation, however,
was required to be made in accordance with a comprehensive plan. W. Va. Code § 8-5-3
(1931). It is thus apparent that the adoption of a comprehensive plan for the development
of a municipality was a necessary prerequisite to the exercise by a municipality of the zoning
powers authorized by Article 5, including the division of a municipality's territory into
districts, because W. Va. Code § 8-5-3 (1931), provided that the authorized regulations
shall be in accordance with a comprehensive plan.
In 1959, the Legislature repealed the 1931 enactment of Article 5, Chapter 8,
as amended, and reenacted an entirely new Article 5, Chapter 8 entitled Urban and Rural
Planning and Zoning by passing Senate Bill 264. The introductory summary of Senate Bill
264 stated that it related:
to the development, through planning and zoning, of urban and
rural areas, and providing for the creation of city and county
planning commissions; for the authority of said planning
commissions to prepare comprehensive plans for the physical
development of territory within its jurisdictions; for the
approval of such comprehensive plans; . . . ; for subdivision
control and plat approval; for the issuance of improvement
location permits; for authority to zone both urban and rural
property. . . .
The Legislature declared that its intention in enacting this statutory scheme was to authorize
municipalities to create a planning commission to promote the orderly development [of
their territories and to] . . . encourage local units of government . . . to plan for the future
development of their communities. W. Va. Code § 8-5-1 (1959). The planning
commission was obligated to make and recommend for adoption to the governing body of
the [municipality] . . . a comprehensive plan for the physical development of the territory
within its jurisdiction. W. Va. Code § 8-5-16 (1959).
See also, W. Va. Code § 8-5-28
(1959) (obligating a municipal planning commission to adopt a comprehensive plan for the
development of the city . . .). The term comprehensive plan was defined as:
a complete comprehensive plan or any of its parts such as a
comprehensive plan of land use and zoning, of thoroughfares;
of sanitation; of recreation, and other related matters, and
including such ordinance or ordinances as may be deemed
necessary to implement such complete comprehensive plan or
parts thereof by legislative approval and provision for such
regulations as are deemed necessary and their enforcement[.]
W. Va. Code § 8-5-3(8) (1959). Unlike W. Va. Code § 8-5-28 (1959), which required a
municipality to have adopted a comprehensive plan as a precondition to its exercise of
authority to control subdivisions, W. Va. Code § 8-5-39 (1959) did not expressly declare that
the power of zoning could be exercised only after the adoption of a comprehensive plan.
Rather, that section declared that the zoning powers there conferred were to be an integral
part of the planning of areas[.] W. Va. Code § 8-5-39 (1959).
In 1969, the Legislature repealed Chapter 8, Article 5. However, the
provisions governing land use and zoning were recodified in Chapter 8, Article 24, entitled
Zoning and Planning. Provisions of the 1959 enactment cited above remained
substantively the same in this 1969 enactment. In 1973, the Legislature added the adoption
of a comprehensive plan and ordinance governing subdivision control as a specific
prerequisite for improvement location permits so that the statute could be harmonized with
W. Va. Code §8-25-35 (1969). W. Va. Code §8-24-36 (1973).
The statutes governing municipal land use and planning were once again
repealed, revised and reenacted in Chapter 8A of the
West Virginia Code in 2004. The
significance of the existence of a comprehensive plan is emphasized throughout this
legislation, including in the legislative findings which declare that [a] comprehensive plan
is a guide to a community's goals and objectives and a way to meet those goals and
objectives[.] W. Va. Code § 8A-1-1(a)(5) (2004). Accordingly, the Legislature
encourage[d] and recommend[ed] . . . [that a] comprehensive plan should be the basis for
land development and use, and be reviewed and updated on a regular basis [and] . . . [t]hat
planning commissions prepare a comprehensive plan and governing bodies adopt the
comprehensive plans[.] W. Va. Code § 8A-1-1(b) (3), (5) (2004). The 2004 legislation
defines comprehensive plan as a plan for physical development, including land use,
adopted by a governing body, setting forth guidelines, goals and objectives for all activities
that affect growth and development in the governing body's jurisdiction. W. Va. Code §
8A-1-2(c) (2004).
See also, W. Va. Code § 8A-3-1 (2004) (detailing the purpose and goals
of a comprehensive plan); W. Va. Code § 8A-3-4 (2004) (setting forth mandatory
components of a comprehensive plan); and W. Va. Code § 8A-3-5 (2004) (stating optional
components of a comprehensive plan).
With respect to zoning,
(See footnote 3) the 2004 legislation authorizes the governing body
of a municipality to regulate land use within its jurisdiction by: (1)
Adopting a
comprehensive plan; (2) working with the planning commission and the public to develop
a zoning ordinance;
and (3) enacting a zoning ordinance. W. Va. Code § 8A-7-1(a) (2004)
(emphasis added). Similar language is used with respect to a municipality's authority to
regulate subdivisions and land development through ordinances.
See W. Va. Code § 8A-4-1
(2004) (requiring adoption of a comprehensive plan
and an ordinance). Thus, in 2004, the
Legislature made clear that a municipality may not enact a valid zoning ordinance without
also adopting a comprehensive plan.
In summary, both the 1931 and 2004 legislative enactments governing
municipal planning and zoning clearly require the adoption of a comprehensive plan before
a municipality may exercise its zoning powers. The 1959 and 1969 legislative enactments,
however, refer to a comprehensive plan with respect to zoning, but do not contain the
mandatory precondition language similar to that contained in the 1931 and 2004. The 1959,
1969 and 2004 enactments do, however, contain such mandatory language when discussing
regulation of subdivisions, a topic not addressed in the 1931 enactment.
What is not clear under the provisions of the 1959 and 1969 enactments is
whether municipalities were required to adopt a comprehensive plan
before they undertook
to exercise the zoning powers therein given to them. This lack of clarity is highlighted by
the inclusion of the phrase, [a]fter a comprehensive plan . . . [has] been adopted by the
governing body of the municipality, which is in the 1959 and 1969 enactments as a
precondition to the exercise of the powers to control subdivision development, W. Va. Code
§ 8-5-28 (1959) and W. Va. Code § 8-24-28 (1969), and which is also in the 1973 enactment
as a precondition to the exercise of powers to regulate structures and their location, W. Va.
Code § 8-24-36 (1973). The phrase was not specifically included, however, in the 1959 and
1969 enactments as a precondition to the exercise of zoning powers.
It might therefore be argued that the Legislature intended by the inclusions and
the omission not to make the adoption of a comprehensive plan a precondition to the
exercise of the zoning powers. It might further be observed that, in 1973, the Legislature
specifically amended the 1969 enactment to make the adoption of a comprehensive plan a
precondition to the exercise of the powers to regulate structures and their location, but, for
whatever reason, did not also include that precondition to the exercise of zoning powers. In
other words, it may be argued that the inclusion by the Legislature of the express
preconditions in two settings necessarily negates implying the precondition in the third
setting. When one considers, however, other language in the 1969 enactment and in the title
to the 1959 enactment, the argument with respect to legislative intent becomes not only less
plausible but unconvincing.
Before the Legislature enacted the 1973 legislation to include the above quoted
phrase as a precondition to the exercise of the powers to regulate structures and their
location through the issuance of improvement location permits in W. Va. Code § 8-24-36
(1969), the 1969 enactment generally contained no language linking the exercise of those
powers to a comprehensive plan. As previously noted, that was not the case with respect to
the exercise of zoning powers. Both W. Va. Code § 8-5-39 (1959) and W. Va. Code § 8-24-
39 (1969) stated that the zoning powers therein authorized were to be deemed an integral
part of the planning of areas so that certain specified objectives would be lessened or
avoided, and so that other specified objectives would be promoted, all so that the objective
set forth in W. Va. Code § 8-24-1 (1969) could be further accomplished. The term
integral is defined as of, pertaining to, or belonging as a part of the whole; constituent
or component . . . necessary to the completeness of the whole[.] 990
Random House
Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (2d. Ed. 1998). Thus, it is apparent that the Legislature
regarded zoning authority as an essential part of the authority provided to municipalities to
comprehensive[ly] plan for the physical development of the territory within their
jurisdictions. W. Va. Code § 8-24-16 (1969).
Similarly, a comprehensive plan was described as being an integral part of
the enactment of zoning by this Court in
Harrison v. Town of Eleanor, 191 W. Va. 611,
618, 447 S.E.2d 546, 553 (1994). In
Harrison, the Court, after noting that the Town of
Eleanor had never undertaken to establish either a planning or zoning commission or to
enact a comprehensive plan, stated that [t]his fact establishes additional support for [the
ordinance at issue therein] being a building rather than a zoning ordinance, given that the
implementation of these statutory mechanisms [W. Va. Code § 8-24-1,
et seq. (1969)]
necessarily relate to and are an integral part of the enactment of zoning.
Harrison, 191
W. Va. at 618, 447 S.E.2d at 553. The appellee therein had contended that the ordinance
at issue was a zoning ordinance rather than a building ordinance governed by the provisions
of W. Va. Code § 8-12-13(a)(1)(1990). The Court relied upon the fact that the town had not
enacted a comprehensive plan as evidence that the ordinance was a building ordinance rather
than a zoning ordinance thus recognizing that the enactment of a comprehensive plan was
essential to the enactment of a zoning ordinance.
In
Singer v. Davenport, 164 W. Va. 665, 668, 264 S.E.2d 637, 640 (1980), this
Court noted that under the statutory scheme the comprehensive plan is to be used by the
Planning Commission to aid them in drawing up their subdivision ordinances. The
comprehensive plan was never intended to replace definite, specific guidelines; instead it
was to lay the groundwork for the future enactment of zoning laws. The Court agreed with
a statement contained in the comprehensive plan before it that the single most important
tool for Plan implementation is the zoning ordinance and concluded that the
comprehensive plan is merely the foundation for the control of future development and
growth[.]
Singer, 164 W. Va. at 668, 264 S.E.2d at 640.
Further support for the proposition that a zoning ordinance was a statutorily
authorized mechanism for carrying out a comprehensive plan is to be found in W. Va. Code
§ 8-24-47 (1969), which declares that [a]mendments, supplements or changes of the rules
and regulations of the zoning ordinance shall be considered as amendments to the
comprehensive plan. The word the is a definite article used, esp. before a noun, with
a specifying or particularizing effect, as opposed to the indefinite or generalizing force of
the indefinite article
a or
an[.] 1965
Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (2d.
Ed. 1998). Thus, when W. Va. Code § 8-24-47 (1969) makes reference to the
comprehensive plan, it is referring to the particular comprehensive plan adopted by the
municipality. This Code section does not make reference to a comprehensive plan, or to
a comprehensive plan, if any, adopted by the municipality. The article the denotes
something in existence and that the Legislature intended that a municipality adopt a
comprehensive plan either as part of, prior to, or contemporaneously with, the adoption of
a zoning ordinance.
In titling of the 1959 enactment Urban and Rural Planning and Zoning, the
Legislature plainly described its Act as relating to the development, planning and zoning of
urban and rural areas. Since the 1969 enactment was largely a recodification of the 1959
enactment, that title also expresses the intent of the Legislature with respect to the recodified
provisions of the 1959 Act. Thus, the Legislature expressed its intent that the development
of urban and rural areas was to be attained through the dual mechanisms of planning and
zoning, rather than the singular mechanism of either planning or zoning. Also, the stated
legislative intent in 1959 was to authorize municipalities to create planning commissions in
order to promote a planned, orderly, future development. W. Va. Code § 8-5-1 (1959).
Corpus Juris Secondum sets forth an excellent description of the relation
between zoning and planning. Therein it states:
Zoning is concerned primarily with the use of property,
while planning is broader in scope and connotes the
development of a community.
While the terms zoning and planning may be
considered so closely akin as to constitute a single concept, and
they are sometimes used interchangeably, in actuality the terms
are not synonymous or interchangeable. Master planning is
distinguishable from zoning, both in cause and effect, since they
serve different purposes. Zoning is concerned with whether a
particular area of a community may be used for a particular
purpose, but planning is broader in its concept. Planning
contemplates the implementation of an overall program or
design of the present and future physical development of the
total area and services of an existing or contemplated
municipality, while zoning is part of an end result or product of
planning, since it is through the medium of zoning regulations
that the gains and objectives of planning may be carried to
fruition. Thus, planning embraces zoning, but the converse is
not true.
* * *
Comprehensive plans and zoning ordinances are two
separate tools to be used in the scheme of municipal land
utilization, in that zoning is the means by which the
comprehensive plan is effectuated. A land use plan is simply a
basic scheme generally outlining planning and zoning
objectives in an extensive area and is not conclusive of the use
that can be made of the land involved. Although a planning
commission may recommend all kinds of desirable approaches
to land utilization and development, not all of these may
become eventually enforceable in a zoning ordinance.
However, a municipality may establish a comprehensive land
use plan and effectuate that plan through a scheme of
comprehensive zoning regulations.
In zoning and planning, the comprehensive plan is the
policy statement, and it is zoning ordinances that have the force
and effect of law. A city's zoning ordinance is the law, and its
comprehensive development plan is not. A comprehensive plan
is not a legally controlling zoning law, but serves as a guide to
local government agencies charged with making zoning
decisions. Nonetheless, zoning ordinances are required to
conform to and implement development plans, and where a
general plan is in effect when a zoning ordinance is passed, the
ordinance may be invalid if it conflicts with the plan.
101A C.J.S.
Zoning & Land Planning § 4 (2008) (footnotes omitted).
The 1969 enactment did not require that a municipality adopt a comprehensive
plan.
See W. Va. Code § 8-24-22 (1969) (authorizing municipality to reject plan and
requiring statement of reasons for rejection). If a municipality then decided not to enact a
comprehensive plan and we were to interpret the applicable statutes as allowing the
municipality, nevertheless, to exercise zoning powers provided therein, we would have the
anomaly of a municipality having been authorized to exercise zoning powers, but without
the powers respecting subdivision control, approval of plats and replats, and of regulating
structures and their location through the issuance of improvement location permits all of
which statutorily require a comprehensive plan . . .[to] have been adopted[.] W. Va. Code
§ 8-24-28 (1969), W. Va. Code § 8-24-36 (1973).
A municipality which adopted a comprehensive plan as a policy statement for
its physical development was authorized by the 1969 enactment to implement the plan
through subdivision control, improvement location permits and zoning. We are thus of the
opinion, and therefore hold, that the 1969 planning and zoning enactment, W. Va. Code §§
8-24-1,
et seq.(1969), when considered in its entirety and as interpreted by this Court in
Harrison,
supra, required a municipality to adopt a comprehensive plan either as part of,
prior to, or simultaneously with, the adoption of a zoning ordinance in order for the
municipality to exercise the zoning powers therein provided. Were we not to so hold, we
would have the further anomaly of the Legislature having imposed such requirement in the
period from 1931 to 1959 and in the period subsequent to June 10, 2004, but not in the
period from June 11, 1959, to June 10, 2004. We do not find that such was the intent of the
Legislature. In view of our holding, the Town of Paw Paw's 1972 zoning ordinance is not
saved by the provisions of W. Va. Code § 8A-7-12 (2004) because it was not legally adopted
under the 1969 enactment. Accordingly, it is invalid and unenforceable.
For the reasons stated above, we reverse the Circuit Court of Morgan County's
June 4, 2007, order and remand this matter for entry of an order granting summary judgment
to the Appellant on the basis that the 1972 zoning ordinance at issue is invalid.
The term zoning is statutorily defined as the division of a municipality or county
into districts or zones which specify permitted and conditional uses and development
standards for real property within the districts or zones. W. Va. Code § 8A-1-2(gg) (2004).