1. A motion for summary judgment should be granted only when it is clear that there is
no genuine issue of fact to be tried and inquiry concerning the facts is not desirable to clarify the
application of the law. Syl. pt. 3, Aetna Casualty and Surety Company v. Federal Insurance
Company of New York, 148 W.Va. 160, 133 S.E.2d 770 (1963).
2. 'The general rule is, that when an act of the Legislature is repealed without a saving
clause, that it must be considered, except as to transactions passed and closed, as if it had never
existed.' Syl. pt. 1, Curran v. Owens, 15 W.Va. 208 (1879). Chesapeake and Potomac Co. v.
State Tax Department, 161 W.Va. 77, 83, 239 S.E.2d 918, 922 (1977).
3. Where a county land use ordinance concerning procedures for amending the county's
comprehensive plan and related ordinances relies solely upon a statutory scheme previously
repealed by the West Virginia Legislature, the ordinance is without authority to mandate the
procedures to be followed by the county commission and planning commission in adopting or
rejecting proposed amendments to the comprehensive plan and related ordinances.
Ketchum, Justice:
This declaratory judgment action is before this Court upon the appeal of the County
Commission of Jefferson County, West Virginia, (hereinafter appellant or County
Commission) from the February 26, 2008, order of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County
granting summary judgment in favor of an entity known as Jefferson County Citizens for
Economic Preservation (hereinafter appellee). In the proceedings below, the appellee, a non-
profit corporation consisting of various property owners and land use professionals, challenged
the March 2005 adoption by the County Commission of amendments to the Jefferson County
Zoning and Land Development Ordinance. The principal challenge was to an amendment which
lowered the permitted density in the County's rural district by decreasing the number of lots
allowed from 1 lot for every 10 acres to 1 lot for every 15 acres.
In granting summary judgment, the Circuit Court determined that the County
Commission failed to follow the relevant statutory scheme in adopting the amendments and that
the amendments were, therefore, invalid. The County Commission states that the statutory
scheme cited by the Circuit Court and the appellee was repealed prior to 2005 and replaced by a
new statutory procedure which the County Commission followed. Accordingly, the County
Commission asks this Court to reinstate the amendments.
This Court has before it the petition for appeal filed by the County Commission, the
response, all matters of record and the briefs and argument of counsel. The respective positions
of the parties concerning the merits of the 2005 amendments to the Ordinance, and the degree to
which the County's rural district should be developed, are not matters for this Court to decide.
Instead, the issue before this Court is limited to whether the Circuit Court was correct in its
determination that the County Commission failed to follow the relevant statutes in adopting the
amendments to the Ordinance.
Upon review, this Court is of the opinion that the Circuit Court's determination, that the
prior statutory scheme should have been followed, was incorrect. Consequently, the February 26,
2008, order granting summary judgment in favor of the appellee is reversed, and this action is
remanded to the Circuit Court for the entry of an order granting judgment in favor of the County
Commission, reinstating the 2005 amendments to the Jefferson County Zoning and Land
Development Ordinance.
The Jefferson County Zoning and Land Development Ordinance was first adopted in
1988 and has been amended several times. As reflected in its Minutes, the County Commission
voted in January 2005 to hold public hearings and accept written comments upon a new set of
amendments, prepared by the County Commission, which included a proposal to lower the
permitted density in the County's rural district by decreasing the number of lots allowed from 1
lot for every 10 acres to 1 lot for every 15 acres. That proposal would constitute a change of §
5.7(d)1. of the existing Ordinance.
By order of the County Commission, notices of the upcoming hearings were published in
the Spirit of Jefferson Advocate, a local newspaper. Soon after, public hearings were conducted
on February 23 and March 3, 2005. Although the record before this Court includes neither
transcripts of the hearings nor the written comments concerning the amendments submitted by
the participants, the Minutes of the County Commission reveal that members of both the County
Commission and the Jefferson County Planning Commission, representatives of the appellee and
others attended the hearings.
Following the hearings, the County Commission, on March 17, 2005, asked the Planning
Commission to offer comment upon the compatibility of the amendments with the County's
Comprehensive Plan concerning land development. On March 22, 2005, the Planning
Commission, by unanimous vote, determined that the amendments were compatible with the
Comprehensive Plan. On March 23, 2005, the County Commission adopted the new set of
amendments to the Jefferson County Zoning and Land Development Ordinance. As a result, §
5.7(d)1. of the Ordinance was changed, thus decreasing the number of lots allowed in the rural
district from 1 lot for every 10 acres to 1 lot for every 15 acres. The amendments were effective
as of April 8, 2005.
In May 2005, the appellee, Jefferson County Citizens for Economic Preservation, filed a
petition in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County for a writ of certiorari or, in the alternative, for
declaratory relief, alleging that the 2005 amendments, including the change to § 5.7(d)1., were
unlawfully adopted and unfairly diminished the value of real property in the rural district.
Subsequently, the appellee filed an amended complaint and cited W.Va. Code, 53-3-1 (1923), et
seq., and W.Va. Code, 55-13-1 (1941), et seq., respectively, as conferring jurisdiction in the
Circuit Court with regard to certiorari and the requested declaratory relief. On July 8, 2005, the
Circuit Court entered an order concluding that certiorari is inappropriate in this matter and that
the litigation should proceed as an action for declaratory judgment. See, W.Va. R. Civ. P. 57
(providing that the procedure for obtaining declaratory relief under W.Va. Code, 55-13-1, et. seq.,
shall be in accordance with the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure). The appellee does not
challenge the July 8, 2005, order.
At the heart of the controversy is § 12.2(a) of the Jefferson County Zoning and Land
Development Ordinance. That section, entitled Procedure for Amendment, was in effect
during the consideration and adoption of the 2005 amendments to the Jefferson County
Ordinance.
Pursuant to § 12.2(a), all amendments to the Ordinance were to be adopted according to
the procedures set forth in W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), through W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969).
Those statutes, which encompass rural planning at the county level, require that the county
planning commission, rather than the county commission, publish notices of, and conduct public
hearings concerning, proposed amendments to the county comprehensive plan and related
ordinances. Moreover, if approved, the planning commission is required to formally adopt the
amendments and recommend and certify them to the county commission. Thus, because the
County Commission in this action, rather than the Planning Commission, published the notices
and conducted the public hearings, the appellee alleged in the amended petition that the 2005
amendments to the Ordinance were invalid. In addition, the appellee alleged that the 2005
amendments to the Ordinance were invalid because, other than determining their compatibility
with the Comprehensive Plan, there was no formal adoption, recommendation and certification
of the amendments by the Jefferson County Planning Commission for the County Commission's
review.
(See footnote 1)
In response, the County Commission referred to the fact that, § 12.2(a) of the Ordinance
notwithstanding, the West Virginia Legislature, in 2004, repealed W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969),
through W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969), and nearly all of chapter 8, article 24. Those provisions
were replaced by the West Virginia Land Use Planning Act, W.Va. Code, 8A-1-1 (2004), et seq.,
effective June 11, 2004. According to the County Commission, even though public hearings
were conducted upon the amendments to the Ordinance, no hearings were required under the
relevant provisions of the new West Virginia Land Use Planning Act, since all activity
concerning the proposed amendments to the Ordinance occurred in 2005. Consequently, the
County Commission asked the Circuit Court to uphold the March 23, 2005, adoption of the
amendments.
The action proceeded in due course, and on February 21, 2007, the Circuit Court denied
the County Commission's motion for summary judgment. Noting that the West Virginia Land
Use Planning Act validated prior ordinances, such as § 12.2(a), the Circuit Court indicated that §
12.2(a) and the former statutory scheme referenced therein, W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), through
W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969), would control whether the 2005 amendments to the Ordinance were
properly adopted.
Thereafter, the County Commission filed a second motion for summary judgment
alleging, inter alia, that, even if the former statutory scheme applied, it complied with those
provisions by conducting the public hearings with members of the Planning Commission in
attendance and by obtaining the Planning Commission's subsequent determination that the
proposed amendments to the Ordinance were compatible with the Comprehensive Plan.
Nevertheless, the appellee filed a motion for summary judgment, asking the Circuit Court to
invalidate the amendments to the Ordinance for failure by the County Commission to follow §
12.2 and W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), through W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969).
On February 26, 2008, the Circuit Court entered an order granting summary judgment in
favor of the appellee, Jefferson County Citizens for Economic Preservation, thereby invalidating
the 2005 amendments to the Ordinance. Relying upon § 12.2 and the former statutory scheme,
the Circuit Court concluded that the process surrounding the consideration of the amendments
was defective because the County Commission, rather than the Planning Commission, published
the notices and conducted the public hearings and because, other than determining compatibility
with the Comprehensive Plan, the Planning Commission failed to formally adopt, recommend
and certify the amendments for the County Commission's review.
The County Commission appeals to this Court from the February 26, 2008, order.
Pursuant to Rule 56 of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is
proper where the record demonstrates that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. See generally, Cleckley,
Davis and Palmer, Litigation Handbook on West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, 1110-1147
(3rd ed. Juris Pub. 2008); 11A M. J., Judgment and Decrees § 217.1-217.5 (Matthew Bender &
Co. 2007).
This Court's standards of review concerning summary judgments are well settled. As
syllabus point 3 of Aetna Casualty and Surety Company v. Federal Insurance Company of New
York, 148 W.Va. 160, 133 S.E.2d 770 (1963), holds: A motion for summary judgment should
be granted only when it is clear that there is no genuine issue of fact to be tried and inquiry
concerning the facts is not desirable to clarify the application of the law. Syl. pt. 2, Jackson v.
Putnam County Board of Education, 221 W.Va. 170, 653 S.E.2d 632 (2007); syl. pt. 1, Mueller
v. American Electric Power Energy Services, 214 W.Va. 390, 589 S.E.2d 532 (2003). See also,
Southern Electrical Supply v. Raleigh County National Bank, 173 W.Va. 780, 782, 320 S.E.2d
515, 517 (1984) (summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues of material
fact in dispute, and the matter can be decided by application of rules of law).
Upon appeal, the entry of a summary judgment is reviewed by this Court de novo.
Angelucci v. Fairmont General Hospital, 217 W.Va. 364, 368, 618 S.E.2d 373, 377 (2005); syl.
pt. 1, Koffler v. City of Huntington, 196 W.Va. 202, 469 S.E.2d 645 (1996); syl. pt. 1, Painter v.
Peavy, 192 W.Va. 189, 451 S.E.2d 755 (1994). Also reviewed de novo is a circuit court's
resolution of legal questions in a declaratory judgment action. In Cox v. Amick, 195 W.Va. 608,
466 S.E.2d 459 (1995), this Court stated: [b]ecause the purpose of a declaratory judgment action
is to resolve legal questions, a circuit court's ultimate resolution in a declaratory judgment action
is reviewed de novo; however, any determinations of fact made by the circuit court in reaching its
ultimate resolution are reviewed pursuant to a clearly erroneous standard. 195 W.Va. at 612,
466 S.E.2d at 463. Syl. pt. 2, Blankenship v. City of Charleston, 223 W.Va. 822, 679 S.E.2d 654
(2009); syl. pt. 1, Flanagan v. Stalnaker, 216 W.Va. 436, 607 S.E.2d 765 (2004); syl. pt. 1,
Butler v. Price, 212 W.Va. 450, 574 S.E.2d 782 (2002).
The material facts underlying the procedures followed by the County Commission in the
adoption of the 2005 amendments to the Ordinance are not in dispute. All activity with regard to
the consideration and adoption of the amendments to the Ordinance occurred in 2005, after the
June 11, 2004, effective date of the West Virginia Land Use Planning Act containing W.Va.
Code, 8A-1-1 (2004), et seq. The focus of the controversy concerns Jefferson County Zoning
and Land Development Ordinance § 12.2, entitled Procedure for Amendment, which states:
After the adoption of this Ordinance, all amendments to it shall be adopted
according to the procedures set forth in sections eighteen through twenty-three of
Chapter 8, Article 24 of the West Virginia Code, as amended; except, that public
publication of notice of the date, time and place of hearing upon amendment of
the zoning ordinance need be only fifteen or more days prior to the date set for
such hearing; and except that if the County Commission desires an amendment, it
may direct the Planning Zoning Commission to prepare an amendment and submit
it to the public hearing within sixty (60) days after formal written request by the
County Commission.
A careful reading of § 12.2 reveals no mandatory requirements concerning the process of
amending the Ordinance except by reference to W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), through W.Va.
Code, 8-24-23 (1969). Although those statutes were repealed by the Legislature in 2004, § 12.2
of the Ordinance, itself, was in effect during the 2005 consideration and adoption of the
amendments in question by the County Commission. That is because, by virtue of the new Act,
particularly W.Va. Code, 8A-7-10(b) (2004), and W.Va. Code, 8A-7-12 (2004), former
ordinances, such as § 12.2, were continued in effect until amended or repealed. As W.Va. Code,
8A-7-12 (2004), provides: All zoning ordinances, all amendments, supplements and changes to
the ordinance, legally adopted under prior acts, and all action taken under the authority of the
ordinance, are hereby validated and the ordinance shall continue in effect until amended or
repealed by action of the governing body taken under authority of this article.
Thus, according to the Circuit Court and the appellee, inasmuch as § 12.2 was in effect in
2005, the repeal of the former statutory scheme, W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), through W.Va.
Code, 8-24-23 (1969), did not preclude the application of those statutes to the consideration and
adoption of the 2005 amendments to the Ordinance. As stated above, those statutes require the
planning commission, rather than the county commission, to publish notices of, and conduct
public hearings concerning, proposed amendments to the county comprehensive plan and related
ordinances. Moreover, upon approval of the amendments, those statutes require the planning
commission to formally adopt the amendments and recommend and certify them to the county
commission.
(See footnote 2)
As long recognized, the general rule is, that when an act of the Legislature is repealed
without a saving clause, that it must be considered, except as to transactions passed and closed,
as if it had never existed. Syl. pt. 1, Curran v. Owens, 15 W.Va. 208 (1879). Chesapeake and
Potomac Co. v. State Tax Department, 161 W.Va. 77, 83, 239 S.E.2d 918, 922 (1977). See,
Crank v. McLaughlin, 125 W.Va. 126, 131, 23 S.E.2d 56, 59 (1942) (no one has a vested right to
demand the continuance of a law or ordinance, although accrued rights thereunder are protected
until repeal or modification); syl. pt. 4, Fairmont Wall Plaster v. Nuzum, 85 W.Va. 667, 102 S.E.
494 (1920) (neither the courts nor individuals acting as officers can prolong the life of a repealed
statute); 17 M. J., Statutes §102 (Matthew Bender & Co. 2006) (the general rule is that a repealed
statute cannot be acted upon after it is repealed, but as to all matters that have taken place under
it, they remain valid and cannot be questioned).
Here, § 12.2 of the Ordinance concerning the amendment process was animated solely by
reference to the repealed statutes: W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), through W.Va. Code, 8-24-23
(1969). It did not independently set forth or restate any procedural steps comparable to the those
statutes which would have mandated procedures for the consideration and adoption of the 2005
amendments to the Ordinance. As a result, it is of no moment that § 12.2 continued in effect
during the period in question. Following the Legislature's express repeal of W.Va. Code, 8-24-18
(1969), through W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969), in 2004, the scope and reach of § 12.2 fell short of
setting the standard to be followed. To enforce § 12.2 of the Ordinance at this point would
frustrate the intent of the Legislature. As the County Commission pointed out during the
argument before this Court, if § 12.2 were to continue in effect indefinitely in the form set forth
herein, then, under the logic of the appellee, repealed statutes W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969),
through W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969), would be controlling in Jefferson County in perpetuity.
It follows from what has been said that where a county land use ordinance concerning
procedures for amending the county's comprehensive plan and related ordinances relies solely
upon a statutory scheme previously repealed by the West Virginia Legislature, the ordinance is
without authority to mandate the procedures to be followed by the county commission and
planning commission in adopting or rejecting proposed amendments to the comprehensive plan
and related ordinances. This Court so holds and concludes that, in this action, the Circuit Court's
determination that the prior statutory scheme should have been followed by the County
Commission was incorrect.
In the circumstances of this action, therefore, the County Commission is entitled to have
the 2005 amendments to the Ordinance reinstated.
(See footnote 3)
Accordingly, the February 26, 2008, order of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, West
Virginia, granting summary judgment in favor of the appellee, Jefferson County Citizens for
Economic Preservation, is reversed, and this action is remanded to the Circuit Court for the entry
of an order granting judgment in favor of the County Commission of Jefferson County,
reinstating the 2005 amendments to the Jefferson County Zoning and Land Development
Ordinance.
Reversed and Remanded
Footnote: 1 It should be noted that the appellee also asserted that the lowering of the permitted
density in the rural district of Jefferson County constituted a taking of private property without
just compensation. As W.Va. Const. art. III, § 9, states: Private property shall not be taken or
damaged for public use, without just compensation[.]
In the subsequent order of February 26, 2008, however, the Circuit Court rejected that
assertion and entered judgment in favor of the County Commission upon that issue. The order
stated: The change in density does not destroy all economic use of property in the Rural
Zoning District because an individual owning land there can still subdivide his or her property
and sell off parcels, or farm the land and sell the crops. Syllabus point 6 of McFillan v.
Berkeley County Planning Commission, 190 W.Va. 458, 438 S.E.2d 801 (1993), cited by the
Circuit Court, holds:
Land-use regulations will not constitute an impermissible taking of
property under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Section
9 of Article III of the West Virginia Constitution if such regulations can be
reasonably found to promote the health, safety, morals or general welfare of the
public and the regulations do not destroy all economic uses of the property.
Syl. pt. 5, Harrison v. Town of Eleanor, 191 W.Va. 611, 447 S.E.2d 546 (1994).
No cross-appeal challenging the ruling of the Circuit Court in that regard has been filed
by the appellee.
Footnote: 2 Pursuant to W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969), following the adoption of a comprehensive plan and ordinance, any amendments shall be adopted according to the procedures set forth in sections 18 through 22. Thus, as directed by W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), the planning commission shall publish notices of, and conduct public hearings concerning, the proposed amendments. If approved, the amendments are to be adopted by the planning commission and recommended to the county commission under W.Va. Code, 8-24-19 (1969). In addition, the amendments are to be certified to the county commission pursuant to W.Va. Code, 8-24-20 (1969). Finally, W.Va. Code, 8-24-21 (1969), and W.Va. Code, 8-24-22 (1969), provide for the county commission's consideration of the amendments upon the completion of the above requirements. Lower Donnally Association v. Charleston Municipal Planning Commission, 212 W.Va. 623, 627, 575 S.E.2d 233, 237 (2002); State ex rel. Foster v. City of Morgantown, 189 W.Va. 433, 435-36, 432 S.E.2d 195, 197-98 (1993).
Footnote: 3 In so ruling, however, this Court notes that while the County Commission correctly
maintains that the West Virginia Land Use Planning Act, W.Va. Code, 8A-1-1 (2004), et seq., is
the relevant authority in assessing the process pursuant to which the 2005 amendments to the
Ordinance were adopted, several questions in that regard have not been addressed by the parties
and the Circuit Court. As a result, this Court declines to definitively or preemptively settle those
questions at this point.
For example, the County Commission relies upon W.Va. Code, 8A-7-8 (2004), of the
West Virginia Land Use Planning Act as controlling of the ordinance amendment process. That
provision was cited in the notices published in the local newspaper prior to the February 23 and
March 3, 2005, public hearings, even though, at that time, § 12.2 of the Ordinance referred to the
former statutes: W.Va. Code, 8-24-18 (1969), through W.Va. Code, 8-24-23 (1969). As the
February 26, 2008, order of the Circuit Court states, § 12.2 was ultimately amended to remove
the former statutory requirements and replace them with W.Va. Code, 8A-7-8 (2004).
While the County Commission correctly observes that no public hearing requirement is
set forth in W.Va. Code, 8A-7-8 (2004), the encouragement of public participation is found in
W.Va. Code, 8A-3-1(b) (2004), of the West Virginia Land Use Planning Act. Other sections of
the Act, W.Va. Code, 8A-3-6 (2004), W.Va. Code, 8A-3-7 (2004), W.Va. Code, 8A-3-11 (2004),
W.Va. Code, 8A-4-5 (2004), W.Va. Code, 8A-7-5 (2004), and W.Va. Code, 8A-7-9 (2004),
provide for public hearings.
Inasmuch as the appellee did not raise the above matters, and in view of the two public
hearings conducted by the County Commission with the participation of the Planning
Commission, this Court is of the opinion that, upon the whole, the record demonstrated the
County Commission's entitlement to reinstatement of the 2005 amendments to the Ordinance.