Michael A. Braun
Smith & Braun
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellees
Philip Gaujot
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellant,
Donald Karnes, Mayor
William A. Tantlinger
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellant,
Hack's Mobile Homes, Inc.
This Opinion was delivered PER CURIAM.
1. "The enactment of a zoning ordinance of a
municipality being a legislative function, all reasonable
presumptions should be indulged in favor of its validity."
Syllabus Point 3, G-M Realty v. City of Wheeling, 146 W.Va. 360,
120 S.E.2d 249 (1961).
2. "Where the complaining party has failed to show that
a municipal ordinance, properly adopted, is arbitrary or
unreasonable, this Court will not overrule city authorities in the
exercise of their legislative function." Syllabus Point 4, Town of
Stonewood v. Bell, 165 W.Va. 653, 270 S.E.2d 787 (1980).
Per Curiam:
This is an appeal by Donald Karnes, the Mayor of the City
of Nitro, West Virginia, and Hack's Mobile Homes, Inc., a West
Virginia corporation, from an order entered by the Circuit Court of
Kanawha County on October 29, 1990. That order enjoined Hack's
Mobile Homes, Inc., from using a parcel of real estate located in
the City of Nitro in such a manner as to violate the zoning
ordinance of the City of Nitro. The apparent effect of the order
is to enjoin Hack's from using the parcel for the operation of a
mobile home sales lot. On appeal, the appellants claim that the
parcel of real estate was, and is, properly and validly zoned for
mobile-home-sales use, that Hack's should be allowed to operate a
mobile home sales lot on it, and that the circuit court's ruling
was erroneous. After reviewing the documents filed and the
questions presented, this Court agrees with the appellants'
assertions.
On March 17, 1959, the City of Nitro adopted a zoning
ordinance and an accompanying zoning map. The ordinance provided
that real estate located "along" state and federal highways was
zoned "B-1", a designation that allowed use for a trailer sales
lot. On the zoning map adopted in 1959, the parcel in issue in the
present case, a parcel which runs contiguous to Route 25, a state
highway, on the south and which extends northward to Hillside Drive
on the north, was designated B-1. Hillside Drive was not, and is
not, a state or federal highway. The parcel in 1959 was bisected
by an alley which ran parallel to Route 25 and to Hillside Drive.
In the Fall of 1988, the City Council of the City of
Nitro adopted an ordinance, designated Ordinance 88-9, which
abandoned and discontinued as a public way the alley which bisected
the parcel in question. Thereafter, in November, 1988, appellant
Hack's Mobile Homes, Inc., purchased the property in question and
opened a mobile home sales lot.
The appellees, who are residents and property owners
along the north side of Hillside Drive, and who did not want a
mobile home sales lot across the street from their homes,
instituted this action to obtain a declaratory judgment that the
property in question was not properly zoned for use as a mobile
home sales lot and to obtain injunctive relief to prohibit the use
of the property as such a lot. In their complaint they alleged
that, in 1959, it was the recommendation of the Nitro Planning
Commission that parcels located on the northerly and southerly
sides of Hillside Drive be classified as residential, and that
through "mistake or inadvertence," the property located on the
southerly side of Hillside Drive was classified as "B-1". They
further alleged that if Hack's Mobile Homes, Inc., was permitted to
use the portion of the property adjoining Hillside Drive as a
mobile home lot, they would suffer irreparable damage and harm in
the devaluation of their property.
An answer was filed by the appellants, and following the
filing of the answer, the appellees moved for summary judgment. A
hearing was conducted on the motion for summary judgment on October
5, 1989, and subsequently the parties submitted memoranda on the
questions presented. On October 29, 1990, the court granted the
appellees the summary judgment which they sought.
In granting summary judgment, the court did not address
the question of whether the portion of the property in question
along Hillside Drive was by "mistake or inadvertence" zoned "B-1",
as alleged by the appellees. Instead, the court noted that
Hillside Drive was not a state or federal highway, that Route 25
was such a highway, and that under the City of Nitro's zoning
ordinance, only properties located along a state or federal highway
could be used for purposes such as a mobile home sales lot. The
court found that in the Fall of 1988, by Ordinance 88-9, the City
of Nitro had abandoned the alleyway which bisected the property in
question. The court concluded that the closing of the alley did
not affect or modify the zoning ordinance and that if the intention
in closing the alley was to change the zoning ordinance, such was
not done in compliance with the requirements. The court then
enjoined the appellant Hack's Mobile Homes, Inc., from using the
portion of the property in question abutting Hillside Drive as a
mobile home sales lot and ordered the appellant Mayor of the City
of Nitro and other appropriate officials to enforce the zoning
ordinance in accordance with the court's order. Overall, the court
apparently concluded the alley which bisected the parcel in
question actually divided it into two portions for zoning purposes
and that while the portion which was adjacent to Route 25 was
properly zoned B-1, the portion north of the alley which was
adjacent to Hillside Drive could not be zoned "B-1", even if the
alley bisecting the parcel was legally abandoned.
In the present proceeding, the appellants claim that the
circuit court erred in failing to hold that the parcel of property
in issue, in its entirety, has always been available for use as
mobile home sales lot. They also, by implication, claim that the
circuit court erred in enjoining the use of the property as a
mobile home sales lot.
At the onset, this Court notes that it has rather
consistently recognized that: "The enactment of a zoning
ordinance of a municipality being a legislative function, all
reasonable presumptions should be indulged in favor of its
validity." Syllabus point 3, G-M Realty v. City of Wheeling, 146
W.Va. 360, 120 S.E.2d 249 (1961). See also, Town of Stonewood v.
Bell, 165 W.Va. 653, 270 S.E.2d 787 (1980). The Court has also
recognized that: "Where the complaining party has failed to show
that a municipal ordinance, properly adopted, is arbitrary or
unreasonable, this Court will not overrule city authorities in the
exercise of their legislative function." Syllabus point 4, Town of
Stonewood v. Bell, Id.
In the present proceeding, the appellees take the
position that the wording of the zoning ordinance must be the
ultimate determinate of whether the property in question along
Hillside Drive is or can be zoned "B-1" so as to allow its use as
a mobile home lot. Their arguments focus on the meaning of the
word "along" as used in the context of "along a state or federal
highway" in the 1959 zoning ordinance. They basically argue that
the word was meant to mean only immediately adjacent to a state or
federal highway and that it cannot be construed to extend the
zoning to Hillside Drive.
In any proceeding to construe or determine the meaning of
a legislative enactment, which, as previously indicated in syllabus
point 3 of the G-M Realty case, a zoning ordinance is, the critical
question is what was the intent of the legislative body. See,
e.g., Gant v. Waggy, ___ W.Va. ___, 377 S.E.2d 473 (1988); State ex
rel. Fetters v. Hott, 173 W.Va. 502, 318 S.E.2d 446 (1984); Woodell
v. Dailey, 160 W.Va. 65, 230 S.E.2d 466 (1976).
In the zoning area, a leading authority, E. C. Yokley, in
his treatise Zoning Law and Practice § 9-5 (4th ed. 1978) has
indicated that an important feature of any zoning program is the
adoption of a land use map. Yokley states:
Apart from any requirement in the enabling
statute, the attachment of the land use map of
the affected community delineating the
boundaries of the various use districts in the
ordinance forms an indispensable adjunct of
the ordinance itself . . . .
See, State ex rel. Weiks v. Town of Tumwater, 66 Wash.2d 33, 400
P.2d 789 (1965); City Council of Augusta v. Irvin, 109 Ga.App. 598,
137 S.E.2d 82 (1964); Moon v. Smith, 138 Fla. 410, 189 So. 835
(1939).
In the present case, contemporaneously with adopting the
zoning ordinance in issue, the City Council of the City of Nitro
adopted a zoning map. That zoning map showed that not only the
area immediately contiguous to Route 25 was zoned "B-1", but that
the part of the block in question in the present case, extending
from the alley to Hillside Drive, was zoned "B-1".
Rather clearly, the term "along" a federal or state
highways, as used in the zoning ordinance, was not defined further.
From the fact that the zoning map adopted
contemporaneously with the adoption of the zoning ordinance showed
that the whole of the land in issue in the present case was
designated "B-1", this Court believes that the city, in adopting
the zoning ordinance, intended the word "along" to have a broader
meaning than that asserted by the appellees, and intended that the
whole area in question in the present case be deemed to be "along"
a state or federal highway and intended it to be zoned "B-1". The
fact that it was originally so zoned was, in effect, admitted by
the appellees when they stated in their complaint:
That although it was the recommendation of the
Nitro Planning Commission that parcels located
on the northerly and southerly side of
Hillside Drive be classified as residential,
through mistake or inadvertence, the property
located on the southerly side of Hillside
Drive was classified a "B-1".
Given these circumstances, this Court concludes that the term
"along" a state or federal highway, as used in the zoning ordinance
insofar as it relates to the property in question in the present
case, must be construed and interpreted not only as meaning land
immediately adjacent to Route 25, but all that land in question,
extending as far back as Hillside Drive.
Overall, in the present case the appellees have not shown
that the City of Nitro was arbitrary or unreasonable in adopting
the 1959 zoning ordinance, and the Court believes that the City, in
adopting the 1959 ordinance, intended that the portion of the
property in question adjoining Hillside Drive be zoned "B-1", a
classification which allows use of the property as a mobile home
sales lot. Under these circumstances, this Court concludes that
the trial erred in enjoining the appellants from allowing the use
of the parcel in question as a mobile home sales lot.See footnote 1
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Circuit Court
of Kanawha County is reversed insofar as it enjoins Hack's Mobile
Homes, Inc., from using the parcel of real estate in question in
any manner consistent with "B-1" zoning.
As previously indicated, this Court has found that,
under the ordinance as adopted, the property lying between the
alley and Hillside Drive was originally and has continued to be
zoned "B-1". In this Court's view, the vacating of the alley in
no way affected the zoning of the property, and insofar as the
circuit court concluded that it did not affect or modify the
zoning ordinance of the City of Nitro, the circuit court was
correct.
The Court further notes that the appellees also argue
that the vacating of the alley was improper in that the notice of
the City's intention to do so was not given in the manner
required by the zoning ordinance, and that the failure to give
notice in accordance with the zoning ordinance rendered the
vacating of the alley invalid.
Rather clearly, there was a valid purpose for vacating
the alley other than changing the zoning of the property. By
bringing about the vacation of the alley, the owners of the
property could use it and/or build upon it as one parcel of land,
free from any right of the public to traverse the property.
Since, in this Court's view, the vacating of the alley had no effect whatsoever upon the zoning of the property, this Court believes that it was not incumbent upon the City of Nitro to give notice in accordance with the requirements of the zoning ordinance to vacate the alley.