Steven Lee Eddins appeals the district court’s decision upholding the City of Lewiston’s determination that he is prohibited from replacing recreational vehicles currently located in his manufactured home park. We reverse.
*32 I.
Factual and Procedural Background
Steven Lee Eddins has owned and operated a manufactured home park in Lewiston, Idaho, since 2000. Eddins has continuously rented out a combination of standard mobile home spaces and recreational vehicle spaces to various tenants. 1 Eddins has a license to operate a manufactured home park, but does not have a license to operate a recreational vehicle park. In 2006, the City of Lewiston passed Ordinance 4398, which for safety reasons, 2 prohibits recreational vehicles from being located in manufactured home parks. More specifically, section 23-14(b) of the Lewiston City Code was amended to read:
Unit types permitted:
Manufactured home parks shall contain a minimum of seventy five (75) percent Class A Manufactured Homes. Up to twenty five (25) percent of a parks [sic] total units may be Class B Manufactured Homes. A Conditional Use Permit must be obtained in order to increase the ratio of Class B Manufactured Homes. Class C Manufactured Homes shall not be permitted.
Lewiston City Code section 23-14(b). Pursuant to the new regulations, recreational vehicles are not among the types of units permitted in manufactured home parks, as they are not considered Class A or Class B manufactured homes.
However, the new regulations provide a grandfather right for manufactured home parks that existed prior to the enactment of the ordinance in 2006. Section 23-17(a) provides:
Manufactured home parks in existence or under development as of the effective date of this ordinance shall be permitted to continue as an established land use regardless of zone but shall be exempt from the standards of 23-14, except as stated in this section.
Lewiston City Code section 23-17(a). Section 23-17(d) of the code then goes on to specify the type of replacement units allowed under the grandfather right:
Replacement units in manufactured home parks developed prior to the effective date [of the ordinance] may be Class A or Class B units, except that the mix of Class A and B units existing as of the effective date may not move further from compliance with Section 23-14(b).
Lewiston City Code section 23-17(d).
In 2008, Eddins applied for a permit from the Lewiston Community Development Department to allow one of his current tenants, who had been renting the same space for several years, to replace an existing recreational vehicle with a newer recreational vehicle. The Department subsequently sent Eddins a letter informing him that his permit had been denied, and that he was prohibited from placing additional recreational vehicles in his park under the new ordinance.
Eddins appealed the Department’s decision to the Lewiston Planning and Zoning Commission, arguing that he has a grandfather right to replace existing recreational vehicles with new or substitute recreational vehicles. After an informal hearing, the Commission upheld the Department’s decision, concluding that Eddins’ grandfather right under the new regulations only permits him to keep existing recreational vehicles in the park, but does not allow him to bring in additional or substitute recreational vehicles. Thereafter, Ed-dins appealed to the Lewiston City Council, where the Commission’s decision was upheld. Eddins then filed a petition for judicial re *33 view with the district court, arguing that he has a due process right to continue using his park in the same way in which he did prior to the passage of the ordinance as long as he does not improperly expand the use. The district court upheld the Commission’s decision, finding substantial evidence in the record to support the Commission’s interpretation of the grandfather provision in the city code. 3 Eddins timely appealed the decision to this Court.
II.
Issues on Appeal
I. Whether the act of replacing existing recreational vehicles with new recreational vehicles in Eddins’ manufactured home park constitutes a continuation of the nonconforming use that is protected by due process?
II. Whether Eddins has demonstrated that his substantial rights have been prejudiced?
III.
Discussion
A. Standard of Review
Idaho’s Local Land Use Planning Act (LLUPA) allows an applicant who has been denied a land use application by a governing board to seek judicial review under the procedures provided in the Idaho Administrative Procedure Act (APA), after exhausting all remedies under the local ordinance. I.C. § 67-6519. When reviewing the decision of a district court acting in its appellate capacity under the APA, this Court reviews the agency record independently of the district court’s decision. Price
v. Payette Cty. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs.,
The agency’s decision may only be overturned where its findings: (a) violate statutory or constitutional provisions; (b) exceed the agency’s statutory authority; (c) are made upon unlawful procedure; (d) are not supported by substantial evidence in the record; or (e) are arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion. I.C. § 67-5279(3). The party contesting a governing board’s decision must first demonstrate that the board erred in a manner specified in Idaho Code section 67-5279(3), and then the party must also demonstrate that a substantial right has been prejudiced. I.C. § 67-5279(4).
B. Due Process
Eddins’ sole argument on appeal is that his due process rights have been violated by the City’s action. Eddins argues that he has a due process right to continue operating his park in the same manner in which he did prior to the passage of the new city ordinance. Specifically, Eddins asserts that this due process protection applies not only to existing recreational vehicles in the park, but also applies to the overall use of the property, including the replacement of recreational vehicles. The City, on the other hand, argues that Eddins does not have a right to substitute new recreational vehicles because the grandfather right in the Lewiston Ordinance only allows existing vehicles to be replaced with Class A or Class B manufactured homes. Further, the City argues that Eddins’ due process right attaches only to the recreational vehicles that were on the property at the time the ordinance was *34 passed and does not attach generally to the placement of recreational vehicles on the property.
This Court has previously recognized that the due process clauses of the U.S. Constitution and our State Constitution protect an individual’s right to continue a “nonconforming use.”
O’Connor v. City of Moscow,
However, the right to continue a nonconforming use is not without limitation. As the Court has previously noted, this right “protects the owner from abrupt termination of what had been a lawful condition or activity on the property. The protection does not extend beyond this purpose.”
Id.
(quoting
Bastian v. City of Twin Falls,
Due process protects the fundamental or primary use of the property prior to the enactment of a new zoning ordinance; therefore, a nonconforming use is not impermissibly enlarged or expanded until there has been some change in the fundamental or primary use of the property. For example, in
Lewis-Clark Memorial Gardens, Inc. v. City of Lewiston,
the Court dealt with property that was being used to operate a private cemetery business.
The pouring of crypts above ground for subsequent burial for interment of the human dead did not result in any basic change in the fundamental or primary use of the real property in question, such fundamental or primary use remaining the same, that is, the conduct of a private cemetery business for interment of the human dead, and the pouring of such crypts in the manner done by plaintiff is an ordinary adjunct of, or integral, although not absolutely necessary, part of the operation of private cemetery businesses.
Id. On appeal, this Court affirmed the district court’s decision. Id.
Furthermore, the reasonable substitution of equipment or materials used in a business that is protected as a nonconforming use does not generally constitute an impermissible expansion or enlargement as long as the fundamental or primary use remains the same. In
Gordon Paving Co. v. Blaine Cty. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs,
we held that a paving company’s act of replacing obsolescent equipment with more modern equipment for a business that was protected as a nonconforming use did not constitute an enlargement or expansion of that use.
In this case, the act of replacing an existing recreational vehicle with a new recreational vehicle in the manufactured home park is a continuation of Eddins’ nonconforming use that is protected by due process. While the City argues that Eddins’ due process right to a nonconforming use attaches only to the recreational vehicles that were on the property at the time the ordinance was passed,
Lewis-Clark Memorial Gardens
makes clear that a nonconforming use protects the “fundamental or primary use of the real property in question.”
The act of replacing an existing recreational vehicle with a new recreational vehicle is not an expansion or enlargement of Eddins’ nonconforming use. In Lewis-Clark Memo *36 rial Gardens, this Court found that the property owner’s fundamental or primary use of the real property was to operate a cemetery business and the construction of additional crypts did not constitute an enlargement or expansion of the original nonconforming use because it did not change the fundamental use of the property. Id. Similarly, the act of replacing existing recreational vehicles with new recreational vehicles does nothing to change the fundamental use of the property. In fact, such an act is actually less expansive than the act this Court permitted in Lewis-Clark Memorial Gardens because certainly there is a greater change to the physical environment and to the intensity of use by adding five hundred additional crypts to a property than there would be by allowing the replacement of one recreational vehicle by another.
Furthermore, in Gordon Paving, the Court specifically found that the reasonable substitution of more modern equipment for older equipment in a business that is protected as a nonconforming use does not constitute an enlargement or expansion of the nonconforming use. The facts of that ease are substantially similar to the facts of this case because Eddins’ tenant is simply seeking to replace an older recreational vehicle with a newer recreational vehicle and the nature of his business will remain the same after the substitution. Thus, such a substitution does not constitute an expansion or enlargement of the nonconforming use.
The City correctly argues that allowing Eddins to replace the recreational vehicles will prolong the nonconforming use, and likely will make it more difficult to satisfy the safety goals of the ordinance by slowing the elimination of the business. However, the goal of quickly eliminating the combination of manufacturing homes and recreational vehicles does not trump the due process protection afforded to Eddins’ nonconforming use.
Therefore, replacing an existing recreational vehicle with a new recreational vehicle in Eddins’ manufactured home park constitutes a continuation of the nonconforming use that is protected by due process. For that reason, we find the City’s action in this ease violates Eddins’ due process right to continue a nonconforming use.
C. Substantial Right
Next, we must also determine whether Eddins has demonstrated that his substantial rights have been prejudiced. I.C. § 67-5279(3). This is a relatively easy question in this case because due process rights are substantial rights.
See Mitchell v. W.T. Grant Co.,
IY.
Conclusion
We reverse the decision of the district court upholding the City’s determination that Eddins is prohibited from replacing existing recreational vehicles with new recreational vehicles in his manufactured home park. Costs are awarded to Eddins.
Notes
. While Eddins has only owned the property since 2000, the record indicates the park has been in existence since the 1940’s or 50’s and has always been used for the rental of spaces for manufactured homes and recreational vehicles. It appears the park was originally designed for such purpose because several of the spaces used to store recreational vehicles are too small to house a manufactured home. Additionally, Ed-dins asserts that the park is designed in such a way that it cannot reasonably be restructured to allow for the placement of manufactured homes in the spaces that are currently used for recreational vehicles.
. During the hearing before the Planning and Zoning Commission, the Commissioner mentioned that the goal of the ordinance was to gradually eliminate the placement of recreational vehicles in manufactured home parks for safety reasons. The Commissioner specifically mentioned that recreational vehicles do not allow "the proper ingress and egress for fire.”
. The district court, in its written opinion, indicates that Eddins never raised the issue of whether his constitutional due process rights had been violated before the district court. However, the record contains the brief Eddins submitted to the district court, which primarily consists of an argument that his due process rights were violated by the City’s action. Because the district court did not recognize Eddins’ due process argument, it focused solely on whether the Commission had properly applied the grandfather provision in the city ordinance without addressing the broader question of whether that application violates Eddins’ due process rights.
. In its brief, the City writes:
The Appellant asserts he has a "grandfathered” right to continue to have those recreational vehicles in his manufactured home park even though a 2006 city ordinance prohibits the placement of recreational vehicles in a manufactured home park. The Respondent does not deny this "grandfathered” right. All recreational vehicles actually in the manufactured home park on the effective date of the ordinance may continue to remain in the park.
