Lead Opinion
" This case involves an order by petitioner’s (City’s) Building Official requiring respondent Grant to evacuate all residential occupants and remove all kitchen improvements in the downstairs level of a building Grant owns in City. After a hearing, City’s Zoning Board of Adjustment (Board) denied Grant’s request to overturn the Building Official’s order and the circuit court affirmed. In an unpublished opinion, the Court of Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part. We granted City’s petition for a writ of certiorari and now reverse.
FACTS
In 1993, Grant purchased a two-story building located within City. At that time, the building contained three apartments on the second floor. Three units (A, B, and C) were located on the ground floor. Unit A had a bath, kitchen, wall heater, and air conditioner. Unit C contained a kitchen. The previous owner had rented the three second floor apartments, lived in Unit C, and rented Unit A to residential tenants.
Before purchasing the property, Grant requested a written opinion from City’s Building Official regarding whether an ice cream shop could be located in the lower level of the building. By letter, City’s then Building Official, Forrest Tucker, responded:
... regarding your desire to situate an ice cream shop in the lower level ...
... my initial concern focussed [sic] on locating a commercial activity below the base flood elevation (BFE) in what appears to be a residential structure. I have reviewed the matter with the Atlanta office of FEMA and jointly, wehave concluded that your venture does not appear to violate any of our community regulations. Since less than 75% of this structure is devoted to residential use, it is classified as a non-residential structure. Accordingly, properly flood proofed uses below the BFE would be allowed.
As to whether you must properly flood proof the lower level' in concert with all requirements for new construction, the answer is “no” provided your renovations do not exceed 50% of the structure’s pre-improvement value. As long as you do not exceed the 50% threshold, you may locate your ice cream shop in the lower level without complying with the mandatory flood proofing provisions of new construction.
After he purchased the property, Grant received building permits from City, and made improvements to the ground floor units. One of the permits describes “Downstairs Apt. # 1” as the location of the job. Grant added bathrooms to Units B and C and upgraded the kitchen sink in Unit C. A tenant installed a kitchen in Unit B. Grant did not locate an ice cream store in the building. From June 1994 to June 1995, he rented the units to commercial tenants.
By letter dated January 3, 1996, Tom Hall, City’s current Building Official, notified Grant as follows:
The building ... is a post FIRM building and the down stairs [sic] may not be used for any occupancy other than commercial. The commercial tenants may not use the downstairs as a commercial live-in.
Consequently, you have until Monday, January 8 ^ at noon to evacuate all residential occupants and by February 3, 1996 the owner of the building must show a plan to remove all the kitchen improvements downstairs. The bath-rooms [sic], which are is [sic] allowed in commercial space may remain.1
Grant appealed the notice. At the Board hearing, Hall testified he had seen residents living in the three downstairs units. According to Hall, City’s zoning/flood ordinance precludes living space, plumbing, and electrical connections for residential purposes below the base flood elevation (BFE).
Grant testified he wanted Unit A to remain residential and Units B and C to be designated for commercial purposes. He stated he did not believe the kitchens in Units B and C should have to be removed because he was told an ice cream store, which he asserts requires a kitchen, could be placed in those locations. Grant admitted he bought the property without reading City’s flood regulations.
In its written order, the Board concluded:
[Grant’s] request to overturn the order of the Building Official with respect to evacuation of the tenants and removal of the kitchens is hereby denied. All tenants must be evacuated and all kitchens, for all purposes — residential and commercial, must be removed.
ISSUES
1. ■ Did the Court of Appeals err in holding South Carolina Code Ann. § 6-7-760 (1977) requires the Board to file a transcript with the clerk of the circuit court?
2. Did the Court of Appeals err in remanding this matter to the Board to hear evidence on Grant’s estoppel claims?
DISCUSSION
1. Failure to file transcript
The Court of Appeals remanded this case for reconstruction of the record because the Board failed to file with the circuit court a transcript of the hearing as required under § 6-7-760. City claims this was error.
Section 6-7-760 provides in relevant part:
Upon the filing of such an appeal [from the board of adjustment], the clerk of the circuit court shall give immediate notice thereof to the secretary of the board and within thirty days from the time of such notice the board shall cause to be filed with the clerk a duly certified copy of the proceedings had before____the board of adjustment, in-eluding a transcript of the evidence heard before it, if any, and the decision of the board. 2
(emphasis added).
The Court of Appeals held this section requires that a transcript be filed if evidence was heard before the Board. City asserts that a transcript must be filed only if one has been prepared at the Board’s discretion. In construing this statute, City contends the phrase “if any” modifies the noun “transcript,” not the phrase “of the evidence heard before it.” We agree with City’s proposed construction of § 6-7-76Q.
The cardinal rule of statutory construction is for the Court to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the legislature. Mid-State Auto Auction of Lexington, Inc. v. Altman,
We find the language of § 6-7-760 ambiguous and, under our rules of statutory construction, determine it should not be construed to mandate the preparation of a transcript. Under S.C.Code Ann. § 6-7-740 (1977),
We find the Court of Appeals erred in holding a transcript must be filed when there is an appeal to the circuit court. In light of this conclusion, the remand for reconstruction of the record ordered by the Court of Appeals is unnecessary.
2. Estoppel
In affirming the Board’s decision, the circuit court rejected Grant’s assertion that City was estopped to order the exclusion of residential tenants and the removal of kitchens. On appeal of the circuit court’s order, the Court of Appeals remanded to the Board to “hear evidence on and consider Grant’s estoppel claim.” City argues this was error. We agree. Because we find the record adequate to review this issue, remand is not necessary and we affirm on the merits as follows.
Grant agrees City’s ordinance precludes residential tenants from living in the ground floor units of his building. He claims, however, that City should be estopped from precluding residential use of Unit A because City officials issued building permits allowing residential use of that unit. Grant further claims City issued building permits for kitchens in Units B and C and rendered a written opinion allowing kitchens in those units.
As a general rule, estoppel does not lie against the government to prevent the due exercise of its police power or to thwart the application of public policy. South Carolina Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Parker,
Two pertinent cases address the first element of estoppel. In Abbeville Arms v. City of Abbeville,
In discussing the first element of estoppel, we noted Abbe-ville Arms had checked the zoning ordinance, including the official zoning map, which indicated the property was zoned R-6 High Density Residential. Through correspondence with the City zoning administrator, Abbeville Arms confirmed the zoning for its project. We concluded “it is clear that the defect [on the zoning map] was latent and that respondent lacked knowledge and the means of knowledge as to its existence.” Id. at 494,
Landing Dev. Corp. v. City of Myrtle Beach, supra, involved the development of condominium units for short-term rentals in a district zoned for “one, two and multi-family dwellings including ... condominiums ... for permanent occupancy.” The zoning ordinance did not define “permanent occupancy” and there was no law equating “permanent occupancy” with occupancy by a permanent resident. When asked if rentals were permitted in the district, the Director of Zoning and Housing for Myrtle Beach indicated they were and eventually issued business licenses to permit short-term 'rentals. The Director later informed respondents that short-term rentals were not permitted.
In concluding Myrtle Beach was estopped from denying business licenses for short-term rentals, we held:
[respondents lacked the knowledge or means to know that short-term vacation rentals were prohibited in the A-3 District. The only definitive source of information concerning the interpretation and enforcement of the ordinance was [the Director].
In this case, City issued a building permit for work in “Downstairs Apt. # 1.” Assuming the permit’s reference to an “apartment” misled Grant into believing residential use was permitted in Unit A, issuance of the permit does not estop City from enforcing its zoning/flood ordinance which precludes residential use ,of the downstairs floor. Grant could have easily ascertained the flood limitations on his building by reviewing the zoning/flood ordinance. Unlike the developers in Landing Dev. Corp. and Abbeville Arms, Grant had the means but failed to obtain this information. Accordingly, we conclude City is not estopped from excluding residential use of Unit A.
Further, the building permits issued by City for Units B and C describe the work to be done as “plumbing,” “HVAC,” and “additional wiring for electrical circuits.” There is no reference to kitchens. By issuing these permits, City did not approve their installation. Although City agrees it is bound by its former Building Official’s written opinion approving Grant’s downstairs units for an ice cream shop, that opinion does not approve installation of a kitchen. Town of Sullivans Island v. Byrum,
REVERSED.
Notes
. City has consistently agreed Grant may use the lower level of his building for commercial purp&ses.
. Section 6-7-760 has been repealed and recodified with similar language at S.C.Code Ann. § 6-29-830 (Supp.2000).
. Now recodified as S.C.Code Ann. § 6-29-790 (Supp.2000).
. In addition, Grant testified a tenant added the kitchen in Unit B. Since Grant did not detrimentally change his position based on the issuance of building permits for Unit B, he has failed to meet the third element of estoppel as to this unit. See Midlands Utility, Inc., v. South Carolina Dep't of Health and Envtl. Control, supra (in order to establish estoppel, party claiming estoppel must prejudicially change position in reliance upon government conduct).
. The circuit court did not address Grant's vested right and waiver claims and these issues are not before us.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part and dissenting in part):
I concur in part and dissent in part. I concur with the majority regarding Grant’s estoppel claim. I respectfully dissent, however, from the majority’s conclusion which allows a zoning board to produce a transcript of a hearing solely at its own discretion.
In relevant part, South Carolina Code Ann. § 6-7-760 (1977) provides:
Upon the filing of such an appeal ¡from the board of adjustment], the clerk of the circuit court shall give immediate notice thereof to the secretary of the board and within thirty days from the time of such notice the board shall cause to be filed with the clerk a duly certified copy of the proceedings had before .... the board of adjustment, including a transcript of the evidence heard before it, if any,and the decision of the board. 6
(Underline added).
“If a statute’s language is plain and unambiguous, and conveys a clear and definite meaning, there is no occasion for employing rules of statutory interpretation and the court has no right to look for or impose another meaning.” Paschal v. State Election Comm’n,
A statute as a whole must receive a practical, reasonable, and fair interpretation consonant with the purpose, design, and policy of lawmakers. Roche v. Young Bros., Inc., of Florence,
The majority and I agree that Section 6-7-760 is ambiguous. As noted by the majority, “if any” arguably modifies the noun “transcript;” alternatively, “if any” modifies the phrase, “evidence heard before it.”
In my opinion, the most reasonable interpretation of § 6-7-760 is that the legislature intended to require a zoning board to prepare and file a transcript with the circuit court whenever evidence was presented before it and its decision is appealed. Requiring a zoning board to file a transcript if it prepares one leaves the production of a verbatim transcript at the discretion of the zoning board, a result I find the legislature could not have intended. My interpretation is entirely consistent with § 6-7-740 which requires zoning boards to keep public records of its hearings and other official actions. In compliance
Because of my interpretation of § 6-7-760, I necessarily must address City’s question whether the Court of Appeals erred by concluding the circuit court should have remanded this matter to the Board for rehearing after Grant encountered hostility while attempting to reconstruct the record.
At the initial hearing before the circuit court, the parties agreed the tape recording from the Board hearing was of poor quality and could not be transcribed. Accordingly, Grant moved to either reconstruct the record or hold a new hearing. The circuit court allowed Grant to reconstruct the record by stipulation, affidavit, or transcript.
At the second hearing, Grant’s attorney stated:
... it was a bit difficult to supplement the record, Your Honor. I guess one explanation might be that these were not friendly witnesses, in that I did not get return phone calls from people I really wanted to get affidavits from, since I could not require them [to] call me back or cooperate.
City’s attorney responded:
Your Honor, [Grant’s attorney] — I don’t think she meant to imply this, but I just want to present to the Court that we have been very cooperative in trying to reach a stipulation. She talked about not [sic] able to reach people. I do not believe those people were city employees, and I do not believe she meant to imply that [City’s attorney] or I somehow, you know, caused the problem.
Grant’s attorney replied:
It is correct that I did not imply that they were not cooperative at all. They have been, but, nonetheless, Your Honor, the record is still incomplete.
Grant reconstructed the record with an affidavit from his property manager.
The circuit court properly allowed Grant to reconstruct the record. See Dolive v. J.E.E. Developers, Inc.,
I would affirm in part and reverse in part the Court of Appeals’ opinion.
. Section 6-7-760 has been repealed and recodified with similar language at § 6-29-830 (Supp.2000).
. Under my interpretation, zoning boards need not employ full-time court reporters.
. A different attorney represented Grant on appeal.
. Section 6-9-840 (Supp.2000) specifically provides that if the circuit court judge "determines that the certified record is insufficient for review, the matter may be remanded to the zoning board of appeals for rehearing.” This section became effective in May 1999. See Act No. 355, 1994 S.C. Acts 4036. The predecessor to this section, § 6-7-780, did not have a provision for remand.
