On 13 January 2003, High Performance Holdings, LLC, (HPH) filed an application for a special use permit with the Davie County Board of Adjustment (the Board), seeking to build and operate a go-cart track. On 5 May 2003, after four nights of public hearings, the Board approved the permit, over the opposition of petitioners, all of whom live near the proposed site. The petitioners filed a writ of cer-tiorari in Superior Court in Davie County on 8 September 2003, which the court granted. HPH filed a motion to intervenе on 22 September 2003, which the court also granted. After a hearing on 15 December 2003, the court affirmed the Board’s decision and entered judgment accordingly on 13 January 2004. Petitioners appeal. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm.
The evidеnce tends to show that HPH owns a 134-acre tract of land in rural Davie County. HPH intends to build and operate a go-cart track on approximately 35 acres of its property as part of its operation called “Farmington Motorsports Park.” This 35-acre tract is zoned Residential-Agricultural (R-A), and a go-cart track is a permitted use in Davie County R-A zoning districts, subject to the granting of a special use permit by the Board. The proposed go-cart track site
is adjacent to an already existing dragstrip. The property where the dragstrip is located is zoned Highway-Business (H-B). The dragstrip has been there since at least 1961, and predates Davie County zoning ordinances, and is thus a non-conforming use within the meaning of the zoning code. The petitioners all live near the proposed go-cart
Petitioners contend first that the Board of Adjustment erred by placing the burden of proof on them to prove that the health and safety requirements of the special use permit statute had not been met, and that the superior court erred in affirming. We disagree.
Davie County Ordinance § 155.236 (C) states, in pertinent part, that a speciаl use permit shall not be granted unless:
The Board of Adjustment finds that in the particular case in question, the use for which the special use permit is sought will not adversely affect the health or safety of persons residing or working the neighborhood of the prоposed use and will not be detrimental to the public welfare . . .
Petitioners argue that our Courts have distinguished between ordinances with specific and general requirements. They assert that the burden of proof of specific requirements rests with the аpplicant,
Mann Media Inc. v. Randolph County Planning Bd.,
Here, the Board’s decision does not specify what burden of proof it applied, and the petitioners base their argumеnt that the Board placed the burden on them on the Superior court’s citation to Woodhouse in its order. The Superior court’s order does cite Woodhouse, stating in one of its conclusions of law that:
The burden of proving or disproving general considerations, involving an assessment of the use’s impact on ‘health, safety and welfare of the community falls upon those who oppose the issuance of a [special use permit].’
However, the court goes on to state that,
[i]n any event, the Court finds, upon a review of the whole record that HPH met any arguably applicable burdens of production and persuasion and that its evidence satisfiеd the specific and general requirements of the Davie County Zoning Code.
Also, in another conclusion of law, the court states that for an applicant to make out a
prima facie
case, he or she must “pro-ducen competent, material аnd substantial evidence tending to establish the existence of facts and conditions which the ordinance requires for the issuance of a special use permit” (quoting
Refining Co. v. Bd. of Alderman,
In their second argument, petitioners contend that the Board’s and superior court’s findings of fact and conclusions оf law are not supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence in the record as a whole. The superior court in this case reviewed the Board’s decision pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-345 (e) (2003). On appeal from a superior cоurt’s review of a municipal zoning board of adjustment, this Court’s standard of review is limited to “(1) determining whether the trial court exercised the appropriate scope of review and, if appropriate, (2) deciding whether the court did so proрerly.”
Fantasy World, Inc. v. Greensboro Bd. of Adjustment,
The reviewing court applies the “whole record” test when the petitioner alleges
Petitionеrs contend that there was not substantial evidence to support the Board’s findings regarding noise. Specifically, they object to the following findings:
3) The go-cart track . . . will not adversely affect the health or safety of persons residing or working in the neighborhood of the go-cart track. This is based upon sworn testimony and evidence submitted during the hearing which shows the following:
* * *
(c) A landscaped berm will be installed adjoining the Harding property ... to reduce the sound and provide a screen from activities on the site.
* * *
(g) Sound levels from the co-cart track will not exceed those already existing in the neighborhood, primarily generated by the drag racing course. Evidence provided by the petitioner’s sound expert, S&ME, far out weighed the evidence оffered by the opponents. It is the Board’s opinion that if the proposed go-cart track stood alone, that the noise generated by the go-cart track would not be of any material significance so as to be detrimental to the nеighborhood.
After careful review of the record, we conclude that these findings are supported by substantial evidence. Dwayne Rakestraw, a civil engineer, testified that because dragsters typically run at 110 decibels (dB), they would “completеly drown out everything else.” Rakestraw also testified that the level of noise at Petitioner Harding’s house would be similar to that generated by a passing car. Likewise, test results of the engineering firm S&ME indicated that “noise levels generated by the carts would bе expected to add 1 to 2dB to the overall noise levels generated by the operation of the dragster measured at the eastern property line.”
Furthermore, in a presentation made to the Board by HPH, the Board heard evidenсe that the go-carts would be subject to strict equipment regulations to reduce noise and that the proposed landscaped berm and natural barriers would achieve a 5-10dB reduction, while proposed plants and trees would achiеve another l-2dB reduction. This presentation also suggested that at normal distances the carts produce noise in the range of conversation or passenger cars and that as distance increases, so does the perceivеd sound level. The calculations were prepared by Rakestraw and were based on the average noise produced by 30 running carts. According to these calculations, the nearest neighbor, residing 300 feet from the track, would be expеcted to have a noise level
Petitioners assert that the SM&E test results and HPH’s presеntation to the Board are incompetent evidence because they are hearsay and too general and speculative. Similarly, petitioners contend that Rakestraw’s testimony was not competent because he was nоt properly qualified as a sound expert. However, Board proceedings are quasi-judicial in nature and the Board is not bound by the rules of evidence, but may consider all of the evidence offered.
Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Bd. of Aldermen,
Local boards, such as municipal bоards of adjustment, are not strictly bound by formal rules of evidence, as long as the party whose rights are being determined has the opportunity to cross-examine adverse witnesses and to offer evidence in support of his position and in rebuttal оf his opponent’s.
Burton v. New Hanover County Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
Although petitioners presented evidence about the adverse effects of sound, we conclude that there was substantial evidence on which the Board could base its findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the effect of the noise generated by the proposed go-cart track on the surrounding community. Even if the evidence in the record would have supported cоntrary findings and conclusions, this Court will not substitute its judgment for that of the Board where there is substantial evidence to support the Board’s decision.
In their final argument, petitioners contend that the findings of fact and conclusions of law made by the Board, and affirmеd by the court, are arbitrary and capricious. We disagree.
The arbitrary or capricious standard is a difficult one to meet. Administrative agency decisions may be reversed as arbitrary or capricious if they are patently in bad faith or whimsiсal in the sense that they indicate a lack of fair and careful consideration or fail to indicate [] any course of reasoning and the exercise of judgment.
Mann,
Affirmed.
