Peggy McMASTER, d/b/a PJM Properties and Gray McGurn, Appellants,
v.
COLUMBIA BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS, Christopher Barczak, Ernest W. Cromartie, III, Elaine Gillespie, Alvin Hinkle, Lowndes T. Pope, Charles Watson, and Elizabeth Webber-Akre, in their official capacities as members of the Columbia Board of Zoning Appeals and City of Columbia, Respondents.
Supreme Court of South Carolina.
*501 Henry Dargan McMaster, of Columbia, Lance S. Boozer, of Tompkins & McMaster, of Columbia, for Appellants.
*502 Peter Michael Balthazor, of Columbia, for Respondents.
Danny C. Crowe and R. Hawthorne Barrett, of Turner Padget Graham & Laney, of Columbia, for Amicus Curiae Municipal Association of South Carolina, Marcus A. Manos, of Nexsen Pruet, of Columbia, and Thomas R. Gottshall, of Haynsworth Sinkler Boyd, of Columbia, for Amicus Curiae University Hill Neighborhood Association of Columbia.
PER CURIAM.
This case requires us to consider whether the City of Columbia Zoning Ordinance (hereinafter "the Ordinance"), which limits to three the number of unrelated persons who may reside together as a single housekeeping unit, violates the Due Process Clause of the South Carolina Constitution. We find it does not.[1]
I.
The facts of this case are not in dispute. The property which is the subject of this appeal ("the property") is owned by Appellant McMaster and is located in the City of Columbia ("the City") in the immediate vicinity of the University of South Carolina. The property constitutes a single dwelling unit and is located within a RD-DP zoning district.[2] Pursuant *503 to the Ordinance, only one "family" may occupy a single dwelling unit. The Ordinance defines family as "an individual; or two or more persons related by blood or marriage living together; or a group of individuals, of not more than three persons, not related by blood or marriage but living together as a single housekeeping unit." Columbia City Code § 17-55 (emphasis added).
At the time this dispute arose, the property was occupied by four unrelated individualsAppellant Gray McGurn and three other young women, all of whom were undergraduate students at the University of South Carolina. The occupants were friends, shared meals and expenses, and operated as a single household.
After receiving a neighborhood complaint, the City's Zoning Administrator conducted an investigation and determined that more than three unrelated individuals were occupying the property, in violation of the Ordinance. The City sent McMaster a notice of zoning violation, directing that occupancy be reduced to no more than three unrelated persons within thirty days. McMaster appealed the violation notice to the City's Board of Zoning Appeals ("the Board"), arguing the Ordinance was not violated and, in the alternative, the Ordinance was unconstitutional. Following a hearing, the Board affirmed the zoning violation.
Appellants appealed the Board's decision to the circuit court pursuant to S.C.Code § 6-29-820, challenging the constitutionality of the Ordinance under federal and state law, which was narrowed to a challenge under our state constitution. Following a hearing, the circuit court found the Ordinance's definition of family did not violate the Due Process Clause of the South Carolina Constitution. Specifically, the circuit court found Appellants failed to meet their burden of proving the limitations set forth in the Ordinance were not reasonably related to any legitimate governmental interest. The circuit court further found the City had not acted arbitrarily or wrongfully in passing the Ordinance and, therefore, had not infringed upon Appellants' substantive due process rights under the state constitution.
Because Appellants challenge the constitutionality of the Ordinance, the matter was directly appealed to this Court. *504 See S.C.Code § 14-8-200(b)(3) (Supp.2010) (providing the right of appeal from a final judgment involving a challenge on state or federal grounds to the constitutionality of a municipal ordinance lies directly to the Supreme Court).
II.
An issue regarding interpretation of a legislative enactment is a question of law. City of Rock Hill v. Harris,
III.
Appellants argue that the Ordinance's definition of "family," which limits to three the number of unrelated persons who may reside together as a single housekeeping unit, arbitrarily and capriciously deprives them of a cognizable property interest in violation of the Due Process Clause of the South Carolina Constitution.[3] We disagree.
"A municipal ordinance is a legislative enactment and is presumed to be constitutional." Town of Scranton v. Willoughby,
"The authority of a municipality to enact zoning ordinances, restricting the use of privately owned property is founded in the police power." Id. In reviewing substantive due process challenges to municipal ordinances, a court must consider whether the ordinance bears a reasonable relationship to any legitimate interest of government. Denene, Inc. v. City of Charleston,
"In order to prove a denial of substantive due process, a party must show that he was arbitrarily and capriciously deprived of a cognizable property interest rooted in state law." Denene
In Village of Belle Terre v. Boraas,
Although Belle Terre established that the federal constitution does not afford substantive due process protection in this instance, state courts are free to conclude that their respective state constitutions do provide such protection. Appellants argue the City's definition of "family" is arbitrary and capricious and bears no rational relationship to any legitimate state interest of government in violation of the South Carolina constitution.[5] Appellants also argue the Ordinance excludes *507 many groups of individuals which should be permitted to reside together as a single housekeeping unit.[6]
However, as many other states have found,[7] we find the rationale of Belle Terre persuasive and find there is a rational relationship between the Ordinance's definition of "family" and the legitimate governmental interests the Ordinance seeks to further. See Belle Terre
With that in mind, we find the Ordinance is a valid exercise of the City's broad police power and that there is a rational relationship between the City's decision to limit to three the number of unrelated individuals who may live together as a single housekeeping unit and the legitimate governmental interests of controlling the undesirable qualities associated with "mass student congestion." Cf. Harbit,
AFFIRMED.
TOAL, C.J., PLEICONES, BEATTY, KITTREDGE and HEARN, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Although the freedom to select one's cohabitants could, under some circumstances, implicate the freedom of association guaranteed by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, we emphasize that we address only the limited argument before usnamely the rights of a landlord vis-à-vis a due process challenge under the South Carolina Constitution.
[2] Districts designated as RD "are intended as one- and two-family residential areas with attached and detached units with medium to high population densities." Columbia City Code § 17-234. The DP designation, when appended to a basic district classification, is intended to further the purpose and intent of the Ordinance, including protecting and improving the quality of the environment of the City by encouraging "the identification, recognition, conservation maintenance and enhancement of areas, sites, structures, fixtures and other features of the architectural, economic, social, cultural and political history of the City as well as its natural features; to encourage appropriate use of such features, areas, and sites, structures and fixtures; and to restrain influences adverse to such purposes, and by so doing to promote the public welfare." Columbia City Code § 17-251.
[3] Appellants also raise equal protection and privacy challenges to the Ordinance. However, the circuit court's ruling did not specifically address those grounds, and Appellants failed to make a Rule 59(e), SCRCP, motion. Accordingly, those issues are not preserved for review, and we do not address them. See Shealy v. Aiken County,
[4] Three years later, the United States Supreme Court found a zoning ordinance which restricted the categories of related individuals who could live together as a single housekeeping unit infringed upon the fundamental rights regarding "personal choice in marriage and family life." See Moore v. City of E. Cleveland,
[5] As Appellants note, four states have found similar zoning provisions limiting occupancy of unrelated individuals to be unconstitutional. Those states have done so, generally, because the ordinances preclude functional families from living together. Only California has determined that unrelated individuals possess a fundamental right to choose cohabitants. See City of Santa Barbara v. Adamson,
[6] Appellants argue the Ordinance impermissibly excludes various household units comprised of unrelated people, including: two unrelated elderly people with two unrelated caretakers or a residence shared by four unrelated foreign exchange students, young professionals, nuns, judges or legislators. However, because Appellants are not included in any of these particular non-traditional family scenarios, they are not before us and we do not address them. See Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
[7] The overwhelming majority of states that have considered the issue have found similar ordinances restricting the number of unrelated persons that may live together to be constitutional. E.g., Dinan v. Bd. of Zoning Appeals,
[8] In finding the Iowa Constitution was not violated by a zoning ordinance of the town of Ames, home of Iowa State University, which restricted the number of unrelated persons who may live together to three, the Supreme Court of Iowa noted that "it cannot be ignored that Ames is a university campus city and therefore, experiences typical secondary effects of mass student congestion." See Ames Rental Prop. Ass'n,
