Thеse appeals arise from companion equity and law cases filed in the Circuit Court of Grayson County (the trial court) in which the City of Galax maintained that Ralph L. and Frieda Patton, husband and wife, are prohibited by its local zoning ordinance from utilizing the first floor of the structure on their property for residential apartments. In the equity case, the chancellor determined that the proposed use of the first floor was not subject to the so-called "grandfathering" provision in Galax City Code § 160-157 and issued an injunctiоn prohibiting the Pattons from making renovations to their property for that proposed use. In the law case, the trial court reviewed and affirmed the decision of the local Board of Zoning Appeals denying the Pattons' application for a conditional use permit for the proposed residential use of the first floor. We awarded appeals to the Pattons to review both actions of the trial court.
BACKGROUND
Under familiar principles of appellate review, we consider thе evidence in the light most favorable to the City of Galax, the prevailing party in the trial court.
Matthews v. Board of Zoning Appeals,
The property in question is located at 201 South Main Street in the City of Galax. Mr. Patton acquired the property in 1967 and thereafter transferred the title to himself and his wife jointly. Subsequent to the Pattons' acquisition of the property, the City adopted a comprehensive zoning ordinance, placing the property in a Business General (B-2) District (the B-2 District). "This district, containing the major downtown retailing center and major outlying commercial areas, provides a framework for a strong nucleus of the commercial community, in which each business can enhance other business and where all the amenities of downtown can be provided." Galax City Code § 160-91.
"Apartment use" of structures in the B-2 District requires a conditional use permit. Galax City Code § 160-93(E). Apartment use is not pеrmitted on the first floor of any structure in the B-2 District "fronting on designated streets."
At the time the Pattons acquired the property, the first floor of the structure was used principally for a drugstore. The record does not reflect when this use was discontinued, although the parties do not dispute that such is the case. The record also does not reflect the dimensions of the first floor or any significant details concerning its interior layout. However, it is not disputed that, both before and after the adoption of the City's zoning ordinance, portions of the first floor have been used for a woodworking shop, a beauty shop, and at times for residential rental rooms. It is also undisputed that the second floor of the structure has been in continual use for residential apartments. 1
In 1997, the Pattons began renovations on the first floor of their property. The Pattons obtained a building permit to construct a
On February 15, 2001, the Pattons were informed by Keith Barker, a building official for the City of Galax, that they were not permitted to use the first floor of their property for residential purposes without a conditional use permit and that no further building permits would issue for the ongoing renovation work until a conditional use permit was obtained. On December 10, 2001, the City filed a bill of complaint in the trial court seeking an injunction prohibiting the Pattons from continuing to renovate the first floor of the property for residential use.
In their answer to the bill of complaint, the Pattons asserted that the property "has been in residential use continuously and at all times since the adoption of a zoning ordinance by the City of Galax, and that the residential use of the premises is grandfathered such that continuing residential use of the premises is not in violation of the zoning ordinance of the City of Galax." On January 4, 2002, the chancellor issued а temporary injunction prohibiting the Pattons from conducting further renovation work on the property. Following a hearing on the City's bill of complaint, the parties agreed to a continuance of the proceedings in order to permit the Pattons to apply for a conditional use permit for residential apartments on the first floor street level of the property.
On March 7, 2002, the Pattons applied to the City of Galax for a conditional use permit to allow apartments on the first floor street level of the property. Following a public hearing on April 25, 2002, the City of Galax Planning Commission denied the Pattons' application. The Commission found that the proposed apartments would front on Main Street, which the Commission determined to be a "designated street[ ]" within the meaning of Galax City Code § 160-93(E). After the Commission's action was confirmed by the Galax City Council, the Pattons filed an appeal with the City of Galax Board of Zoning Appeals. On June 25, 2002, the Board denied the Pattons' appeal, concurring in thе determination of the Commission that the structure on the Pattons' property fronted on a designated street.
On July 17, 2002, the Pattons filed a notice of appeal in the trial court. After issuing a writ of certiorari to the Board of Zoning Appeals, the trial court consolidated the appeal of the Board's decision with its consideration of the City's bill of complaint. The trial court ruled that no additional evidence was needed in either case and directed the parties to present their final arguments in written briefs. Those briefs reflected the arguments the parties now make on appeal.
In an opinion letter dated August 8, 2003, the trial court ruled in the law case that the Board of Zoning Appeals properly construed the term "designated streets" to include all public streets within the B-2 District. Referring to the City's zoning map, filed as an exhibit, the trial court noted that Main Street is color coded as being within the B-2 District. Thus, the trial court concluded that the Board properly followed the ordinance in affirming the decision of the Planning Commission, as confirmed by the City Council, to deny the conditional use permit on the basis that the proposed apartments on the first floor of the structure on the Pattons' property would front on a designated street in violation of Galax City Code § 160-93(E). The trial court further noted that the use of "the subject property ... for first floor residential apartments was not in existence at the time that the zoning ordinance came into effect" and, thus, was not grandfathered for that use.
In a separate opinion letter in the equity case, also dated August 8, 2003 and referencing the letter opinion filed in the law case, the chancellor opined that the requested injunction should issue. A final order and a final decree memorializing the rulings of the trial court as reflected in the opinion letters were entered in the respective cases on December 19, 2003.
DISCUSSION
It is self-evident that if the Pattons are entitled to use the first floor of the structure
Because the chancellor heard the evidence
ore tenus,
his decree is entitled to the same weight as a jury verdict.
The Dunbar Group, LLC v. Tignor,
It is the settled law of this Commonwealth that for a prior use of land that violates a newly enacted zoning restriction to be considered a lawful nonconforming use, the use must have been "`a lawful use existing on the effective date of the zoning restriction.'"
C. & C. Inc. v. Semple,
With respect to nonconforming uses in existence at the time the zoning ordinance applicable here was adopted, Galax City Code § 160-157 provides, in relevant part, that:
A. Intent. Within the districts established by this chapter or amendments that may later be adopted, there may exist structures and uses of land and buildings which would be prohibited, regulated or restricted under the terms of this chapter or future amendments. It is the intent of this chapter to permit these nonconforming uses and structures to continue until they are removed but not to encourage their survival. It is further the intent of this chapter that these nonconforming structures and uses shall not be enlarged upon, expanded or extended.
....
D. Nonconforming uses of structures or of structures and premises in combination. If a lawful use involving individual structures with a replacement cost of one thоusand dollars ($1,000.) or more or if a structure and premises in combination exists at the effective date of adoption or amendment of this chapter that would not be allowed in the district under the terms of this chapter, the lawful use may be continued so long as it remains otherwise lawful, subject to the following provisions:
....
(2) Any nonconforming use may be extended throughout any parts of a building which were manifestly arranged or designed for such use at the time of adoption or amendment of this chapter, but no such use shall be extended to occupy any land outside such building.
....
E. Repairs and maintenance. Nothing in this chapter shall prevent the making of ordinary repairs on a nonconforming structure or a structure containing a nonconforming use, provided that the structure is not enlarged in size.
Prior to the City's adoption of its zoning ordinance, it is unquestioned that the entire structure on the Pattons' property could have
The Pattons contend, as they did before the chancellor, that pursuant to Galax City Code § 160-157(D), use of the structure on their property for residential apartments is a permitted nоnconforming use because the second floor has been continually used for residential apartments since before the ordinance was adopted. We agree that the Pattons established by clear evidence that the use of the second floor of their property for residential apartments is a permitted nonconforming use grandfathered under the zoning ordinance. The Pattons further contend that under subsection (D)(2) they are permitted to extend this residential use to the first floor because its occasional prior use for residential apartments demonstrates that it was "manifestly arranged or designed for such use at the time of adoption" of the zoning ordinance. Continuing, the Pattons maintain that the intended renovation of the first floor would not enlarge or alter the arrangement or the design of the structure and, thus, would be consistent with the provisions of subsection (E). We disagree.
We have not previously had the opportunity to address a claim that a use established in one part but not all of a building prior to enactment of a zoning ordinance constitutes a grandfathered right to extend the nonconforming use throughout the building. However, other jurisdictions that have considered this issue have held that the right to continue the nonconforming use does not extend to other areas of the building unless, at the time the ordinance was enacted, the design of the building clearly indicated that such use was intended throughout.
See, e.g., Condor, Inc. v. City of North Charleston,
Thus, rather than treating a prior nonconforming use in one part of a building as permitting extension of the use to the whole building as a matter of right, it is generally held that the government may establish the manner in which extension of the use will be permitted, if at all. This principle is in accord with "the spirit underlying zoning regulations[, which] is to restrict rather than increase nonconforming uses."
In order to extend the use of the second floor for residential apartments to the first floor, it was not sufficient for the Pattons to show that the intended renovations of the first floor will not alter the manner in which the first floor is arranged or designed. Rather, they were required to prove that the first floor was "arranged or designed for such use at the time of adoption or amendment of" the zoning ordinance. Because the record does not contain an adequate description of the interior layout of the first floor,
We now turn to the question from the law case whether the trial court erred in affirming the decision of the Board of Zoning Appeals to deny the Pattons a conditional use permit for residential apartments on the first floor of the structurе on their property on the ground that the structure fronted on a "designated street[ ]" as contemplated by Galax City Code § 160-93(E). "[T]he decision of a board of zoning appeals `is presumed to be correct and can be reversed or modified only if the trial court determines that the BZA applied erroneous principles of law or was plainly wrong and in violation of the purposes and intent of the zoning ordinance' and `the party challenging the BZA's decision has the burden of proof on these issuеs.'"
Higgs v. Kirkbride,
The parties agree that, pursuant to Galax City Code § 160-93(E), first floor apartments that do not front on designated streets are a permitted conditional use in the B-2 District. They disagree over the meaning of the term "designated streets." The Pattons contend that the term means those streets specifically designated by the Galax City Council for exclusion of first floor apartments rather than all streets shown on the City's zoning map lying within the B-2 District. Because the City has not designated any individual streets either in the zoning ordinance or on the zoning map for the purpose of excluding first floor apartments, they contend that denial of the conditional use permit by the Board of Zoning Appeals was in error and that the trial court erred in affirming that decision. The City responds that "designated streets" are the public streets within the B-2 District shown on the City's zoning map. Thus, the City cоntends that the conditional use permit at issue here was properly denied based on the determination that the Pattons' proposed apartments on the first floor of their property would front on Main Street, a public street shown on the zoning map to be within the B-2 District.
Admittedly, Galax City Code § 160-93(E) is not a model of clarity. However, "[z]oning laws should be given a fair and reasonable construction in the light of the manifest intent of the legislative body enacting them, the object sought to be attained, the natural import оf the words used in common and accepted usage, the setting in which such words are employed, and the general structure of the ordinance as a whole."
Mooreland v. Young,
Clearly, the object of the creation of the B-2 District is to establish a "nucleus" or center for commercial and retail trade in the downtown and major outlying commercial areas of the City. Galax City Codе § 160-91. The legislative intent of the City in creating this district manifestly was to promote the mutual enhancement of businesses within the district by their proximity to one another. In this context, residential apartments on the first floors of structures fronting on the
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we will affirm the judgment of the trial court in both cases.
Affirmed.
Justice AGEE, with whom Justice KINSER and Justice LEMONS join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I agree with the majority opinion affirming the trial court's judgment in the equity case that the Pattons' proposed use of the first floor for residential apartments was not a prior nonconforming use grandfathered under the applicable zoning ordinance. However, I write separately because I respectfully disagree with the majority opinion in the law case construing the term "designated streets" under Galax City Code § 160-93 so as to affirm the Board of Zoning Appeals' denial of the Pattons' application for a conditional use permit.
The majority holds that the term "designated streets" in the zoning ordinance denotes "those public streets shown on the City's zoning map as being within the [business] district." Based on the plain language of the ordinance and established principles of statutory construction, I cannot agree and therefore respectfully dissent.
The record reflects that the sole reason the Pattons' conditional use permit was denied by the Board of Zoning Appeals was that "the apartments did front on a designated street." The trial court reiterated this basis in its letter opinion. However, the agreed statement of facts confirms "there was no list of streets" аnd "no `designated streets' shown upon the zoning map for the City of Galax." The record is devoid of any evidence that the City of Galax has ever designated any street as a "designated street" under Galax City Code § 160-93 or any other provision of the City Code.
The majority bases its reading of the term "designated streets" on the City's perceived intent in creating the B-2 business district. However, "[t]he purpose and intent of the ordinance should be considered but the ordinance should not be extended by interpretation or cоnstruction beyond its intended purpose."
Donovan v. Board of Zoning Appeals,
"Street" as a term, refers to a large class of roadways, not specific, named thoroughfares. A street is a road or way over land set apart for public use and travel in a city or town.
Norfolk City v. Chamberlaine,
In the ordinance at issue here, the general term, "street," is qualified by the specific, modifying term, "designated." "[W]hen general words and specific words are grouped together, the general words are limited and qualified by the specific words and will be construed tо embrace only objects similar in nature to those objects identified by the specific words."
Commonwealth v. United Airlines, Inc.,
The term "designated streets" has been used in this specific sense in ordinances of other Virginia localities.
White v. Hunt,
"Designated streets" is not a defined term in the Code of the City of Galax. We must, therefore, adopt the meaning evident by the plain language of the ordinance.
See Chappell v. Perkins,
The effect of the majority's decision is to effectively rewrite Galax City Code § 160-93(E) from its current provision
2
to read "[a]partment use, both on the second floor and the first floor not fronting on streets in the Business General district." Had the Galax City Council wished to adopt such an ordinance it could have done so, but did not. While City Council may elect to amend its zoning ordinances, that power is not within the province of the judiciary. Courts cannot add language to an ordinance that the drafters have not seen fit to include.
See Holsapple v. Commonwealth,
The only stated basis for the decision of the Board of Zoning Appeals denying the conditional use permit is that the Pattons' building was on a designated street. While I recognize that the decision of the Board of Zoning Appeals is presumed to be correct,
Masterson v. Board of Zoning Appeals,
The decision of the Board of Zoning Appeals was thus plainly wrong and sо is the judgment of the trial court affirming it. Accordingly, I would reverse the judgment of the trial court in the law case.
The parties refer to apartments and rental rooms interchangeably. The record establishes that individual rooms are rented for residential occupancy, with common bathrooms and a kitchen available for use by the occupants.
Galax City Code § 160-93 reads as follows: Conditional uses in the Business General (B-2) District shall be permitted following a public hearing and approval ... Conditional uses shall be one (1) or more of the following uses: ... E. Apartment use, both on the second floor and the first floor not fronting on designated streets.
