This case is on appeal from the Court of Appeals’ decision upholding the denial of Petitioner’s zoning variance. We affirm as modified.
Factual/Procedural Background
Petitioners Restaurant Row Associates and the Afterdeck d/b/a Thee DollHouse (“Thee DollHouse”) began its adult entertainment business in Horry County (“the County”) in March 1988. On September 30, 1989, the County adopted Ordinance 92-89, establishing adult entertainment zoning regulations. Ordinance 92-89, now codified in the Horry County Zoning Code as section 526, granted a six-year amortization period to businesses existing at the time of the ordinance’s enactment that were in violation of the ordinance so that they
The zoning plan prohibits the location of an adult entertainment establishment within 500 feet of a residential district. Thee DollHouse is a nonconforming use under the ordinance because it is located 350 feet from a residential district. Almost all of this 350 feet consists of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway that separates Thee DollHouse from the residential district. This residential district is comprised of a golf course and currently contains no residential development.
In early 1994, the Horry County Zoning Administrator wrote to Thee DollHouse, advising it that it was an “adult use” as defined by the County’s Adult Use Zoning Regulations, and that its nonconforming use of the property would have to cease on or before January 1,1995. Thee DollHouse responded by filing three separate petitions with the Horry County Board of Adjustments and Zoning Appeals (“the Board”). The first petition challenged the definition of “Adult Cabaret” as used in the ordinance. The second petition alleged that Ordinance 26-90, an ordinance passed after 92-89, effectively grandfathered in Thee DollHouse’s adult use. The third petition requested a variance from the setback and amortization provisions of 92-89.
During the Board meeting, the Zoning Administrator made no recommendation to approve or deny the variance application. A paid consultant testified extensively for Thee DollHouse. The consultant offered testimony, including a written report, supporting Thee DollHouse’s claim that it met the variance criteria. The Board also heard comments from several members of the public.
After hearing all the evidence, the Board denied Thee DollHouse’s request for a variance as well as its other two petitions. Thee DollHouse then appealed the Board’s decisions to the circuit court. The circuit court upheld the Board’s determination that Horry County Ordinance 26-90 did not grandfather in adult uses, but nevertheless held that the denial of Thee DollHouse’s variance request was “arbitrary and clearly erroneous in light of the lack of any residence on the golf course and the natural barrier created by the Intracoastal Waterway.”
Did the Court of Appeals err in reversing the circuit court and thereby upholding the Zoning Board’s determination that Thee DollHouse failed to meet the standards for receiving a variance?
Law/Analysis
Thee DollHouse argues that the Court of Appeals erred by failing to find the Board acted arbitrarily and capriciously in denying the variance. We disagree.
When deciding whether to grant a variance, a local board must be guided by standards which are specific in order to prevent the ordinance from being invalid and arbitrary.
Hodge v. Pollock,
The board of appeals ... shall have the following powers:
(2) To authorize upon appeal in specific cases a variance from the terms of the ordinance or resolution as will not be contrary to the public interest where, owing to special conditions, a literal enforcement of the provisions of the ordinance or resolution will, in an individual case, result in unnecessary hardship, so that the spirit of the ordinance or resolution shall be observed, public safety and welfare secured, and substantial justice done. Such variance may be granted in such individual case of unnecessary hardship upon a finding by the board of appeals that:
(a) There are extraordinary and exceptional conditions pertaining to the particular piece of property in question because of its size, shape, or topography, and
(b) The application of the ordinance or resolution of this particular piece of property would create an unnecessary hardship, and
(c) Such conditions are peculiar to the particular piece of property involved, and
(d) Relief, if granted, would not cause substantial detriment to the public good or impair the purposes and intent of the ordinance or resolution or the comprehensive plan, provided, however, that no variance may be granted for a use of land or building or structure that is prohibited in a given district by ordinance or resolution.
In order to grant a variance, the Board must make the factual determination that each of the four elements above favor granting the variance.
See Dolive v. J.E.E. Developers, Inc.,
It is a well settled proposition of zoning law that a court will not substitute its judgment for the judgment of the board. The court may not feel that the decision of the board was the best that could have been rendered under the circumstances. It may thoroughly disagree with the reasoning by which the board reached its decision. It may feel that the decision of the board was a substandard piece of logic and thinking. None the less, the court will not set aside the board’s view of the matter just to inject its own ideas into the picture of things.
Talbot v. Myrtle Beach Board of Adjustment,
Thee DollHouse argues that the Court of Appeals applied an incorrect standard for determining the unnecessary hardship element of the zoning ordinance. We agree, but nonetheless conclude that Thee DollHouse has failed to prove unnecessary hardship. The Court of Appeals held there was no unnecessary hardship because Thee DollHouse failed to present evidence suggesting “there was no feasible conforming use for the land in question.”
Restaurant Row Associates v. Horry County,
Variance applicants are not required to prove that without the variance there exists no feasible conforming use for the property in question in order to show unnecessary hardship. This Court has upheld the granting of variances where there were feasible conforming uses of the property.
See Hartman v. City of Columbia,
In South Carolina, “The courts have never undertaken to formulate an all-inclusive definition of ‘unnecessary hardship’. Although it has been stated that the phrase should be given a reasonable construction, it is recognized that it does not lend itself to precise definitions automatically resolving every case.”
Stevenson v. Board of Adjustment of City of Charleston,
Although there is no set definition, this Court has established guidelines for determining “unnecessary hardship.” First, a claim of unnecessary hardship cannot be based upon conditions created by the owner nor can one who purchases property after the enactment of a zoning regulation complain that a nonconforming use would work an unnecessary hardship upon him.
Rush v. City of Greenville,
Thee DollHouse’s claims of business disruption, loss of goodwill, relocation costs, and contractual obligations to the existing location all fall under the scope of its financial hardship. However, these claims alone do not automatically constitute unnecessary hardship, and in this case the Board concluded that they did not. It is important to remember that Thee DollHouse can continue in its existing location, the only restriction is that it cannot operate as an adult use without a variance. This situation is very different from the one found in
Bennett v. Sullivan’s Island Bd. of Adjustment,
Thee DollHouse argues that if it must relocate there will be at least a temporary loss of First Amendment rights, in addition to financial hardship, and this will constitute unnecessary hardship. Thee DollHouse argues that any loss of First Amendment rights would be unnecessary hardship because its business does not produce the secondary effects that allow the regulation of adult business under the First Amendment. We disagree.
Thee DollHouse argues that denying the variance was an unconstitutional application of the ordinance. Initially, the ordinance itself is constitutional under the decisions of the United States Supreme Court in
Young v. American Mini Theatres, Inc.,
The County’s zoning ordinance is a proper time, place, and manner restriction because it does not unreasonably limit “alternative avenues of communication.”
See Renton,
Even though the County’s zoning ordinance is constitutionally valid, Thee DollHouse argues that the Board applied it unconstitutionally by denying the variance. Thee DollHouse argues that it provided unrebutted testimony to the
Renton
recognized that local governments need not wait for the secondary effects of adult businesses to actually manifest themselves before implementing zoning restrictions. In
Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
Thee DollHouse also argues that the natural barrier of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway prevents even the possibility of negative secondary effects from arising in the
The County’s ordinance as applied to Thee DollHouse is constitutional. Other than the claim of a temporary loss of First Amendment rights during relocation and the financial hardship associated with such a move, Thee DollHouse did not produce for the Board evidence that would demand a finding of unnecessary hardship. Having failed to meet this required element of the variance criteria, the Board correctly denied Thee DollHouse’s petition.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Notes
. The ordinance provides:
WHEREAS, by enacting Ordinance Number 92-89, the Horry County Council intended to prevent the recognized ill effects of allowing adult entertainment establishments too close to residential areas; and
WHEREAS, residential use existing in zones other than the ones specifically delineated in Section 526.2(C) 1 as residential are incompatible with and suffer a serious risk of harm by the location of an adult entertainment establishment near them, for the reasons outlined in the studies referenced in Ordinance Number 92-89, which studies are incorporated herein by reference as if set forth herein verbatim;
Horry County Ordinance Number 29-92.
. We note that the secondary effects doctrine from
Renton
distinguishes the current case from our decision in
Bannum, Inc. v. City of Columbia,
.
Vicary v. City of Corona,
