In this case, the owner of seven acres of land in Guilford County sued Guilford County and the Guilford County Board of Commissioners. Plaintiff requested the court to set aside the rezoning of his land and issue an order permitting plaintiff to proceed with development of the property. The trial court concluded that the plaintiff had not incurred substantial expenditures pertaining to the property in question prior to rezoning so as to create in plaintiff a vested right. The court decreed that the rezoning of the tract was valid. The principal issue presented on appeal is whether the trial court’s findings of fact regarding the substantiality of plaintiff’s expenditures support the conclusion that plaintiff did not obtain a vested right to develop the property in question as commercial property. We affirm.
Plaintiff purchased the seven-acre tract on 3 July 1985. At that time, three acres were zoned for commercial retail uses and four acres were zoned for residential use only. Plaintiff was under the impression that all of the tract was zoned residential, however, and thus the first subdivision plan he submitted to the Guilford County Planning Board called for development of the property into seven one-acre residential lots. After plaintiff was informed that part of his property was zoned commercial, he hired the same engineer who developed the first plan to draw up a second plan to develop that portion commercially. Because the plan called for off-site sewage disposal, plaintiff was required to submit his new plan to the Guilford County Technical Review Committee [hereinafter TRC]. On 30 October 1986, the TRC sent a memo to plaintiff’s engineer stating that the committee had “conditionally” approved the plan. The TRC stamped the actual plan drawing: “APPROVED for B-l compliance DATE: 10-29-86 GUILFORD COUNTY PLANNING Dept.”
Plaintiff did not take any other action on the development until 16 July 1987 when he obtained a $100,000 loan, using as security the entire seven-acre tract and some other property he owned. Plaintiff testified that the $100,000 was disbursed as follows: $29,000 was used to pay off the principal on the entire seven-acre *543 tract, $2,500 was used to pay the engineering costs related to the entire seven-acre tract, $200 was spent on the application fee to rezone the residential tract to commercial, $500 was paid to appraise all the property used as collateral, $1,000 was paid for a loan origination fee, and $30,000 was used towards the development of unrelated property. Plaintiff testified that he had also paid taxes on the property.
After obtaining the loan, plaintiff sought alteration of his plan and began to pursue the rezoning of the four residential acres to commercial use. While plaintiff sought this rezoning,, a group of adjoining landowners filed an application with the Guilford County Board of Commissioners to have the three acres of commercial property rezoned to residential. On 21 December 1987, after a public hearing, the Board of Commissioners voted to rezone the three commercially zoned acres to residential. Subsequently, plaintiff brought this action claiming, among other things, that he has a vested right to commercially develop the property regardless of the rezoning to residential.
In order to proceed with commercial development in the residential zone, plaintiff must show that he has acquired a vested right in the property as zoned before the rezoning.
Town of Hillsborough v. Smith,
When plaintiff bought the tract, he thought it was all zoned residential. He had a plan drawn up dividing the property into a seven-lot residential subdivision. After learning that part of his tract was zoned for commercial uses, plaintiff changed his plans. *544 The money that plaintiff spent towards his first set of plans cannot be said to be substantial expenditures made in reliance on a governmental act of keeping three acres of his property zoned commercial, when plaintiff did not know the acres were zoned commercial. Of the $100,000 that plaintiff borrowed using the tract in question as part of the collateral, a large portion was expended on general overhead and an entirely different project. Further, some of the engineering costs were related to the development of the residential portion of the property; the trial court correctly determined that these expenditures should not enter into the calculation since the zoning for this property had not changed. Further, the trial court correctly did not include the $29,000 used to pay off the old deed of trust on the entire seven-acre tract because plaintiff initially bought the property for residential development.
As recognized in
Randolph v. Coen,
Plaintiff purchased the property in July 1985, submitted his plan to the TRC for approval of the off-site sewer facilities in October 1986, and obtained financing in July 1987. Plaintiff admits that the lengthy delay in developing the property was “simply because I was concentrating on other projects and this one was sort of put on the back burner.” Thus, plaintiff cannot argue that length of time between plaintiff’s purchase of the property and the County’s rezoning should be classified as an expense of time or labor made in reliance on the current zoning of the tract.
In
Sunderhaus v. Bd. of Adjustment,
We hold that the trial court’s findings of fact support its conclusion that the plaintiff had not incurred substantial expenditures for the commercial development of this property. Since we find that the plaintiff did not make substantial expenditures, we need not address whether plaintiff’s reliance on the TRC’s conditional approval of the plan was reasonable. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s conclusion that plaintiff did not acquire a vested right to develop his property contrary to the zoning ordinance.
Affirmed.
