W&W PARTNERSHIP v. PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS, ET AL.
Record No. 090328
Supreme Court of Virginia
February 25, 2010
JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN
PRESENT: Kеenan, Koontz, Kinser, Lemons, Goodwyn, and Millette, JJ., and Carrico, S.J. FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, Herman A. Whisenant, Jr., Judge Designate
OPINION
In this appeal we consider whether a voluntary conveyance of land to the Commonwealth for a road that physically divided the landowners’ remaining property resulted in a legal subdivision of that remaining property.
Background
In 1940, Bryon D. and Georgette I. Woodside (the Woodsides) conveyed 1.44 acres of an approximately 48-acre tract of land located in Prince William County to the Commonwealth of Virginia. The 1.44 acres of land was used to extend a public road, Route 234, which thеn bisected the remainder of the Woodsides’ tract of land, leaving approximately 40 acres to the south of Route 234 and 5.17 acres to the north.
The deed conveying the land to the Commonwealth only contains a metes and bounds description of the strip of land conveyed to the Commonwealth. The deed does not contain a
The Woodsides owned the remaining property until 2000, when it was conveyed by legal description to the First Baptist Church of Gainesville. The property was conveyed to W&W Partnership in 2005. Thereafter, W&W Pаrtnership subdivided and conveyed a portion of the 40 acres to the south of Route 234, leaving W&W Partnership with 15.3 acres of property consisting of 10.13 acres to the south of Route 234 and 5.17 acres to the north.
W&W Partnership sought a separate address and Grid Parcel Identification Number (GPIN)1 from the Prince William County Zoning Administrator (Zoning Administrator) for the 5.17 acres of land north of Route 234, claiming that the 5.17 аcres of land were a separate, legally nonconforming lot created in 1940 by the Woodsides’ sale of the 1.44 acres to the Commonwealth. The Zoning Administrator ruled that the Woodsides’ parcel was not legally subdivided by the conveyance in 1940, but rather the property the Woodsides retained after the 1940 conveyance
W&W Partnership appealed to the Prince William County Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA), which affirmed the decision of the Zoning Administrator. W&W Partnership appealed to the circuit court, and the circuit court affirmed the BZA decision. W&W Partnership appeals the judgment of the circuit court.
Analysis
W&W Partnership claims that the circuit court erred in failing to find that the conveyance in 1940 by the Woodsides was an action by the owners that legally subdivided the 5.17 acres north of Route 234 from the rest of the Woodsides’ parcel. W&W Partnership claims that the 5.17 acres of land north of Route 234 was a separate conforming A-1 zoning district lot in 1958, when Prince William County adopted its first zoning ordinance. Thus, it claims that in 1982 when the Prince William County zoning ordinances were amended to require lots in A-1 zoning districts to contain at least 10 acres, the
Responding, thе BZA and Zoning Administrator contend that the 5.17 acres of land north of Route 234 was not legally separated from the parent tract in 1940 and presently is part of a 15.3-acre parcel owned by W&W Pаrtnership. They contend that the 15.3-acre parcel is located within an A-1 zoning district, which, as of 1982, requires all new lots to contain at least 10 acres. Thus, the court did not err in affirming the BZA‘s decision denying W&W Partnership‘s request for a separate GPIN and address for the 5.17-acre portion of the parcel.
On appeal from the BZA to the circuit court, “the findings and conclusions of the board of zoning appeals on questions of fact shall be presumed to be correct.”
We must resolve the issue of whether the 5.17 acres of
This Court stated in Stigall that the creation of a new lot “is a legal separation of property because it results from action by the owner and involves, at a minimum, a change in the legal description of the property, either by metes and bounds or by plat, which is duly recorded in the appropriate land records.” Id. at 705, 554 S.E.2d at 54. In Stigall, the landowner‘s parcel of property was physically dividеd when the Commonwealth acquired, by eminent domain, a portion of the parcel for the construction of a freeway. Id. at 700, 554 S.E.2d at 51. The freeway bisected the remaining parcel into two unequаl sections, but the property continued to be taxed as one parcel and the owner did not record a subdivision in the county‘s land records. Id. at 700-01, 554 S.E.2d at 51. We concluded that a legal separation of the landowner‘s remaining parcel had not been effected by the physical separation caused by the freeway because the Commonwealth acquired the proрerty by eminent domain, not through an action by the owner, and the owner had not duly recorded a change in the legal description of the remaining property. Id. at 705, 554 S.E.2d at 54.
W&W Partnership сlaims a distinction between a condemnation, which it claims effects a mere physical separation of property, and a voluntary conveyance by an owner, which it argues results in a legal separation of the remaining property. W&W Partnership further argues that the 1940 Woodsides deed memorialized a bona fide sale of 1.4 acres to the Commonwealth with a metеs and bounds description and that a “change in the legal description of the property” resulted when the Woodsides’ 1940 deed of conveyance was recorded. Thus, W&W Partnership argues that the 5.17 acres was separated legally and physically by the 1940 conveyance. We disagree.
We recognize that when Bryon and Georgette Woodside conveyed the 1.44-acre рarcel of land to the Commonwealth, the
Upon conveyance of the 1.44 acres to the Commonwealth in 1940, the Woodsides did not record a changed legal description of their property. The 1940 deed only provides a metes and bounds description of the 1.44-acre parcel conveyed to the Commonwealth. The 1940 deed does not set forth a new legal description of the remaining noncontiguous lot, and the Woodsides did not file a plat in the land records showing any new boundaries. Thus, the owners did not memorialize, by metes and bounds or by plat, any intended or desired legal separatiоn of the noncontiguous portions. Neither did the owners record in the appropriate land records anything indicating that the
Conclusion
Accordingly, for the reasons stated, we affirm the circuit court‘s judgment.
Affirmed.
