ORANGE COUNTY, a Municipal Corporation
v.
Forrest T. HEATH and wife, Nancy B. Heath.
No. 84.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
May 12, 1971.*811 Graham & Cheshire by Lucius M. Cheshire, Hillsborough, for plaintiff appellant.
*812 Winston, Coleman & Bernholz, by Alonzo Brown Coleman, Jr., Hillsborough, for defendant appellees.
HIGGINS, Justice.
The plaintiff alleged the defendants were in violation of the original zoning ordinance of February 6, 1967, limiting the described lands to residential use. The complaint did not refer either to an amendment passed on May 6, 1968, rezoning the area to use as a trailer home park, or to the attempt of the Orange County Board of Commissioners to rescind the amended ordinance in a special meeting held on May 13, 1968. However, by brief, the plaintiff suggested the rezoning order is void as an act of spot zoning and, being void, may be ignored. In the alternative the plaintiff seems to argue that if the rezoning ordinance of May 6, 1968, be adjudged to be valid, the rescinding resolution of May 13, 1968, repealed it, reinstating the limitation to residential use.
The record discloses the defendants purchased twenty acres of land in rural Chapel Hill Township and began developing it as a trailer home park. After five acres had been so developed, the area was zoned as a residential district. The defendants did not seek a permit to complete the project as a non-conforming use. See In Re Tadlock, 261 N.C. 120, 134 S.E.2d 177. On the contrary, they filed a petition for a rezoning order including the fifteen acres in the area zoned for trailer home park use. The zoning board conducted an investigation and recommended to the Board of Commissioners that the fifteen acres referred to be rezoned as prayed for in the defendants' petition. The Board of Commissioners posted the required notices and conducted a hearing as contemplated by G. S. § 153-266.16 and rezoned the land for mobile home park use as prayed for in the petition. The Board of Commissioners entered upon the records the resolution that the area was rezoned for trailer home park purposes.
A zoning ordinance is a legislative determination as to what restrictions should be placed on the use of land. The legislative judgment in such matters may not be disputed unless it is arbitrary or unreasonable. "* * * (A) legislative act is presumed to be constitutional and valid. This presumption applies to zoning ordinances. * * * The presumption of constitutionality is rebuttable, but it imposes upon the litigant who alleges invalidity the burden of proving that the ordinance is unreasonable and arbitrary." Anderson, American Law of Zoning, Vol. 1, § 2.14, pp. 67-69. See also Raleigh v. Morand, 247 N.C. 363, 100 S.E.2d 870; Zopfi v. City of Wilmington, 273 N.C. 430, 160 S.E.2d 325; In Re Appeal of Parker, 214 N. C. 51, 197 S.E. 706; Helms v. Charlotte, 255 N.C. 647, 122 S.E.2d 817.
The plaintiff does not allege the rezoning ordinance of May 6, 1968, is invalid, nor does it offer proof of facts which would establish invalidity. In fact, Stipulation No. 4, when properly construed, seems to be a concession that the rezoning act is valid. The argument in the brief, however, seems to challenge validity on the ground it is spot zoning. "Spot zoning arises where a small area, usually a single lot or a few lots, surrounded by other property of similar nature, is placed arbitrarily in a different use zone from that to which the surrounding property is made subject." Zopfi v. City of Wilmington, supra. The defendants' tract of fifteen acres rezoned by the ordinance of May 6 was not isolated, but joined the five acres already in legal use as a mobile home park. The rezoning act placed the defendants' entire area in the same use category, the use for which they acquired it at a time prior to the beginning of the zoning procedures.
The complaint and the stipulations when properly interpreted take from the plaintiff all legal grounds for its objection to the zoning ordinance of May 6, 1968. Necessarily the plaintiff's cause must fail unless it establishes the validity of the rescission *813 ordinance attempted on May 13, 1968. The defendants filed a proper petition for the change which the zoning board had investigated and had approved after a duly advertised and duly conducted public hearing. The Board of Commissioners allowed the petition and rezoned the remainder of defendants' property for inclusion in the trailer home park, the construction of which they had begun before any rezoning procedure began. One week later in a special meeting without request or petition, without notice and without the knowledge on the part of the defendants, or others, or an opportunity for anyone to be heard, the Board attempted to rescind the ordinance.
G.S. § 153-266.15 provides: "No amendment may be adopted until after a public hearing thereon." G.S. § 153-266.16 provides: "Whenever in this article a public hearing is required, all parties in interest and other citizens shall be given an opportunity to be heard." In the case of Freeland v. Orange County, reported in 273 N. C. 452, 160 S.E.2d 282, the opinion by the present Chief Justice, this language is used: "The manifest intention of the General Assembly was that a public hearing be conducted at which those who opposed and those who favored adoption of the ordinance would have a fair opportunity to present their respective views. The requirement that such a public hearing be conducted is mandatory."
A public hearing in a meeting held pursuant to notice was a prerequisite to the passage of the rezoning ordinance of May 6, 1968. The same procedure (notice and a hearing) would be required in order for the Board to rescind that ordinance and return the property to the former classification. The plaintiff's Stipulation No. 6 is fatal to the plaintiff's claim. "6. That this action (on May 13, 1968) was taken without any public notice or advertisement."
The plaintiff's attack on the judgment entered in the superior court failed for lack of merit. For the reasons herein assigned the judgment of the superior court is
Affirmed.