Mann Media, Inc. v. Randolph County Planning Board

McGEE, Judge.

Petitioners applied for a special use permit to locate a broadcast tower on certain land located in Randolph County. Following proceedings held on 10 November 1998, respondent denied petitioners’ application. Pursuant to a writ of certiorari, the Randolph County Superior Court vacated and remanded the matter for a hearing de novo, because respondent had not specified its reason for the denial in the minutes of the meeting at which the action was taken.

Petitioners’ application for a special use permit was heard on 10 June 1999 and was again denied by respondent in an order dated 24 June 1999. Petitioners’ request for a writ of certiorari from the Randolph County Superior Court was granted, and a hearing was held on 2 August 1999. On 17 August 1999, the trial court vacated respondent’s 24 June 1999 order denying petitioners’ application for a special use permit and remanded the matter to respondent for entry of an order allowing petitioners’ application. Respondent appeals.

The scope of the trial court’s judicial review of respondent’s denial of petitioners’ application includes “[ijnsuring that decisions of town boards are supported by competent, material and substantial evidence in the whole record, and . . . that decisions are not arbitrary and capricious.” Concrete Co. v. Board of Commissioners, 299 N.C. 620, 626, 265 S.E.2d 379, 383 (1980). Respondent contends that the trial court improperly reversed respondent’s conclusions that petitioners’ “proposed use will substantially injure the value of adjoining or abutting property” and that “[t]he location and character of the use . . . will not be in harmony with the area in which it is to be located.” As in Concrete Co., the question on appeal before this Court “is not whether the evidence before the superior court supported that court’s order but whether the evidence before the [county planning] board was supportive of its action.” Id.

*139I.

Respondent assigns error to the trial court’s conclusion of law that “[b]ecause Petitioners’ proposed use is a permitted use within the zoning district in which it is proposed to be located, it is in harmony with the area in which it is to be located as a matter of law.” As our Court has stated with respect to special and conditional use permits:

The inclusion of a use as a conditional use in a particular zoning district establishes a prima facie case that the permitted use is in harmony with the general zoning plan. If, however, competent, material, and substantial evidence reveals that the use contemplated is not in fact in “harmony with the area in which it is to be located” the Board may so find.

Vulcan Materials Co. v. Guilford County Bd. of County Comrs., 115 N.C. App. 319, 324, 444 S.E.2d 639, 643 (1994) (citations omitted). The trial court must assess whether competent, material and substantial evidence supported respondent’s conclusion that petitioners’ proposed use was not in harmony with the area in which it was to be located.

“In civil cases, ‘[t]he burden is on the appellant not only to show error but to enable the court to see that he was prejudiced[.]’ ” Hajmm Co. v. House of Raeford Farms, 328 N.C. 578, 589, 403 S.E.2d 483, 490 (1991) (citation omitted). In order to overcome petitioners’ prima facie showing of harmony, respondent must show that its conclusion of lack of harmony is supported by competent, material and substantial evidence. In Vulcan, we found competent, material and substantial evidence of lack of harmony in a proposed quarry where (1) the area surrounding the proposed quarry was entirely residential and agricultural; (2) the nearest non-residential use to the proposed quarry was a commercial facility over two miles away; and (3) the Guilford County Comprehensive Plan adopted in 1986 reserved the area of the site for residential use. See Vulcan, 115 N.C. App. at 323-24, 444 S.E.2d at 642.

In the present case, no evidence of a comprehensive plan for the county was presented before respondent. The record shows a feed and supply store abuts petitioners’ proposed site, and three more commercial establishments appear to be located some 3,500 feet from the proposed tower. A broadcast tower owned by WFMY, even taller than petitioners’ proposed 1,500-foot tower, stands 1.35 miles away, *140and apparently there is a third tower within five miles of petitioners’ proposed site.

Respondent based its conclusion of lack of harmony specifically on the “substantially greater” population density around the site of petitioners’ proposed tower than around “sites for towers which have been previously approved by [respondent] for Special Use Permits.” However, comparative evidence of population density in the record is limited to a map of the area surrounding the WFMY broadcast tower. While it is true that the WFMY map shows there to be only half as many houses within 1,500 feet of that taller tower than within 1,500 feet of petitioners’ proposed tower, the relevance of a 1,500-foot circle is never explained. No evidence of population densities around any other towers approved by respondent appears in the record, nor any suitable explanation of the relationship between population density and a broadcast tower’s harmony with an area.

“A board of commissioners ‘cannot deny applicants a permit in their unguided discretion or, stated differently, refuse it solely because, in their view, [it] would “adversely affect the public interest.” ’ ” Woodhouse v. Board of Commissioners, 299 N.C. 211, 217, 261 S.E.2d 882, 886 (1980) (citations omitted). We conclude that the record fails to show competent, material and substantial evidence to overcome petitioners’ prima facie showing of harmony under Vulcan.

II.

Respondent also assigns error to the trial court’s finding of fact that petitioners’ “proposed tower would have no substantial adverse effect on the value of adjoining or abutting properties” and conclusions of law that opponents’ testimony of adverse effect on value was incompetent because it did not relate to property adjoining or abutting petitioners’ proposed site. Respondent argues that, if the testimony of adverse property value effects by opponents was incompetent, then petitioners’ evidence of lack of adverse property value effect was similarly incompetent, because neither petitioners nor opponents introduced any evidence of actual adjoining or abutting property values. If petitioners’ evidence was incompetent, then they failed to meet their burden of showing no adverse property value effects, see Refining Co. v. Board of Aldermen, 284 N.C. 458, 468, 202 S.E.2d 129, 136 (1974), and their application was properly denied.

*141In Sun Suites Holdings, L.L.C. v. Board of Aldermen of Garner, 139 N.C. App. 269, 533 S.E.2d 525, disc. review denied, 353 N.C. 280, 546 S.E.2d 397 (2000), two opponents to a conditional use permit testified concerning adverse property effects. The first, a resident of the neighborhood, testified that he would not have bought his house had he known of the petitioner’s planned development and assumed the same would hold true for anyone buying his house, thus lowering its value. The second opponent, a real estate agent with clients in the neighborhood, testified that he felt that property values would go down in the neighborhood. Our Court has stated that “speculative opinions such as the foregoing fail to constitute substantial evidence.” Id. at 278, 533 S.E.2d at 531 (citation omitted). Neither witness “presented any ‘factual data or background,’ such as certified appraisals or market studies, supporting their naked opinions.” Id. (citation omitted). Neither owned property adjoining or abutting the proposed site, and neither testified specifically to the effect of the planned development on property adjoining or abutting the proposed site. We held that neither had provided substantial evidence of adverse effects to property values. See id.

In the present case, no opponents owning property adjoining or abutting petitioners’ proposed tower site offered more than speculative opinions that their property values would be affected. A realtor opined that property values would be affected but was unable to provide any examples of affected sales of property adjoining or abutting other towers and acknowledged that she had taken no formal courses in real property appraisal. A builder testified that he was in the process of purchasing some seven lots in a subdivision abutting the proposed site and would walk away from the purchase if the tower was approved because of its adverse effect on property values, but for business reasons refused to specify which lots he was interested in and, thus, whether any of them were actually adjoining or abutting the proposed site. We conclude that, under Sun Suites, the opponents to petitioners’ tower failed to present competent, material and substantial evidence of substantial adverse effects on the value of adjoining or abutting properties.

Respondent argues that, by the same logic, petitioners failed to present competent, material and substantial evidence as well. Petitioners’ appraiser specifically opined that the tower would not have a substantial effect on adjoining or abutting property values, but acknowledged that the slow turnover in housing around other towers in Randolph County meant he did not have any actual before-and-*142after comparables for such properties. The appraiser instead based his opinion on property farther away from the tower and compensated for the distance in his calculations. Under Sun Suites, respondent argues, the appraiser’s opinion should be as incompetent as that of the tower’s opponents.

However, because petitioners’ appraiser is a professional appraiser whose skill was acknowledged even by the opponent realtor described above, we hold that his expert opinion will satisfy the requirement for competent, material and substantial evidence despite our holding in Sun Suites. We do not believe that Randolph County, in enacting an ordinance covering special use permits, intended to preclude approval of such permits whenever market data in the area failed to include adjoining or abutting comparables. We therefore hold that petitioners presented competent, material and substantial evidence that their proposed tower would have no substantial adverse effect on the value of adjoining or abutting properties.

Because we find that petitioners met their burden for approval of their special use permit application, and because we find that respondent’s order denying the special use permit was not supported by competent, material and substantial evidence, we affirm the trial court’s judgment vacating respondent’s order and remanding the matter to respondent for entry of an order allowing petitioners’ special use permit application.

Affirmed.

Judge HORTON concurs. Judge WALKER dissents.