Court Opinion

ID: 9906800
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-05 14:24:42.93305+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:47:46.694396
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
UNPUBLISHED

              Present: Judges Humphreys, Beales and Lorish
              Argued at Richmond, Virginia

              THE EAST END LANDFILL, LLC

              v.     Record No. 1232-22-2

              THE COUNTY OF HENRICO, VIRGINIA, ET AL.

              THE EAST END LANDFILL, LLC
                                                                            MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
              v.     Record No. 1233-22-2                                  JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS
                                                                                DECEMBER 5, 2023
              THE COUNTY OF HENRICO, VIRGINIA, ET AL.

              THE EAST END LANDFILL, LLC

              v.     Record No. 1234-22-2

              BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF HENRICO COUNTY, ET AL.

                                   FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY
                                           Richard S. Wallerstein, Jr., Judge

                              Paul R. Schmidt (J. Bryan Plumlee; Poole Brooke Plumlee PC, on
                              briefs), for appellant.

                              Ryan Murphy, Deputy County Attorney (Andrew Newby, County
                              Attorney, on brief), for appellees.

                     This consolidated appeal involves the denial of a conditional use permit for the expansion

              of a landfill in Henrico County. The East End Landfill, LLC (“TEEL”) filed three separate

              actions in the Henrico County Circuit Court: an appeal from the decision of the Henrico County

              Board of Zoning Appeals (“BZA”) denying the permit application, a complaint for declaratory

              judgment declaring the conditional use permit ordinance void, and a petition for an injunction

                     *
                         This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
prohibiting Henrico County from enforcing the ordinance or requiring a use permit for the

proposed use. Because Henrico County replaced the offending ordinance during the pendency of

the litigation, the circuit court dismissed all three actions for mootness. TEEL now appeals.

                                          BACKGROUND

         TEEL is a Virginia limited liability company that operated a landfill in Henrico County.

TEEL acquired an adjacent landfill and operated both landfills under a unified use permit from the

county. In June 2013, TEEL sought and obtained an amended conditional use permit to expand its

landfill business at Darbytown Road in Henrico, as required by Henrico Zoning Ordinance (“HZO”)

§ 24-74(b). For reasons that are not apparent from the record, the BZA subsequently revoked this

conditional use permit in 2018. Following this revocation, TEEL applied for a new conditional use

permit, which was subsequently denied by the BZA in October 2020. At the time that TEEL filed

for this new conditional use permit, TEEL was not operating the landfill.

         TEEL then appealed the BZA decision to the circuit court, arguing for the first time the

Henrico conditional use permit ordinance was unconstitutionally vague. TEEL also included a

“motion for declaratory judgment” and “motion for injunction” in their appeal. Upon Henrico

County’s motion, the circuit court dismissed the motions, and granted leave for TEEL to file

separate declaratory judgment and injunctive relief actions, which TEEL subsequently did in July

2021.

         TEEL’s declaratory judgment action alleged that the HZO governing conditional use

permits (HZO § 24-116) was void for the failure of the ordinance to articulate definite standards to

govern the BZA decision. TEEL’s petition for injunctive relief alleged the exact same controversy

and asked the court to permanently enjoin Henrico County from enforcing the conditional use

permit ordinance or to prohibit Henrico County from requiring TEEL to obtain a permit to operate

its landfill.

                                                 -2-
        On June 22, 2021, during the pendency of the BZA appeal, but prior to TEEL filing its

declaratory judgment and injunction actions, the Henrico Board of Supervisors made substantial

overhauls to its zoning code and replaced HZO § 24-116 with HZO § 24-1101 et seq. Under the

new ordinance, conditional use permits for landfills are issued directly by the Board of Supervisors,

obviating the need for specific articulable standards. HZO §§ 24-2306, -4205.

        Henrico County filed motions to dismiss in each of the three cases on the grounds that the

issues were now moot, arguing that the repeal of the allegedly unconstitutional ordinance meant that

the issues were no longer live and that any legally cognizable interest that TEEL had prior to the

repeal was now gone. The circuit court held a hearing on Henrico County’s motions and issued a

letter opinion and final order granting the motions to dismiss. TEEL now appeals.

                                             ANALYSIS

        “Where, as here, ‘no evidence [has been] taken with regard to [a] motion to dismiss[,] we

treat the factual allegations . . . as we do on review of a demurrer.’” Bragg v. Bd. of Supervisors of

Rappahannock Cnty., 295 Va. 416, 423 (2018) (first, second and third alterations in original)

(quoting Va. Marine Res. Comm’n v. Clark, 281 Va. 679, 686 (2011)). We accept “the truth of all

material facts that are . . . expressly alleged, impliedly alleged, and which can be inferred from the

facts alleged.” Harris v. Kreutzer, 271 Va. 188, 195-96 (2006). Additionally, because the

sufficiency of appellant’s pleadings presents “pure questions of law, we do not accord a

presumption of correctness to the judgment below, but review the issues de novo.” Philip Morris

USA Inc. v. Chesapeake Bay Found., Inc., 273 Va. 564, 572 (2007); see also Bragg, 295 Va. at 423

(“We . . . review the circuit court’s decision to dismiss the petition, and any corresponding issues of

statutory interpretation, de novo.”).

                                                  -3-
                                        I. TEEL’s BZA Appeal

        We first address TEEL’s appeal to the circuit court from the BZA decision denying their

petition for a conditional use permit. Under Code § 15.2-2314, a party aggrieved from a decision by

a BZA may file a petition for a writ of certiorari in the circuit court to review the decision of the

BZA. However, because an aggrieved party may not challenge the constitutionality of an ordinance

through the certiorari process, the circuit court did not err in dismissing TEEL’s petition.1

        In Board of Zoning Appeals of James City County v. University Square Associates, 246 Va.

290 (1993), the Supreme Court of Virginia held that zoning appeal certiorari proceedings are limited

in scope and cannot address the constitutionality of ordinances. At issue in University Square was a

decision of the James City County Board of Zoning Appeals rejecting a site plan for failure to

comply with certain conditions in a special use permit. Id. at 293. The developer appealed to the

circuit court arguing that the BZA condition was “so vague and uncertain that it was totally

unenforceable,” and the circuit court agreed and reversed the BZA. Id. The Supreme Court

reversed. Id. at 294. Noting the limited statutory vehicle of BZA appeals, the Supreme Court

expressly held that “the certiorari process does not authorize a trial court to rule on the validity or

constitutionality of legislation underlying a board of zoning appeals decision.” Id. The Court

reasoned:

                Our conclusion is supported by the fact that the proceeding on a
                writ of certiorari is not a trial de novo. Town of Ashland v. Ashland
                Inv. Co., 235 Va. 150, 155 (1988). Rather, the trial court’s review
                is limited to determining whether the decision of the board of
                zoning appeals is plainly wrong or is based on erroneous principles
                of law. Masterson v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 233 Va. 37, 44

        1
         This Court is obligated to decide cases on the best and narrowest grounds. Butcher v.
Commonwealth, 298 Va. 392, 396-97 (2020). Additionally, this Court may affirm the circuit
court’s decision for any reason that is apparent from the record. Vandyke v. Commonwealth, 71
Va. App. 723, 731 (2020). Although the circuit court ruled that TEEL’s petition was moot, we
hold that the best and narrowest grounds to decide this case is that the statutory certiorari process
did not permit the circuit court to consider TEEL’s argument that the prior ordinance was
unconstitutional.
                                                -4-
                 (1987). Therefore, since the BZA’s decision was limited to the
                 issue whether the Zoning Administrator’s ruling was correct, the
                 constitutionality of the underlying legislation was not a proper
                 subject for the trial court’s review on a writ of certiorari.

Id. at 294-95.

        In this case, the sole basis for TEEL’s writ of certiorari to the circuit court was that the

Henrico County ordinance authorizing the BZA to grant or deny conditional use permits was

unconstitutional. Applying the holding in University Square, we hold that the circuit court was not

permitted to review the underlying constitutionality of the Henrico County ordinance as a part of the

certiorari proceeding, and therefore did not err in dismissing TEEL’s petition.

                      II. TEEL’s Declaratory Judgment and Injunction Appeals

        TEEL also argues that the circuit court erred in dismissing its declaratory judgment action

and its petition for an injunction as moot. We decline to reach the merits of this argument as TEEL

has approbated and reprobated.

        Under the approbate and reprobate bar, a litigant may not “in the course of the same

litigation occupy inconsistent positions.” Hurley v. Bennett, 163 Va. 241, 252 (1934). “The

approbate-reprobate bar allows the opposing party and the courts to rely on the position first taken

when one party affirmatively assumes inconsistent legal positions on their own behalf.” Harvey v.

Commonwealth, 67 Va. App. 336, 349 (2017).

        In this case, TEEL’s initial filings all alleged that the ordinance permitting the BZA to deny

conditional use permits without articulable standards was “void.” When a legal instrument is “void”

it is “[o]f no legal effect. . . . The distinction between void and voidable is often of great practical

importance. Whenever technical accuracy is required, void can be properly applied only to those

provisions that are of no effect whatsoever—those that are an absolute nullity.” Void, Black’s Law

Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). “Virginia law is clear that legal nullities should be treated as though

they never occurred.” Hood v. Commonwealth, 75 Va. App. 358, 366 (2022). However, on appeal
                                                   -5-
TEEL now argues that the circuit court’s mootness ruling “deprived [TEEL] of its rights to proceed

under the ‘old’ HZO.” It is mutually inconsistent to argue that an ordinance is void and without

legal effect while simultaneously arguing that a litigant somehow has rights under that same

ordinance. In other words, because TEEL has argued that the ordinance was void, it cannot now be

heard to argue that the now-repealed ordinance is of some legal effect entitling TEEL to relief.

TEEL’s approbation and reprobation is necessarily fatal to its arguments on appeal.

                                          CONCLUSION

       Because a party may not challenge the constitutionality of an ordinance in a BZA certiorari

proceeding, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of TEEL’s appeal from the BZA’s denial of its

conditional use permit. Additionally, because TEEL has approbated and reprobated, we affirm the

circuit court’s dismissal of TEEL’s declaratory judgment and injunction actions.

                                                                                            Affirmed.

                                                -6-