Byron v. Synco Props., Inc. ( 2018 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA17-318
    Filed: 20 March 2018
    Mecklenburg County, No. 16-CVS-1265
    WILLIAM M. BYRON and DANA T. BYRON, Plaintiffs,
    v.
    SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC., a North Carolina corporation, and CITY OF
    CHARLOTTE, a North Carolina body politic and corporate, Defendants.
    Appeal by Plaintiffs from Order entered 23 November 2016 by Judge Yvonne
    Mims-Evans in Mecklenburg County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals
    5 September 2017.
    Scarbrough & Scarbrough, PLLC, by Madeline J. Trilling, and The Law Office
    of Kenneth T. Davies, P.C., by Kenneth T. Davies, for Plaintiffs.
    K&L Gates LLP, by Roy H. Michaux, Jr., for Defendant SYNCO Properties, Inc.
    Office of the Charlotte City Attorney, by Assistant City Attorney Thomas E.
    Powers, III, and Senior Assistant City Attorney Terrie Hagler-Gray, for
    Defendant City of Charlotte.
    INMAN, Judge.
    Landowners whose property is not directly and adversely affected by a zoning
    statute do not have standing to bring a declaratory judgment action to challenge the
    constitutionality of the statute or a municipality’s interpretation of the statute.
    Plaintiffs William M. Byron and Dana T. Byron (“Plaintiffs”), husband and
    wife, appeal from a summary judgment order dismissing their declaratory judgment
    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    action against defendant SYNCO Properties, Inc. (“SYNCO”) and the City of
    Charlotte (the “City,” collectively “Defendants”) challenging the rezoning of real
    property in Charlotte, North Carolina.          Plaintiffs contend that, because their
    complaint alleged facial constitutional challenges to a statute and session laws, the
    trial court was required to transfer those claims to a three-judge panel in Wake
    County pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 1-81.1, 1-267.1, and 1A-1, Rule 42(b)(4) (2015).
    Plaintiffs further challenge the trial court’s dismissal of their claims challenging N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 160A-385 (2015) and Session Law 2015-160 as moot, as well as its
    determination that the prior version of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-385 (2013) did not
    apply to the rezoning based on its interpretation of that session law. Defendants
    contend that Plaintiffs lacked standing to bring their suit. After careful review, we
    agree with Defendants that Plaintiffs lacked standing to assert the claims they seek
    to revive on appeal. As a result, we affirm the order of the trial court.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In late 2014, SYNCO filed an application with the City to rezone a tract located
    in the SouthPark area of Charlotte. On 11 March 2015, several local property owners
    (the “Petitioners”) filed a protest petition (the “Protest Petition”) with the City
    opposing the proposed rezoning pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-385 (2013) (the
    “Protest Petition Statute”). Plaintiffs were not among the Petitioners that filed the
    Protest Petition.
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    In July 2015, the North Carolina General Assembly passed Session Law 2015-
    160, which replaced the protest petition procedure in the Protest Petition Statute
    with a “Citizen Comment” procedure. 2015 N.C. Sess. Laws ch. 160, § 1 (2015)
    (codified as amended at N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-385 (2017)). Per the session law, the
    amended procedure “bec[ame] effective August 1, 2015, and applies to zoning
    ordinance changes initiated on or after that date.” 
    Id., § 6.
    On 24 September 2015, SYNCO withdrew its initial rezoning application.
    SYNCO filed a new rezoning application the following day. The new application
    sought approval for the same uses as those proposed in the initial rezoning
    application, along with revised building sizes and transportation improvements.
    On 19 January 2016, the Charlotte City Council voted unanimously to approve
    the second rezoning application. The City and SYNCO treated the second application
    as one not subject to the Protest Petition Statute. Nothing in the record indicates
    that the Petitioners sought injunctive or other relief requiring the City to recognize
    the applicability of the Protest Petition to the second rezoning application or to follow
    the procedures set forth in the Protest Petition Statute. Rather, one of the Petitioners
    stated in an affidavit that “a change in the state law had invalidated the Protest
    Petition” and declined to take action to revive the Petition or require its application.
    On 25 January 2016, Plaintiffs filed a declaratory judgment action seeking to
    invalidate the City Council’s approval of the rezoning application.           After two
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    amendments to the original complaint and the voluntary dismissal of one claim,
    Plaintiffs’ final amended complaint alleged that: (1) Defendants violated N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 160A-364 (2015);1 (2) Defendants made certain misrepresentations and
    omissions in the rezoning process; (3) Defendants violated the Protest Petition
    Statute, which they were required to follow per Plaintiffs’ interpretation of Session
    Law 2015-160; (4) the City’s actions were ultra vires; (5) Session Law 2000-84 was
    unconstitutional;2 (6) the City’s actions violated Plaintiffs’ due process rights; (7) N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 160A-383 (2015), which employs the citizen comment procedures rather
    than protest petition procedures, unconstitutionally deprives the judiciary of judicial
    power; and (8) N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-383 (2015) and Session Law 2015-160’s
    replacement of protest petition procedures with citizen comment procedures deprives
    Plaintiffs of their constitutional right to petition the government for the redress of
    grievances.3
    The parties filed competing motions for summary judgment, and the trial court
    granted summary judgment against Plaintiffs on 23 November 2016.                                  In the
    summary judgment order, the trial court held that Plaintiffs had standing to bring
    1  This statute establishes the procedures applicable to the adoption, amendment, or repeal of
    ordinances by cities and towns, and is unrelated to the issues raised on appeal. N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    160A-364.
    2 This session law permitted the City to engage in conditional zoning. 2000 N.C. Sess. Laws
    ch. 84 (2000).
    3 These claims are identified in Plaintiffs’ final amended complaint as their first, second, third,
    fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, and ninth causes of action, respectively.
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    their claims, but nonetheless dismissed all claims against Defendants, including
    Plaintiffs’ facial constitutional challenges. The Plaintiffs timely appealed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Standard of Review
    The standard of review on an appeal from summary judgment is de novo, and
    “such judgment is appropriate only when the record shows that there is no genuine
    issue as to any material fact and that any party is entitled to a judgment as a matter
    of law.” Atkinson v. City of Charlotte, 
    235 N.C. App. 1
    , 3, 
    760 S.E.2d 395
    , 397 (2014)
    (internal citation and quotation marks omitted). Because standing is a question of
    law, it, too, is subject to de novo review by this Court. Cherry v. Wiesner, ___ N.C.
    App. ___, ___, 
    781 S.E.2d 871
    , 876 (2016).
    B. The Standing Requirements Relevant to Plaintiffs’ Appeal
    Resolution of this appeal requires distinguishing the different standing
    doctrines applicable to: (1) zoning ordinance challenges; (2) statutory construction
    and validity claims; and (3) constitutional challenges to zoning ordinances.       “In
    passing on the validity of an annexation or zoning ordinance, one of the court’s first
    concerns is whether the plaintiff has standing to bring the action.” Town of Ayden v.
    Town of Winterville, 
    143 N.C. App. 136
    , 138, 
    544 S.E.2d 821
    , 823 (2001) (citation
    omitted). The question of standing “is a threshold issue that must be addressed, and
    found to exist, before the merits of the case are judicially resolved.” In re Baby Boy,
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    
    238 N.C. App. 316
    , 321-22, 
    767 S.E.2d 628
    , 631 (2014) (citation and quotation marks
    omitted).
    A rezoning ordinance may be challenged in a declaratory judgment action
    “only . . . by a person who has a specific personal and legal interest in the subject
    matter affected by the zoning ordinance and who is directly and adversely affected
    thereby.” Taylor v. City of Raleigh, 
    290 N.C. 608
    , 620, 
    227 S.E.2d 576
    , 583 (1976)
    (emphasis added) (citations omitted). Standing to challenge a statute requires that
    the statute directly and adversely affect the plaintiff. Wake Cares, Inc. v. Wake Cty.
    Bd. of Educ., 
    190 N.C. App. 1
    , 11, 
    660 S.E.2d 217
    , 223 (2008) (“A declaratory judgment
    may be used to determine the construction and validity of a statute, but the plaintiff
    must be directly and adversely affected by the statute[.]” (emphasis added) (internal
    citation and quotation marks omitted)).           Finally, standing to challenge the
    constitutionality of a zoning ordinance or statute requires that the plaintiff
    demonstrate injury or immediate danger of injury to a constitutionally protected
    interest in the property subject to that ordinance or statute. See, e.g., Coventry Woods
    Neighborhood Ass’n, Inc. v. City of Charlotte, 
    202 N.C. App. 247
    , 257, 
    688 S.E.2d 538
    ,
    545 (2010) (holding that neighboring property owners could not challenge a rezoning
    decision on facial or as-applied constitutional and procedural due process grounds
    because “a change in the treatment of an adjoining tract of property under local land
    use ordinances that affects the use and enjoyment of [the plaintiffs’] property [does
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    not] implicate[] a constitutionally-protected property interest”); Templeton v. Town of
    Boone, 
    208 N.C. App. 50
    , 56, 
    701 S.E.2d 709
    , 713-14 (2010) (holding plaintiffs lacked
    standing to challenge a zoning ordinance on constitutional grounds where the
    ordinance was not enforced against plaintiffs’ properties but only “affected” them
    (emphasis in original)).
    The trial court’s summary judgment order dismissed all of Plaintiffs’ claims;
    however, Plaintiffs argue on appeal only that the trial court: (1) incorrectly concluded
    that the City was not required to apply the Protest Petition Statute to the rezoning
    due to its misinterpretation of the effective date of Session Law 2015-160; (2)
    wrongfully concluded their challenges to certain zoning statutes and session laws
    were moot; and (3) impermissibly dismissed their constitutional challenges to those
    zoning statutes and session laws. In effect, then, Plaintiffs seek to revive their
    declaratory judgment action only as to: (1) the interpretation of Session Law 2015-
    160 (and by extension the applicability of the Protest Petition Statute); and (2) the
    constitutionality of the zoning statutes and session laws governing the procedure
    employed by the City in rezoning.4            In short, Plaintiffs’ appeal challenges the
    interpretation and constitutionality of the statutes and session laws governing the
    City’s rezoning decision, rather than the inherent validity of the rezoning decision
    itself. As a result, the question before this Court is not whether Plaintiffs had
    4  Plaintiffs confirmed at oral argument that their only claims on appeal related to their
    constitutional challenges and the interpretation of Session Law 2015-160.
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    standing to challenge the rezoning decision, as they sought to do in the claims not at
    issue on appeal,5 but whether they had standing to seek a declaratory judgment
    determining the construction and constitutionality of the session laws and statutes
    governing that rezoning. Compare 
    Taylor, 290 N.C. at 620
    , 227 S.E.2d at 583 (“[T]he
    validity of a municipal zoning ordinance . . . may be determined . . . under our
    Declaratory Judgment Act . . . by a person who has a specific personal and legal
    interest in the subject matter affected by the zoning ordinance and who is directly
    and adversely affected thereby.” (emphasis added) (citations omitted)) with Wake
    Cares, 
    Inc., 190 N.C. App. at 11
    , 660 S.E.2d at 223 (“A declaratory judgment may be
    used to determine the construction and validity of a statute, but the plaintiff must be
    directly and adversely affected by the statute[.]” (emphasis added) (internal citations
    and quotation marks omitted)).
    C. Plaintiffs Lack Standing to Challenge the City’s Interpretation of Session Law
    2015-160 and the Applicability of the Protest Petition Statute
    5  For example, Plaintiffs challenged the rezoning on the grounds that the City’s decision
    constituted an ultra vires action that was “not in accordance with . . . adopted land use plans[,]” as
    well as “arbitrary and without reasonable basis[.]” This claim, in contrast to Plaintiffs’ statutory
    construction and constitutional validity claims, would be subject to the standing analysis employed in
    a declaratory judgment action challenging a zoning decision as inherently unlawful. See, e.g., Taylor
    290 N.C. at 
    620, 227 S.E.2d at 583
    (holding that standing exists in a declaratory judgment action
    challenging a rezoning as contrary to the established land use plan and as arbitrary and capricious
    where “challenged by a person who has a specific personal and legal interest in the subject matter
    affected by the zoning ordinance and who is directly and adversely affected thereby” (citations
    omitted)); cf. 
    Templeton, 208 N.C. App. at 54-62
    , 701 S.E.2d at 713-17 (applying, in a declaratory
    judgment action, one set of standing requirements to claims challenging the constitutionality of a
    zoning ordinance itself and a different set of standing requirements to claims alleging violation of a
    procedural statute governing the zoning decision).
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiffs contend that the City and trial court misinterpreted the words
    “zoning ordinance changes initiated on or after [1 August 2015]” in Session Law 2015-
    160. 2015 N.C. Sess. Laws ch. 160, § 6. Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that, because
    SYNCO filed its first rezoning petition prior to that date, we should hold the rezoning
    under its second petition was a “zoning ordinance change[ ] initiated” prior to the
    session law’s effective date. 
    Id., § 6.
    Such a reading would require the City to have
    followed the Protest Petition Statute in the consideration of SYNCO’s rezoning
    petition and, as a result, render the City’s rezoning decision invalid.
    As 
    noted supra
    , “[a] declaratory judgment may be used to determine the
    construction and validity of a statute, but the plaintiff must be directly and adversely
    affected by the statute[.]” Wake Cares, 
    Inc., 190 N.C. App. at 11
    , 660 S.E.2d at 223
    (emphasis added) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).           Thus, the
    Plaintiffs can only seek a declaratory judgment proclaiming their preferred
    interpretation of the statute if they are “directly and adversely affected” by its
    enactment and replacement of protest petition procedures with citizen comments. Id.
    at 
    11, 660 S.E.2d at 223
    . Plaintiffs, however, were never entitled to oppose the
    rezoning by protest petition, as they did not meet the statutory requirements for such
    a filing under the Protest Petition Statute. The Protest Petition Statute specifically
    delineated those who had access to such a remedy: “owners of either (i) twenty percent
    (20%) or more of the area included in the proposed change or (ii) five percent (5%) of
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    a 100-foot-wide buffer . . . .” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-385 (2013). As conceded by
    Plaintiffs in oral argument before this Court, their property is neither subject to the
    proposed change in SYNCO’s petition, nor is it within 100 feet of the area subject to
    rezoning. Thus, Plaintiffs, as parties not subject to or able to avail themselves of the
    Protest Petition Statute, are not “directly and adversely affected” by the
    unavailability of a statutory procedure they were never entitled to enjoy in the first
    instance. Nor are they permitted to bring a claim interpreting the language “initiated
    on” in Session Law 2015-160, as its application concerns only whether qualifying
    persons able to avail themselves of the Protest Petition Statute could continue to
    pursue their rights thereunder.
    While Plaintiffs argue in their brief that the Protest Petition filed by the
    Petitioners     resulted      in   “heightened       procedural      requirements,”6        they     also
    acknowledge that those requirements are “imposed for the benefit and protection of
    the protest petition filer(s).”        (emphasis added).         In other words, any perceived
    procedural or due process benefits were bestowed on Plaintiffs not by the Protest
    Petition Statute itself, but instead by the Petitioners’ filing of a valid Protest Petition.
    6  Plaintiffs claim in their briefs that certain ordinances enacted by the City impose these
    requirements. Specifically, Plaintiffs claim these ordinances impose “additional requirements for
    notice and public hearing to the protest petition filer(s).” (emphasis added). Ignoring the fact that
    Plaintiffs were not and could not be protest petition filers in this case, several ordinances cited by the
    Plaintiffs are not included in the record on appeal, and we are prohibited by precedent from taking
    judicial notice of municipal ordinances. State v. Pallet, 
    283 N.C. 705
    , 712, 
    198 S.E.2d 433
    , 437 (1973).
    We therefore do not consider those ordinances not present in the record in our resolution of this appeal.
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    It was, therefore, Petitioners’ failure to revive or otherwise pursue the reinstatement
    of their Protest Petition—not Session Law 2015-160—that injured Plaintiffs.
    “Every claim must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest[,]”
    Goodrich v. Rice, 
    75 N.C. App. 530
    , 536, 
    331 S.E.2d 195
    , 199 (1985) (citation omitted),
    and, by extension, “[a] party has standing to initiate a lawsuit if he is a ‘real party in
    interest[,]’ ” Slaughter v. Swicegood, 
    162 N.C. App. 457
    , 463, 
    591 S.E.2d 577
    , 582
    (2004) (citations omitted). When it comes to the interpretation of Session Law 2015-
    160 and the loss of the protections afforded by the Protest Petition and the Protest
    Petition Statute, it is the Petitioners, not Plaintiffs, who are the real parties in
    interest “directly and adversely affected by the statute” and the City’s and trial court’s
    interpretations thereof. Wake Cares, 
    Inc., 190 N.C. App. at 11
    , 660 S.E.2d at 223.
    Because “[a] declaratory judgment may be used to determine the construction and
    validity of a statute, but the plaintiff must be directly and adversely affected by the
    statute,” id. at 
    11, 660 S.E.2d at 223
    (emphasis added) (internal citations and
    quotation marks omitted), and Plaintiffs are not so affected, we hold they are without
    standing to pursue their claims requiring the interpretation of Session Law 2015-160.
    The prior decisions by this Court relied upon by Plaintiffs are distinguishable
    and therefore not binding or persuasive. See Thrash Ltd. Partnership v. Cty. of
    Buncombe, 
    195 N.C. App. 727
    , 
    673 S.E.2d 689
    (2009); Frizzelle v. Harnett Cty., 
    106 N.C. App. 234
    , 
    416 S.E.2d 421
    (1992); Lee v. Simpson, 
    44 N.C. App. 611
    , 261 S.E.2d
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    295 (1980). In Thrash, we held that the landowner had standing to sue because its
    land fell within the ambit of the zoning ordinance in question, and “plaintiff’s use of
    its land was limited by the zoning 
    regulations.” 195 N.C. App. at 731
    , 673 S.E.2d at
    692. Similarly, in Frizzelle, the plaintiff landowners alleged that Harnett County
    commissioners failed to follow required notice and hearing procedures in enacting a
    zoning ordinance applicable to the plaintiffs’ 
    lands. 106 N.C. App. at 242-43
    , 416
    S.E.2d at 425-26. Finally, in Lee, Union County’s ordinances required its Board of
    Commissioners to provide notice and hearing to owners of real property adjoining
    land subject to a rezoning application; the plaintiffs, who were such owners subject
    to receive that notice, did not, and challenged the rezoning on procedural 
    grounds. 44 N.C. App. at 612
    , 261 S.E.2d at 295-96.
    Plaintiffs were not entitled to avail themselves of the Protest Petition Statute,
    the procedural process that Plaintiffs contend they were wrongfully denied. Thus,
    Thrash, Frizzelle, and Lee are inapposite. See also Ring v. Moore Cty., ___ N.C. App.
    ___, ___, 
    809 S.E.2d 11
    , 14 (2017) (distinguishing Thrash where “in this case Plaintiffs
    have not alleged that the zoning ordinance directly limits the use of their land”).
    D. Plaintiffs Lack Standing to Bring Their Constitutional Claims
    Just as a declaratory judgment action concerning statutory interpretation
    cannot be maintained by a party without legal standing, “this Court will not
    determine the constitutionality of a legislative provision in a proceeding in which
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    there is no actual antagonistic interest in the parties.”     Nicholson v. State Ed.
    Assistance Auth., 
    275 N.C. 439
    , 447, 
    168 S.E.2d 401
    , 406 (1969) (internal citation and
    quotation marks omitted). As a result, “[o]nly one who is in immediate danger of
    sustaining a direct injury from legislative action may assail the validity of such
    action. It is not sufficient that he has merely a general interest common to all
    members of the public.” Charles Stores Co., Inc. v. Tucker, 
    263 N.C. 710
    , 717, 
    140 S.E.2d 370
    , 375 (1965). Further, when the constitutionality of an ordinance itself is
    challenged, “a litigant must produce evidence that he has sustained an injury or is in
    immediate danger of sustaining an injury as a result of enforcement of the challenged
    ordinance.” Grace Baptist Church v. City of Oxford, 
    320 N.C. 439
    , 444, 
    358 S.E.2d 372
    , 375 (1987) (citation omitted).
    Here, several of the facial challenges by Plaintiffs concern generalized
    grievances claiming the City and State governments have acted to: (1) violate the
    constitutionally mandated separation of powers; or (2) unlawfully restrict judicial
    power. Plaintiffs also specifically allege that: (1) the rezoning proceeding was quasi-
    judicial, requiring due process standards which the City and State governments
    violated; and (2) Session Law 2015-160, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-385 (2015), and the
    City’s actions thereunder deprived the Plaintiffs of a right to petition and access to
    open courts to seek redress.
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiffs assert their separation of powers and unlawful restriction claims
    solely as persons with a “general interest as . . . citizen[s] in good government in
    accordance with the provisions of the Constitution[,]” 
    Nicholson, 275 N.C. at 448
    , 168
    S.E.2d at 406 (citations omitted), rather than as those “who [are] in immediate danger
    of sustaining a direct injury[,]” Charles 
    Stores, 263 N.C. at 717
    , 140 S.E.2d at 375.
    This is also true of Plaintiffs’ specific facial challenges, as: (1) Plaintiffs had no legal
    right to file a protest petition in this case, and therefore were not deprived of any
    right to petition or access to open courts by the enactment of Session Law 2015-160
    and the application of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-385 (2015); and (2) the property rezoned
    was not the Plaintiffs’. See, e.g., Coventry 
    Woods, 202 N.C. App. at 256
    , 688 S.E.2d at
    544 (holding that neighbors to a property undergoing rezoning could not bring a facial
    or as-applied constitutional challenge to the rezoning on procedural due process
    grounds, as there is no “authority in support of the proposition that they are entitled
    to constitutional protection against changes in the treatment of adjoining tracts of
    property under properly-adopted zoning or subdivision ordinances”); 
    Templeton, 208 N.C. App. at 56
    , 701 S.E.2d at 713-14 (2010) (“Without an allegation that the subject
    zoning ordinance amendments will be or have been enforced against property owned
    by plaintiffs, plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that they have ‘sustained an injury
    or [are] in immediate danger of sustaining an injury’ from enforcement of the
    ordinance amendments against them.           Therefore, plaintiffs failed to carry their
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    burden to make sufficient allegations to establish standing to bring their
    constitutional claims against defendant.” (alteration in original) (quoting Grace
    Baptist 
    Church, 320 N.C. at 444
    , 358 S.E.2d at 375)). Because Plaintiffs do not have
    a constitutionally protected interest in the rezoning of an adjoining landowner’s
    property, and because their remaining constitutional challenges assert only
    generalized grievances, we hold these claims were properly dismissed.
    E. The Trial Court Was Not Required to Transfer Plaintiffs’ Constitutional Claims
    Due to Their Lack of Standing
    Per the language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-267.1, all facial constitutional
    challenges to acts of the General Assembly must be heard by a three-judge panel in
    Wake County.     N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-267.1(a1).            Where a lawsuit asserting such
    challenges not before the three-judge panel involves other claims unrelated thereto,
    the court with jurisdiction and venue over the action:
    shall, on its own motion, transfer that portion of the action
    challenging the validity of the act of the General Assembly
    to the . . . three-judge panel if, after all other matters in the
    action have been resolved, a determination as to the facial
    validity of an act . . . must be made in order to completely
    resolve any matters in the case.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 42(b)(4) (emphasis added); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-
    81.1(a1) (establishing venue for such claims with the three-judge panel and requiring
    such actions be transferred consistent with Rule 42(b)(4)). In other words, facial
    constitutional challenges must be transferred to the three-judge panel only if the
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    BYRON V. SYNCO PROPERTIES, INC.
    Opinion of the Court
    constitutionality of the statute in question must be resolved in order to conclude the
    action.
    Because we hold that Plaintiffs did not have standing to bring their
    constitutional challenges as set 
    forth supra
    Part II.D., the transfer of Plaintiffs’
    constitutional claims to a three-judge panel was not necessary, as “a determination
    as to the facial validity of [the] act[s]” in question was not required to “completely
    resolve any matters in the case.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 42(b)(4); see also N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 1-81.1(a1) (requiring the transfer of claims only if a determination of
    facial validity is necessary “after all other questions of law in the action have been
    resolved”). Further, because we hold that Plaintiffs lacked standing, we need not
    address the merits of their mootness and statutory interpretation arguments.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Plaintiffs brought multiple claims in their declaratory judgment action, some
    challenging the propriety of the rezoning itself and others challenging the
    construction and constitutional validity of certain statutes and session laws.
    Plaintiffs’ appeal challenges only the trial court’s dismissal of their constitutional and
    statutory construction claims. We hold that Plaintiffs lack standing to bring those
    claims and we affirm their dismissal. Plaintiffs did not argue error in the dismissal
    of their remaining causes of action; as a result, we affirm the order of the trial court.
    AFFIRMED.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Judges BRYANT and DAVIS concur.
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