Fonvielle v. N.C. Coastal Res. Comm'n ( 2023 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA22-742
    Filed 18 April 2023
    New Hanover County, No. 21CVS3584
    HENRY FONVIELLE, Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    NORTH CAROLINA COASTAL RESOURCES COMMISSION, Respondent Agency-
    Appellee,
    and,
    WBRP, L.L.C.; THOMAS G. CONLEY; and TIMOTHY R. CONLEY, Intervenor-
    Respondents-Appellees.
    Appeal by petitioner-appellant from order entered 5 April 2022 by Judge
    Thomas H. Lock in New Hanover County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of
    Appeals 22 March 2023.
    Law Offices of G. Grady Richardson, Jr., P.C., by Susan Groves Renton and G.
    Grady Richardson, Jr., for petitioner-appellant.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Mary L.
    Lucasse, for respondent agency-appellee.
    McGuireWoods LLP, by Elizabeth Z. Timmermans, Zachary L. McCamey, and
    John Huske Anderson, Jr., for intervenor-respondents-appellees.
    FLOOD, Judge.
    Petitioner argues the trial court erred in affirming the Coastal Resources
    Commission’s denial of Petitioner’s request for a contested case hearing, and holding
    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    Petitioner was not an adjacent riparian landowner entitled to actual notice. As we
    explain in further detail below, the Coastal Resources Commission did not have
    subject matter jurisdiction to consider Petitioner’s request, and the trial court did not
    err.
    I. Factual and Procedural History
    This case concerns two oceanfront properties in the Town of Wrightsville Beach
    (the “Town”): the first is the site at issue (the “Site”) located at 15 East Augusta Street
    and owned by Intervenor-Respondents Thomas Conley and Timothy Conley through
    WBRP, LLC (“Intervenor-Respondents”), and the second is the property located at 18
    East Augusta Street and owned by Petitioner Henry Fonvielle (“Petitioner”). The
    Site and Petitioner’s property are separated by the end of East Augusta Street at the
    public beach access, which lies to the south of the Site and to the north of Petitioner’s
    property.
    In October 2019, Intervenor-Respondents applied for a Coastal Area
    Management Act (“CAMA”) minor permit, as required by statute, to demolish the
    existing house and develop the Site.         See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-118 (2021).
    Application for a CAMA minor permit requires, inter alia, certification of “Notice of
    Adjacent Property Owners.” On 11 January 2021, Scott Sullivan, acting as an agent
    of Intervenor-Respondents, applied for a subsequent CAMA minor permit application
    (the “Application”) to construct a home on the Site. In the Application, Intervenor-
    Respondents certified to having given notice to the owner of the northern adjacent
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    property to the Site, but Petitioner was not identified as a property owner to whom
    Intervenor-Respondents gave notice. With the Application, Intervenor-Respondents
    submitted a Preliminary Site Plan drawing, which consists of a map detailing home
    construction plans on the Site, elevation lines, and the “Static Line.”          Notice of
    Application was posted on the Site, in the form of a “placard,” on 22 January 2021.
    The Application was accepted as complete on 25 January 2021 by CAMA Local Permit
    Official Tony Wilson (the “LPO”).
    On 5 February 2021 the LPO issued CAMA Minor Development Permit No.
    WB21-0002 (the “Permit”) to Intervenor-Respondents, authorizing construction of a
    new single-family residence. On 21 July 2021, the LPO contacted Department of
    Coastal Management (“DCM”) staff to arrange a meeting with Petitioner on the Site,
    to discuss Petitioner’s concerns about the construction on the Site and discuss the
    Static Line drawn between the Site and Petitioner’s property. On 23 July 2021, DCM
    staff met with the LPO and Petitioner at Petitioner’s residence.
    On 30 July 2021, the LPO issued a Stop Work Order, and provided, (1) the roof
    of the home under construction on the Site was over the setback line, and (2)
    Intervenor-Respondents failed to provide notice to Petitioner. The LPO requested an
    “as-built survey”   from   Intervenor-Respondents          confirming   the   construction
    conformed to the Permit requirements. Soon after, Intervenor-Respondents provided
    to the LPO the requested “as-built survey” (the “Underwood Survey”), and the LPO
    lifted the Stop Work Order based on the information provided in the Underwood
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    Survey.
    On 3 August 2021, Petitioner submitted to the North Carolina Coastal
    Resources Commission (the “Commission”) his request for a third-party contested
    case hearing. On 20 August 2021, the Commission issued its decision, denying
    Petitioner’s request as untimely and holding the Commission lacked subject matter
    jurisdiction to consider the request as it was not brought within twenty days of the
    Permit’s issuance. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-121.1(b) (2021). Petitioner appealed
    the Commission’s decision to New Hanover Superior Court.
    On 5 April 2022, the trial court—which made no findings of fact—denied
    Petitioner’s petition and affirmed the Commission’s denial of Petitioner’s contested
    case hearing request, and concluded in its order:
    Petitioner is not an “adjacent riparian property owner”
    under 15A [N.C. Admin. Code] 7J.0204(b)(5), and
    accordingly was not entitled to notice of [Intervenor-
    Respondents’]     intention   to    develop   [Intervenor-
    Respondents’] property and apply for a CAMA minor
    development permit. Assuming arguendo that Petitioner
    is an adjacent riparian property owner, the only notice to
    which he would be entitled is of [Intervenor-Respondents’]
    intent to develop the property and apply for the CAMA
    permit.
    Petitioner timely appealed.
    II. Jurisdiction
    Under North Carolina law for the administrative review of permit decisions,
    [a] determination that a person may not commence a
    contested case is a final agency decision and is subject to
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    judicial review under Article 4 of Chapter 150B of the
    General Statutes.     If, on judicial review, the court
    determines that the Commission erred in determining that
    a contested case would not be appropriate, the court shall
    remand the matter for a contested hearing under [N.C.
    Gen. Stat. §] 150B-23 and final decision on the permit
    pursuant to [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 113A-122. Decisions in
    such cases shall be rendered pursuant to those rules,
    regulations, and other applicable laws in effect at the time
    of the commencement of the contested case.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-121.1(b) (2021); see also Balance v. N.C. Res. Comm’n, 
    108 N.C. App. 288
    , 291, 
    423 S.E.2d 815
    , 817 (1992) (“The provisions of N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    113A-121.1 make it abundantly clear that [an] agency’s denial of [a] petitioner[’]s
    request for a contested case hearing is a final agency decision subject to judicial
    review.”).
    III. Analysis
    Petitioner argues (1) the trial court erred in its interpretation of the
    regulations governing the Commission’s decision to deny his request for a contested
    case hearing, and (2) the trial court acted arbitrarily and capriciously in affirming
    the Commission’s decision.
    A. Standard of Review
    “An appellate court’s standard of review of an agency’s final decision . . . has
    been, and remains, whole record on the findings of fact and de novo on the conclusions
    of law.” Harris v. N.C. Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 
    252 N.C. App. 94
    , 102, 
    798 S.E.2d 127
    ,
    134 (2017).   Under a de novo review, we consider “the matter anew and freely
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    substitute[] [our] own judgment for the agency’s judgment.” Mann Media, Inc. v.
    Randolph Cnty. Plan. Bd., 
    356 N.C. 1
    , 13, 
    365 S.E.2d 9
    , 17 (2002) (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    When this Court applies the whole record test, we “may not substitute [our]
    judgment for the agency’s as between two conflicting views, even though [we] could
    reasonably have reached a different result had [we] reviewed the matter de novo.”
    N.C. Dep’t of Env. and Nat. Res. v. Carroll, 
    358 N.C. 649
    , 660, 
    599 S.E.2d 888
    , 895
    (2004); see Diaz v. Div. of Soc. Servs., 
    360 N.C. 386
    , 
    628 S.E.2d 1
    , 2 (2006) (“In cases
    appealed from administrative tribunals, we review questions of law de novo and
    questions of fact under the whole record[.]”). We must review all competent evidence
    “to determine whether there is substantial evidence to justify the agency’s decision.”
    Carroll, 
    358 N.C. at 660
    , 
    599 S.E.2d at 895
    .
    “‘Substantial evidence’ is ‘relevant evidence a reasonable mind might accept as
    adequate to support a conclusion.’” 
    Id. at 660
    , 
    599 S.E.2d at 895
     (quoting N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 150B–2(8b) (2021)). Although our review is of the trial court’s order affirming
    the Commission’s decision, as the Commission is the only fact-finding body of this
    proceeding, we consider whether there was substantial evidence that supported the
    Commission’s findings of fact. See Watkins v. N.C. State Bd. of Dental Exam’r, 
    358 N.C. 190
    , 199, 
    593 S.E.2d 764
    , 769 (2004) (applying the “whole record” test to
    determine whether an agency’s decision was supported by substantial evidence, on
    appeal from the trial court’s order reversing the agency’s decision).
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    B. Correctness of the Commission’s Decision
    Petitioner argues the Application was incomplete as of 25 January 2021 and
    was not made complete until the late-July submission of the Underwood Survey.
    Therefore, according to Petitioner, the “trial court erred in affirming the Decision
    which held as fact that [the] Application was complete in January 2021.” Respondent
    and Intervenor-Respondents contend Petitioner’s claim that the Application was
    incomplete does not excuse the untimeliness of his contested case hearing request,
    and Petitioner’s request is barred by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-121.1(b). To address the
    timeliness of Petitioner’s request, we must first consider whether the Application was
    complete as of 25 January 2021.
    1. The Application’s Completeness as of 25 January 2021
    Because Petitioner’s argument concerns an issue of fact, we conduct our review
    under the whole record test. See Harris, 
    252 N.C. App. at 102
    , 
    798 S.E.2d at 134
    . As
    our Supreme Court has provided:
    Under the whole record test, [an agency’s] finding[s] must
    stand unless [they are] arbitrary and capricious. In
    determining whether an agency decision is arbitrary or
    capricious, the reviewing court does not have the authority
    to override decisions within agency discretion when that
    discretion is exercised in good faith and in accordance with
    law. The arbitrary and capricious standard is a difficult
    one to meet. Administrative agency decisions may be
    reserved as arbitrary or capricious if they are patently in
    bad faith, or whimsical in the sense that they indicate a
    lack of fair and careful consideration or fail to indicate any
    course of reasoning and the exercise of judgment.
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    Mann, 
    356 N.C. at 16
    , 
    565 S.E.2d at 19
     (citation and quotation marks omitted)
    (cleaned up).
    Under 15A N.C. Admin. Code 07J.0204(b)(5)(B) (the “governing regulation”),
    for a CAMA minor permit application to be accepted as “complete,” the following
    requirements must be met:
    [T]he applicant must give actual notice of his intention to
    develop his property and apply for a CAMA minor
    development permit to all adjacent riparian landowners.
    Actual notice can be given by sending a certified letter,
    informing the adjoining property owner in person or by
    telephone, or by using any other method which satisfies the
    Local Permit Officers that a good faith effort has been
    made to provide the required notice[.]
    15A N.C. Admin. Code 07J.0204(b)(5)(B) (2021).
    When this Court reviews a final decision of an administrative agency in a
    contested case, our review is “governed by [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 150B-51(b)[,]” and “it is
    the responsibility of the administrative body, not a reviewing court, to determine the
    weight and sufficiency of the evidence[,] . . . to draw inferences from the facts, and to
    appraise conflicting and circumstantial evidence.” Watkins, 
    358 N.C. at 199, 202
    , 
    593 S.E.2d at 769, 771
     (2004). In Watkins, our Supreme Court reviewed the entire record
    on an appeal from a final agency decision concerning a contested case. 358 N.C. at
    194, 
    593 S.E.2d at 766
    . The petitioner in Watkins alleged, inter alia, the agency’s
    decision was arbitrary and capricious. 
    Id. at 194
    , 
    593 S.E.2d at 766
    . Accordingly, the
    issue for review was whether the agency’s decision was supported by substantial
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    evidence in view of the entire record. 
    Id. at 199
    , 
    593 S.E.2d at 769
    .
    Prior to assessing the agency’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in
    Watkins, our Supreme Court provided they must “examine all the record evidence—
    that which detracts from the agency’s findings and conclusions as well as that which
    tends to support them—to determine whether there is substantial evidence to justify
    the agency’s decision.” 
    Id. at 199
    , 
    593 S.E.2d at 769
    . While there was evidence
    presented by the petitioner in Watkins that tended to detract from the agency’s
    findings, there was also evidence that supported the agency’s findings. See 
    id.
     at
    201–02, 
    593 S.E.2d at
    770–71. Given the agency’s role as the sole fact finder in
    Watkins, and based on the standard of review, the Court provided “[t]o the extent the
    evidence diverges, we defer to the [agency]’s resolution of any conflicts.” 
    Id. at 202
    ,
    
    593 S.E.2d at 771
    . As the agency’s decision was supported by “relevant evidence a
    reasonable mind might accept as adequate,” despite the presence of detracting
    evidence, the Court affirmed the agency’s findings as supported by substantial
    evidence in review of the whole record. 
    Id. at 202, 204
    , 
    593 S.E.2d at
    771–73.
    Here, per the governing regulation, the requirements for a CAMA minor
    permit application to be complete are that the applicant give actual notice to all
    adjacent riparian landowners, and that said notice satisfy the LPO that a good faith
    effort has been made to provide the required notice. See 15A N.C. Admin. Code
    07J.0204(b)(5)(B) (2021). The Commission found as fact that the Application was
    complete on 25 January 2021.        This finding was supported by evidence that
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    Intervenor-Respondents posted a placard on the Site on 22 January 2021, and that
    this method of notice satisfied the LPO that Intervenor-Respondents made a good
    faith effort to provide the required notice.
    There is evidence here that detracts from the Commission’s finding that the
    Application was complete: the Application lacked markings required by local permit
    application instructions, and the Underwood Survey filed in July 2021 provided
    additional information1 that was not in the original application. As the Commission
    was presented with evidence the Application conformed to the requirements of the
    governing regulation, however, despite the presence of detracting evidence, the
    Commission’s decision was supported by “relevant evidence a reasonable mind might
    accept as adequate” and was not arbitrary and capricious. See Watkins, 
    358 N.C. at 202
    , 
    593 S.E.2d at 771
    . As the Commission is the sole factfinder of this proceeding,
    to “the extent the evidence diverges, we defer to the [Commission’s] resolution of any
    conflicts” in the evidence and affirm the Commission’s finding that the Application
    was complete as of 25 January 2021. 
    Id. at 202
    , 
    593 S.E.2d at 771
    .
    2. Timeliness of Petitioner’s Request
    As Intervenor-Respondents’ application was complete as of 25 January 2021,
    1 We note that, as argued by Respondent, the Underwood Survey merely clarified that the
    Application did conform to the governing regulation’s requirements of permit issuance, and did not
    “significantly alter the project proposal[.]” See N.C. Admin. Code 07J.0204(d) (2021) (“If the changes
    or additional information [to an application] significantly alters the project proposal, the application
    shall be considered new and the permit processing period will begin to run from that date.”).
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    we now consider whether Petitioner’s request is barred as untimely, as argued by
    Respondent and Intervenor-Respondents. Under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-121.1(b),
    [a] person other than a permit applicant . . . who is
    dissatisfied with a decision to deny or grant a minor or
    major development permit may file a petition for a
    contested case hearing only if the Commission determines
    that a hearing is appropriate.         A request for a
    determination of the appropriateness of a contested case
    hearing shall be made in writing and received by the
    Commission within 20 days after the disputed permit
    decision is made.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-121.1(b) (2021). A petitioner’s timely filing of a hearing
    request pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-121.1(b) is a condition precedent to the
    exercise of the Commission’s subject matter jurisdiction.        See Cunningham v.
    Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 
    381 N.C. 10
    , 2022-NCSC-46, ¶ 25 (“Under North
    Carolina law, satisfaction of the timely-filing requirement is a condition precedent to
    the exercise of [a] Commission’s jurisdiction and, accordingly, implicates the subject-
    matter jurisdiction of [a] Commission.”).
    Here, the Application was deemed “complete” as of 25 January 2021, and the
    Permit was issued to Intervenor-Respondents on 5 February 2021. Accordingly, the
    statutory twenty-day window for a third party to file a contested case hearing request
    for the issuance of the Permit began on 5 February 2021. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-
    121.1(b) (2021). Petitioner, however, submitted his request for a contested case
    hearing on 3 August 2021. Any third-party petition for a contested case hearing was
    required to be filed within twenty days of 5 February 2021, and Petitioner’s request
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    was submitted well beyond the statutory deadline set forth in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 113A-
    121.1(b). As the timely-filing requirement is a condition precedent to the exercise of
    the Commission’s jurisdiction, Petitioner’s late filing deprived the Commission of
    subject matter jurisdiction to consider his request. See Cunningham, ¶ 25.
    Petitioner argues, however, he is an adjacent riparian landowner under the
    governing regulation. Petitioner specifically contends Intervenor-Respondents, as
    part of their application for a CAMA minor permit, were required to provide him
    notice as an adjacent riparian landowner and failed to do so. According to Petitioner,
    because he did not receive the required notice, the Permit was issued before
    Intervenor-Respondents submitted a complete Application and Petitioner was
    therefore prevented from timely challenging the premature permit decision.
    Under the governing regulation, a CAMA minor development permit may be
    deemed complete if an applicant gives to all adjacent riparian landowners actual
    notice of his intent to develop, and the applicant’s method of notice “satisfies the Local
    Permit Officers that a good faith effort has been made to provide the required
    notice[.]”   15A N.C. Admin. Code 07J.0204(b)(5)(B) (2021).         As set forth above,
    however, the Commission properly found the Application was complete because their
    finding was supported by substantial evidence the Application conformed to the
    governing regulation: Intervenor-Respondents provided notice by means of a
    “placard” posted on the Site, and the LPO was satisfied Intervenor-Respondents
    made a good faith effort to provide the required notice. Our analysis need not go
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    FONVIELLE V. N.C. COASTAL RES. COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    further because, regardless of whether Petitioner is an adjacent riparian landowner
    under the governing regulation, the Application was complete as of 25 January 2021.
    For Petitioner’s request to be deemed timely, Petitioner must have submitted his
    request within the twenty days following the issuance of the Permit, and Petitioner
    failed to do so.     The trial court did not err in affirming the Commission’s
    determination that Petitioner’s request was untimely.
    IV. Conclusion
    Petitioner failed to timely file his petition for a contested case hearing, and the
    Commission did not have subject matter jurisdiction to consider his request.
    Accordingly, the order of the trial court is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED.
    Judges GRIFFIN and RIGGS concur.
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