               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA

                                   No. 434PA18

                                Filed 3 April 2020

PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC, Petitioner

             v.
CITY OF ASHEVILLE, Respondent


      On discretionary review pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-31 of a unanimous decision

of the Court of Appeals, 822 S.E.2d 79 (N.C. Ct. App. 2018), affirming an order

entered on 2 November 2017 by Judge William H. Coward in Superior Court,

Buncombe County. Heard in the Supreme Court on 6 January 2020.


      Fox Rothschild LLP, by Kip D. Nelson and Thomas E. Terrell, Jr., for
      petitioner-appellee.

      Poyner Spruill LLP, by Andrew H. Erteschik, Chad W. Essick, Nicolas E. Tosco,
      Colin R. McGrath, and N. Cosmo Zinkow, for respondent-appellant.


      ERVIN, Justice.


      The question before us in this case is whether the City of Asheville properly

denied an application for the issuance of a conditional use permit submitted by PHG

Asheville, LLC, seeking authorization to construct a hotel in downtown Asheville.

The trial court and the Court of Appeals both held that the City had improperly

concluded that PHG had failed to present competent, material, and substantial

evidence tending to show that the proposed hotel satisfied the standards for the

issuance of a conditional use permit set out in the City’s unified development
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ordinance. In seeking relief before this Court, the City argues that the Court of

Appeals ignored this Court’s precedents concerning the manner in which applications

for the issuance of conditional use permits should be evaluated, incorrectly applied

the applicable standard of review, and erroneously disregarded the City’s findings of

fact. After carefully reviewing the record, briefs, and arguments of the parties, we

conclude that PHG presented competent, material, and substantial evidence that the

proposed hotel satisfied the relevant conditional use permit standards set out in the

City’s unified development ordinance and that the record did not contain any

competent, material, and substantial evidence tending to establish that the proposed

development failed to satisfy the applicable ordinance standards. Therefore, the City

lacked the authority to deny the requested conditional use permit. As a result, we

affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision.

      On 27 July 2016, PHG submitted a conditional use permit application to the

City’s planning department in which it requested authorization to construct an eight-

story, 185-room, 178,412 square-foot hotel and an adjoining structure containing 200

parking spaces on a tract of real property located at 192 Haywood Street. The 2.05-

acre tract upon which the proposed hotel was to be located was contained in the

Patton/River Gateway portion of the “Central Business District,” which is outside the

“Traditional Downtown Core.” According to the Downtown Master Plan that the City

had adopted in March 2009, the Patton/River Gateway area “should . . . accommodate




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significant residential and extended-stay hotel development,” with “some [of this

development to occur] in taller buildings.”

      As a result of the size of the proposed development and its presence in the

Downtown Design Review Overlay portion of the Central Business District, section

7-5-9.1 of the City’s unified development ordinance required PHG to undertake a

Level III site plan review of the project. The Level III site plan review process

required the holding of a pre-application conference involving area representatives;

staff review of the application; and review by the Technical Review Committee, the

Downtown Commission, and the Planning and Zoning Commission prior to final

review by the Asheville City Council. The Technical Review Committee and the

Downtown Commission each recommended approval of the project subject to

variances to be approved by the Planning and Zoning Commission and the making of

certain modifications to the project by PHG. The Planning and Zoning Commission

granted two variances relating to the project that modified the proposed lot frontage

and the height of the street wall before unanimously recommending approval of the

conditional use permit to the City Council.

      On 24 January 2017, PHG’s application for a conditional use permit came

before the Asheville City Council for a quasi-judicial public hearing. According to

Section 7-16-2 of the City’s unified development ordinance:

             (c) Conditional use standards. The Asheville City Council
             shall not approve the conditional use application and site
             plan unless and until it makes the following findings, based


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             on the evidence and testimony received at the public
             hearing or otherwise appearing in the record of the case:

                (1) That the proposed use or development of the land
                    will not materially endanger the public health or
                    safety;

                (2) That the proposed use or development of the land is
                    reasonably compatible with significant natural and
                    topographic features on the site and within the
                    immediate vicinity of the site given the proposed site
                    design and any mitigation techniques or measures
                    proposed by the applicant;

                (3) That the proposed use or development of the land
                    will not substantially injure the value of adjoining or
                    abutting property;

                (4) That the proposed use or development of the land
                    will be in harmony with the scale, bulk, coverage,
                    density, and character of the area or neighborhood
                    in which it is located;

                (5) That the proposed use or development of the land
                    will generally conform with the comprehensive plan,
                    smart growth policies, sustainable economic
                    development strategic plan, and other official plans
                    adopted by the city;

                (6) That the proposed use is appropriately located with
                    respect to transportation facilities, water supply,
                    fire and police protection, waste disposal, and
                    similar facilities; and

                (7) That the proposed use will not cause undue traffic
                    congestion or create a traffic hazard.

At the hearing before the City Council, PHG presented the testimony of three expert

witnesses, including Tommy Crozier, a licensed real estate appraiser with over fifteen



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years’ experience in conducting property appraisals, and Kevin Dean, a registered

professional engineer.

      In his testimony, Mr. Crozier addressed the third standard set out in the City’s

ordinance, which required consideration of whether the proposed hotel would

significantly injure the value of adjoining or abutting properties. Mr. Crozier testified

that three properties adjoined the tract upon which the proposed hotel would be

located, including an apartment building, a church, and a multi-center office building.

According to Mr. Crozier, “the three adjoining properties are valued for tax purposes

under $3 million,” while the construction of the hotel would cost about $25 million.

Mr. Crozier described the situation at issue in this case as a textbook example of the

principle of progression, in which “lower valued properties are enhanced by the value

of higher value[d] properties.” On the basis of his examination of recent land sale

transactions in the vicinity of the proposed hotel, Mr. Crozier opined that “values

have increased substantially over the last few years” as a result of the construction

of other hotels in the area. As a result, Mr. Crozier concluded that “[t]he proposed

subject hotel will not impair the value of adjoining or abutting property” and “should

meaningfully enhance the values of surrounding properties.”

      At the conclusion of Mr. Crozier’s testimony, Vice Mayor Gwen Wisler asked

Mr. Crozier whether he had considered comparable sales data involving transactions

in other cities in which two hotels had been located within a quarter mile from a new

hotel. After acknowledging that he had not included data of that nature in his report,


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Mr. Crozier stated that “there is so much demand for new hotel rooms in the market

that [this new hotel] will not impact the value negatively of any of the hotels around

here” in light of the fact that downtown hotel occupancy in Asheville is around 80 to

85 percent even though occupancy rates in an efficient market at equilibrium would

be approximately 65 percent. For example, Mr. Crozier testified that, following the

opening of the Hyatt Place in downtown Asheville, the business of the adjoining Hotel

Indigo had increased by about ten percent.

      In his testimony, Mr. Dean addressed the issue of whether construction and

operation of the proposed hotel would result in any undue traffic congestion or create

a traffic hazard. Mr. Dean testified that he had consulted with the City’s traffic

engineer, who had informed him that he only needed to provide a trip generation

table and the anticipated distribution of those trips in order to satisfy the relevant

ordinance requirement. Based upon the industry standards applicable to traffic

studies, Mr. Dean determined that new traffic at nearby intersections resulting from

the construction and operation of the proposed hotel would represent less than five

percent of the total traffic that passed through that intersection and would only

increase the overall traffic delay at nearby intersections by approximately four

seconds. In order to make these determinations, Mr. Dean testified that he had

“collected peak hour traffic counts on November 10th of [2016]” and “performed a trip

generation for the site based on [the] Institute of Transportation Engineer[s’] data”

and information generated by appropriate software. As a result, Mr. Dean concluded


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that “the proposed use will not cause undue traffic congestion or create a traffic

hazard.”

      At the conclusion of Mr. Dean’s testimony on direct examination, Councilman

Cecil Bothwell asked Mr. Dean why he had based his analysis upon conditions

experienced on November 10th, which was a Thursday, rather than conditions in the

summer or in September or October, when Asheville experiences higher tourist-

related traffic levels. In response, Mr. Dean testified that “traffic [studies] are only

supposed to be counted between Tuesdays and Thursdays to get a typical weekday

condition that’s not affected by a Monday or Friday variation,” that the use of this

approach is “industry standard,” and that traffic engineers are generally required to

only conduct traffic assessments on Tuesdays through Thursdays.            In addition,

Councilman Bothwell questioned Mr. Dean about the queuing that already occurs at

intersections near the hotel and whether the new entrance to the hotel would

exacerbate existing conditions. After acknowledging that he could not argue with the

Councilman Bothwell’s “anecdotal stories,” Mr. Dean stated that “the amount of

traffic that’s going to be added is only supposed to be [a] negligible increase to any

[queues] that you would see” and will not “cause any undue additional issues.”

      Vice Mayor Wisler asked further questions about the time of day upon which

Mr. Dean’s study focused, about whether Mr. Dean had taken the times at which

people check into and out of a hotel into account, and whether Mr. Dean had studied

conditions in the summer, during which the City experienced its highest levels of


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traffic. In response, Mr. Dean stated that he had collected the data upon which his

study was based on “a typical weekday in November” by measuring traffic from 7:00

a.m. to 9:00 a.m. and from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., periods which “generally represent[

] the peak hour” of the streets that were at issue in his study. At that point, Vice

Mayor Wisler asked whether Mr. Dean had taken Mr. Crozier’s appraisal, which

mentioned certain hotels and apartments that were either planned to be built or had

just been added, into account in conducting his study. Mr. Dean replied by stating

that he had not considered the information to which Vice Mayor Wisler alluded and

that he had, instead, examined the impact of the proposed hotel upon existing traffic

conditions. In addition, Mr. Dean stated that, if there is a higher amount of traffic

near the hotel originating from sources other than the hotel itself than was

contemplated in his study, the traffic resulting from the construction and operation

of the hotel would constitute a smaller percentage of the overall traffic and have a

smaller percentage impact upon overall traffic conditions.

      Three members of the public spoke in favor of the approval of the conditional

use permit. Another member of the public asked a procedural question without

supporting or opposing the issuance of the permit.       Charles Rawls, a native of

Asheville and resident of the nearby Montford community, expressed uncertainty

concerning whether he opposed the project and posed certain questions about traffic-

related issues. With respect to the extent to which traffic would be entering and

exiting the proposed parking deck onto North French Broad Road, Mr. Rawls


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commented that, “heading south on French Broad, there is a hill there that is a blind

hill” that might create an issue for persons who lacked familiarity with the area. In

addition, Mr. Rawls asked “how much of the traffic coming and going to that parking

garage would be happening at peak hours so that it might affect the safety of the

public” and whether Mr. Dean had observed the angle and sight limitations relating

to that hill. In response, Mr. Dean stated that he had not seen that hill and that “[w]e

did not conduct a sight distance check, which is typically what’s required.” According

to Mr. Dean, the North Carolina Department of Transportation “typically requires

driveways to meet certain sight distance requirements” and that he had not

conducted the “check” in question because his firm had not been involved in designing

the site. No one presented any evidence in opposition to the approval of the proposed

conditional use permit.

      After Mayor Esther Manheimer closed the evidentiary hearing, Vice Mayor

Wisler immediately moved that PHG’s conditional use permit application be denied

on the grounds that the applicant had failed to meet the first, second, third, fourth,

fifth, and seventh standards set out in the City’s unified development ordinance and

Councilman Keith Young seconded the motion. At that point, Councilman Bothwell

expressed agreement with the assertion that PHG had failed to satisfy the traffic-

related standard and thanked Mr. Rawls for “discover[ing] the lack of the sight

distance examination.” At that point, the City Council voted unanimously to deny

the conditional use permit application.


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      On 14 February 2017, the City entered a written order that contained forty-

four findings of fact in support of its decision to deny the issuance of the requested

conditional use permit on the basis of its failure to satisfy six of the seven standards

set out in the City’s unified development ordinance. Among other things, the City

Council found as a fact that:

                    18.    An appraiser, Tommy Crozier, testified on
             behalf of the Applicant and presented an “Expert Report,”
             which purported to show that CUP Standard 3 was met,
             i.e., that the development of the Hotel would “not
             substantially injure the value of adjoining or abutting
             property.” However, Mr. Crozier’s testimony and the
             Expert Report do not contain facts and data sufficient to
             prove that there would not be a substantial adverse impact
             on such values following construction of the Hotel.

                    19.   Mr. Crozier’s testimony and the Expert
             Report state generally, and the Council accepts as fact, that
             the values of property in this area of Asheville (northwest
             downtown) have been increasing in recent years, and that
             recent sales prices exceed the assessed tax values of
             properties in the area. There was, however, no evidence to
             establish the date of the tax appraisals or evidence that
             would indicate how these tax values would have any
             relevance to CUP Standard 3. There was no evidence,
             through facts and data, to indicate how the Hotel would
             affect or impact such an increase in value (assuming such
             an increase would continue) on the adjacent and adjoining
             properties.

                    20.    There was no sales data presented and there
             are no comparable sales in the Expert Report, which
             provide information about the sale prices of properties
             adjacent to hotels in Asheville, or elsewhere, before and
             after a hotel was constructed on the tract in question. In
             fact, there was no data through, e.g., comparable sales,
             that could show the before and after value of properties


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adjacent to any hotels in the City, even though the Expert
Report indicates there have been multiple hotels
constructed in the City in recent years, and at least two in
the immediate area.

      21.   That property values are increasing in the
area generally over time does not establish the impact of
this Hotel on the adjoining and adjacent tracts, nor
whether the value of those particular tracts would suffer
an adverse impact if the Hotel is constructed.

      22.    There was no data or comparable sales to
substantiate Mr. Crozier’s claim that the Hotel Indigo was
in part, the reason for the recent increase in property
values in this area of downtown Asheville, or to show such
increases were higher or lower than in other parts of the
City during the same time period.

      23.    There was no evidence or data that could
show the impact on the value of adjacent properties, when
the proposed Hotel would be the third hotel in a several
block radius. It appears that additional hotels could
increase the value of other nearby hotels, but no facts or
data were provided that could establish that property with
other uses would not be substantially diminished.

      24.    The Expert Report also contains the following
statements, which brings the reliability of the Expert
Report into question:

             a.    “The information contained in the
             Report or upon which the Report is based has
             been gathered from sources the Appraiser
             assumes to be reliable and accurate. The
             owner of the Property may have provided
             some of such information.      Neither the
             Appraiser nor C&W [Cushman & Wakefield]
             shall be responsible for the accuracy or
             completeness of such information, including
             the correctness of estimates, opinions,



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             dimensions, sketches, exhibits and factual
             matters. . . . . [sic]”

             b.     “This report assumes that the subject
             will secure an affiliation with Embassy Suites
             or a similar chain. If the subject does not
             maintain a similar affiliation, it could have a
             negative impact on the subject’s market
             value.”

             c.      “Our financial analyses are based on
             estimates and assumptions which were
             developed in connection with this appraisal
             engagement. It is, however, inevitable that
             some assumptions will not materialize and
             that unanticipated events may occur which
             will cause actual achieved operating results to
             differ from the financial analyses contained in
             the report, and these difference[s] may be
             material. It should be further noted that we
             are not responsible for the effectiveness of
             future management and marketing efforts
             upon which the projected results contained in
             this report may depend.”

      25.   The CUP application does not request that
the Hotel be only an Embassy Suites hotel or a “similar
chain.”

      26.    The methodologies employed, and data
provided, by the Applicant’s witness, Mr. Crozier, were
inadequate to allow Council to find that the Hotel would
not substantially injure the value of adjoining properties.

       27.   There is significant traffic in downtown
Asheville near and around the Property in September ·and
October, and in the summer months. The vehicular traffic
in the area will increase if the Hotel is constructed.

        28.   The Applicant presented the testimony of a
traffic engineer, Kevin Dean, as well as Mr. Dean’s written


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“Traffic Assessment.” The Traffic Assessment did not
provide any facts or data which could show the level of
traffic or traffic counts for any time of the year, except
during a four hour period during the day on November 10,
2016, which was a Thursday. The level of traffic in this
area is much higher at other times of the year, particularly
the summer months; however, there were no traffic counts
or any traffic data provided for any date other than
November 10.

       29.   Mr. Dean was not aware of the environmental
conditions on November 10, 2016, or whether such
conditions could have affected traffic volumes on that date.

      30.     The Applicant’s traffic counts were done on
November 10, 2016 between the hours of 7 a.m. and 9 a.m.,
and between the hours of 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Under industry
standards, this is apparently “assumed” to be the time of
highest traffic on nearby streets, but there was no evidence
which could establish this would be the case for this area
of Asheville.

       31.     The number of trips generated from the Hotel
in the Traffic Assessment was also derived from an
industry standard, and not the actual trips expected from
this Hotel at this location. Hotels in downtown Asheville
have an occupancy rate in excess of 85%, but the general
rate for an efficient market is 65%. The Traffic Assessment
did not take this expected higher occupancy of the
Asheville market into account.

       32.   The Applicant did not submit any traffic data
for Friday through Sunday, even though those are typically
the days that tourists visit the City and traffic volumes are
higher.

        33.   The estimated traffic counts used for the
Traffic Assessment and Mr. Dean’s opinion, were also these
on a “typical weekday.” There was no weekend data
collected, even though this is the time that most tourists
visit the Asheville downtown.


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       34.   Without accurate traffic counts for any days
other than Thursday November 10, there is no data or
evidence to determine whether the additional trips
generated by the Hotel (as well [as] those from the other
tourists which the Hotel will attract but who do not stay at
the hotel) would not decrease the existing level of service
to an unacceptable level. The Level of Service Summary in
the Traffic Assessment was not based on complete
information or data.

       35.   There was no data or evidence presented that
could show what the level of traffic would be with three
hotels (Indigo, Hyatt and Embassy Suites) located within a
several block area for Friday, Saturday and Sunday during
the summer months or other high traffic periods.

       36.   The Traffic Assessment did not account for
traffic that will be generated by future hotels and
apartments in the downtown area that are planned and
approved, but which are not yet fully constructed and
operational.

      37.    The proposed Hotel includes a twenty-foot
wide driveway, which provides street access to and from
the parking structure and North French Broad Avenue.

        38.   There is a blind hill with limited visibility in
the vicinity of the Hotel’s parking deck[ ] entrance and exit
onto North French Broad Avenue. To determine whether
the addition of that entrance/exit would cause a safety
issue would require a “sight distance check.” A sight
distance check was not a part of the Traffic Assessment and
no other evidence was presented to show the parking deck
entrance or exit would not endanger driver or pedestrian
safety. The Traffic Assessment did no analysis relating to
traffic safety as it relates to vehicles entering and exiting
this driveway.




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Based upon these findings of fact, the City Council concluded that PHG had failed to

produce competent, material, and substantial evidence that the hotel (1) “will not

materially endanger the public health or safety;” (2) “is reasonably compatible with

significant natural and topographic features of the site and within the immediate

vicinity of the site given the proposed site design and any mitigation techniques or

measures proposed by the applicant;” (3) “will not substantially injure the value of

the adjoining or abutting property;” (4) “will be in harmony with the scale, bulk,

coverage, density, and character of the area or neighborhood in which it is located

and, moreover, the evidence instead showed the Hotel would not be in harmony with

the scale, bulk, coverage and character of the area and neighborhood;” (5) “will

generally conform to the comprehensive plan, smart growth policies, sustainable

economic development strategic plan and other official plans adopted by the City and,

moreover, the evidence instead showed the Hotel would not generally conform to the

City’s 2036 Vision Plan;” and (6) “will not cause undue traffic congestion or create a

traffic hazard.”

      On 16 March 2017, PHG filed a petition seeking the issuance of a writ of

certiorari pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 160A-393 authorizing judicial review of the City

Council’s decision to deny its permit application in which PHG alleged that the City

Council had (1) “erred as a matter of law by not accepting PHG’s evidence as

competent, material, and substantial evidence entitling PHG to a permit;” (2) made

findings of fact not supported by substantial evidence; and (3) made findings of fact


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that were arbitrary and capricious.1 On the same day, the requested writ of certiorari

was issued. The issues raised by PHG’s petition were heard before the trial court at

the 2 October 2017 civil session of Superior Court, Buncombe County.                On 2

November 2017, the trial court entered an order determining that PHG was entitled

to the issuance of the requested conditional use permit and ordered that this matter

be “remanded to the City of Asheville City Council with the directive that it grant

PHG’s application and issue it a Conditional Use Permit at its next regularly

scheduled meeting.”

      In support of this decision, the trial court concluded that, contrary to the City

Council’s decision, the evidence submitted in support of PHG’s request for the

issuance of a conditional use permit “was competent, material and substantial and

sufficient to establish a prima facie case of entitlement to a conditional use permit”

and that, “[i]n deciding otherwise, the Council [had] made an error of law.” In

addition, the trial court concluded that “the [C]ity’s decision was not supported by

substantial evidence appearing in the record” and was, instead, “arbitrary and

capricious.” The trial court further determined that the testimony of Mr. Rawls

concerning traffic safety-related issues was “incompetent as a matter of law” and that

the City Council had failed to recognize that “PHG had only a burden of production,




      1 PHG also alleged that the City Council had violated its due process rights by pre-
judging the permit request. However, the trial court did not agree, and this issue was not
appealed.

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and not a burden of persuasion” at the first stage of this proceeding. The City noted

an appeal to the Court of Appeals from the trial court’s order.

       In seeking relief from the trial court’s order before the Court of Appeals, the

City argued that the trial court had applied an incorrect standard of review when it

“expressly and erroneously applied de novo review in evaluating whether the

evidence was ‘sufficient.’ ” In addition, the City contended that the trial court had

erred by concluding that PHG had met its burden of eliciting competent, material,

and substantial evidence tending to show that the hotel would not substantially

injure the value of adjoining or abutting properties; cause undue traffic congestion or

a traffic hazard; or be in harmony with the scale, bulk, coverage, density, and

character of the area or neighborhood in which the proposed hotel was intended to be

located.2 Finally, the City contended that the trial court had erred by considering the

recommendations that had been made by various City committees and advisory

boards and by holding that the City Council’s decision was arbitrary and capricious.

       In rejecting the City’s challenge to the trial court’s order, the Court of Appeals

began by concluding that the trial court had correctly applied the appropriate

standard of review. PHG Asheville, LLC v. City of Asheville, 822 S.E.2d 79, 86 (N.C.



       2 The City failed to argue before the Court of Appeals that the trial court had erred by
concluding that PHG had satisfied its burden of producing competent, material, and
substantial evidence addressing the three ordinance criteria that are not discussed in the
text of this opinion, thereby abandoning its right to challenge the trial court’s decision with
respect to those criteria on appeal. See N.C.R. App. P. 28(a) (stating that “[i]ssues not
presented and discussed in a party’s brief are deemed abandoned”).

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Ct. App. 2018) (stating that “[t]he superior court’s order shows it did not weigh

evidence, but properly applied de novo review to determine the initial legal issue of

whether Petitioner had presented competent, material, and substantial evidence”).

According to the Court of Appeals, “[t]he City Council’s 44 findings of fact were

unnecessary, improper, and irrelevant” because “[n]o competent, material, and

substantial evidence was presented to rebut Petitioner’s prima facie case, and no

conflicts in the evidence required the City Council to make findings to resolve any

disputed issues of fact.” Id. The Court of Appeals reached this conclusion based upon

N.C.G.S. § 160A-393(l)(2), which provides that “findings of fact are not necessary

when the record sufficiently reveals the basis for the decision below or when the

material facts are undisputed and the case presents only an issue of law.” Id. (cleaned

up) (quoting N.C.G.S. § 160A-393(l)(2) (2017)). For that reason, the Court of Appeals

held that any “whole record” review that the trial court might have conducted had

been rendered unnecessary in light of its determination that PHG had presented

competent, material, and substantial evidence that sufficed to establish the existence

of a prima facie case of entitlement to the issuance of the permit and that no

competent, material, and substantial evidence had been presented in opposition to

PHG’s request. Id. at 87. More specifically, the Court of Appeals held that Mr.

Crozier’s report and related testimony “constitute[d] material, as well as competent

and substantial, evidence to show prima facie compliance with criteria 3,” id. at 90,

and that “[n]o competent, material, and substantial expert evidence contra was


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presented at the hearing to show [that] Crozier’s analysis was unsound or utilized an

improper methodology.” Id. at 89 (stating that “[t]he City Council’s lay notion that

Crozier’s analysis is based upon an inadequate methodology does not constitute

competent evidence under the statute to rebut his expert testimony and report”).

Similarly, the Court of Appeals concluded that “[n]o competent, material, and

substantial evidence was presented to refute Dean’s traffic analysis,” that Mr. “Dean

[had] testified [that] his study was conducted in accordance with industry standards

and used standard industry data and methods,” and that “[t]he speculations of lay

members of the public and unsubstantiated opinions of City Council members do not

constitute competent evidence contra under the statutes and precedents to rebut

Dean’s traffic analysis.” Id. at 91. As a result, for all of these reasons, the Court of

Appeals affirmed the trial court’s order. On 9 May 2019, this Court allowed the City’s

discretionary review petition.

      In seeking to persuade us to overturn the Court of Appeals’ decision, the City

argues that, pursuant to this Court’s holding in Mann Media, “a local government

may deny a conditional use permit if, at the permit hearing, the developer is unable

to definitively address whether the proposed development presents a safety risk” and

“that this rule applies even when the safety risk is raised by members of the public

whose testimony is ultimately inadmissible,” citing Mann Media, Inc. v. Randolph

Cty. Planning Bd., 356 N.C. 1, 16–17, 565 S.E.2d 9, 19 (2002). In the City’s view,

“there is no meaningful difference between Mann Media and this case” given that, in


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                                   Opinion of the Court



Mann Media, members of the public raised concerns about ice falling from a tower

while, in this case, a member of the public raised a safety issue concerning the

presence of a blind hill near a parking garage. The City argues, that, just like in

Mann Media, “PHG’s witness could not state with certainty—much less ‘satisfactorily

. . . prove’ or ‘guarantee’—that the proposed development would not create a ‘safety

risk’ ” and that PHG’s failure to adequately address this safety issue necessitated

denial of PHG’s permit, quoting Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17, 565 S.E.2d at 19. In

addition, the City argues that, “when the local government assesses the evidence at

the permit hearing, the local government may rely on its knowledge of the local

community,” citing Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Bd. of Aldermen, 284 N.C. 458, 468,

202 S.E.2d 129, 136 (1974).     The City contends that, “instead of allowing local

knowledge to inform local permitting decisions, the Court of Appeals expressly

constrained local governments from considering that local knowledge.” As a result,

the City contends that the Court of Appeals’ decision conflicts with our decisions in

Mann Media and Humble Oil and that, “[i]f left undisturbed[, it] would usher in a

new era of perfunctory, rubber-stamp review” of conditional use permits by local

governing bodies.

      Secondly, the City argues that “the Court of Appeals erred in its treatment of

the City Council’s factual findings.” In the City’s view, the City Council’s findings of

fact concerning traffic congestion and traffic hazards and its findings of fact




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                       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                      Opinion of the Court



concerning the effect of the proposed hotel upon the value of surrounding properties

had ample record support.3

       In seeking to convince us to affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision, PHG argues

that “an applicant is entitled to a conditional use permit if the applicant meets its

prima facie burden” of producing competent, material, and substantial evidence in

support of each condition set out in the applicable land use ordinance. According to

PHG, “the applicant only has a burden of production” rather than a burden of

persuasion, with this burden of production having been “deliberately and

appropriately [set at a] low [level] in conditional use permit cases because [the City]

has already legislatively determined that the proposed use is an acceptable use at the

location, subject to meeting the standards of a [conditional use permit].” For that

reason, PHG contends that the issue of whether an applicant has met its initial

burden to produce competent, material, and substantial evidence is a legal question

subject to de novo review and that a reviewing court “is not bound by a municipality’s

factual findings” in making that decision. As a result, PHG asserts that “the City

Council erred in denying the conditional use permit” because it met its burden of




       3 The City has abandoned the contention that it advanced before the Court of Appeals
that the trial court had erred by reversing the City Council’s determination that PHG failed
to meet its burden of producing competent, material, and substantial evidence that the
development of the hotel would be in harmony with the scale, bulk, coverage, density and
character of the area or neighborhood in which it is located by failing to bring that contention
forward for our consideration in its new brief before this Court. See N.C.R. App. P. 28(a)

                                             -21-
                      PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



production regarding both traffic and property values and because “[t]he City

Council’s findings were not based on competent, material, and substantial evidence.”

      As this Court said just over forty years ago, “[t]he granting of a special

exception is apparently not too generally understood.” Woodhouse v. Bd. of Comm’rs,

299 N.C. 211, 218, 261 S.E.2d 882, 887 (1980) (quoting Syosset Holding Corp. v.

Schlimm, 159 N.Y.S.2d 88, 89 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1956), modified and aff’d, 164 N.Y.S.2d

890 (N.Y. App. Div. 1957)). “A conditional use permit ‘is one issued for a use which

the ordinance expressly permits in a designated zone upon proof that certain facts

and conditions detailed in the ordinance exist.’ ” Id. at 215–16, 261 S.E.2d at 886

(quoting Humble Oil, 284 N.C. at 467, 202 S.E.2d at 135).

      By the time that a case arising from an application for the issuance of a

conditional use permit reaches this Court, the proceeding in question has been subject

to several levels of examination and review. As an initial matter, the application

must be considered by the applicable local governmental body. See N.C.G.S. § 160A-

388(a), (c) (2019).    In the event that the local governmental body denies the

application, the applicant has the right to seek judicial review of that decision by the

superior court. See id. §§ 160A-388(e2)(2), -393. At the conclusion of that process, a

disappointed litigant is entitled to seek appellate review of the trial court’s decision

in accordance with the relevant statutory provisions and the North Carolina Rules of

Appellate Procedure.




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                                  Opinion of the Court



      At each step in this multi-level process, a distinct legal standard is applicable.

According to well-established North Carolina law, the local governing board “must

follow a two-step decision-making process in granting or denying an application for a

[conditional] use permit.” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 12, 565 S.E.2d at 16. As an

initial matter, the local governmental body must determine whether “an applicant

has produced competent, material, and substantial evidence tending to establish the

existence of the facts and conditions which the ordinance requires for the issuance of

a [conditional] use permit.” Humble Oil, 284 N.C. at 468, 202 S.E.2d at 136 (emphasis

added). In the event that the applicant satisfies this initial burden of production,

then “prima facie he is entitled to” the issuance of the requested permit. Id. At that

point, any decision to deny the application “should be based upon findings contra

which are supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence appearing in

the record,” id., with the local governmental body lacking the authority to “deny a

permit on grounds not expressly stated in the ordinance” given that “it must employ

specific statutory criteria which are relevant.” Woodhouse, 299 N.C. at 218–19, 261

S.E.2d at 887.

      The superior court “ ‘sits in the posture of an appellate court’ and ‘does not

review the sufficiency of evidence presented to it but reviews that evidence presented

to the town board.’ ” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 12–13, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (quoting

Coastal Ready-Mix Concrete Co. v. Bd. of Comm’rs, 299 N.C. 620, 626–27, 265 S.E.2d




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                                   Opinion of the Court



379, 383 (1980)). In reviewing the local governmental body’s decision, the superior

court is charged with:

               (1)   Reviewing the record for errors in law,

               (2)   Insuring that procedures specified by law in both
               statute and ordinance are followed,

               (3)    Insuring that appropriate due process rights of a
               petitioner are protected including the right to offer
               evidence, cross-examine witnesses, and inspect documents,

               (4)   Insuring that decisions of town boards are supported
               by competent, material[,] and substantial evidence in the
               whole record, and

               (5)    Insuring that decisions are not arbitrary and
               capricious.

Id. at 13, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (quoting Coastal Ready-Mix, 299 N.C. at 626, 265 S.E.2d

at 383); see also N.C.G.S. § 160A-393(k)(1)(b) (2019) (providing that the superior court

should insure that the local governmental body’s decision concerning a conditional

use permit was not “[i]n excess of the statutory authority conferred upon the city,

including preemption, or the authority conferred upon the decision-making board by

ordinance”).

      The exact nature of the standard of review to be utilized by the superior court

in any particular case “depends upon the particular issues presented on appeal.”

Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 13, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (quoting ACT-UP Triangle v. Comm’n

for Health Servs., 345 N.C. 699, 706, 483 S.E.2d 388, 392 (1997)). In the event that

the petitioner asserts that the local governmental body has committed an error of


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                      PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                     Opinion of the Court



law, then that contention is subject to de novo review. Id. Under the well-established

de novo standard of review, “the superior court ‘considers the matter anew and freely

substitutes its own judgment for the [local governing board’s] judgment.’ ” Mann

Media, 356 N.C. at 13–14, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (cleaned up) (quoting Sutton v. N.C. Dep’t

of Labor, 132 N.C. App. 387, 389, 511 S.E.2d 340, 341 (1999)). The extent to which

“the record contains competent, material, and substantial evidence is a conclusion of

law, reviewable de novo.” N.C.G.S. § 160A-393(k)(2) (2019).4 In the event that the

petitioner contends that the local governmental body’s decision was either (1)

arbitrary or capricious or (2) not supported by competent, material, or substantial

evidence, the superior court is required to conduct a whole record review. Mann

Media, 356 N.C. at 13, 565 S.E.2d at 17. In conducting a whole record review, the

reviewing court “must ‘examine all competent evidence’ (the ‘whole record’) in order

to determine whether the [local governing body’s] decision is supported by

‘substantial evidence.’ ” Id. at 14, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (quoting ACT-UP Triangle, 345



       4 PHG filed a motion seeking to have the City’s appeal dismissed on the grounds that
it had been rendered moot as a result of the enactment of Session Law 2019-111 on 28 June
2019, which added the language quoted in the text to N.C.G.S. § 160A-393(k)(2). See An Act
to Clarify, Consolidate, and Reorganize the Land-Use Regulatory Laws of the State, S.L.
2019-111, § 1.9, https://perma.cc/G86W-WPR6. In PHG’s view, the enactment of this
legislation “definitively answered the principal question presented in this appeal: what is
the appropriate standard of review for whether an applicant has met its prima facie burden
of producing competent, material, and substantial evidence?” We are not persuaded by this
argument. As an initial matter, S.L. 2019-111 states that it “clarif[ies] and restate[s] the
intent of existing law and appl[ies] to ordinances adopted before, on, and after the effective
date.” Id. at § 3.1. In addition, the content of the applicable standard of review is not
determinative in this instance. As a result, we deny PHG’s motion to dismiss the City’s
appeal.

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                                   Opinion of the Court



N.C. at 706, 483 S.E.2d at 392). Under the whole record test, the reviewing court is

not allowed “to replace the board’s judgment as between two reasonably conflicting

views, even though the court could justifiably have reached a different result had the

matter been before it de novo.” Id. at 14, 565 S.E.2d at 17–18 (quoting Thompson v.

Wake Cty. Bd. of Educ., 292 N.C. 406, 410, 233 S.E.2d 538, 541 (1977)). Any order

that the superior court enters in the course of reviewing a local governmental board’s

decision relating to the issuance of a conditional use permit “must set forth sufficient

information in its order to reveal the scope of review utilized and the application of

that review.” Id. at 13, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (citation omitted).

      In the event that appellate review of the superior court’s order is requested,

the appellate court “examines the trial court’s order for error[s] of law,” with that

“process ha[ving] been described as a twofold task: (1) determining whether the trial

court exercised the appropriate scope of review and, if appropriate, (2) deciding

whether the court did so properly.” Id. at 14, 565 S.E.2d at 18 (quoting ACT-UP

Triangle, 345 N.C. at 706, 483 S.E.2d at 392). In the event that the case under

consideration reaches this Court after a decision by the Court of Appeals, the issue

before this Court is whether the Court of Appeals committed any errors of law. N.C.R.

App. P. 16(a). For that reason, this Court is required to make the same inquiry that

the Court of Appeals was called upon to undertake in reviewing the trial court’s order.

As a result, we will now examine whether the trial court utilized the appropriate

standard of review and, if so, whether it did so properly.


                                          -26-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                  Opinion of the Court



      As the record that is before us in this case clearly reflects, the trial court

appropriately engaged in both de novo and whole record review. Mann Media, 356

N.C. at 15, 565 S.E.2d at 18 (stating that a “court may properly employ both

standards of review in a specific case” as long as “the standards are to be applied

separately to discrete issues” and the trial court “identif[ies] which standard(s) it

applied to which issues” (citations omitted)). In addressing the issue of whether PHG

adduced sufficient evidence to satisfy the applicable burden of production, the trial

court stated that:

             Exercising de novo review, the Court concludes as a matter
             of law that the evidence presented by PHG and other
             supporting witnesses was competent, material and
             substantial and sufficient to establish a prima facie case of
             entitlement to a conditional use permit. In deciding
             otherwise, the Council made an error of law. A court
             reviews “de novo the initial issue of whether the evidence
             presented by a petitioner met the requirement of being
             competent, material, and substantial.” Blair Investments,
             LLC. v. Roanoke Rapids City Council, 231 N.C. App. 318,
             321, 752 S.E.2d 524, 527 (2013).

Thus, the trial court engaged in de novo review in analyzing PHG’s challenge to the

City Council’s determination that PHG had failed to make the necessary prima facie

showing of entitlement to the issuance of the requested conditional use permit.

      As this Court has clearly held, the extent to which an applicant has presented

competent, material, and substantial evidence tending to satisfy the standards set

out in the applicable ordinance for the issuance of a conditional use permit is a

question directed toward the sufficiency of the evidence presented by the applicant


                                         -27-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



and involves the making of a legal, rather than a factual, determination. See Styers

v. Phillips, 277 N.C. 460, 464, 178 S.E.2d 583, 586 (1971) (stating that “[w]hether

there is enough evidence to support a material issue is always a question of law for

the court”). For that reason, we have previously analogized an applicant’s burden of

producing competent, material, and substantial evidence to support the issuance of a

conditional use permit to the making of the showing necessary to overcome a directed

verdict motion during a jury trial. Humble Oil, 284 N.C. at 470–71, 202 S.E.2d at

137 (stating that “[s]ubstantial evidence is more than a mere scintilla” and “must be

enough to justify, if the trial were to a jury, a refusal to direct a verdict when the

conclusion sought to be drawn from it is one of fact for the jury” (citation omitted)).

      In concluding that PHG presented sufficient evidence to support the issuance

of the requested conditional use permit, the trial court recognized that “PHG

submitted a large volume of evidence that its hotel project met all ordinance

standards” and that the evidence that PHG elicited “included [testimony from] five

witnesses [three of whom] were received as experts, without objection, and who

presented live testimony and ample reports, also received without objection.” In

addition, the trial court noted that “no competent evidence opposing the . . .

application appear[ed] in the record.” The Court of Appeals held that “[t]he superior

court’s order shows it did not weigh evidence, but properly applied de novo review to

determine the initial legal issue of whether Petitioner had presented competent,

material, and substantial evidence.” PHG Asheville, 822 S.E.2d at 86. We agree with


                                          -28-
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                                     Opinion of the Court



the Court of Appeals that the trial court utilized the appropriate standard of review

with respect to this issue and did so properly.5

       As the record reflects, PHG presented the testimony of two architects, an

appraiser, a traffic engineer, a certified planner, and the Vice President of PHG who,

between them, presented evidence concerning each of the standards enunciated in




       5  This Court did hold in Mann Media that, “[u]nder the whole record test, in light of
petitioners’ inability satisfactorily to prove that the proposed use would not materially
endanger public safety, we are not permitted to substitute our judgment for that of [the
governing board]” and “hold that petitioners failed to meet their burden of proving this first
requirement and did not establish a prima facie case.” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17, 565
S.E.2d at 19. The Court engaged in whole record review in Mann Media because the wording
of the superior court’s order “suggest[ed] that the superior court applied both [de novo and
whole record review] simultaneously in several instances,” a fact that left us “unable to
conclude that the superior court consistently exercised the appropriate scope of review.” Id.
at 15, 565 S.E.2d at 18. Even so, we concluded that no remand was necessary “because the
central issue presented by [the governing board] and argued by both parties on appeal is
whether there was competent, material, and substantial evidence to support [the governing
board’s] denial of a [conditional] use permit,” with “[r]esolution of this issue involv[ing]
evaluation of evidence used by [the governing board] to deny the application” and with “the
entire record of the hearing [being] before us.” Id. As a result, the Court applied the whole
record test in Mann Media “in the interests of judicial economy,” id. at 16, 565 S.E.2d at 19,
rather than because it was fundamentally altering the existing process for judicially
reviewing challenges to the denial of conditional use permits and implicitly overruling
decisions discussed in the text and cited without exception in Mann Media for the purposes
for which we have cited them in this opinion, such as Humble Oil. Id. at 12, 565 S.E.2d at
16. In view of the fact that the trial court appropriately separated the issue of whether PHG
had established the required prima facie case from the other issues that were before it at that
time, there was no need for either the Court of Appeals or this Court to refrain from utilizing
the ordinarily applicable standard of review, which Mann Media did nothing to change. In
addition, the City has not cited any statutory provision or decision of this Court that in any
way suggests that the manner in which its conditional use permit ordinance is couched has
any effect upon the manner in which a decision refusing to issue a conditional use permit
should be reviewed by either the trial or appellate courts. As a result, the issue of whether
the applicant for a conditional use permit made out the necessary prima facie case does not
involve determining whether the applicant met a burden of persuasion, as compared to a
burden of production, and is subject to de novo, rather than whole record, review during the
judicial review process.

                                             -29-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



the relevant portion of the City’s land use ordinance. Mr. Crozier and Mr. Dean,

whose testimony is at issue in the case as it has been presented to us, were each

qualified as experts in their respective fields.      Both Mr. Crozier and Mr. Dean

submitted voluminous reports that contained extensive data detailing the basis for

their conclusions.   Mr. Crozier’s appraisal report and testimony provided ample

support for PHG’s contention that the proposed hotel would not substantially injure

the value of adjoining or abutting properties by detailing recent land sales in the area

near the proposed hotel development and applying the principle of progression before

concluding that the construction and operation of the proposed hotel would not injure

the value of adjoining or abutting properties and would, instead, cause their values

to increase.   Similarly, Mr. Dean’s traffic study and testimony provided ample

support for PHG’s contention that the proposed hotel would not cause undue traffic

congestion or create a traffic hazard in light of the City staff’s statement that “all we

needed to provide was the trip generation table . . . as well as our anticipated

distribution of those trips.” Mr. Dean’s analysis, which was performed in accordance

with industry standards and utilized rates and equations developed by the Institute

of Traffic Engineers, concluded that the traffic caused by the proposed development

would result in only a “minimal impact” and would “only increase the overall delay

at [nearby] intersections by about four seconds.” We agree with the trial court and

the Court of Appeals that the evidence that PHG presented before the City Council




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                      PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



sufficed to satisfy its burden of producing competent, material, and substantial

evidence tending to show that it satisfied the relevant ordinance standards.

         In light of the fact that PHG had made a sufficient showing to survive what

amounted to a directed verdict motion and the City does not contend that the record

contains any “evidence contra,” the City Council’s inquiry should have ended at this

point.     See N.C.G.S. § 160A-388(e2)(1) (2019) (stating that “[t]he board shall

determine contested facts and make its decision within a reasonable time” by

entering an order that “reflect[s] the board’s determination of contested facts and

their application to the applicable standards”); see also id. § 160A-393(l)(2) (stating

that “findings of fact are not necessary when the record sufficiently reveals the basis

for the decision below or when the material facts are undisputed and the case

presents only an issue of law”). Instead, however, the City Council concluded that

PHG had failed to make the necessary prima facie showing and attempted to support

this determination with a series of findings of fact that rested upon incompetent

testimony and questioned the credibility of the testimony provided by PHG’s

witnesses.

         In defense of the approach that it took in considering PHG’s application, the

City argues that the Court of Appeals disregarded the findings of fact that are

contained in its order and argues that the effect of the Court of Appeals’ decision was

that, “if no one shows up to oppose a project and introduce evidence in opposition,

every new development would be a fait accompli.” However, the basis upon which


                                          -31-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                  Opinion of the Court



the City seeks to have its decision upheld rests upon a misapprehension of the

applicable law, under which “[a] denial of the permit should be based upon findings

contra which are supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence

appearing in the record.” Humble Oil, 284 N.C. at 468, 202 S.E.2d at 136. In other

words, given that PHG elicited sufficient evidence to satisfy its burden of production

to show an entitlement to the issuance of the requested conditional use permit, the

City Council did, in fact, lack the authority to deny PHG’s application in the absence

of competent, material, and substantial evidence tending to support a different

outcome.

      The findings of fact contained in the City’s order are simply inadequate to

support the result that the City Council ultimately reached. As an initial matter, we

note that the City Council’s findings concerning property values and traffic-related

issues lack any support in the admissible and competent evidence. Simply put, given

the absence of any evidence that tended to conflict with Mr. Crozier’s appraisal study,

there were no factual issues relating to the property value issue which the City

Council needed to resolve. Instead, the City Council’s findings of fact fault Mr.

Crozier for failing to include information that he had no reason, based upon an

examination of the relevant ordinance language, to conclude would be needed or even

relevant. For example, the City Council states in Finding of Fact No. 19 that “[t]here

was no evidence, through facts and data, to indicate how the Hotel would affect or

impact such an increase in value” despite the fact that the City’s unified development


                                         -32-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



ordinance merely required PHG to produce evidence tending to establish that the

proposed development would not substantially injure the value of adjoining or

abutting properties without making any mention of a requirement that the applicant

establish the amount by which the proposed development would affect the value of

surrounding properties. Similarly, in Finding of Fact No. 20, the City Council faulted

Mr. Crozier for failing to present comparable sales data relating to properties in other

parts of Asheville or in entirely different cities. The fundamental problem with the

City Council’s justifications for refusing to credit the testimony of Mr. Crozier is that

it held PHG to a burden that is simply not reflected in or supported by the relevant

ordinance provisions. See Woodhouse, 299 N.C. at 219, 261 S.E.2d at 887–88 (stating

that “[t]o hold that an applicant must first anticipate and then prove or disprove each

and every general consideration would impose an intolerable, if not impossible,

burden on an applicant for a conditional use permit,” with an applicant not being

required to “negate every possible objection to the proposed use”).

      The same deficiencies are present in the City Council’s findings concerning

traffic-related issues. Once again, no competent, material, or substantial evidence

was presented in opposition to the conclusions drawn in Mr. Dean’s analysis. In spite

of the fact that Mr. Dean’s uncontested testimony established that his traffic study

had been performed in accordance with industry standards, the City Council

questioned the credibility of the results reached in his study on the grounds that he

had failed to base his study upon conditions specific to Asheville. Among other things,


                                          -33-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                  Opinion of the Court



the City Council criticized Mr. Dean for failing to base his traffic study upon data

relating to conditions on the weekend or during the summer or fall seasons when

tourist-related traffic in Asheville is at its height. Once again, the City Council’s

findings reflect an insistence upon the presentation of evidence that is never

mentioned in the City’s land use ordinance, which is a standard to which the

applicant cannot lawfully be held. In addition, the City Council’s findings also rested

upon the testimony of Mr. Rawls, who raised questions about limitations upon the

ability of persons exiting the hotel’s parking garage to see up and down an adjoining

street in spite of the fact that the General Assembly had determined that lay

testimony concerning traffic conditions is not competent in conditional use permit

proceedings.   See N.C.G.S. § 160A-393(k)(3)(b) (2019) (stating that “[t]he term

‘competent evidence,’ as used in this subsection, shall, regardless of the lack of a

timely objection, not be deemed to include the opinion testimony of lay witnesses as

to . . . [t]he increase in vehicular traffic resulting from a proposed development

[which] would pose a danger to the public safety”). As a result, the City Council’s

traffic-related findings do not justify a decision to reject Mr. Dean’s analysis of the

impact of the proposed hotel on traffic in the surrounding area.

      A city council is, of course, entitled to rely upon the special knowledge of its

members concerning conditions in the locality which they serve.         However, this

principle does not justify the City Council’s decision to deny PHG’s permit application

in this case. In Humble Oil, a town alderman opposed the issuance of a conditional


                                         -34-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                  Opinion of the Court



use permit for a filling station in Chapel Hill, stating that the intersection near the

proposed station “had been dangerous for twenty-eight years.” Humble Oil, 284 N.C.

at 469, 202 S.E.2d at 136. Before holding that this statement and others like it were

nothing more than “conclusions unsupported by factual data or background” so as to

be “incompetent and insufficient to support the Aldermen’s findings,” id., we stated

that

             [i]f there be facts within the special knowledge of the
             members of a Board of Aldermen or acquired by their
             personal inspection of the premises, they are properly
             considered. However, they must be revealed at the public
             hearing and made a part of the record so that the applicant
             will have an opportunity to meet them by evidence or
             argument and the reviewing court may judge their
             competency and materiality.

Id. at 468, 202 S.E.2d at 136.

       As we have already noted, several members of the City Council mentioned facts

within their special knowledge about the city that they represented during the quasi-

judicial hearing held for the purpose of considering PHG’s application. Among other

things, various members of the City Council questioned Mr. Dean concerning the

manner in which he conducted his traffic study, with their questions raising issues

about the extent to which his study should have been based upon conditions existing

at a different date and time. Aside from the fact that Mr. Dean was able to answer

and provide reasonable explanations for his answers, nothing in the relevant

ordinance provision required Mr. Dean to have anticipated these questions and to



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                      PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



have conducted his study in the manner that these questions seemed to believe to

have been appropriate without sufficient advance notice to have permitted him to

present any necessary rebuttal evidence. As a result, nothing in the special facts

known to the members of the City Council in this case justified the making of a

decision that PHG had failed to satisfy its burden of production or to reject PHG’s

permit application.

      Finally, the City argues that this Court’s decision in Mann Media requires a

decision in its favor. In Mann Media, the Randolph County Planning Board denied

an application for the issuance of a conditional use permit authorizing the

construction and operation of a broadcast tower based upon concerns that ice would

fall from the necessary support beams. Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 3–5, 565 S.E.2d at

11–12. After determining that the evidence presented in opposition to the issuance

of the proposed permit constituted incompetent “anecdotal hearsay,” id. at 17, 565

S.E.2d at 19, this Court held that “petitioners [had] failed to carry their burden of

proving that the potential of ice falling from support wires of the proposed tower was

not a safety risk” in light of the fact that the applicant had “candidly acknowledged

his inability to state with certainty that ice would not travel a greater distance in the

event of wind or storm,” id., and that, for that reason, “petitioners [had] failed to meet

their burden of proving this first requirement [that the proposed tower would not

materially endanger public safety] and did not establish a prima facie case.” Id. The

same result would not be appropriate in this case given that nothing in the relevant


                                          -36-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



ordinance provision, particularly given the advice that Mr. Dean received from the

City staff, set forth any requirement that the sort of sight distance study that the

City Council wanted to have been conducted was required in order to obtain the

issuance of the requested conditional use permit. If Department of Transportation

regulations do require a sight distance survey, it is not the City Council’s role to

enforce those regulations in the guise of implementing the City’s ordinances relating

to conditional use permits.

      Thus, we hold that the Asheville City Council made a legislative decision to

allow certain uses by right in specified zones “upon proof that certain facts and

conditions detailed in the ordinance exist.” Woodhouse, 299 N.C. at 215–16, 261

S.E.2d at 886 (quoting Humble Oil, 284 N.C. at 467, 202 S.E.2d at 135). The effect of

the making of this decision was to bind the Asheville City Council to the use of quasi-

judicial procedures and to exclusive reliance upon the substantive standards

enunciated in the relevant provisions of its land use ordinance in determining

whether conditional use permit applications should be granted or denied. See id. at

219, 261 S.E.2d at 887 (stating that, “[w]here a zoning ordinance specifies standards

to apply in determining whether to grant a [conditional] use permit and the applicant

fully complies with the specified standards, a denial of the permit is arbitrary as a

matter of law” (quoting Hay v. Township of Grow, 206 N.W.2d 19, 22 (Minn. 1973)).

As a result, in the event that an applicant for the issuance of a conditional use permit

presents competent, material, and substantial evidence tending to show that it has


                                          -37-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Opinion of the Court



satisfied the applicable ordinance standards, it has made out a prima facie case of

entitlement to the issuance of the conditional use permit, with any decision to deny

the permit application being required to rest upon contrary findings of fact that have

adequate evidentiary support. In view of the fact that PHG presented competent,

material, and substantial evidence that its proposed hotel satisfied the relevant

ordinance standards and the fact that no competent, material, and substantial

evidence was presented in opposition to PHG’s showing, the City simply lacked the

legal authority to deny PHG’s application. As a result, subject to the modified logic

set forth in this opinion, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision.

      MODIFIED AND AFFIRMED.




                                          -38-
Justice EARLS dissenting.

      Here the majority overrules this Court’s decision in Mann Media, Inc. v.

Randolph Cty. Planning Bd., in which the Court held that the question of whether a

petitioner meets its burden of establishing a prima facie case for a conditional use

permit is reviewed—not de novo—but rather under the whole record test, pursuant

to which “we are not permitted to substitute our judgment for that of” the local

government. 356 N.C. 1, 17, 565 S.E.2d 9, 19 (2002) (“Under the whole record test,

in light of petitioners’ inability satisfactorily to prove that the proposed use would not

materially endanger public safety, we are not permitted to substitute our judgment

for that of respondent. Accordingly, we hold that petitioners failed to meet their

burden of proving this first requirement and did not establish a prima facie case.”).

In my view, under the whole record test, the Asheville City Council’s determination

that PHG Asheville, LLC (PHG), failed to meet its burden of establishing that the

proposed use would not cause undue traffic congestion or a traffic hazard was not

arbitrary or capricious. I would therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals,

which affirmed the superior court’s reversal of the City Council’s denial of PHG’s

application. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

      While “[z]oning ordinances list uses that are automatically permitted in a

particular zoning district,” which “are . . . referred to as ‘uses by right,’ ” “[m]any

zoning ordinances also allow additional uses in each district that are permitted only
                      PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                    Earls, J., dissenting



if specific standards are met; these are what are known as special and conditional

uses.” David. W. Owens, Land Use Law in North Carolina, at 159 (2d ed. 2011). As

the majority notes, “[a] conditional use permit ‘is one issued for a use which the

ordinance expressly permits in a designated zone upon proof that certain facts and

conditions detailed in the ordinance exist.’ ” Woodhouse v. Bd. of Comm’rs of Nags

Head, 299 N.C. 211, 215–16, 261 S.E.2d 882, 886 (1980) (quoting Refining Co. v. Bd.

of Aldermen, 284 N.C. 458, 467, 202 S.E. 2d 129, 135 (1974)). Notably, “[t]he

standards underlying such permits include those that require application of some

degree of judgment and discretion, as opposed to permitted uses where only objective

standards are applied.” Owens, Land Use Law in North Carolina, at 159.

       When determining whether to grant a conditional use permit, the local

government’s authorized board1 “operates as the finder of fact” and “must follow a

two-step decision-making process” in making its determination:

              If “an applicant has produced competent, material, and
              substantial evidence tending to establish the existence of
              the facts and conditions which the ordinance requires for
              the issuance of a special use permit, prima facie he is
              entitled to it.” If a prima facie case is established, “[a]
              denial of the permit [then] should be based upon findings
              contra which are supported by competent, material, and
              substantial evidence appearing in the record.”




       1“North Carolina law allows the final decision on a special or conditional use permit
to be assigned to the governing board, the board of adjustment, or the planning board.”
Owens, Land Use Law in North Carolina, at 160.

                                            -2-
                    PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                  Earls, J., dissenting



Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 12, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (alterations in original) (quoting

Humble Oil & Ref. Co. v. Bd. of Aldermen of Chapel Hill, 284 N.C. 458, 468, 202

S.E.2d 129, 136 (1974)). The “board sits in a quasi-judicial capacity” and

             must insure that an applicant is afforded a right to cross-
             examine witnesses, is given a right to present evidence, is
             provided a right to inspect documentary evidence
             presented against him and is afforded all the procedural
             steps set out in the pertinent ordinance or statute. Any
             decision of the town board has to be based on competent,
             material, and substantial evidence that is introduced at a
             public hearing.

Id. at 12, 565 S.E.2d at 16–17 (quoting Coastal Ready-Mix Concrete Co. v. Bd. of

Comm’rs of Nags Head, 299 N.C. 620, 626, 265 S.E.2d 379, 383 (1980)). The board

“is ‘without power to deny a permit on grounds not expressly stated in the ordinance’

and it must employ specific statutory criteria which are relevant.” Id. at 12, 565

S.E.2d at 16–17 (quoting Woodhouse, 299 N.C. at 218–19, 261 S.E.2d at 887); see also

Owens, Land Use Law in North Carolina, at 160 n.8 (“While the standards for the

permit involve application of a degree of discretion, the applicant is entitled to the

permit upon establishing that the standards will be met.”).

      This Court addressed the standard of review applicable to the denial of a

conditional or special use permit in Mann Media. There, the petitioners sought a

special use permit to construct a broadcast tower in an area of Randolph County

zoned for residential and agricultural use. Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 2, 565 S.E.2d at

11. Randolph County’s zoning ordinance provided that a special use permit may be



                                          -3-
                       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                        Earls, J., dissenting



granted   for     public   utilities,   including     broadcast   towers,   to   be   built   in

residential/agricultural areas, but required Randolph County’s Planning Board (the

Planning Board) to find four factors before granting the permit:

                (1) that the use will not materially endanger the public
                health or safety if located where proposed and developed
                according to the plan as submitted and approved;

                (2) that the use meets all required conditions and
                specifications;

                (3) that the use will not substantially injure the value of
                adjoining or abutting property, or that the use is a public
                necessity; and

                (4) that the location and character of the use if developed
                according to the plan as submitted and approved will be in
                harmony with the area in which it is to be located and in
                general conformity with the Land Development Plan for
                Randolph County.

Id. at 11, 565 S.E.2d at 16. After hearing the petitioners’ evidence, the Planning

Board found, inter alia, that “ice has formed and fallen from the other towers within

the county’s zoning jurisdiction causing damage and is likely to do so from the

proposed tower.” Id. at 3, 565 S.E.2d at 12. The Planning Board denied the permit,

determining that the proposed use would materially endanger the public safety,

would substantially injure the value of adjoining or abutting property, and would not

be in harmony with the surrounding area. Id. at 4, 565 S.E.2d at 12. On appeal, the

superior court reversed, concluding that the Planning Board’s decision was not

supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence. Id. at 7–8, 565 S.E.2d



                                                -4-
                      PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Earls, J., dissenting



at 14. In particular, the superior court determined that any evidence presented to

the Planning Board concerning ice damage at other towers was incompetent, and

therefore the Board’s reliance on such evidence was arbitrary and capricious. Id. at

7–8, 565 S.E.2d at 14. A majority panel at the Court of Appeals affirmed the superior

court, and the petitioners sought further review in this Court. Id. at 9, 565 S.E.2d at

15.

       This Court stated that in appeals from denials of conditional use permits, the

“superior court ‘sits in the posture of an appellate court’ and ‘does not review the

sufficiency of evidence presented to it but reviews that evidence presented to the town

board.’ ” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 12–13, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (quoting Coastal Ready-

Mix Concrete Co., 299 N.C. at 626–27, 265 S.E.2d at 383). The superior court’s role

consists of:

               (1)   Reviewing the record for errors in law,

               (2)   Insuring that procedures specified by law in both
                     statute and ordinance are followed,

               (3)   Insuring that appropriate due process rights of a
                     petitioner are protected including the right to offer
                     evidence, cross-examine witnesses, and inspect
                     documents,

               (4)   Insuring that decisions of town boards are supported
                     by competent, material and substantial evidence in
                     the whole record, and

               (5)   Insuring that decisions are not arbitrary and
                     capricious.



                                           -5-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Earls, J., dissenting



Id. at 13, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (quoting Coastal Ready-Mix Concrete Co., 299 N.C. at 626,

265 S.E.2d at 383). The Court explained that the applicable standard of “judicial

review ‘depends upon the particular issues presented on appeal.’ ” Id. at 13, 565

S.E.2d at 17 (quoting ACT-UP Triangle v. Comm’n for Health Servs., 345 N.C. 699,

706, 483 S.E.2d 388, 392 (1997)). Specifically, “[w]hen the petitioner ‘questions (1)

whether the agency’s decision was supported by the evidence or (2) whether the

decision was arbitrary or capricious, then the reviewing court must apply the ‘whole

record’ test.’ ” Id. at 13, 565 S.E.2d at 17 (quoting ACT-UP Triangle, 345 N.C. at 706,

483 S.E.2d at 392). On the other hand, “[i]f a petitioner contends the [b]oard’s

decision was based on an error of law, ‘de novo’ review is proper.” Id. at 13, 565 S.E.2d

at 17 (quoting Sun Suites Holdings, LLC v. Bd. of Aldermen of Garner, 139 N.C. App.

269, 272, 533 S.E.2d 525, 527–28 (2000)). The Court stressed that “[t]hese standards

of review are distinct,” explaining:

             Under a de novo review, the superior court “consider[s] the
             matter anew[ ] and freely substitut[es] its own judgment
             for the agency’s judgment.” When utilizing the whole
             record test, however, the reviewing court must “ ‘examine
             all competent evidence (the “whole record”) in order to
             determine whether the agency decision is supported by
             “substantial evidence.” ’ ” “The ‘whole record’ test does not
             allow the reviewing court to replace the [b]oard’s judgment
             as between two reasonably conflicting views, even though
             the court could justifiably have reached a different result
             had the matter been before it de novo.”

Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 13–14, 565 S.E.2d at 17–18 (alterations in original)

(citations omitted). The Court further elaborated that under the whole record test, a


                                           -6-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                    Earls, J., dissenting



“finding must stand unless it is arbitrary and capricious,” and that in making this

determination

             the reviewing court does not have authority to override
             decisions within agency discretion when that discretion is
             exercised in good faith and in accordance with law.

             The “arbitrary or capricious” standard is a difficult one to
             meet. Administrative agency decisions may be reversed 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.[ ]”

Id. at 16, 565 S.E.2d at 19 (alterations in original) (citations omitted).

      Applying these standards, the Court first examined the Planning Board’s

finding that the proposed broadcast tower would “materially endanger the public

safety” due to the risk of ice falling from the tower. Id. at 16, 565 S.E.2d at 19. The

Court stated:

                    In this finding, respondent cited evidence of ice
             building up and falling from other towers. Our review of
             the record indicates that this evidence, consisting
             principally of ice brought before respondent in a cooler and
             anecdotal hearsay, was not competent. Even so, the record
             also indicates that petitioners failed to carry their burden
             of proving that the potential of ice falling from support
             wires of the proposed tower was not a safety risk.
             Petitioner Mann testified that while the tower itself would
             have deicing equipment, the support wires would not.
             Although he opined that any ice forming on the wires would
             slide down the wires, he candidly acknowledged his
             inability to state with certainty that ice would not travel a
             greater distance in the event of wind or storm. While Mann
             argued that the prevailing winds at the site are from a
             direction that would blow any ice away from nearby


                                            -7-
                        PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                       Earls, J., dissenting



               buildings and dwellings, he could not guarantee that
               falling ice would not be a risk. Other evidence in the record
               shows that numerous permanent structures lie in close
               proximity to the proposed tower site.

                      Respondent’s finding that petitioners failed to
               establish that there would be no danger to the public from
               falling ice is neither whimsical, nor patently in bad faith,
               and it is not indicative of a lack of any course of reasoning
               or exercise of judgment. The burden is on petitioners to
               meet the four requirements of the Ordinance before finding
               that a prima facie case has been established, and
               respondent did not state in its written order that
               petitioners made a prima facie case. Under the whole
               record test, in light of petitioners’ inability satisfactorily to
               prove that the proposed use would not materially endanger
               public safety, we are not permitted to substitute our
               judgment for that of respondent. Accordingly, we hold that
               petitioners failed to meet their burden of proving this first
               requirement and did not establish a prima facie case.

Id. at 17, 565 S.E.2d at 19. The Court ultimately2 reversed the decision of the Court

of Appeals and remanded for further remand with directions for the superior court to


       2 Having concluded that the Planning Board’s finding that the petitioners failed to
establish a prima facie case with respect to the ordinance’s first requirement was not
arbitrary or capricious under the whole record test, the Court was “not obligated to address
the remaining three requirements under the Ordinance.” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17, 565
S.E.2d at 19 (citing Coastal Ready-Mix, 299 N.C. at 632–33, 265 S.E.2d at 386). Nonetheless,
“in the interests of completeness,” the Court addressed the third requirement (“that the use
will not substantially injure the value of adjoining or abutting property”) and because the
petitioners’ expert failed to address “adjoining or abutting properties,” the Court held that
“under the whole record test, . . . petitioners failed to meet the Ordinance’s third
requirement.” Id. at 18, 565 S.E.2d at 20. The Court also addressed the fourth requirement
(“that the location and character of the use if developed according to the plan as submitted
and approved will be in harmony with the area in which it is to be located and in general
conformity with the Land Development Plan for Randolph County”) and determined that the
superior court properly applied de novo review to this issue because it agreed with the Court
of Appeals that, as a matter of law, “[t]he 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

                                               -8-
                       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                      Earls, J., dissenting



enter judgment affirming the Planning Board’s denial of the special use permit. Id.

at 19, 565 S.E.2d at 21.

       Here, Asheville’s ordinance provides that the “City Council shall not approve

the conditional use application . . . unless and until it makes the following findings,”

including, inter alia, “[t]hat the proposed use will not cause undue traffic congestion

or create a traffic hazard.” (Emphases added.) Thus, as was the case in Mann Media,

in order to establish a “prima facie case” for the conditional use permit under

Asheville’s ordinance, an applicant must not only meet a burden of production—

evidence from which the fact-finder could make the requisite findings—but also a

burden of persuasion—evidence from which the fact-finder does make the requisite

findings.3 See Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17, 565 S.E.2d at 19 (stating that where the

ordinance required the Planning Board to find four factors before granting the permit,

“[t]he burden is on petitioners to meet the four requirements of the Ordinance before

finding that a prima facie case has been established, and respondent did not state in


general zoning plan.” Id. at 19, 565 S.E.2d at 20 (quoting Mann Media, Inc. v. Randolph Cty.
Planning Bd., 142 N.C. App. 137, 139, 542 S.E.2d 253, 255 (2001)). Yet, because the Court
determined that the petitioners failed to establish a prima facie case as to the first and third
requirements of the ordinance, it was unnecessary to address whether sufficient evidence
was presented to rebut the petitioners’ prima facie showing with respect to the fourth
requirement. Id. at 19, 565 S.E.2d at 20.

       3 Admittedly, a “prima facie case” is typically synonymous with a burden of
production. Nonetheless, regardless of terminology, it is clear under Mann Media that when
an ordinance specifically requires the local board to in fact make necessary findings before a
permit may permissibly be granted, the applicant must meet more than the burden of
production before “prima facie he is entitled to” the permit. Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 12, 565
S.E.2d at 167.

                                              -9-
                       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                      Earls, J., dissenting



its written order that petitioners made a prima facie case,” and “hold[ing] that

petitioners failed to meet their burden of proving this first requirement and did not

establish a prima facie case.”); Owens, Land Use Law in North Carolina, at 163

(stating that “the ordinance standards” at issue in Mann Media “required a finding

that the use ‘will not endanger the public health or safety” and that “[t]he [C]ourt

upheld the permit denial based on a failure of the petitioner to meet the burden of

proof[4] on this general standard” (emphasis added)); see also, e.g., Harding v. Bd. of

Adjustment of Davie Cty., 170 N.C. App. 392, 394, 612 S.E.2d 431, 434 (2005) (holding

that where Davie County’s ordinance provided that a special use permit “shall not be

granted unless” the Board of Adjustment made the requisite findings, the Board of

Adjustment properly placed the burdens of production and persuasion on the

applicant). Accordingly, the City Council properly noted in its order that “[t]he

Applicant bears the burden of proving to the City Council, by competent, material

and substantial evidence, that the proposed Hotel meets the seven CUP standards in

the UDO.”


       4 “The burden of proof includes both the burden of persuasion and the burden of
production.” Black’s Law Dictionary 209 (11th ed. 2019); see also, e.g., Scarborough v.
Dillard’s, Inc., 363 N.C. 715, 729, 693 S.E.2d 640, 648 (2009) (Timmons-Goodson, J.,
dissenting) (“The burden of proof in any case includes both the burden of production and the
burden of persuasion. The burden of production, also known in North Carolina as the ‘duty
of going forward,’ is ‘[a] party’s duty to introduce enough evidence on an issue to have the
issue decided by the fact-finder, rather than decided against the party in a peremptory ruling’
such as a directed verdict or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict[.] The burden of
persuasion, meanwhile, is the ‘party’s duty to convince the fact-finder to view the facts in a
way that favors that party.’ . . . The burden of persuasion is also often ‘loosely termed [the]
burden of proof.’ ” (citations omitted)).

                                              -10-
                    PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                  Earls, J., dissenting



      Following the hearing, the City Council determined, inter alia, that PHG failed

to prove that the proposed use “will not cause undue traffic congestion or create a

traffic hazard,” and made the following relevant findings:

                   8.     The Property’s primary frontage is along
             Haywood Street, which borders the Property’s entire
             northern property line. The Property also has frontage
             along Carter Street, which borders the Property’s entire
             western property line, and North French Broad Avenue,
             which is the only key pedestrian street which borders the
             Property. The Hotel is oriented towards Haywood Street.

                   ....

                    11.   Ninety percent of the existing improvements
             in the area are one and two story structures and
             approximately 72 percent of those structures are less than
             10,000 square feet. The Hotel would constitute the third
             hotel within a several block radius (approximately ¼ mile).
             The addition of this third hotel would change the visual
             character of the area, and would create a cluster of hotels
             in the immediate vicinity, where there were previously
             smaller buildings and more diverse uses.

                   ....

                    16.   There is a significant amount of pedestrian
             traffic in the area near and around the Carter Street
             Driveway.

                   17.    The Carter Street Driveway is 28 feet wide,
             which is wider than the 24 foot driveway width allowed by
             City Standards. The Applicant obtained a modification
             from the City’s Transportation Department Director to
             allow for the wider driveway.        The Transportation
             Department Director’s written decision to allow the
             modification, however, does not address the impact of the
             wider driveway on the public health and safety and there
             was no evidence presented that would indicate the wider


                                          -11-
       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                     Earls, J., dissenting



driveway would provide the same level of protection to the
public, particularly pedestrians, as a driveway which
would comply with City requirements.

      ....

       27.   There is significant traffic in downtown
Asheville near and around the Property in September and
October, and in the summer months. The vehicular traffic
in the area will increase if the Hotel is constructed.

        28.   The Applicant presented the testimony of a
traffic engineer, Kevin Dean, as well as Mr. Dean’s written
“Traffic Assessment.” The Traffic Assessment did not
provide any facts or data which could show the level of
traffic or traffic counts for any time of the year, except
during a four hour period during the day on November 10,
2016, which was a Thursday. The level of traffic in this
area is much higher at other times of the year, particularly
the summer months; however, there were no traffic counts
or any traffic data provided for any date other than
November 10.

       29.   Mr. Dean was not aware of the environmental
conditions on November 10, 2016, or whether such
conditions could have affected traffic volumes on that date.

      30.     The Applicant’s traffic counts were done on
November 10, 2016 between the hours of 7 a.m. and 9 a.m.,
and between the hours of 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Under industry
standards, this is apparently “assumed” to be the time of
highest traffic on nearby streets, but there was no evidence
which could establish this would be the case for this area
of Asheville.

       31.     The number of trips generated from the Hotel
in the Traffic Assessment was also derived from an
industry standard, and not the actual trips expected from
this Hotel at this location. Hotels in downtown Asheville
have an occupancy rate in excess of 85%, but the general
rate for an efficient market is 65%. The Traffic Assessment


                             -12-
       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                     Earls, J., dissenting



did not take this expected higher occupancy of the
Asheville market into account.

       32.   The Applicant did not submit any traffic data
for Friday through Sunday, even though those are typically
the days that tourists visit the City and traffic volumes are
higher.

        33.   The estimated traffic counts used for the
Traffic Assessment and Mr. Dean’s opinion, were also these
on a “typical weekday.” There was no weekend data
collected, even though this is the time that most tourists
visit the Asheville downtown.

       34.   Without accurate traffic counts for any days
other than Thursday November 10, there is no data or
evidence to determine whether the additional trips
generated by the Hotel (as well those from the other
tourists which the Hotel will attract but who do not stay at
the hotel) would not decrease the existing level of service
to an unacceptable level. The Level of Service Summary in
the Traffic Assessment was not based on complete
information or data.

       35.   There was no data or evidence presented that
could show what the level of traffic would be with three
hotels (Indigo, Hyatt and Embassy Suites) located within a
several block area for Friday, Saturday and Sunday during
the summer months or other high traffic periods.

       36.   The Traffic Assessment did not account for
traffic that will be generated by future hotels and
apartments in the downtown area that are planned and
approved, but which are not yet fully constructed and
operational.

      37.    The proposed Hotel includes a twenty-foot
wide driveway, which provides street access to and from
the parking structure and North French Broad Avenue.




                             -13-
        PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                      Earls, J., dissenting



        38.   There is a blind hill with limited visibility in
the vicinity of the Hotel’s parking deck’s entrance and exit
onto North French Broad Avenue. To determine whether
the addition of that entrance/exit would cause a safety
issue would require a “sight distance check.” A sight
distance check was not a part of the Traffic Assessment and
no other evidence was presented to show the parking deck
entrance or exit would not endanger driver or pedestrian
safety. The Traffic Assessment did no analysis relating to
traffic safety as it relates to vehicles entering and exiting
this driveway.

      39.    The Hotel will have 5,000 square feet of
meeting space, which would potentially attract visitors to
the Hotel, other than guests staying at the Hotel. This
meeting space use was not included in the Traffic
Assessment nor included in the traffic analysis.

       40.    The Hotel would bring more than 50,000 new
visitors to the City each year. Not all of these new visitors
would be patrons of the Hotel, but would frequent
downtown businesses and, therefore, add to the already
dense downtown area. The Traffic Assessment did not
account for any traffic caused by additional visitors, other
than an estimate of trips by Hotel patrons and employees.

       41.  The Hotel parking deck would have 200
vehicular parking spaces. The Hotel contains 185 rooms
and will have 75 employees. There are insufficient spaces
in the proposed Hotel parking deck to accommodate this
number of guests and employees, even if they all do not
drive automobiles to the Hotel.

       42.   There is currently a shortage of public
parking in downtown Asheville and there are often
insufficient parking spaces to meet the demand. The
development of the Hotel would exacerbate the parking
shortages in the area, because of the limited number of
parking spaces planned in the parking deck and the
Applicant’s failure to provide sufficient parking to
accommodate all of its guests and employees.


                              -14-
                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Earls, J., dissenting




As in Mann Media, we review the City Council’s determination of whether PHG

established a prima facie case and met its burden of proof under the ordinance under

the whole record test, pursuant to which a finding “must stand unless it is arbitrary

and capricious.” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 16, 565 S.E.2d at 19.

      An examination of the record establishes that, at the hearing, PHG presented

evidence noting that Asheville is not only “a tourist destination,” but “is the hub of

both commercial and tourist activity in Western North Carolina” and is “defined by

its picturesque mountainous landscape.” The report of PHG’s real estate appraiser,

Tommy Crozier, provided that the site of the proposed hotel “has an excellent location

across from the Hotel Indigo and the new Hyatt Place hotel,” and further that “[i]n

the current market cycle, several large scale redevelopments downtown have been

completed or are planned for near-term construction,” including three recently

opened hotels and six hotels currently in development among the “[n]otable projects.”

PHG acknowledged a concern with the proliferation of hotels in downtown Asheville,

with its representatives stating that “[w]e know that there are questions about the

overbuilding of hotels in downtown Asheville” and “[w]e do realize there’s a lot of

other hotels.” PHG asserted that its proposed hotel is “a little bit different from some

of the offerings at some of the other hotels” and addresses “an important niche in the

hospitality of downtown Asheville” in that, in addition to its 185 rooms and its

“detached, multi-level parking garage,” it has “5000 square feet of meeting space, that



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                       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                     Earls, J., dissenting



will, hopefully, essentially will create its own demand.” This meeting space would

constitute “the second largest meeting space for hotels specifically in the downtown

market area,” according to PHG, and would “help [ ] to capture additional meetings

and events that otherwise may move to Greenville or other cities.” Crozier testified

that “this hotel will generate somewhere north of 50,000 new visitors a year.”

      Additionally, PHG presented testimony from Kevin Dean, an engineer, who

analyzed five intersections near the site of the proposed hotel and prepared a “traffic

assessment” summarizing his findings.               Dean’s assessment “present[ed] trip

generation, distribution, and traffic analyses of the existing and existing + site

conditions” and states that “all of the study intersections are expected to continue to

operate at acceptable levels of service with only minor increases in delay” and that

“simulations show no queuing issues at any of the study intersections or on any of the

I-240 ramps.” At the hearing, Dean was asked about his decision to pick a Thursday

in November to examine the potential for traffic congestion in downtown Asheville:

                      COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL: My question, my
               first question is, why did you pick November 10th, a
               Thursday, to do your traffic study?

                      MR. DEEN[5]: Traffic studies are -- traffic counts
               are only supposed to be counted between Tuesdays and
               Thursdays to get a typical weekday condition that’s not
               affected by a Monday or Friday variation. So that’s
               industry standard. We are required, typically, to only
               count on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, or Thursdays.



      5   The transcript of the hearing misspells Mr. Dean’s name as “Deen.”

                                             -16-
       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                     Earls, J., dissenting



      ....

      COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL: I am wondering
about the choice of November, too. I mean, we have, say,
September and October, we have a lot of tourist traffic
here. Summertime it’s jammed all the time.

      MR. DEEN: Sure.

       COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL: And your report says
there’s no expectation of [queuing].

      MR. DEEN: Sure.

      COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL: But there is also
[queuing] at where you turn off of Montford and then go to
North French Broad, it sometimes backs up all the way
across the bridge.

      MR. DEEN: Okay.

        COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL: And, again, with
traffic coming from the eastbound exit with -- when you get
to that light and turn left into the hotel. --

      MR. DEEN: Okay.

      COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL:                   -- to the new
entrance --

      MR. DEEN: Sure.

      COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL: -- won’t that cause
[queuing] on Haywood Street waiting to turn into the left?

       MR. DEEN: So I can’t argue with your anecdotal
stories. What I can tell you is the amount of traffic that’s
going to be added is only supposed to be negligible increase
to any cues that you would see. I mean, five seconds -- five
percent of the intersection or less. I think it’s closer to
three percent at that intersection, which is very mild.


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                                   Earls, J., dissenting




                    COUNCILMAN BOTHWELL: Okay

                    MR. DEEN: So I would just go to say that it’s not
             going to cause any undue additional issues.

When asked whether his assessment took into account the current development in

that area, including the “other hotels and other apartments, et cetera, that are either

planned or just recently added,” Dean stated “[w]e did not.” According to Dean, any

potential increase in traffic from other development in the area, though unaccounted

for by his traffic assessment, would only lessen the impact of the proposed hotel.

Dean testified:

                   MR. DEEN: . . . Now, like you said, there are other
             developments that would come in that would be growth
             that would be inherent to an area. But what I would argue
             would be that if we don’t include that traffic, our site will
             appear to have a greater impact than it will at those times.

                   So if there’s more traffic, if there’s more traffic on the
             network, then our 70 trips will be a smaller percentage
             than they are today. Does that make sense?

                    ....

                   MR. DEEN: Okay. And I would argue that if the
             volumes were truly higher than our site, traffic would be
             an even smaller percent than it already was.

                    MAYOR MANHEIMER: That doesn’t make sense.

      A member of the public, Charles Rawls, raised the issue of a potential “blind

hill” near the hotel’s proposed parking garage, “turn[ing] from Haywood Street

heading south on French Broad.” Mr. Dean, when asked if he had studied whether


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                                   Earls, J., dissenting



the entrance and exit of the hotel’s proposed two hundred space parking garage could

adversely affect safety, stated:

             I have not. We did not conduct a sight distance check,
             which is typically what’s required. But DOT typically
             requires driveways to meet certain sight distance
             requirements, whether vehicles are stopping or turning or
             making decisions, like you said, a vehicle entering a
             driveway. So DOT typically requires certain standards to
             be met. We didn’t do that because we weren’t involved in
             the actual design of the site.

        The City Council also asked PHG about issues with parking, of which PHG

acknowledged, “of course we’re aware that there are parking issues in the area.” In

particular, the City Council asked about the capacity of the hotel’s proposed parking

deck:

                      COUNCILMAN SMITH:             How many spaces are
             there?

                      MR. OAST: 200.

                  COUNCILMAN SMITH: And 185 rooms and how
             many employees?

                      MR. WALDEN:        Roughly 75.

                    COUNCILMAN SMITH: Where are the employees
             going to park?

                      MR. WALDEN: In that general area.

                   COUNCILMAN SMITH: Okay. So there will be an
             impact. That’s another impact. That’s helpful to know.

                      ....



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                                   Earls, J., dissenting



                  COUNCILMAN YOUNG:                 And approximately 75
             employees?

                    MR. WALDEN: Yes, Sir.

                   COUNCILMAN YOUNG: And the employees will
             probably park in the adjacent area?

                    MR. WALDEN: Yes.

PHG, which also owns the recently opened “Hyatt Place” across the street from the

proposed hotel, confirmed that some of the Hyatt Place’s employees were using the

site of the proposed hotel for parking:

                   COUNCILWOMAN MAYFIELD: Where do your
             employees who work at this Hyatt Place park? Do they
             park in that hotel’s deck?

                    MR. WALDEN: They park on site here at Hyatt
             Place, and then they do use part of our -- our lot right now
             across the street, as well as the -- around the surrounding
             area.

                    ....

                     COUNCILMAN YOUNG: So when it’s built, if it’s
             built, the adjacent -- the parking that your employees use
             across the street now will go away.

                    MR. WALDEN: Yes.

                    COUNCILMAN YOUNG: And on top of that will go
             away, you would also incur parking from the current
             employees that will be employed by the Embassy now. So
             the people across the street parking would lose their
             parking now, and the current employees would also have
             to find parking.




                                           -20-
                    PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                  Earls, J., dissenting



                   MR. WALDEN:         Yes, sir, but in a very limited
             capacity.

                   ....

                   COUNCILWOMAN MAYFIELD: I’m not hearing
             you say directly that you will provide parking for all of you
             employees in that -- in that deck.

                    And so the concern is that this -- this hotel would be
             adding to the -- would be bringing more people there on a
             daily basis, the workers who work at the hotel --

                   MR. WALDEN: Right.

                   COUNCILWOMAN MAYFIELD: -- and not provide
             them a place to park, which would make parking in that
             area even more difficult.

                   MR. WALDEN: Sure.

                   COUNCILWOMAN MAYFIELD:                   So that’s a
             concern.

                   MR. WALDEN: Sure.

                    COUNCILWOMAN MAYFIELD: Is that a valid
             concern, or can you tell us that you[r] employees will have
             a place to park in that deck on a regular basis and will not
             be adding to the already overloaded shortage -- that’s not -
             - adding to the shortage of parking that’s already there.

                    MR. WALDEN: I do not feel that our employees
             would add to that burden. I feel that it’s sufficient within
             the amount of spaces that we have. With valet and a
             number of spots, I do not feel that it would add an
             additional burden to the parking situation.

      In my view, the City Council’s finding that PHG failed to establish that the

proposed use “will not cause undue traffic congestion or create a traffic hazard” “is


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                     PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                   Earls, J., dissenting



neither whimsical, nor patently in bad faith, and it is not indicative of a lack of any

course of reasoning or exercise of judgment.” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17, 565 S.E.2d

at 19. Rather, the City Council’s decision was based on legitimate concerns that were

insufficiently addressed by PHG’s evidence, including the exacerbation of the

acknowledged parking issues in the area, the potential hazard created by the hotel’s

driveway, and the impact of recent and planned hotels and other developments on

traffic congestion in the area, which was not considered in Mr. Dean’s traffic

assessment.

      In that latter respect, Mr. Dean suggested that any traffic congestion

unaccounted for in his assessment would only lessen the proposed hotel’s impact on

traffic because the hotel’s impact would then amount to a smaller percentage of

overall traffic in downtown Asheville. This assertion, however, does not address what

is required by the ordinance. For example, it does not address whether Mr. Dean’s

earlier conclusions that “study intersections are expected to continue to operate at

acceptable levels of service with only minor increases in delay” and that “simulations

show no queuing issues at any of the study intersections” would be affected when the

impact of the proposed hotel is assessed in conjunction with the realities of the traffic

impact from the major developments not considered by Mr. Dean’s assessment.

      Moreover, Mr. Dean also failed to explain why it was appropriate to use a

Thursday in November to examine the potential for traffic congestion in downtown

Asheville, “the hub of . . . tourist activity in Western North Carolina.” While the


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                                      Earls, J., dissenting



majority assigns some talismanic quality to Mr. Dean’s assertion that this was an

“industry standard,” Mr. Dean never elaborated on the nature of this standard or,

more importantly, explained why this undefined “industry standard” was an

appropriate method of addressing the specific requirement in this municipal

ordinance—that is, whether the proposed hotel in downtown Asheville, along with its

“detached, multi-level parking garage” and “5000 square feet of meeting space, that .

. . will create its own demand,” will cause undue traffic congestion or create a traffic

hazard. Absent such an explanation, it was not arbitrary or capricious for the City

Council to find unpersuasive the use of a weekday in November to assess potential

traffic congestion in downtown Asheville.

       The majority, noting that “[w]hen an applicant has produced competent,

material, and substantial evidence tending to establish the existence of the facts and

conditions which the ordinance requires for the issuance of a special use permit,

[p]rima facie he is entitled to it,” Humble Oil,6 284 N.C. at 468, 202 S.E.2d at 136,


       6  In Humble Oil, the Court determined that the Board of Alderman’s denial of the
petitioner’s permit application must be set aside because the Board did not refer the
application to the Planning Board for review before acting on it, as required by the ordinance.
Humble Oil, 284 N.C. at 466-68, 202 S.E.2d at 135–36. The Court did not address whether
the petitioner met its prima facie burden and the Court’s only references to “de novo” were in
its statements that on remand the Board of Alderman must “consider Humble’s application
De novo.” Id. at 471, 202 S.E.2d at 138. The Court did “deem it expedient” to also address
on appeal the Board’s finding that the proposed use “would materially increase the traffic
hazard and danger to the public at this intersection” and to determine whether the finding
“is arbitrary in that it is unsupported by competent, material, and substantial evidence.” Id.
at 468, 202 S.E.2d at 136. The Court determined that the anecdotal evidence purportedly
supporting this finding was “unsupported by factual data or background,” and therefore
incompetent and insufficient to support the finding. Id. at 469, 202 S.E.2d at 136. Unlike

                                              -23-
                       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                      Earls, J., dissenting



asserts that PHG was only required to meet a burden of production to establish a

prima facie case. This ignores the plain language of Asheville’s ordinance (“The

Asheville City Council shall not approve the conditional use application . . . unless

and until it makes the following findings” (emphases added)), which, like the

ordinance in Mann Media, places the burden of persuasion on the applicant, requiring

the applicant to prove to the fact-finder—here the City Council—each of the necessary

standards. See Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17, 565 S.E.2d at 19 (stating that “[t]he

burden is on petitioners to meet the four requirements of the Ordinance before finding

that a prima facie case has been established, and respondent did not state in its

written order that petitioners made a prima facie case,” and that “petitioners failed

to meet their burden of proving this first requirement and did not establish a prima

facie case”). In other words, “the facts and conditions which the ordinance requires



the Asheville City Council’s finding here that PHG did not meet its prima facie burden
because it “failed to produce competent, material and substantial evidence that the Hotel will
not cause undue traffic congestion or create a traffic hazard,” which is based on the absence
of evidence, the Board of Alderman’s finding in Humble Oil is an affirmative finding (“would
materially increase the traffic hazard and danger”) purporting to be based on evidence in the
record contrary to the petitioner. The significance of this distinction is illustrated in Mann
Media, in which the Court held that the Planning Board’s affirmative finding “that ice has
formed and fallen from the other towers . . . and is likely to do so from the proposed tower,
and would therefore materially endanger the public safety” was based on anecdotal hearsay
and not supported by competent evidence; yet, the Court held that in light of the petitioners’
inability to state with sufficient certainty that there was no danger from “the potential of ice
falling from support wires of the proposed tower,” under the whole record test, the Planning
Board’s “finding that petitioners failed to establish that there would be no danger to the
public from falling ice is neither whimsical, nor patently in bad faith, and it is not indicative
of a lack of any course of reasoning or exercise of judgment.” Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 16–
17, 565 S.E.2d at 19 (emphases added).


                                              -24-
                       PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                      Earls, J., dissenting



for the issuance of” the permit are that the City Council specifically makes the seven

relevant findings, including that “[t]hat the proposed use will not cause undue traffic

congestion or create a traffic hazard.”

       Moreover, the majority ignores that under Mann Media, the City Council’s

determination of whether PHG established a prima facie case is reviewed under the

whole record test, pursuant to which “we are not permitted to substitute our

judgment for that of respondent.” Id. at 17, 565 S.E.2d at 19; see also id. at 17, 565

S.E.2d at 19 (stating that “[u]nder the whole record test, [a] finding must stand unless

it is arbitrary and capricious” and that the Planning Board’s “finding that petitioners

failed to establish that there would be no danger to the public from falling ice is

neither whimsical, nor patently in bad faith, and it is not indicative of a lack of any

course of reasoning or exercise of judgment.”). Instead, the majority erroneously

applies de novo7 review and substitutes its own judgment for that of the City Council.


       7 Notably, the legislature recently amended N.C.G.S. § 160A-393(k), providing that
“[w]hether the record contains competent, material, and substantial evidence is a conclusion
of law, reviewable de novo.” PHG contends that this “clarifying” amendment renders the
appeal moot because it answers “[t]he central question” here of “what standard of review
applies to a municipality’s denial of a conditional use permit when the denial is based on an
alleged failure to present a prima facie case.” Yet, the question of “[w]hether the record
contains” a sufficient quantum of evidence is an inquiry into a party’s burden of production.
Asheville’s ordinance, like the ordinance in Mann Media, specifically requires the applicant
to meet a burden of persuasion, mandating that the “City Council shall not approve the
conditional use application . . . unless and until it makes the following findings.” (Emphases
added.) Thus, as in Mann Media, the “prima facie case” in this particular context requires
an applicant to meet, not a burden of production (i.e. producing evidence from which the City
Council could find that the proposed use will not cause undue traffic congestion), but a burden
of persuasion (producing evidence from which the City Council does find that the proposed
use will not cause undue traffic congestion). The City Council’s finding in this respect is

                                              -25-
                      PHG ASHEVILLE, LLC V. CITY OF ASHEVILLE

                                    Earls, J., dissenting



       “The ‘arbitrary or capricious’ standard is a difficult one to meet.” Id. at 16, 565

S.E.2d at 19. Because the City Council’s finding that PHG failed to prove that the

proposed use will not cause undue traffic congestion or create a traffic hazard “is

neither whimsical, nor patently in bad faith, and it is not indicative of a lack of any

course of reasoning or exercise of judgment,” it is not arbitrary or capricious and

therefore “must stand.” Id. at 16, 565 S.E.2d at 19.8 As such, the Court of Appeals

and superior court should be reversed, and the decision of the City Council denying

the conditional use permit should be affirmed. Accordingly, I dissent.

       Justice HUDSON joins in this dissenting opinion.




reviewed under the whole record test. Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17–18; 565 S.E.2d at 20.

       8 Because PHG failed to prove this requirement of the ordinance, it is unnecessary to
address the remaining requirements. Mann Media, 356 N.C. at 17, 565 S.E.2d at 19 (stating
that “petitioners failed to meet their burden of proving this first requirement and did not
establish a prima facie case,” and that “[b]ecause of this holding, we are not obligated to
address the remaining three requirements under the Ordinance”).

                                            -26-
