Special Exceptions and Planned Unit Developments in Mississippi: Mohiuddin v. Jackson County Board of Supervisors

Special Exceptions May Authorize Non‑Permitted Uses in Planned Unit Developments: Commentary on Mohiuddin v. Jackson County Board of Supervisors

I. Introduction

This commentary analyzes the Mississippi Supreme Court’s decision in Eamon Mohiuddin v. Jackson County, Mississippi Board of Supervisors and Ocean Springs Islands RV Resort, LLC, decided November 13, 2025. The Court affirmed Jackson County’s grant of a special exception to allow a large, commercial RV resort within a Planned Unit Development (PUD) district on a 368‑acre, flood‑prone coastal tract.

The decision is doctrinally important for several reasons:

  • It clarifies the scope of “special exceptions” under county zoning ordinances, including when such exceptions may authorize uses otherwise “not permitted” in a zoning district.
  • It distinguishes between special exceptions, variances, and rezonings, and rejects an argument that large‑scale projects must be accomplished only through rezoning.
  • It refines Mississippi’s approach to PUD districts, including how “residential intensity” and flexibility in land use are understood in that context.
  • It reinforces existing law on public notice, arbitrary and capricious review, and the evidentiary burden on challengers to local zoning decisions.

At the center of the dispute is whether Jackson County could, through its special‑exception mechanism, authorize an intensive commercial RV resort in a PUD district that, on its face, “does not allow campers, travel trailers, tents or recreational vehicles to be used for living purposes.” The Supreme Court answered yes, holding that the ordinance’s design—and especially its definition of a “special exception”—permitted such relief, and that the Board’s factual findings were supported by substantial evidence.

II. Factual and Procedural Background

A. The Property and Existing Zoning

The property at issue (the “Property”) is a 368‑acre tract in unincorporated Jackson County, Mississippi, characterized by wooded islands, salt marsh, tidal ponds, and bayou waters (Davis and Simmons Bayous). Historically, part of it had been used as an 18‑hole golf course, but since 2001 it has remained “substantially undeveloped.”

Key historical developments:

  • 2001 – After Hurricane Georges flooded the area, the Property was zoned as a Planned Unit Development (PUD) district.
  • 2006 – The County approved a revised master plan specifying permitted uses: a “resort community,” a 200‑room hotel and conference center, an 18‑hole golf course, and certain commercial space.
  • 2009 – FEMA revised flood maps, dramatically enlarging the high‑risk VE flood zone to cover roughly 60% of the Property and raising base flood elevation requirements. These changes made traditional vertical construction significantly more difficult, both physically and economically.

Zoning classification:

  • Most of the Property is zoned PUD.
  • A small portion east of Beachview Drive is zoned R‑1A (single‑family residential).

The PUD section of the Jackson County Zoning Ordinance (Article 5.01.22) describes the PUD district’s purpose as facilitating design flexibility and better use of natural features, and expressly states,

“The district does not allow campers, travel trailers, tents or recreational vehicles to be used for living purposes.”

On its face, that sentence appeared to be a major obstacle to any RV‑oriented development.

B. OSIRV’s Proposal

In 2023, Ocean Springs Islands RV Resort, LLC (OSIRV) acquired the Property and proposed a “world class conservation‑minded and nature‑focused luxury RV resort” that would include:

  • 476 full‑hookup RV sites (all utilities included)
  • 16 “tree houses”
  • 2 “bayou houses”
  • 20 resort‑owned Airstream units
  • Hiking trails and multiple on‑site recreational activities

The project had a clear commercial orientation—essentially a large‑scale hospitality venture— but it also sought to leverage and preserve the site’s natural character and to use RVs and other non‑permanent structures as a way to adapt to flood‑zone constraints.

Because an RV resort was not among the PUD’s expressly permitted uses, OSIRV applied for a special exception under the Jackson County Zoning Ordinance.

C. Local Proceedings

  1. Application (September 9, 2023): OSIRV filed a special‑exception application with the Jackson County Planning Commission.
  2. Planning Commission Hearing (October 18, 2023): After a public hearing, the Planning Commission recommended approval, emphasizing that the Property had remained vacant for over 20 years “mainly because of the flood restrictions.”
  3. Board of Supervisors Hearings:
    • December 4, 2023: Initial hearing with extensive public comment; the Board delayed a vote to seek additional legal advice.
    • December 18, 2023: Additional public comment; the Board ultimately approved the special exception and issued a detailed six‑page order containing findings of fact and conclusions of law.
  4. Circuit Court Appeal: Eamon Mohiuddin, a neighboring landowner and active opponent of the project, appealed to the Jackson County Circuit Court, which affirmed the Board’s decision.
  5. Supreme Court Appeal: Mohiuddin then appealed to the Mississippi Supreme Court, challenging both the Board’s interpretation of the ordinance and its application of the special‑exception criteria.

III. Summary of the Supreme Court’s Decision

The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court and thus the Board’s grant of a special exception to OSIRV, holding:

  1. Interpretation of the Ordinance:
    • The Jackson County Zoning Ordinance permits the Board to authorize an RV resort within a PUD via a special exception because:
      • A special exception is defined as a “use which is not permitted” in the district but may be allowed upon Board approval.
      • The Ordinance does not contain categorical “prohibited uses” or an express bar against RVs in the PUD that would foreclose special exceptions.
      • Therefore, allowing an RV resort by special exception does not nullify or contradict the Ordinance in the way the Court of Appeals found in Keenum v. City of Moss Point.
    • This use does not violate the PUD’s requirement that “the basic control development intensity shall be one (1) or more residential districts,” because PUDs are designed to allow flexible combinations of residential and compatible commercial uses and to adjust to the land’s features.
    • Rezoning was not required; a special exception was a proper vehicle, and the Board’s action did not amount to “illegal spot zoning.”
  2. Application of the Ordinance: Under the deferential “arbitrary, capricious, discriminatory, illegal, or without substantial evidentiary basis” standard—and the related “fairly debatable” rule—the Court found:
    • Public notice of the hearings was legally sufficient, despite alleged imperfections in Parcel Identification Numbers (PPINs). The notices contained a complete metes‑and‑bounds description, and Mohiuddin’s full participation effectively waived any notice objection.
    • The “deprivation of rights commonly enjoyed by other residents of the district” component of the special‑exception clause was inapplicable in a PUD context where OSIRV is the only “resident” of that particular PUD, and PUDs are inherently unique and not comparable.
    • The Board reasonably found that a literal application of the ordinance would inflict an “unnecessary hardship” on OSIRV, particularly in light of post‑zoning flood‑zone changes, construction height limits, and insurance costs that make traditional resort development impractical and uneconomic.
    • The proposed RV resort was in harmony with the purpose and intent of the PUD regulations and the overall zoning ordinance, taking advantage of natural features, providing open space and recreation, and aligning with FEMA’s recommendations for high‑risk flood areas.
    • The “special circumstances” justifying the exception were not self‑created by OSIRV; they arose from FEMA mapping, floodplain requirements, and broader market trends, not from OSIRV’s voluntary choices.

In sum, the Court held that the Board both correctly interpreted its ordinance and reasonably applied the special‑exception criteria on a record more than sufficient to satisfy Mississippi’s deferential standard of review for local land‑use decisions.

IV. Detailed Analysis

A. Standard of Review and Its Practical Consequences

The Court applied a bifurcated standard of review, following Wheelan v. City of Gautier, 332 So. 3d 851 (Miss. 2022):

  • Interpretation of the zoning ordinance – a question of law reviewed de novo. The Court owes no deference to the Board’s legal reading of its ordinance, but it still applies ordinary rules of statutory construction (plain meaning, harmonizing provisions, etc.).
  • Application of the ordinance to the facts – reviewed with substantial deference. The Board’s decision is upheld unless it is “arbitrary, capricious, discriminatory, illegal, or without substantial evidentiary basis.” If the decision is “fairly debatable”—that is, if reasonable minds could differ—the Court will not substitute its judgment for that of local officials.

This framework heavily shapes the outcome:

  • Legal arguments about what the ordinance means (e.g., can a PUD ever host an RV resort?) get strict scrutiny.
  • Factual arguments about whether the Board correctly found hardship, harmony with neighborhood, or non‑self‑created circumstances face an uphill battle; challengers must show that no reasonable decision‑maker could have reached the Board’s conclusion on this record.

B. Interpretation of the Ordinance

1. Does the Ordinance Allow an RV Resort in a PUD by Special Exception?

The core textual issue was whether Jackson County’s ordinance reflexively barred an RV resort in a PUD because the PUD description states:

“The district does not allow campers, travel trailers, tents or recreational vehicles to be used for living purposes.”

Mohiuddin argued that this clause amounts to a categorical prohibition, leaving the Board without authority to authorize an RV resort by special exception. He relied on Keenum v. City of Moss Point, 368 So. 3d 817 (Miss. Ct. App. 2023).

a. Distinguishing Keenum v. City of Moss Point

In Keenum, the Court of Appeals invalidated Moss Point’s grant of a special exception allowing “business activities carried on for a profit” in a strictly residential R‑1A district. The governing ordinance in Keenum:

  • Contained an explicit “Uses Prohibited” section, listing commercial and industrial uses as forbidden in R‑1A districts.
  • Enumerated only four narrow categories eligible for special exceptions (home occupations, country clubs, semi-public recreational areas, and churches).

Allowing for‑profit business activity there would have contradicted an express “prohibited use” clause and would have rendered the limited special‑exception scheme meaningless. The Court of Appeals therefore set aside the city’s action.

The Mississippi Supreme Court in Mohiuddin characterized this case as “easily distinguishable” because Jackson County’s ordinance:

  • Does not establish a comparable “prohibited uses” list for PUDs.
  • Defines a special exception as:
    “A use which is not permitted in the zoning district where the property is located under the provisions of this Ordinance but which in the specific case, would, in the judgment of the Board of Supervisors, promote the public health and safety, and the general welfare of the community…”
  • Empowers the Planning Commission and Board (Section 10.6) to consider special exceptions “when the use is not specified in Uses Permitted or Uses Permitted on Review in that District.”
  • Contains no language carving out a class of uses that are so prohibited they cannot be reached even by special exception.

In other words, where Keenum involved a direct conflict with an express “use prohibited” clause and a narrow exceptions scheme, Jackson County’s ordinance builds in a broad mechanism for allowing non‑listed uses via special exception. The PUD sentence about RVs defines the baseline uses permitted as of right; it does not operate as an immutable prohibition in the face of a clear special‑exception power.

b. “Not Permitted” vs. “Strictly Prohibited”

A subtle but important textual distinction underlies the Court’s reasoning: the ordinance uses the phrase “not permitted” in defining special exceptions. The Court contrasts this with the “strictly prohibited” language in Keenum’s ordinance.

The Court essentially draws this line:

  • “Not permitted” use (in the basic district scheme) may be considered for approval by special exception, if all criteria are met.
  • “Strictly prohibited” use (if the ordinance contains such a category and makes clear it is off‑limits even to special exceptions) cannot be authorized by the Board via exception; doing so would contradict the ordinance and be ultra vires.

Here, the PUD’s statement that it “does not allow” RVs to be used for living purposes is read against the backdrop of:

  • The ordinance’s broad special‑exception authority for “a use which is not permitted.”
  • The absence of any clause declaring RVs “strictly prohibited” even as a special exception.

On that basis, the Court held that granting a special exception for an RV resort does not render the ordinance meaningless; rather, it is consistent with the ordinance’s express mechanism for approving otherwise unpermitted uses.

This is one of the decision’s key precedential contributions: it confirms that in Mississippi, when an ordinance defines “special exception” as a use “not permitted” by right, the special‑exception power can be used to authorize uses that the district text otherwise says it “does not allow,” unless the ordinance contains a separate, explicit category of “prohibited uses” that are beyond the reach of special exceptions.

2. PUD “Residential Intensity” and Commercial RV Use

Mohiuddin next argued that an RV resort is inherently inconsistent with the PUD requirement that:

“The basic control development intensity shall be one (1) or more residential districts.”

He contended that a heavily commercial RV resort undermines the PUD’s intended “residential intensity.”

The Court rejected this argument by focusing on:

  • The purpose clause for PUDs (Section 901), which emphasizes:
    • Providing “a more desirable physical development pattern than would be possible through the strict application of zoning regulations.”
    • Allowing “variety and flexibility in land development” to adjust design to topography and natural features.
  • The ordinance’s own recognition that PUDs may combine residential and commercial uses “as a single and unified project.”

OSIRV’s project was undeniably commercial, but:

  • It included some permanent residential components.
  • It used non‑permanent lodging structures (RVs, tree houses, Airstreams) in a way that was arguably safer and more compatible with the flood‑prone environment than traditional housing.
  • It preserved open space and emphasized recreational use of the land.

Given the text and purpose of the PUD regulations, the Court concluded that the ordinance “clearly authorizes” the Board to accommodate such a mix of uses by special exception. The “basic control development intensity” reference to residential districts sets a general benchmark; it does not preclude substantial commercial use where compatible and properly approved.

3. Special Exception vs. Rezoning and “Spot Zoning”

Mohiuddin also argued that granting a special exception for an “exceptionally large parcel” in effect changes the entire zoning district and should have been accomplished by rezoning (a legislative act), not via special exception. He invoked Harrison v. Mayor & Board of Aldermen of Batesville, 73 So. 3d 1145 (Miss. 2011), and raised a concern about “illegal spot zoning.”

The Supreme Court addressed this in two steps:

  1. Scope of the Board’s Authority:
    Drawing from Harrison and earlier cases, the Court reiterated that the key question is whether the Board acted “within its scope and power under the applicable zoning ordinances.” Here:
    • The ordinance explicitly authorizes special exceptions for “uses not permitted” in a district.
    • RVs are “not permitted” by right in the PUD, but are not designated as an untouchable prohibited use.

    Therefore, the Board was acting within its delegated power; the case is unlike Harrison, where the Board granted a variance to permit mining in zones where such use was prohibited without adequate factual findings.

  2. “Spot zoning” concern:
    Harrison teaches that the correct inquiry is not a label (“is this spot zoning?”) but whether the Board’s action is legally authorized and factually justified. Because Jackson County’s ordinance allows special exceptions for unpermitted uses, and because the Board made detailed findings satisfying the ordinance’s exception criteria, the Court rejected the contention that this was impermissible “spot zoning” dressed up as an exception.

The decision thus confirms that, at least under Jackson County’s ordinance, even large‑scale changes in land use across a substantial tract may be implemented by special exception, so long as:

  • The ordinance authorizes special exceptions for “uses not permitted.”
  • No express prohibition forecloses that use.
  • The Board complies with procedural and substantive criteria (hardship, harmony, etc.).

C. Application of the Ordinance: Special‑Exception Criteria

Section 9.12(a) of the Jackson County Ordinance sets out four conditions for granting a special exception:

  1. Compliance with public hearing procedures (Section 9.3).
  2. Planning Commission determination that:
    • (a) A literal interpretation of the ordinance would deprive the applicant of rights commonly enjoyed by other residents of the district and would impose an unnecessary hardship on the applicant.
    • (b) The requested exception will be in harmony with the ordinance’s purpose and will not be injurious to the neighborhood or general welfare.
  3. The “special circumstances” are not the result of the applicant’s own actions.
  4. Existing nonconforming or permitted uses elsewhere do not, by themselves, justify the exception.

Mohiuddin challenged nearly every step of this analysis. The Supreme Court addressed each in turn.

1. Public Notice

Mohiuddin argued that public notice of the hearings was defective because the Jackson County notices contained inconsistent or incomplete Parcel‑Identification Numbers (PPINs) relative to the metes‑and‑bounds legal description of the Property.

The governing statute, Mississippi Code § 17‑1‑17, requires:

“[A]t least fifteen (15) days’ notice of a hearing … said notice to be given in an official paper or a paper of general circulation … specifying a time and place for said hearing.”

The Court, relying on Luter v. Hammon, 529 So. 2d 625 (Miss. 1988), and Ridgewood Land Co. v. Simmons, 137 So. 2d 532 (Miss. 1962), emphasized:

  • Procedural due process requires “reasonable advance notice” and an opportunity to be heard.
  • Notice must set forth “pertinent information unambiguously” so interested persons understand the proposed action.
  • An objector who receives notice and attends the hearing generally “waives objection to insufficiency of notice because the notice has achieved its purpose.”

In this case:

  • The Planning Commission’s notice (September 27, 2023) and the Board’s notice (November 19, 2023) each:
    • Specifically stated the date, time, and place of the hearings.
    • Included a complete metes‑and‑bounds description of the Property (drawn from the survey) as required by the ordinance and application.
  • The ordinance and application did not require PPINs at all; the legal description was the controlling identifier.
  • Mohiuddin actually attended and actively participated in the Planning Commission hearing, both Board hearings, and thereafter in the judicial appeals.

The Court held that any imperfections in PPIN data did not invalidate otherwise sufficient notice, particularly where:

  • The statutory and ordinance requirements were satisfied by time/place and legal description.
  • Mohiuddin clearly suffered no prejudicial surprise and indeed fully engaged at each stage.

This reinforces a practical principle: substantial compliance, not technical perfection, governs notice in zoning matters, and defects that do not impair a party’s actual ability to participate will not invalidate proceedings.

2. “Rights Commonly Enjoyed by Other Residents” — Inapplicable in a PUD Context

Section 9.12(a)(2)(a) requires a finding that literal interpretation would deprive the applicant of “rights commonly enjoyed by other residents of the district in which the property is located.”

The Board expressly found such a deprivation, but the Supreme Court went further and held that this prong was essentially inapplicable in the PUD context of this case:

  • OSIRV is the only “resident” (in the sense of landowner/developer) within this particular PUD.
  • PUDs are by design project‑specific and unique; they are planned and developed as single, unified entities, and one PUD is not meaningfully comparable to another.
  • It is therefore “impractical and impossible” to identify “other residents of the district” whose commonly enjoyed rights could serve as a benchmark.

On that basis, the Court concluded that the “rights commonly enjoyed” clause is inapplicable for this category of zoning district. This is a noteworthy interpretive move: the Court is effectively reading a textual criterion out of the ordinance in the PUD setting on the ground that it cannot sensibly be applied.

The doctrinal implication is that, for PUDs in Mississippi with a similar ordinance structure, challengers cannot rely on the “rights commonly enjoyed” language as an independent constraint on special exceptions; the practical focus will be on hardship, harmony, and special circumstances.

3. Unnecessary Hardship

The same subsection (9.12(a)(2)(a)) requires OSIRV to show that a literal interpretation of the ordinance would impose an “unnecessary hardship”.

a. Relationship to Harrison and the “Unnecessary Hardship” Standard

Mohiuddin relied on Harrison v. Batesville, where the Court adopted a widely used tripartite definition of “unnecessary hardship” (for variances):

(1) The land cannot yield a reasonable return if used only for allowed purposes;
(2) The plight of the owner is due to unique circumstances of the land, not general neighborhood conditions;
(3) The variance will not alter the essential character of the locality.

In Harrison, the Court reversed the grant of a variance to allow mining, partly because the Board provided only bare conclusions without supporting factual findings.

The Court in Mohiuddin acknowledged Harrison but underscored that:

  • Harrison was about variances, not special exceptions, and involved a different set of ordinance provisions.
  • The ordinance here contains its own definition of “hardship” expressly limited to variances and specifying that “mere economic or financial hardship alone is not considered to meet” the exception standard.
  • The ordinance does not import that restrictive definition or its “more than economic hardship” requirement into the special‑exception context.

Thus, while the Court uses Harrison for methodological guidance (e.g., the need for credible, specific findings), it refuses to graft Harrison’s variance‑specific standards onto the special‑exception framework where the ordinance does not do so.

b. Evidence Supporting Hardship

The record before the Board was extensive. The Board relied on:

  • FEMA Flood Map Revisions (2009):
    • Approximately 60% of the Property is now in a VE (coastal high‑hazard) flood zone.
    • Base Flood Elevation (BFE) requirements increased, raising minimum elevation for occupiable structures.
  • Height Limits vs. Floodplain Standards:
    • County height‑restriction ordinances, when combined with higher BFE, made it “practically difficult” to construct the multi‑story hotel, conference center, or comparable permanent structures contemplated by the 2006 master plan.
  • Insurance Costs:
    • Modern flood‑insurance premiums for permanent residential and commercial buildings in VE zones are extremely high, further undermining economic feasibility.
  • Vacancy and Market Shifts:
    • The land sat undeveloped for more than two decades under existing PUD entitlements.
  • Consistency with Flood‑Damage Ordinance and FEMA Guidance:
    • The Board concluded that traditional, intensive structural development (e.g., large hotels) would conflict with the County’s Flood Damage Prevention Ordinance.
    • Conversely, using RVs and non‑permanent structures aligns with FEMA’s recommendations for high‑hazard flood zones.

Based on this evidence, the Board found:

“Without exception, there are simply too many hardships which make development of this property extremely difficult and impractical” under current PUD approvals.

The Supreme Court held that this constitutes substantial evidence of unnecessary hardship. Notably, the Court:

  • Did not require OSIRV to show that purely economic hardship was irrelevant; rather, it held that the “no mere economic hardship” clause applies only to variances, not special exceptions.
  • Accepted a mix of physical constraints (flood risk, elevation requirements, height caps) and economic realities (insurance costs, longstanding vacancy) as sufficient to demonstrate unnecessary hardship for purposes of a special exception.

4. Harmony with the Ordinance and Non‑Injury to the Neighborhood

Section 9.12(a)(2)(b) requires that the exception be “in harmony with the purpose and intent of this ordinance” and not “injurious to the neighborhood or the general welfare.”

The Court anchored its analysis in the PUD purpose language (Table 5‑3.22 and Section 901), which emphasizes:

  • Developing open‑space areas in larger developments.
  • Taking advantage of natural features in design.
  • Improving the urban environment.
  • Reducing the cost of public resources and utilities.
  • Allowing a unified development with residential and “compatible commercial” uses.

Evidence before the Board showed that:

  • The RV resort emphasizes outdoor recreation and conservation‑minded, nature‑focused design.
  • It takes advantage of the Property’s unique bayous, marshes, and wooded islands.
  • Planned mitigation measures, such as delayed opening to coordinate road improvements, aim to reduce traffic and infrastructure burdens.
  • FEMA guidance supports the use of RV‑based or non‑permanent lodging in high‑risk flood areas.

The Board concluded, and the Court accepted, that:

“The requested exception will be in harmony with the purpose and intent of the Zoning Ordinance and will not be injurious to the neighborhood or the general welfare.”

Under the “fairly debatable” standard, where qualified experts and stakeholders present differing views but the Board’s choice is reasonably supported, the Court will not reweigh evidence or second‑guess local policy judgments.

5. Special Circumstances Not Resulting from Applicant’s Actions

Section 9.12(a)(3) requires that the special circumstances justifying the exception are not the result of the applicant’s own actions.

Mohiuddin contended that OSIRV self‑created its hardship by purchasing the Property knowing the PUD zoning and flood‑zone issues. Citing Harrison, he argued that this should weigh against any relief.

The Court acknowledged that self‑created hardship is a relevant—but not dispositive—consideration for variances. Here, however, the Board made express findings that:

  • OSIRV “did not set the new flood plain elevations.”
  • OSIRV “did not set the flood insurance rates.”
  • OSIRV “did not cause the change in the character of the neighborhood over the last decade.”
  • OSIRV “did not cause the existing increase in nightly rentals in the area or the purchase of property for rental purposes rather than ownership.”

In other words, the core hardships—physical constraints, regulatory changes, market conditions— pre‑dated OSIRV’s involvement and were not created by OSIRV’s voluntary acts. OSIRV’s decision to purchase the Property did not itself cause the flood‑zone expansion or regulatory burdens.

The Court therefore upheld the Board’s finding that the “special circumstances are not the result of actions of the Applicant,” satisfying Section 9.12(a)(3).

V. Precedents and Authorities: How They Shaped the Decision

1. Wheelan v. City of Gautier and Hatfield — Standard of Review

The Court reaffirmed:

  • Wheelan v. City of Gautier, 332 So. 3d 851 (Miss. 2022), which clarified the de novo review of ordinance interpretation and deferential review of application decisions, and overruled Hatfield v. Board of Supervisors of Madison County, 235 So. 3d 18 (Miss. 2017), to the extent Hatfield used a more expansive review of application decisions.
  • The “fairly debatable” rule from Hatfield (still cited for that limited proposition): if the decision is fairly debatable based on the evidence, courts will not disturb it.

This framework heavily favors upholding local land‑use decisions absent clear legal error or a lack of substantial evidentiary support.

2. Keenum v. City of Moss Point — Limits on Special Exceptions

Keenum serves as a cautionary example: where an ordinance tightly confines special exceptions and expressly prohibits certain uses, a municipality cannot use a special exception to authorize what the ordinance squarely forbids.

Mohiuddin narrows Keenum’s application by emphasizing:

  • The necessity of careful attention to the precise language of each ordinance, particularly distinctions between “uses prohibited” and “uses not permitted.”
  • The broader scope of special exceptions under Jackson County’s ordinance, which lacks Keenum’s categorical prohibited‑use structure.

3. Harrison v. Batesville, Drews, and McKibben — Variances and Hardship

The Court canvassed:

  • Harrison v. Mayor & Board of Aldermen of Batesville, 73 So. 3d 1145 (Miss. 2011) — setting out the “unnecessary hardship” standard for use variances and requiring detailed Board findings.
  • Drews v. City of Hattiesburg, 904 So. 2d 138 (Miss. 2005) — expressing concern when a variance allows a use otherwise prohibited.
  • McKibben v. City of Jackson, 193 So. 2d 741 (Miss. 1967) — emphasizing case‑by‑case evaluation of variances.

Mohiuddin uses these cases to underscore:

  • The need for specific, fact‑based findings (which Jackson County supplied here).
  • The difference between variances (altering bulk or use requirements when they cause hardship) and special exceptions (authorizing certain uses if criteria are met).
  • That “spot zoning” rhetoric is secondary to the core question: did the Board act within the powers conferred by its ordinance?

4. Luter v. Hammon and Ridgewood Land Co. v. Simmons — Notice Requirements

These cases provided the doctrinal foundation for:

  • Evaluating whether notice is “reasonable” and not misleading.
  • Clarifying that objectors who attend and participate cannot later invalidate actions on the basis of minor notice defects that did not affect their opportunity to be heard.

Mohiuddin applies these principles to uphold the sufficiency of metes‑and‑bounds‑based notice even where PPIN details were arguably imperfect.

VI. Key Legal Concepts Simplified

1. Zoning Basics: Uses by Right, Special Exceptions, Variances, and Rezoning

  • Use permitted by right: A use the ordinance allows automatically in a given district (e.g., single‑family homes in an R‑1 district), requiring only routine permits.
  • Special exception (or conditional use): A use not permitted by right but listed in the ordinance as potentially allowable if the applicant meets defined criteria and obtains discretionary approval from the local governing body. It is part of the ordinance’s built‑in flexibility.
  • Variance: A limited relief from specific ordinance requirements (e.g., setbacks, height limits, occasionally use restrictions) granted when strict application would create an “unnecessary hardship” or “practical difficulty” unique to the property.
  • Rezoning (map amendment): A legislative act changing the official zoning classification of a parcel (e.g., from R‑1 to C‑2). It alters the ongoing rule set rather than granting a case‑specific exception.

In this case, OSIRV did not seek a variance or rezoning. It pursued a special exception, relying on the ordinance’s express mechanism for allowing “uses not permitted” in a district, subject to conditions.

2. Planned Unit Developments (PUDs)

A PUD is a zoning tool allowing a large tract to be planned and developed as a single, unified project, often mixing residential, commercial, and recreational uses beyond what conventional zoning categories would allow. Core ideas:

  • Emphasis on design flexibility and integration with natural features.
  • Possibility of deviating from strict district‑by‑district use lists in favor of a comprehensive master plan.
  • Ability to coordinate infrastructure, open space, and amenities across the entire site.

In Mohiuddin, the Court reinforced that PUDs are inherently unique, which contributed to its conclusion that some special‑exception criteria (like comparison with “other residents”) do not sensibly apply.

3. “Arbitrary and Capricious” and “Fairly Debatable” Review

Courts reviewing zoning decisions do not rehear the case from scratch. Instead, they ask:

  • Was the decision arbitrary or capricious (based on whim, not on reason and evidence)?
  • Was it discriminatory or illegal (violating law or treating similarly situated parties differently without justification)?
  • Was it “without substantial evidentiary basis” (no credible evidence in the record)?

If reasonable minds could differ about the outcome—that is, if it is “fairly debatable”—courts will not overturn the Board’s judgment even if they might have reached a different result on the same record.

4. “Unnecessary Hardship”

In zoning law, “unnecessary hardship” generally means something more than:

  • A desire to maximize profit.
  • Mere inconvenience or ordinary financial pressure.

It usually involves:

  • Unique physical characteristics (topography, flood risk, parcel shape) that make standard development unusually difficult or unproductive.
  • Constraints that do not afflict the neighborhood generally but are specific to the property.

Mohiuddin adds a nuance: where an ordinance limits the “no mere economic hardship” rule only to variances, courts will not automatically extend that stricter standard to special exceptions unless the text clearly does so.

5. “Spot Zoning”

“Spot zoning” is a term used when:

  • A small parcel is singled out for different, often intense or commercial, treatment than surrounding properties.
  • The change appears to benefit a particular owner without serving a legitimate public purpose or consistent comprehensive plan.

However, Mississippi law—following Harrison and reiterated here—treats the label “spot zoning” as less important than the actual legal test: did the local government act within its lawful authority and did it have a reasonable basis for its decision?

VII. Likely Impact and Broader Significance

1. Expanded Use of Special Exceptions for Large, Non‑Traditional Projects

The clearest practical impact of Mohiuddin is to validate the use of special exceptions—rather than rezoning or variances—to authorize substantial, non‑traditional projects in flexible zoning districts like PUDs, provided:

  • The ordinance defines special exceptions as covering “uses not permitted.”
  • There is no explicit “use prohibited” category barring such exceptions.
  • The Board makes detailed findings on hardship, harmony, and non‑self‑created circumstances.

For developers and local governments, this offers a relatively nimble tool to adapt zoning schemes to evolving conditions—including new market demands and environmental constraints—without the more politically and procedurally burdensome path of rezoning.

2. PUDs as Particularly Flexible Vehicles

By stressing the uniqueness and flexibility of PUDs, the Court signals that:

  • PUD districts may be fertile ground for innovative special‑exception approvals.
  • Challenges premised on uniform “rights commonly enjoyed by other residents” are likely to fail in PUD contexts.

This may encourage more sophisticated PUD master plans and more frequent use of special exceptions in PUDs to respond to site‑specific conditions, such as flood risk, ecological sensitivities, or tourism opportunities.

3. Flood‑Plain Management and “Climate‑Informed” Land Use

Although the Court does not present itself as making environmental policy, Mohiuddin implicitly supports:

  • Using flood‑prone land for less permanent, more flexible uses (RVs, cabins, seasonal structures) rather than heavy, permanent vertical construction.
  • Relying on FEMA flood‑zone mapping and associated regulatory burdens as evidence of “unnecessary hardship” that can justify changing how land is used within an existing zoning envelope.

Local governments may cite this case when steering development away from high‑risk permanent uses toward RV resorts, campgrounds, or other adaptable hospitality models in coastal or flood‑prone regions.

4. Litigation Strategy for Opponents of Zoning Approvals

For objectors like Mohiuddin, the decision underscores:

  • The difficulty of overturning local zoning decisions under the deferential “fairly debatable” standard once a Board has created a robust, fact‑driven record.
  • The limited traction of procedural notice arguments where the objector attended and meaningfully participated in hearings.
  • The importance of focusing on clear legal constraints (e.g., express “uses prohibited” language or statutory bars), rather than policy disagreements about the desirability of the project.

5. Doctrinal Clarifications for Mississippi Land‑Use Law

In addition to its concrete holdings, Mohiuddin contributes several clarifications to Mississippi land‑use law:

  • Special exceptions vs. variances: The Court keeps these categories distinct, particularly regarding hardship standards and the relevance of purely economic hardship.
  • Textual inapplicability of criteria: The Court is willing to deem certain textual requirements (like “rights commonly enjoyed by other residents”) inapplicable in specific zoning contexts (like PUDs) where they cannot be sensibly applied.
  • Ordinance drafting: Municipalities that want to limit special exceptions for certain uses should:
    • Expressly label such uses as “prohibited,”
    • Clearly exclude them from special‑exception eligibility, and
    • Avoid ambiguous phrasing that could be read as mere “non‑permitted” status, subject to exception.

VIII. Conclusion

Mohiuddin v. Jackson County Board of Supervisors is a significant zoning decision at the intersection of PUD flexibility, special‑exception practice, and flood‑plain realities.

The Mississippi Supreme Court:

  • Held that Jackson County’s ordinance permits the use of special exceptions to authorize a large RV resort in a PUD, despite PUD language stating that RVs are not ordinarily allowed, because the ordinance does not contain a categorical prohibition and expressly empowers the Board to approve “uses not permitted.”
  • Confirmed that PUDs are uniquely flexible and that certain special‑exception criteria, like comparing “rights commonly enjoyed” by other residents, may be inapplicable in that context.
  • Clarified the distinction between special exceptions and variances, particularly regarding “unnecessary hardship” and the role of economic concerns.
  • Reaffirmed that procedurally adequate notice is judged by substantive fairness and actual participation, not technical perfection in identifiers like PPINs.
  • Applied a deferential standard to uphold local findings on hardship, harmony, and non‑self‑created circumstances where the record contained considerable supporting evidence tied to FEMA flood‑zone changes and development infeasibility.

Going forward, the decision will likely be cited in Mississippi to:

  • Support robust use of special exceptions for innovative or non‑traditional projects in flexible zoning districts like PUDs.
  • Defend flood‑plain‑responsive development patterns, especially where FEMA mapping and flood‑damage regulations make traditional development impractical.
  • Guide local boards and drafters in structuring and applying special‑exception provisions, especially where they wish either to enable or to cabin their use for particular land‑use types.

In that sense, Mohiuddin is not just about one RV resort in Jackson County; it is a broader affirmation of carefully reasoned, ordinance‑based flexibility in local land‑use decisions under Mississippi law.

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