This is a suit for permanent injunction, brought by Homer N. Comeau and Hazel A. Comeau, to enjoin the City of Brookside Village from enforcing two ordinances relating to the location of mobile homes and to recover damages. The trial court, without a jury, held the ordinances were valid and constitutional and rendered a take nothing judgment against the Comeaus. The court of civil appeals affirmed the portion of the judgment ordering that the Co-meaus take nothing by their suit but reversed and rendered the judgment of the trial court on the issue of the validity of the city’s ordinances.
The Comeaus are owners of a four acre lot in Brookside Village, a small “bedroom” community north of Pearland. A store and storage sheds are located on their lot. The Comeaus sought, by application to the city council, permission to place a mobile home on the premises for use as their residence. The request, presented in July of 1978, was denied by the council pursuant to the city’s Mobile Home Code, ordinance numbers 58 and 78. 2 Subsequent to the council’s denial of a permit for occupancy, the Comeaus brought this suit against the City.
The Comeaus contend that (1) the ordinances impose an arbitrary restriction on property use, not related to the preservation of the general health, safety, morals or welfare of the community and hence represent an unconstitutional exercise of police power; and (2) the ordinances attempt to regulate in an area preempted by federal and state law 3 and are thus invalid.
We turn first to consideration of whether ordinances restricting the location of mobile homes to mobile home parks and regulating the construction, operation and maintenance of such parks are valid under a municipality's grant of police power. Both parties concede that the ordinances in question are essentially zoning or land use ordinances. Zoning regulation is a recognized tool of community planning, allowing a municipality, in the exercise of its legislative discretion, to restrict the use of private property.
Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co.,
The City of Brookside Village has no comprehensive zoning plan. The ordinances before us nevertheless have the effect of a zoning regulation and are to be scrutinized under the aforementioned principles relating to a municipality’s exercise of general police power.
4
We are directed to consider all circumstances and determine, as a substantive matter, if reasonable minds may differ as to whether a particular zoning regulation has a substantial relationship to the protection of the general health, safety or welfare of the public. If the evidence before this Court reveals an issuable fact in this respect, the restriction must stand as valid.
City of Waxahachie v. Watkins, supra; Charleston Homeowners Ass’n v. LaCoke,
Several considerations are advanced by petitioner in support of the council’s enactment of ordinances 58 and 78. The city has no municipal water or sewage system, all water and sewage being provided by individual water wells and septic tanks. Potential water and sewage problems of living quarters placed too close together without adequate room for the necessary septic tank drainage area exist because of the geography of the area; the soil around and within Brookside Village is a gumbo or clay of a poor absorption capability. The city’s problem with septic tanks and water wells was stated as a major impetus to the passage of ordinance number 58, regulating mobile home parks. The higher incidence of fire in mobile homes, coupled with the need to insure sufficient water well placement for the city’s small fire department was also cited as a concern addressed by the regulation.
As originally enacted, ordinance number 58 made allowance for the location of mobile homes outside a mobile home park, with limitations as to lot size. Ordinance 78 deleted such authorization, with the following inclusion: “Parking of mobile homes, camper buses, motor homes and camper trailers, for use as a residence, outside of a mobile home park shall be prohibited.” The purpose of the enactment of ordinance number 78, as testified to by a member of the city council, was to control the location of mobile homes moving into the area, a constraint deemed necessary to protect property values and guard against the sewage and water problems by regulation of facilities.
The specific issues of a municipality’s regulation of mobile home parks and restriction of location of mobile homes do not appear to have been previously addressed in this state.
5
We hold that such regulation of mobile homes represents
°a
valid exercise of a municipality’s police power. The ordinances here in question
*794
bear a substantial relationship to the public health, safety, morals or general welfare. They are not clearly arbitrary and unreasonable, and hence are not unconstitutional. In so holding, we align ourselves with the majority rule of other jurisdictions on the matter of mobile home regulation.
See generally
Annot.,
The courts of other jurisdictions have recognized that mobile home parks pose special health problems and are amenable to regulations designed to eliminate such hazards. Regulation of mobile home parks finds additional support in the business nature of the use. The Supreme Court of Georgia, upholding an ordinance which regulated trailer camps and trailer sites in a township, summarized its rationale as follows:
The congestion of living conditions inherent in a trailer park, together with the uncertainty as to sanitary conditions, including water, sewage, cooking, bathing and washing facilities, and the fact that the occupants of a trailer park may be to a large extent transitory, are all very patent reasons why such a business is so affected with a public interest as to make it a proper subject for legislative regulation under the broad police powers of the State.
Nichols v. Pirkle,
The more specific issue raised herein deals with the city’s prohibition as to location of mobile homes. It is well recognized that mobile homes are properly subject to regulation under the police power of towns.
See, e.g., Hornstein v. Lovett,
The Comeaus assert that ordinance 78 is invalid because mobile homes do not necessarily differ from site-built or conventional housing in relation to the required sewage and water facilities. Respondents argue that mobile homes constructed in accordance with state and federal standards are structurally as safe and aesthetically comparable to conventional housing, thus rendering the purported justification for dissimilar treatment of mobile homes arbitrary. In support of their argument, respondents refer us to the case of
Robinson Tp. v. Knoll,
*795 The mobile home today can compare favorably with site-built housing in size, safety and attractiveness. To be sure, mobile homes inferior in many respects to site-built homes continue to be manufactured. But the assumption that all mobile homes are different from all site-built homes with respect to criteria cognizable under the police power can no longer be accepted.
While we recognize the substantial improvements made in modern mobile homes, we do not perceive the similarities between mobile homes and conventional housing as sufficient to overcome the presumption of the ordinance’s constitutionality. We find that adequate governmental interests are served by regulation of the location of mobile homes. Mobile homes, by definition, are manufactured to permit movement; the inherent structural differences in such manufactured housing can make them vulnerable to windstorm and fire damage; and their mobile nature may lead to transience and detrimentally impact property values if scattered throughout a municipality.
It is possible that the general improvements in appearance and quality of manufacture of mobile homes will persuade municipalities to alter ordinances similar to the one before us. Such changes, however, should be made through the legislative, not the judicial, process. This principle has its inception in judicial acknowledgment of zoning power.
State legislatures and city councils, who deal with the situation from a practical standpoint, are better qualified than the courts to determine the necessity, character and degree of regulation which these new and perplexing conditions require; and their conclusions should not be disturbed by the courts unless clearly arbitrary and unreasonable.
Gorieb v. Fox,
The position of the Comeaus, that ordinance number 78 is invalid as an arbitrary regulation violative of the Equal Protection Clause, is likewise founded on the similarities between mobile homes and conventional housing. The argument is based on the fact that both types of structures fall within the classification of “residences or dwellings.” That mobile homes may be favorably compared with certain site-built homes or modular housing is not dispositive of the constitutional issue involved. As recognized in several jurisdictions, mobile homes are different and thus may be classified separately from other residential structures for purposes of regulation.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Wilkerson v. Murray, supra; Duckworth v. City of Bonney Lake, supra; Town of Stonewood v. Bell, supra; Currituck Co. v. Willey,
The additional issue before us is whether the challenged ordinances are preempted by federal and state legislation. Our attention has been directed to the federal Manufactured Housing Construction and Safety Standards Act 7 and the Texas Manufactured Housing Standards Act. 8 Both the federal and state act contain preemption provisions, with regard to mobile home construction, safety and installation standards. 9
Clearly, an ordinance which conflicts or is inconsistent with state legislation is impermissible.
Jere Dairy, Inc. v. City of Mt. Pleasant,
The referenced state and federal legislation has, to an extent, preempted the field as to construction, safety, and installation of mobile homes. We find nothing in the statutes, however, that creates a conflict with the Brookside Village ordinances regulating the location of mobile homes. Accordingly, ordinances 58 and 78, insofar as they do not pertain to the subject matter of the regulation under the federal and state acts, are upheld as compatible with federal and state legislation.
The judgment of the court of civil appeals is reversed and that of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. The court of civil appeals based its holding on the 1921 case of
Spann v. City of Dallas,
. Ordinance number 58, enacted in 1970, pertains to regulation of the construction, operation and maintenance of mobile home parks in Brookside Village. Ordinance 78, an amending ordinance to number 58, enacted in 1974, prohibits the location of mobile homes for use as a residence outside a mobile home park.
.See National Manufactured Housing Construction and Safety Standards Act of 1974, 42 U.S.C. § 5401 et seq.; Texas Manufactured Housing Standards Act, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5221f (Supp.1981).
. Because Brookside Village, a general law city, has no comprehensive zoning plan, the ordinances in question do not come under article 1011a, which embodies legislative authorization for zoning.
See
Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 1011c (zoning power must be exercised under comprehensive plan). A city, however, may regulate land use under its general police powers.
See City of San Antonio v. Pigeonhole Parking,
. The question of mobile home regulation in Texas, where raised, has been disposed of on other grounds.
See Lassiter v. Bliss,
. The record reflects that more than one-half of the mobile homes located in Brookside Village were manufactured before 1976.
. 42 U.S.C. § 5401 et seq. (1974).
. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5221f (Supp.1981).
. See 42 U.S.C. § 5403(d): “Whenever a Federal mobile home construction and safety standard established under this title is in effect, no State or political subdivision of a State shall have any authority either to establish, or to continue in effect, with respect to any mobile home covered, any standard regarding construction or safety applicable to the same aspect of performance of such mobile home which is not identical to the Federal mobile home construction and safety standard.”
The Texas act provides as follows: “A political subdivision of this state, without the express approval of the department following a hearing on the matter, may not adopt different standards from those promulgated by the department for the construction or installation of manufactured housing within the political subdivision.” Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5221f, § 4(c).
