119 Neb. 666 | Neb. | 1930
The defendants appeal from a final decree enjoining them from conducting a restaurant and mercantile business at their home in violation of the provisions of a city zoning ordinance.
The petition for injunction alleged .that the city is organized and exists under a home rule charter adopted pur
We have read the record and find there is little material dispute in the evidence. The defendants are husband and wife. They acquired title to the lot in question by deed dated January 24, 1923. Mrs. Foss testified that she was the exclusive owner, but the deed in evidence ran to both as tenants in common. This is not material as both were parties. That year they built a home and double garage and made other improvements on the lot. The total cost of the lot -and improvements was $9,800. The property is at the southeast corner of Woodcrest -and Twenty-second streets. The home faces north and is known as 2201 Wood-crest. The neat two-storied brick and stucco house is on
The zoning ordinance consists of 13 sections. The first section divides the city into five classes of districts—residence, apartment, local business, commercial, and industrial. The third section defines the use to which buildings in the residence district may be put and prohibits any other use. The permissible uses do not allow a restaurant in a residence district. They do allow a school. Section 11 of the ordinance declares each section and subdivision of a section independent of every other so far as inducement for the passage is concerned; and that the invalidity of one shall not invalidate another.
A map attached to the ordinance and made a part of it .shows that the residence of the defendants was and has been, from the time the ordinance went into effect, located in a- residence district. The evidence clearly indicates that it is used as a restaurant contrary to the terms of the ordinance, and that such use did not begin until more than a year after the ordinance became effective. If the ordinance is valid, the facts pleaded and proved in this case are sufficient to prevent the use of the property by the defendants for restaurant purposes.
Section 9 of the ordinance provides for a board of appeals consisting of the city engineer and the five members of the city council. It provides for an appeal from the refusal of the building inspector to grant a building permit, provides that the building inspector may, on application for a permit, request the board for an interpretation and application of any provision of the ordinance, and provides also that the board shall have power to adopt rules and regulations from time to time to carry into effect the provisions of the ordinance and to interpret its provisions so as to
The appellants argue that this section of the ordinance is unconstitutional and void because it delegates legislative and judicial power to a board of appeals without any rules to guide it. On the facts at bar that objection in the terms in which it is made affords no help to appellants, because, as we find the facts, the board of appeals as such had nothing to do with the zoning of this particular property. It appears that in the ordinance this was zoned in the residence district. But the appellants seek to aid the above stated proposition as to the delegation of power by the further proposition that the ordinance thus authorizes discrimination between citizens in respect to the enjoyment of property. That power of discrimination, they argue, is inherent in the authority granted the board of appeals to use their arbitrary power, without regard to a reasonable legal discretion, to allow one to carry on a restaurant business in a residential district but to refuse it to another in similar circumstances:
The leading case cited by them is Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U. S. 356 (decided in 1886). Ordinances of the city of San Francisco made it unlawful to carry on a laundry within the corporate limits “without having first obtained the consent of the board of supervisors, except the same be located in a building constructed either of brick or stone.” Plaintiffs were convicted of violations of these ordinances by operating laundries in wooden buildings. They were discharged on writs of habeas corpus by order of the supreme court of the United States. That court very properly held1 that the ordinance was unconstitutional on two grounds: First, in its administration, as shown by the facts., it “makes arbitrary and unjust discriminations, founded on differences of race, between persons otherwise in similar circumstances;” second, it shows on its face that it conferred arbitrary power upon the munici
We find nothing in the body of section 9 of the ordinance nor elsewhere, nor have appellants pointed out anything either in the ordinance or in the practice of the board, that suggests any exercise of delegated authority or any favored treatment of one citizen or of any single piece of property as compared with any other citizen or any other property. The ordinance and the map seem to. show that all lands and lots within the city limits were zoned. The application of the zoning principle to the home of the appellants was by virtue of the ordinance duly passed by the city council itself under and by virtue of the home rule charter of the city. There was no act by the board of appeals. The section adjures them “to carry out the intent and purpose of the plan.” We are of the opinion that section 9 of the ordinance has not been shown, in the circumstances of this cause, to be unconstitutional in this phase. If the power claimed by the appellants to be delegated to the board of appeals should be exercised in an arbitrary or discriminatory way as to parties, classification' of business, or as to different real properties in the same general situation, then will be the time to pass upon that feature of the ordinance.
In the second point of their argument the appellants assert that'the city, by seeking this injunction, has shown an interpretation .of its, zoning ordinances which makes, its
The city has a real interest in the enforcement of all proper ordinances regulating building and zoning of property within the corporate limits. We see no good reason why it may not act to further the interests of any citizen or legal entity when those interests coincide so vitally with its own. If, on the other hand, the board of education is violating the zoning ordinance by maintaining a cafeteria within an area restricted against such an activity, the city could not join it with the appellants. Moreover, the ordinance does not prohibit schools within a residence district. The school property was purchased by the board of education years before appellants purchased theirs and six years before the property was zoned. There may be presented good reason and authority for saying that among the pro
We do not undertake to decide a case in which a party is not before the court. While we do not decide the ultimate merits of any future controversy between the city and board of education over the right to operate a cafeteria in a public school, yet it is proper here, in view of the issues raised by the appellants, to refer briefly to the law in other jurisdictions. In Harvard College v. Assessors of Cambridge, 175 Mass. 145, it was held that the use of real estate owned and furnished rent free by the college for the use of students who club together for the purpose of obtaining, with the assistance of the college, food at cost, .does not subject the real estate to taxes when the revenue laws exempt property used for college purposes. In City of Chicago v. University of Chicago, 228 Ill. 605, it was held that dormitories, dining halls and club houses located upon a college campus, used for conducting the educational .work of the university, and not for gain, are well within the meaning of an ordinance remitting water rates to all .buildings used for educational purposes. In a case relating to a zoning ordinance (Western Theological Seminary v. City of Evanston, 325 Ill. 511) it was held that a provision allowing schools and colleges to be erected in a residence district permitted the erection of dormitories where students would use a students’ common or dining room. Whatever may be the attitude of the city of Lincoln in any .controversy 'between it and the school district, or whatever may be the opinion of this court if and when such a contro
The remaining point argued by appellants is that the police power cannot be invoked here to sustain the application of the ordinance. Regulating the uses to which real property in cities may be put is a matter of comparatively recent origin. The zoning of cities in this country began well within the present generation. Naturally it had its origin in our state more recently than in some of the older states where the problems of varied industries and! business and a more congested population emphasized the need for regulation and found a justification in some aspect of the police power asserted in the interests of the welfare of the public. It is difficult, if not impossible, to lay down any general rules describing the exact field of operation of such power that will fit cases arising in the future. Each must be controlled by the special conditions and circumstances surrounding it. It must be controlled .by constitutional principles, the meaning of which does not change but the application of which to new conditions-varies with the everchanging conditions of a growing civilization.
For examples of the cases we have had where zoning laws were passed upon: In State v. Edgecomb, 108 Neb. 859, it was held that a zoning ordinance was unreasonable as applied to the particular circumstances of that case because it denied the right to a church to erect its edifice upon its' own lots for the sole reason that the building would cover 37]/2 per cent, of the area while the ordinance limited the area to 25 per cent.; and in Pettis v. Alpha Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Pi, 115 Neb. 525, it was held that the police power would sustain an injunction against the use .of a residence by a college fraternity in violation of the classification of such property in a zoning ordinance. This latter decision received much of its support from Village
Under the authority of our own holding in the Pettis case and of that of the supreme court of the United States in the Euclid case, we are of the opinion that the zoning ordinance as appealed against here is not unconstitutional. It is sustainable under the police power as having substantial relation to public health, safety, and general welfare.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.