EDELBECK and others, Appellants, V. TOWN OF THERESA, Respondent.
No. 297
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
January 30, 1973
Motion for rehearing denied, without costs, on March 27, 1973.
203 N.W.2d 694
WILKIE, J.
Argued January 2, 1973.
Based upon the aforementioned authority, the trial court should not have considered the allegations of fact contained in plaintiff‘s initial complaint. However, because the confinement for which recovery is sought in this case was alleged to be intentional the trial court acted properly in sustaining the city‘s demurrer to the amended complaint without leave to amend.
By the Court.—Order affirmed.
For the respondent there was a brief by Allan & Storck of Mayville and oral argument by Robert E. Storck.
WILKIE, J. Three issues are presented on this appeal:
1. Did the town of Theresa enact a valid ordinance on July 6, 1970?
2. Is the town of Theresa estopped from denying a permit to plaintiffs?
3. Is mobile home park zoning legislation such as the disputed ordinance here constitutionally defective?
4. Are damages barred to plaintiffs?
Invalidity of ordinance of July 6, 1970.
Appellants argue, in support of their claim for injunctive relief, that pertinent provisions of
We find no merit in these arguments. First, because the appeal procedure under
As to appellants’ argument that the town board failed to comply with
While appellants are not entitled to pursue the specific statutory appeals procedure outlined in
“(2) If such town has a town park commission organized as provided by law, such commission shall recommend boundaries of such districts and appropriate regulations and restrictions to be imposed therein. If the town has no town park commission, the town board may appoint a town zoning committee of 5 members to perform the duties of the town park commission under this section. The town park commission or zoning committee shall first formulate a tentative report and shall hold public hearings thereon before submitting a final report to the town board. After such final report is submitted, and the ordinance pursuant thereto adopted, the town board may alter, supplement or change the boundaries or regulations contained in such ordinance as herein set forth, but a class 2 notice, under ch. 985, of any such proposed changes shall first be published in the town prior to the hearing. A hearing shall be granted to any person interested, at a time and place to be specified in the notice.”
It is clear from the record here that
“... It is contended that the common council complied with all of such requirements, except the last clause, printed in italics, and that that clause is directory and not mandatory. But the whole section is mandatory, and the common council had no more power to dispense with the last clause than any other portion of the section. Such notice was required so that the public might appear and make their objections to the change.”5
McQuillin‘s Law of Municipal Corporations is to the same effect:
“Provisions respecting publication and sufficient notice of ordinances and resolutions are mandatory, and failure to publish or give notice, or to do so substantially in the manner prescribed, renders them void even where, it has been declared, newspapers reported the pendency of the measure as an ordinary news story.”6
We conclude that the failure to comply with the notice-of-hearing provisions of
Estoppel of town board.
Appellants argue that they are entitled to the prior-nonconforming-use doctrine enunciated in several Wisconsin cases.8 This nonconforming use comes about because of the invalidity of the July 6, 1970, zoning ordinance and the contention that appellants expended over $60,000 in purchasing and improving the property in question after the permit was initially granted under the 1958 ordinance. The only evidence in the record of such a sum is found in an unidentified and unsigned offer to purchase. The trial court correctly concluded that appellants had made an outlay of only “some $3,000 or $4,000.” Thus, this situation is far different from that which existed in State ex rel. Schroedel v. Pagels,9 cited by appellants. In Schroedel, petitioner had expended roughly $185,000 in reliance upon an existing ordinance. Thereafter, and with full knowledge of these expenditures, the municipality adopted a more stringent ordinance. On appeal the supreme court affirmed the trial court‘s conclusion that the petitioner had acquired vested rights and interests by virtue of the expenditures on reliance of the previous ordinance. There is no substance to the appellants’ claim here that they acquired a vested right which barred the town from further action in adopting a more stringent zoning ordinance with reference to mobile home parks.
Constitutionality of mobile home park zoning legislation.
As to appellants’ contention that zoning requirements for mobile homes which are different from those for single and multiple family homes violate the equal pro-
“Trailer camps in recent years have become so common that it is not beyond the bounds of reason that the legislature may believe that such camps, with their collection of small mobile homes, present definite problems of health, safety, morality, and general welfare in the area which is affected by the presence of such camps. . . .”
“The ordinance reasonably tends to stabilize the problems created by the transient nature of mobile-home life to a point where school districts may cope with them.
“We concur in the trial court‘s decision that neither the statute nor the ordinance in question here is unconstitutional.”10
It is entirely constitutional for reasonable zoning regulations to be developed imposing zoning requirements for these trailer camps (mobile home parks).
Appellants also argue that
“(5) PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS TO BE FILED. Accompanying, and to be filed with an original application for a mobile home park, shall be plans and specifications which shall be in compliance with all applicable city, town or village ordinances and provisions of the department of health and social services. The clerk after approval of the application by the governing body and upon completion of the work according to the plans shall issue the license. A mobile housing development harboring only nondependent mobile homes as defined in sub. (1) (g) shall not be required to provide a service building.”
Damages.
The appellants have failed to file a statement of their claim and demand for payment with the town clerk pursuant to
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed as to dismissal of cause of action for money damages; reversed as to dismissal of cause of action for injunction; cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
The following memorandum was filed on March 27, 1973.
PER CURIAM (on motion for rehearing). The ordinance of July 6, 1970, was a zoning ordinance and because, as respondent points out on rehearing, Dodge county had already adopted a county-wide zoning ordinance under
The mandate in this cause is amended to read:
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed as to dismissal of cause of action for money damages; reversed as to dismissal of cause of action for injunction.
