The suit of appellants was for a mandatory injunction seeking to compel the City to grant building permits for a service station and drive-in grocery on land owned by them fronting on Highway 356, within the city limits of Irving. Appellants had furnished the City with full plans and specifications for the buildings in question, likewise complying, as they alleged, with
The case was tried to a jury, the single issue being: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the action of the City of Irving, its officers and representatives, in refusing to issue building permits to the plaintiffs W. W. Fisher, Jr. and Ed Markham, Jr. was arbitrary and capricious?”; answered in the affirmative. Afterwards upon motion of both plaintiffs and the City for judgment, that of defendant was granted, notwithstanding above verdict; and consequent upon denial of mandatory injunction this appeal is taken.
The three points of appeal relate to the grant of defendant’s judgment despite above jury finding (1) “for the reason that there was a real and genuine fact issue as to the arbitrariness and capriciousness of the action of the officials of the City of Irving, Texas, in refusing to grant the building permits in question to Plaintiffs; (2) “for the reason that Defendant was not entitled to such finding in the face of the jury verdict as to the arbitrariness and capriciousness of the City of Irving in refusing to grant said building permits; (3) “for the reason that the arbitrary and capricious action of the officials of the City of Irving constituted an unwarranted deprivation to Plaintiffs of their right to use, enjoy and have the benefit of their property, without compensation for such deprivation of use and benefit and was discriminatory against Plaintiffs by reason of the requirement that they set back their buildings eighty (80) feet from their front property line instead of only thirty (30) feet therefrom as was required of other landowners adjoining Appellants and in the immediate and adjoining area.”
Defendant’s exhibit 9 pictures the land in question lying on South side of Highway 3S6 (Irving Boulevard), divided into tracts 1, 2 and 3, showing a 50-foot service or lateral road at both ends for some two miles of the Highway, save for one tract of 250 feet on the immediate West. Most of these service roads lay to the East; not going over the subject property but turning back onto the main Highway.
Irving is a home rule charter city and as such authority to pass (1) zoning ordinances under Texas Zoning Laws, and (2) such other ordinances under the police power as may reasonably be for the protection of the health, safety, comfort and the welfare of the public. In 1958 Ordinance 435 was passed, requiring that building lines on adjoining property be set back 160 feet from the center line of Highway 356. In effect it was to require of property owners on the highway from whom the City had already arranged for a service road, a set-back of only thirty feet from the right-of-way line, whereas plaintiffs with whom the City had made no such deal, an 80-foot set-back was required. In this connection, plaintiff Fisher testified on cross-examination that in 1955 he had sought to change the classification of the tracts from residential to commercial; submitting to defendant’s Zoning Commission a preliminary plat for that purpose; that said plat had shown a set-back of 160 feet from the center of Highway 356 upon information that unless he submitted a plat indicating a service road of 50 feet off the front of the property the zoning request would not be granted; that the preliminary plat did not dedicate such a strip for a service road or right-of-way, the City, at no time having made any offer to acquire it as such. Mr. Fisher further stated that under the Zoning Ordinance the maximum requirement of set-back for building purposes was no more than 29 or 30 feet from front property line; both he and Building Inspector Fletcher concurring in the statement that Ordinance 435 was the only one requiring the owner’s property line to be
Appellants further argue that Ordinance 435 was one of zoning in effect; Art. 101 Id, V.A.C.S. providing that “no such regulation, restriction, or boundary shall become effective until after a public hearing in relation thereto * * * ”; and no such hearing was admittedly had relative to Ordinance 435. To the contrary, the measure by its terms is a “set-back” regulation passed by a Home Rule City pursuant to its police power for establishment of uniform building lines; a provision thereof reading that “whereas, if said building lines were not set up, future improvement and developments along said streets could extend to the actual property lines of the various abutting property, and would be thus injurious to those owners of property abutting on said streets * * * thus subserving the public welfare and convenience.” Such type of ordinance long antedates our zoning laws (see Halsell v. Ferguson,
Lastly, appellants contend that a requirement of set-back to start from the center line of the highway rather than from the owners’ property line is unreasonable. Attention is called to Art. 6812c, § 1, V.A.C.S. empowering the Commissioner’s Court “To establish building lines or
All points of appeal are overruled and judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
