Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
By an act of the General Assembly of Virginia, approved February 17, 1922, councils of cities were authorized to divide their cities into districts or zones, and to establish set-back building lines, and compel the property owners to conform thereto. The act (Acts of Assembly 1922, p. 46) reads as follows:
“That for the promotion of the health, safety, morals, comfort, prospеrity and general welfare of the general public, the council, or other governing body, of any city may, by ordinance, divide the- area of the city into ope or more districts, of such shape and area as may be best suited to carry out the purposes of this act, and in such district or districts may establish set-back lines, regulating and restricting the location of buildings and other structures; their height and' bulk; the percentage of lot to be occupied by buildings or other structures; and the size of courts and other open spaces, and the trade, industry, residences and*557 other specific uses of the premises in such district or districts, provided that nothing in this act contained shall be construed as intended to authorize the impairment of any vested right.”
On August 26, 1922, the council of the city of Roanoke, acting under the authority granted by this act, passed an ordinance regulating the erection of buildings in the city. Sections 243, 244, and 245 of the ordinance, as amended on .July 11, 1924, read as follows:
Section 243. “That all buildings hereafter to be erected in the city of Roanoke mus,t be built to correspond to the existing house line of the houses built in the same block unless special permission otherwise granted by the city council; provided, that if the buildings to be erected shall be located upon a switching track of any commercial railroad it shall be permitted to build closer to the street than the line of the existing houses.”
Section 244. “That the line of the existing houses shall be the line upon which sixty per cеnt of the houses in the block in which the proposed building is intended to be erected, have with relation to the street, and the said proposed buildings must be at least as far from the street as the line established by said sixty per cent of the houses. The word ‘block’ herein used does not refer to any entire city square, but shall be construed to be that portion on the same side of the street upon which the new building is proposed, bounded by the nearest intersecting streets to the right and left of said proposed building.”
Section 245. “That if there be not more than two houses in the block upon which said building is proposed to be erected., that the building line of said new structure may be such line as shall be fixed upon by an average line for the owner of said building, рrovided,
On January 19, 1923, the council passed an ordinance dividing the city into two districts, one designated as the “business district” and the other as the “residential district.”
S. M. Gorieb is the owner of several building lots located in the “residential district” on the northeast corner of Patterson avenue and Eleventh street, fronting on Patterson avenue 139 feet and on Eleventh street 150 feet, back to an alley. On the eastern portion of the lot he has a dwelling house, but there is no building on the western portion.
Gorieb' applied to Douglas Magann, building inspector for the city, for a permit to erect a store building on the undeveloped corner lot. The permit was refused and op. June 12, 1924, Gorieb petitioned the city council to grant him а permit to erect a brick store building on the property, fronting fqrty feet on Patterson avenue and running baek adjoining Eleventh street for seventy-five feet. After an investigation, the council passed a resolution granting
On August 11, 1924, Gorieb served upon the defendants a notice and рetition for a writ of mandamus to compel the city to issue a building permit for. the erection of a store building on the corner of Patterson avenue and Eleventh street, adjacent to the avenue or nearer thereto than thirty-four and two-thirds feet.
The petition alleges that the ordinances authorize the council to grant or withhold a permit to any individual at their pleasure, in violation of both State and Federal constitutions, and that said ordinances are unconstitutional and void.
Defendants filed their joint answer and demurrer, relying on the act of February 17, 1922, and alleging in the answer that the ordinance, properly construed, does not violate the State or Federal Constitution, and should be sustained.
The case was heard upon the pleadings and evidence, submitted, and the court entered an order adjudging that the ordinance was valid in all respects and dismissed the petition. This is a writ of error to that judgment.
The plaintiff in error relies upon the following assigments of error:
“(1) The court erred in holding that the city council had the right to establish a set-back building line and in the same ordinance reserve the right not to .be' guided by the provisions of said ordinance.
“(2) The court erred in holding the city ordinance constitutional as it constitutes ‘a taking’ of private property for public use without compensation, therefore, a violation of the provisions of both Federal and State constitutions.
“(3) The court erred in holding that the ordinance*560 was applicable under the facts presented in this case аnd in holding that -under any construction of said ordinance the petitioner was prohibited from building nearer the street line than thirty-four and two-thirds (34f) feet.”
The Virginia Constitution declares that the exercise of the police power of the State shall never be abridged. Section 159.
The legislature may, in the exercise of the police power, restrict personal and property rights in the interest of public health, public safety, and for the promotion of the general welfare. Eubank v. City of Richmond,
The Eubank Case involved the validity of a “building line” ordinance and of the act of the General Assembly of Virginia pursuant to which it was passed. The court held the act was constitutional. This case was appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States and is reported in
In the case of Welch v. Swasey, supra, involving the validity of building regulations, adopted by authority of an act of the legislature, the court held that the statute and the city ordinance were both constitutional. The judgment was affirmed by the Suрreme Court of the United States. Id.,
It is not contradicted that the legislature may confer the police power of the State upon cities and towns located therein. The extent of this power is difficult to define, but it is elastic and expands automatically to protect the public against the improper use of private property to the injury of the рublic interest. It must never be exercised except in a reasonable manner and for the welfare of the public.
In Noble Bank v. Haskell,
It is within the police power of the legislature to pass an act authorizing the councils of cities and towns to divide their municipalities into “districts” or “zones,” and to establish building lines on the streets to which all property owners must conform; and such an act, if passed in the interest of the health, safety,
In Windsor v. Whitney, supra, the court, while considering the question of set-back lines, said: “If a building line six feet from an owner’s street line will tend to preserve the public health, add to the public safety from fire, and enhance the public welfare by bettering living conditions and increasing the general prosperity of the neighborhood, can it be done by legislative authority in the exercise of the police power where such an exercise of the police power is reasonable under the circumstances of the case? We hold that it can, and that this is not a taking of property in violation of .the constitutional right, for which compensation must be made. The body of the law upon the subject of the police power is the growth of comparatively recent years. It has been said to be still in the formative stage.
“The line between eminent domain and the police power is a hard one to hold with constancy and consistency, and it is not surprising that now and again these two great powers of government have been confused. A few years ago it was, so far as the rule had been announced, undoubted that restrictions could not be imposed upon a private property solely for aesthetic considerations. Later it has been said by
“Where the free exercise of one’s rights of property is detrimental to the public interest, the State has the right to regulate reasonably such exercise of control under the police power. And that, of course, means without compensation.”
On the question of the validity of zoning and building line ordinances, the authorities are in conflict. A number of them sustain the contention of the plaintiff in error that such ordinances are unconstitutional and void. Val Fruth v. Board of Affairs,
The weight of authority and reason, as it seems to us, supports the contrary view.
All the presumptions are in favor of the validity of the ordinance. While the courts have held that, generally speaking, statutes and ordinances which vest arbitrary discretion in public officials, without prescribing a uniform rule of aсtion by which they shall be guided are unconstitutional and void, this rule is subject to a qualification, “where it is difficult or impracticable to lay down a definite rule, or where the discretion relates to the administration of a police
In Wulfsohn v. Burden,
A New York statute (Laws 1910, c. 348, sec. 25) required certain private bankers to obtain a license frоm the State Comptroller before they were allowed to do business, and authorized the Comptroller to “approve or disapprove the application in his discretion.” It was held in Engle v. O'Malley,
Yee Bow v. Cleveland,
In Cutrona v. Wilmington (Del. Ch.),
Where a city has been built up without much regard to building lines, each citizen locating the buildings on his land according to his own wishes and without regard to the rights of others, the location of the buildings is frequently such that the establishment of any uniform building line will result in unequal burdens upon- the landowners. To overcome such inequalities, section 243 of the Roanoke ordinance authorizes the city council to grant special permission to erect buildings not in conformity with the existing house line in the same block and nearer the street than such house line. The discretion thus vested in the council is not an arbitrary or whimsical, but a reasonable, discretion, and does not authorize the council to grant a permit to A and refuse one to B under like circumstances and conditions. If they should exercise this discretion in an arbitrary manner, the party aggrieved would be entitled to relief through the courts.
In determining the distance Gorieb’s store building should be located from the street line, the council, acting under the ordinance of August 26, 1922, took the general average line of all the houses in the block on both sides of the street. At the time the permit was
There are only five buildings on the same side of the street between the intersecting streets. Three of them are located 44.2 feet, the fourth one 44.3 feet, and the fifth one 37.5 feet from the street line. Treating the difference of one-tenth- of a foot as de minimis, and considering the fourth building as located only 44.2 feet from the street, the existing house line upon which sixty per cent of the houses in the “block” are located would be 44.2 feet from the street, and under section 244 of the ordinance the Gorieb building would have to be located 44.2 feet from the street line. If the council erred in permitting him to build thirty-four and two-thirds feet from the street, it was an error in his favor of which he cannot complain.
For the foregoing reasons, we are of opinion that the ordinance under consideration is constitutional and valid in all respects, and that there is no reversible error in the judgment complained of.
Writ of mandamus denied.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
We concur in the result, but we do not concur in the view that that part of the ordinance which confers upon the city council of the city of Roanoke the power to grant, in their discretion, special permission to individuals to build on a line other than the existing house line, is valid.
