The factual background of this case is set forth in Gust v. Township of Canton, 337 Miсh 137. After decision therein plaintiff started the operation of a trailer camp on his premises in defendant township. Defendant commenced criminal proсeedings against plaintiff for violation of provisions of its zoning and building ordinances, which prohibit the establishment or operation of trailer camps anywhere in the-tоwnship. Plaintiff brought this action to enjoin' defendant’s enforcement of those provisions against him or his premises and prosecution of the criminal case. Prom deсree holding'the ordinances “unconstitutional and void insofar as they prohibit the establishment, maintenance and operation of a trailer coach park * * * on the premises” of plaintiff and granting him the relief prayed, defendant appeals.
Trailer camps may lawfully be operated in Michigan under CL 1948 and CLS 1954, § 125.751
et seq.
(Stat Ann 1953 Cum Supp § 5.278[1]
et seq.),
which providе for the licensing and regulation thereof. Lawful uses of land may be prohibited in certain areas by zoning or building ordinances, if such exercise of police power bears a real and substantial relationship to public health, safety, riiorals or the general welfare.
Roman Catholic Archbishop of Detroit
v.
Village of Orchard Lake,
Defendant says, and its expert planners testified, that despite its open, undeveloped and agricultural character, it is in the Detroit metropolitan area, in which there has been a tremendous industrial growth; that such development has been following industrial corridors along the railroad lines running out of Detroit; that 2 such lines run through defendant township and large industrial plants have been built adjoining them in other townships; that similar development along the railroad lines in defendant township can reasonably be anticipated in the future; that to provide for homes for workers employed in such plants, if and when they are constructed .in defendant township, and in those now *440 located outside the township, it is believed that defendant will change from an agricultural to a semi-urban cоmmunity within 20 to 25 years, possibly sooner; that the ordinances were adopted to control such hoped-for development and change in an orderly way; that the portion of plaintiff’s land zoned industrial is near enough to one of the railroad lines (over a quarter of a mile distant) so that it could be expected to be in demand some day for the industrial development expected to follow such line out from the city of Detroit; that under the zoning ordinance one of the permitted uses for lands zoned “country home” is off-street parking and that a portion of plaintiff’s land was so zoned for the intended benefit of employees of the industries some day expected to be located on that portion of plaintiff’s land zoned industrial and that this would constitute a buffer strip between the industrial zone and the residential zonе in which there are, as yet, neither . residences nor industries. Envisioning this future development, defendant says that the exclusion of trailer camps will be conducive theretо, whereas their presence would be a detriment to the kind of community expected in the future; that the ordinance provides a well-rounded pattern to stimulatе and control healthy and orderly growth in the future and is in anticipation of the expected change; that there ought to be a basic plan for growth laid down befоre the growth commences.
The question presented, then, though not so phrased by the parties, is whether enforcement of the provisions of the zoning and building ordinances prohibiting plaintiff from establishing or operating a trailer camp on his land constitutes a lawful exercise of the police power when it bears no relationship to present public health, safety, morals or general welfare, but is asserted to have such relationship prospectively with respect to conditions expected to
*441
exist in the future. Defendant quotes from
Austin
v.
Older,
If the action of a township board in zoning property in a manner which would otherwise be arbitrary and unreasonable under present conditions is rendered valid by the fact that the board anticipates that in the future conditions will develop under which such zoning would not be arbitrary and unreasonable and believes that it will be conducive thereto, then the only limit on the board’s powers in that regard would seem to be the measure of its expectations and beliefs. The extent of the owner’s right to the free use of his property in the manner deemed best by him is not to be determined by such speculative standards. The test of validity is not whether the prohibition may at some timе in the future bear a real and substantial relationship to the public health, safety, morals or general welfare, but whether it does so now.
Decree affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.
