The petition shows that petitioner is the owner of land situated within the zoned area in which the defendant’s land here involved is located, and it thus appears that she is entitled to seek injunctive relief to prevent a use of defendant’s land which violates the zoning ordinance.
Snow v. Johnston,
Since it is the established rule that this court will never decide a constitutional question if the case can be decided on other grounds
(Taylor v. Flint,
We proceed to a consideration of the relevant portions of the zoning ordinance and the evidence relating thereto. The ordinance requires the set back from the street on which it fronts a distance which is the average set back line of existing structures, and the evidence shows that average as relates to this case to be 58 feet 6 inches. The evidence further shows that the set back of the building complained of is only 25 feet. But it further shows that it is a “lot of record” as mentioned in the ordinance, which is only 77.23 feet in depth, and to require a set back line of 58.6 feet, which is the average, there would be left only 18 and a fraction feet on which to build. The ordinance requires a rear yard of not less than 20% of the depth of the lot, and that lots of record having a width of 55 feet or less must have side yards of 5 feet. It is obvious that a residence conforming to these requirements could not be erected on defendant's lot which is 40 feet by 77.23 feet. Sec. 3-1 of the ordinance provides that “Except as hereinafter provided” no building shall be erected unless it conforms to the requirement as to set back and area of the zone in which it is located. Therein-after Sec. 3-3 provides that “Lots of record at the time of enactment of this ordinance and resolution, which have less than the minimum requirements for R zone may nevertheless be used for uses permitted in respective zone. All other lots in an R zone shall be in accordance with the respective zone requirements.” The lot here involved is a lot of record as defined in the ordinance.
Sec. 3-3 clearly and expressly excepts defendant’s lot and others of record from requirements of the ordinance and expressly subjects all other lots to the requirement. Therefore, the lot is immune from the requirements, and specifically permitted to be “used for uses permitted” by the ordinance. This does not say some but not all such uses, and consequently it is construed to include all such uses. Since admittedly a use permitted by the ordinance is the erection of a dwelling house, and since *784 that is precisely the use being made of it, and since the only relief sought is to enjoin that use, the judgment denying the injunction was demanded.
Judgment affirmed.
