Each of the three plaintiffs herein owns a parcel of land in Orion Township, Oakland County, Michigan; the three parcels are contiguous. On June 2, 1971, plaintiffs submitted to the Orion Township Planning Commission for its approval separate site plans for the construction of condominiums on their respective parcels. At that time the property was zoned for multiple residential use and had been so zoned since 1966; however, the zoning ordinance required submission and approval of a site plan prior to the issuance of a building permit. At the request of the planning commission plaintiffs consolidated their planned developments and submitted a unified site plan. Over the next nine months, during several meetings between plaintiffs, the planning commission, and other interested parties, numerous objections to the proposed development were voiced. The site plan was modified several times to overcome those objections. On April 5, 1972, the commission tabled the site plan "for further study” because of three objections to the plan and two unanswered questions about the plan. The site plan was again modified to overcome the objections. Nonetheless, *124 rather than consider the acceptability of the modifications, the planning commission, at a meeting on April 19, 1972, voted to postpone further action on plaintiffs’ site plan until after a public meeting of the township board scheduled for May 2, 1972. On April 28, 1972, plaintiffs commenced this action for an order of superintending control compelling approval of the site plan as modified and the issuance of building permits.
Prior to the April 19th meeting of the planning commission, residents of the area circulated petitions requesting that the parcels owned by plaintiffs be rezoned single family residential. It was in response to that petition drive, which was highly successful, that the township board scheduled a public hearing on May 2, 1972. On May 3, 1973, at a regularly scheduled meeting, the planning commission was informed by its professional consultant that plaintiffs’ modification of the site plan overcame the commission’s three objections of April 5th. The consultant also informed the commission that one of its unanswered questions had been satisfactorily resolved, but that he had not attempted to resolve the other question. In spite of the consultant’s favorable report, the commission formally rejected plaintiffs’ site plan. Then, the commission set May 31, 1972, as the date for a public hearing on the proposed rezoning of plaintiffs’ property. On June 20, 1972, plaintiffs’ property was rezoned single family residential.
The trial judge refused to allow defendants to plead as a defense the amended zoning ordinance. He then issued the order of superintending control, holding that the plaintiffs had "complied with all of the requirements of the statutes and ordinances, including the various and sundry special requirements imposed” by the Orion Township
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Planning Commission. The commission appeals, claiming that it was error for the trial judge to exclude from the case the amended zoning ordinance and that the evidence on the record justified the commission’s rejection of plaintiffs’ site plan even under the prior ordinance. We agree with the commission that it was error to exclude the amended ordinance from this case.
Lansing v Dawley,
However, we hold that the amended ordinance is an invalid ordinance and does not control the use to which plaintiffs may put their land. At the time plaintiffs’ property was rezoned the enabling act then in effect,
The actions of administrative agencies,
e.g.,
township planning commissions, must be upheld upon judicial review so long as those actions are based upon "competent, material and substantial
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evidence on the whole record”. Const 1963, art 6, § 28;
Viculin v Department of Civil Service,
Affirmed. No costs, public question.
