180 N.E. 379 | Ohio | 1932
Since no special findings were made by the Court of Appeals, or bill of exceptions taken, all the controverted issues of fact contained in the pleadings are deemed to have been determined in favor of the defendant in that court. Among other issues thus determined in his favor are that the intended use of the remodeled building was for sanitarium purposes and that "unnecessary hardships" would result to the applicant "in the way of carrying out the strict letter" of the ordinance requiring a thirty-foot setback. Furthermore, in view of the finding of the Court of Appeals, we must presume that the evidence offered in that court supported the board's conclusion that the public health and safety were secured and substantial justice done in permitting a variance from the required thirty-foot setback. Nor can it be maintained, in the absence of evidence, that the action of the board of appeals was unreasonably and arbitrarily exercised, or was such as would constitute a gross abuse of discretion.
The naked legal question here presented is whether under any circumstances the board of appeals was authorized to vary the zoning provision requiring the remodeled building to "be located not less than thirty feet from any interior side * * * lot line." In this instance the board authorized the permit for a location less than thirty feet from such line. Under *17 the provisions of Section 1281-23 (a) of the zoning ordinance the board of appeals was authorized to "hear and decide all questions brought before it by appeal from the refusal, granting or revocation of permits by the Commissioner of Buildings;" it also had power under that section to reverse, affirm or modify the order appealed from and to make such order or decision "as in its opinion ought to be made under the circumstances," and to direct the issuance of a permit in a proper case. The principal provision of the zoning ordinance here under attack is paragraph (b) of above section, which is fully quoted in the statement of facts, Paragraph (b) expressly provides that if, in specific cases, the board should find thatunnecessary hardships would result in the way of carrying out the strict letter of a provision in the ordinance, it had power to vary the application of any such provision in harmony with the general purpose and intent of the subdivision so that the public health or safety might be secured and substantial justice done.
The principal contentions of counsel for plaintiff in error are twofold, and both may be discussed together. They are as follows: (1) That the thirty-foot setback provision in the zoning ordinance is mandatory, and therefore the board of appeals exceeded its powers in authorizing the issuance of a permit for a setback of a lesser distance. (2) Since no definite standard was fixed in the ordinance for determining what are "practical difficulties" or "unnecessary hardships," the bestowal of power upon the board to vary the application of the ordinance constituted a delegation of legislative power and was for that reason unconstitutional.
The first contention of plaintiff in error is easily disposed of. Standing alone, the provision of the zoning ordinance that a permitted building must be located "not less than thirty feet from any interior side or rear lot line" would be regarded as mandatory. *18 However, the same section of the ordinance provides that in specific cases the board of appeals has power to vary the application of a provision therein if it finds that unnecessary hardship will result in carrying out the strict letter of such provision. That provision refutes the claim that the thirty-foot setback is mandatory in each and every instance.
The chief question therefore is whether the provision of the zoning ordinance authorizing the board of appeals to vary applications in case of "unnecessary hardships" is constitutional — whether it constitutes a delegation of legislative power.
It is an elementary principle of our jurisprudence that in determining whether a law or ordinance is constitutional every reasonable presumption will be indulged in favor of its constitutional validity, and that it is only when there is a clear incompatibility between the legislative act and the Constitution that the judicial power will refuse to execute it. This principle applies whether the legislative act be a statute or a municipal ordinance. Cincinnati, W. Z. Rd. Co. v.Commissioners of Clinton County,
In People, ex rel. Fordham Manor Reformed Charch, v. Walsh,
Plaintiff in error contends that no definite standard was fixed in the ordinance for determining what are the "practical difficulties" or "unnecessary hardships" resulting to the owner of the property who desired to be relieved from the strict letter of the ordinance. *21 Since we have no bill of exceptions, it will be presumed that unnecessary hardships imposed upon the applicant were fully established by the evidence, and that is the import of the finding by the Court of Appeals in its journal entry. Manifestly the legislative body cannot fix any adequate standard or rule that would fit every individual case of hardship. That is impossible; and therefore the legislative body has confined the determination of that feature to an administrative agency — in this case the board of appeals — as a fact-finding body which could determine whether in any specific case unusual hardships might result if the strict letter of the ordinance were complied with.
An ordinance of similar import, in respect to variance, was under consideration by the Court of Appeals of New York inDowsey v. Village of Kensington,
Under similar varying provisions relieving an owner from unnecessary hardships resulting from zoning his property, the following cases support the principle that a board may vary the provisions of a zoning ordinance, and may especially do so if it assigns reasons for its action: People, ex rel. Sheldon, v.Board of Appeals of City of New York,
Mutual Film Corp. v. Industrial Commission of Ohio,
We see no distinction in principle between the use of a fact-finding body for determining whether or not "unusual hardships" have resulted in specific cases and the use of a similar administrative agency to ascertain the fact whether a picture film is of a moral, educational, or harmless character. Manifestly, since unusual hardships would affect some and not other owners in a zoning district, the determination whether the restriction imposes unusual hardships upon an individual's property must be left, in specific instances, to the discretion of administrative agencies, but even so the power conferred upon them cannot be unreasonably or arbitrarily exercised.
The application of this rule we think is supported in Red "C"Oil Mfg. Co. v. Board of Agriculture of N.C.
From what we have here indicated, and in view of the fact that no bill of exceptions has been filed disclosing that the discretion of the board of appeals was unreasonably exercised, or that the board acted arbitrarily, it follows that the judgment of the Court of Appeals should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
MARSHALL, C.J., MATTHIAS, DAY, ALLEN and KINKADE, JJ., concur.
STEPHENSON, J., not participating. *24