This is an appeal from a judgment denying a writ of mandate. Appellant Matthews is the congregation servant or presiding minister of the Modesto West Unit of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and appellant Woody is the Watchtower *802 Study Servant of the same organization. Appellant Woody, as trustee for Modesto West Unit of Jehovah’s Witnesses, acquired an interest in Lot 1, Block 10040 of Olympic Tract in the County of Stanislaus, which is zoned R-l-residential. He filed an application for a use permit to build a church on the property and, after a hearing, the planning commission denied the application for a variance to construct a church in the area. The planning commission gave as reasons for its denial :
" (1) The site is inadequate and less than that considered needed for a minimum church use, as well as possible future expansion needs.
" (2) The site is within a self-contained residential subdivision, which would introduce foreign traffic to the detriment of the peace of the inhabitants. That the church would be better located if access was over a major thoroughfare, rather than a neighborhood street. ’ ’
Appellants Matthews and Woody, following the procedure provided by the ordinance, appealed the denial to the board of supervisors. After a hearing de novo, at which appellants and respondent presented evidence, the board of supervisors upheld the planning commission and denied the application for a variance or use permit. Appellants then sought a writ of mandate in the superior court to compel the Board of Supervisors of the County of Stanislaus to issue the permit. The court issued an alternative writ, and after a hearing entered a judgment by which the alternative writ of mandate was vacated, and the petition for writ of mandate was denied. This appeal followed.
The pertinent sections of the zoning ordinance with which we are concerned, read as follows:
"Section 12.0 Regulations for single family residential or ‘R-l’ districts.
"12.1 The following regulations shall apply in all ‘R-l’ Districts and shall be subject to the provisions of Section 20 of this ordinance.
“12.11 Uses Permitted: (a) single family dwellings,
(b) accessory uses and buildings normally incidental to single family residences.”
"Section 20.0 General Provisions
"20.1 The regulations specified in this ordinance shall be subject to the following general provisions and exceptions:
"20.11 Uses: ...(e) Churches, . . . may be permitted in any ‘R’ district providing a use permit shall first be obtained in each ease.”
*803 “Section 22.0 Permits and Variances
“22.1 Zoning Permits. . . . 22.24 Action by Board of Adjustment : (a) In order to grant any use permit, the findings of the Board of Adjustment shall be that the establishment, maintenance or operation of the use or building applied for will not, under the circumstances of the particular case, be detrimental to the health, safety, peace, morals, comfort and general welfare of persons residing or working in the neighborhood of such proposed use or be detrimental or injurious to property and improvements in the neighborhood or to the general welfare of the County.”
Appellants question the constitutionality of the regulation of church construction in a residential area, upon the ground the zoning ordinance restricts freedom of religious worship. The constitutionality of this kind of zoning ordinance is so well settled that we need only cite cases deciding the issue in California. The decisions in
Corporation Presiding Bishop, etc. Latter Day Saints
v.
City of Porterville,
Nor is the section of the ordinance governing the issuance of use permits unconstitutional because there are no fixed standards and specifications governing a variance. The provision under attack is 22.24,
supra.
By its very nature a variance is an exception to the fixed standards of a basic and specific zoning ordinance. Therefore the variance provisions need contain no detailed, rigid standards, and necessarily must vest a broad discretion in the planning commission and the appeals board. The questioned constitutionality of a similar ordinance was thoroughly discussed in
Tustin Heights Assn.
v.
Board of Supervisors, supra,
at pages 633, 634 and 635. Rather than burden this opinion with a lengthy quotation from
Tustin,
we simply refer to the foregoing citation and hold that for the reasons stated therein the variance permit provisions of the zoning ordinance before us are not unconstitutional by reason of vagueness or uncertainty. (See also
Garden Grove Congregation
v.
City of Garden Grove,
*804 Appellants next argue that the planning commission and the board o£ supervisors discriminated against appellants by applying the ordinance in an unconstitutional manner. This argument rests upon the fact that there are two churches in the same restricted zone, the implication being that the planning commission and the board of supervisors issued use permits to the other churches and therefore discriminated against appellants. We are bound by the record before us, and nothing therein indicates that the two churches were granted use permits under circumstances similar to those presented here. The evidence cited by appellants on this issue consists of conclusions and unsupported statements. The vice of an argument referring to prior events without presenting evidence of the circumstances of those events is disclosed by the answering brief of county counsel that "these two churches were constructed in the Olympic Tract long prior to the enactment of the Stanislaus County Zoning Ordinance, ...”
Finally, appellants argue that the case of
Redwood City Co. of Jehovah’s Witnesses, Inc.
v.
City of Menlo Park,
Of significance is the statement in the Redwood opinion that the record contained nothing to indicate the church had not complied with all of the provisions of the ordinance relating to issuance of a use permit. In our case evidence was presented to the planning commission and the board of supervisors indicating that there would be inadequate parking space on the lot; that the Olympic Tract has no through *805 streets; that the proposed site of appellants’ church can he reached by only one residential street; that a traffic problem already exists which would be aggravated by the additional traffic if the site were used for a church; that additional traffic would endanger children playing in a neighborhood park adjacent to the proposed site; and that adjoining property values would be depreciated.
Counsel for appellants devote a considerable portion of their brief to reweighing the evidence in an effort to demonstrate an abuse of discretion by the planning commission and the board of supervisors, as well as error by the trial court. Appellants cite evidence in the record which they contend reflects that the planning commission and board of supervisors acted capriciously, arbitrarily and discriminatorily. There is evidence which could be construed to lend some support to appellants’ point of view, but it is not our province to reweigh the evidence. Our duty is to review the record to determine whether there is evidence of a substantial nature which supports the decision of the court below.
(Livingston Rock etc. Co.
v.
County of Los Angeles,
The judgment is affirmed.
Conley, P. J., Brown, J., concurred.
