The Mayor and Council of New Castle (New Castle), appellant, appeals from a decision and order of the Court of Chancery which granted the motion of Rollins Outdoor Advertising, Inc. (Rollins) to dismiss *356 New Castle’s | claim against Rollins on the basis that the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. In its order, |the Court of Chancery held that 22 Del. C § 301 et seq. did not confer upon a municipality the power to adopt an ordinance which provided for the gradual elimination ofi nonconforming uses over a period of years (a zoning device generally known as “amortization”). The order went on to state that even if the statute did grant authoritly to impose mandatory amortization of noiiconforming uses, the municipal ordinance under which New Castle sought to act |was unconstitutional since it provided for a| “taking” in violation of Article I, Sections 7 and 8 of the Delaware Constitution and the 5th and 14th Amendments of the j United States Constitution.
We disagree with the Court of Chancery’s analysis! and reverse and remand the case for the réasons set forth below.
On April 10, 1968, the City of New Castle adopted an ordinance to amend, revise, and reenact the comprehensive zoning regulations of the (pity. The zoning ordinance provided for the gradual elimination of certain specifiedl nonconforming uses via amortization. The pertinent part of the ordinance provides as follows:
Gradual Elimination of Certain Uses
—Certain nOn-conformities shall be terminated in accordance with the following provisions:
a. Lawfully existing uses shall within three years from the date of adoption or amendment of this ordinance comply with the performance standards of Section 6, B of this ordinance.
b. Within not more than three years from the date of adoption or amendment of this ordinance by which a use becomes non-conforming, the right to maintain the following non-conformities shall no longer be operated or maintained;
(1) Any jujik yard
(2) A non-conformity, which is not enclosed within! a structure
(3) Off-sitej signs. (City of New Castle Zoning Ordinance, § 4, paragraph 6.)
Rollins Outdoor Advertising, Inc., the ap-pellee, and its predecessors in interest owned and/or maintained two off-site signs (billboards not related to an activity being conducted on the premises) in locations which were zoned residential under the zoning ordinance. Such signs are not a' permitted use in a residential district under the new zoning ordinance. Rollins conducted no other business or activity on the premises.
Apparently these off-site signs were in use by Rollins’ predecessor in interest at the time the comprehensive zoning code was first adopted by the City of New Castle in 1968 and when zoning was first adopted for the municipality at an earlier date. Since the actual use predated the zoning classification, the continued existence of the off-site signs had been tolerated as a nonconforming use.
A theory as to nonconforming uses is that eventually the proscribed use will be terminated or abandoned with the passage of time, and that the property will then be made to comply with its appropriate zoning classification. This did not occur in this case.
On October 28, 1970, Rollins and its predecessors in interest were informed by New Castle, that in accordance with the ordinance, these two signs were to be removed as nonconforming uses on or before April 10, 1971 (approximately three years after the ordinance became effective). Another demand that the signs be removed was sent on May 19, 1971.
Rollins purchased the assets of its predecessor in interest on October 1, 1976 — more than five years after notice that the signs must be removed, and approximately eight years after the zoning ordinance had been enacted.
Despite additional requests and demands by New Castle, Rollins has refused to remove the signs. As a result, these nonconforming uses persist contrary to the specific provisions and announced purposes and requirements of the zoning ordinance.
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The Court of Chancery held that the City of New Castle lacked the power to enact the zoning ordinance here in question. The court’s rationale was that the enabling statute, 22 Del.C. § 301 1 did not confer upon the City of New Castle the power to enact this ordinance because in its opinion the power to “regulate and restrict” the use of land did not include the power to “prohibit” an existing use.
The statute by which all municipalities in this State derive their zoning authority is 22
Del.C.
§ 301
et seq.
As the enabling statute indicates, it was enacted for the broad purpose of promoting the health, safety, morals, and general welfare of the community. While it is true that municipalities have no inherent power to zone property except as the General Assembly may delegate,
Boozer v. Johnson,
Del.Ch.,
Evidence that the statute carried with it the authority to enact a zoning ordinance which would promote these goals through various means including the reasonable amortization of selected nonconforming uses can be found in the legislative history and judicial analysis of the act upon which 22 Del. C. § 301 is modeled.
It is clear that 22
Del.C.
§ 301 is fashioned after the Standard State Zoning Enabling Act.
See,
4 Rathkopt,
The Law of Zoning and Planning,
p. 765 (1979); Note,
Elimination of Nonconforming Uses,
35 Va.L.Rev. 348, 355 n. 45 (1949). Courts in several jurisdictions have held that acts of this type authorize municipalities to eliminate nonconforming uses such as offsite signs by way of amortization or by other similar methods.
Livingston Rock & Gravel Co. v. County of Los Angeles,
Cal.Supr.,
In Grant, supra, sign companies and owners of property leased for off-site sign use sought to enjoin the City of Baltimore from enforcing a zoning ordinance which required the removal of existing off-site signs from residential areas after a five-year amortization period. Under the ordinance, these signs constituted a nonconforming use. The court denied the owner’s request for an injunction stating:
The distinction between an ordinance that restricts future uses and one that requires existing uses to stop after a reasonable time, is not a difference in kind but one of degree and, in each case, constitutionality depends on overall reasonableness, on the importance of the public gain in relation to the private loss. Grant, supra at 369.
This Court has held that a municipality’s zoning authority “depends entirely upon that expressly granted or fairly implied or indespensable to its declared objects and purposes.”
Mayor and Council of Wilmington v. Dukes,
Del.Supr.,
The term “regulate” is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary as:
To fix, establish, or control; to adjust by rule, methcjd, or established mode; to direct by rule or restriction; to subject to governing principles or laws. Black’s Law Dictionary 1156 (5th ed. 1979).
The term “restrict” is defined as:
To restrain within bounds; to limit; to confine. Id. at 1182.
The Supremje Court of the United States has recognized that the term “regulate” necessarily entails a possible prohibition of some kind. That Court has stated: “It is an oft-repeated truism that every regulation necessarily speaks as a prohibition.”
Goldblatt v. Hempstead
(1962),
The Supreme Court of Massachusetts in reviewing a statute containing language similar to than found in 22 Del.C. § 301 (which empowered municipalities to “regulate and restrict” outdoor advertising on public ways, in public places, and on private property within public view) held that the statute in question authorized a town to provide, through amortization, for the elimination of nonconforming off-site signs five years from the time the ordinance was enacted. The chusetts enabl; court held that the Massa-ng act:
[C]onf erred on the Legislature plenary power to regulate and restrict outdoor advertising .... Although the word “prohibit” was omitted from [the enabling act], it was recognized that the unlimited and unqualified power to regulate and restrict can be, for practical purposes, the power to prohibit “because under such j lower the thing may be so far restricted that there is nothing left of of it.” (Citations omitted.)
The court continued its discussions of the two terms by seating:
The distinction between regulation and outright prohibition is often considered to be a narrow one: “[t]hat regulation may take the character of prohibition, in proper cases, is well established by the decisions of this court” ... quoting from United States v. Hill,248 U.S. 420 at 425 [39 S.Ct. 143 at 145,63 L.Ed. 337 ] (1919). John Donnelly and Sons, Inc. v. Outdoor Advertising Board, Mass. Supr.,369 Mass. 206 ,339 N.E.2d 709 (1975).
We hold that, through Article II, Section 25 of the Delaware Constitution and 22 Del. C. § 301, the General Assembly has authorized New Castle to terminate nonconforming off-site signs upon reasonable notice, that is, by what has come to be known as amortization. We hold that the power to “regulate and restrict” as such term applies to zoning matters includes the power, upon reasonable notice, to prohibit some of those uses already in existence.
II
As to the constitutionality of an ordinance which provides for amortization under authority of Delaware’s enabling statute, 22
Del. C.
§ 301, it should be noted that the Delaware statute is similar to the Maryland statute under scrutiny in
Grant, supra.
New Castle argues that this Court should construe the statute as the Maryland Court of Appeals did, and it cites many cases for the proposition that various forms of amortization are reasonable and constitutional. Some of the most persuasive of these cases are:
City of Fayetteville v. McIlroy Bank and Trust Co.,
Ark.Supr.,
Rollins in turn cites authority for the proposition that such an amortization ordinance amounts to an improper taking of private property without just compensation.
City of Fayetteville v. S. & H., Inc.,
Ark.Supr.,
These two positions appear to bring into direct conflict two constitutional principles: the proposition that a person shall not be deprived of property rights without due process of law and the now well established principle that under the police power of the State, the use of private property may be reasonably regulated and restricted through such devices as zoning so long as the regulation and restriction bears a substantial relation to the health, safety, and general welfare of the community. We are of the opinion that reasonable, required amortization of such nonconforming uses as sign boards may be accomplished with due process of law, and that such form of regulation does not necessarily constitute a compensable taking.
The court below relied on
New Castle County v. Harvey,
Del.Ch.,
The court in Harvey went on to state that:
[T]he spirit and intent of the zoning laws is to eventually eliminate the nonconforming use as speedily as possible so as to bring the property within the overall *360 zoning plan, then it would seem that the owner should not be permitted, after zoning, to continue an undesirable use by means of terminating his original, protected business endeavor and entering into a completely new and different enterprise in which he had no interest, stake or investment at the time the zoning took effect. Id. at 619.
The facts of Harvey are clearly distinguishable from the case at bar.
The court below also relied heavily on
In re Ceresini,
Del.Super.,
This Co
urt
’s decision in
Shellburne, Inc.
v. Roberts, Del.Supr.,
We hold in this ease that the ordinances which required that off-site signs be removed within three years created what amounted to new and reasonable divestment. As to the validity of provisions for amortization of nonconforming uses generally
see cases collected at
In
Inhabitants, Town of Boothbay v. National Advertising Co.,
Me.Super.,
We hold that the test for determining the constitutionality of such an ordinance is whether “its terms are ‘clearly arbitrary and unreasonable, having no substantial relation to the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare.’ ”
John Donnelly and Sons v. Outdoor Advertising Board, supra
We conclude that there is nothing inherently arbitrary or unreasonable in requiring the removal of existing off-site signs within three years. However, the suit *361 brought by New Castle against Rollins was dismissed by the Court of Chancery without the presentation of evidence, and at this stage we have an inadequate factual record before us upon which to test the reasonableness of the ordinance or of the amortization period as it will be applied to Rollins. The case will be remanded to the Court of Chancery for a determination of whether the application of the ordinance which has here been held to meet overall constitutional standards would be so unfair or unreasonable to owners of signs such as those owned by Rollins as to render its application in such situations unconstitutional.
REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. 22 Del.C. § 301 states:
For the purpose of promoting health, safety, morals or the general welfare of the community, the legislative body of cities and incorporated towns may regulate and restrict the height, number of stories and size of buildings and other structures, percentage of lot that may be occupied, the size of yards, courts and other open spaces, the density of population, and the location and use of buildings, structures and land for trade, industry, residence or other purposes. (Emphasis added.)
