208 S.W.2d 497 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1948
Affirming.
This is an appeal from a judgment enjoining the enforcement of an amendatory zoning ordinance of the City of Louisville which changed the use of a single lot owned by appellant, James G. Polk, from a 2-family residence use to a 4-family apartment use.
The lot in question fronts 100 feet on South Birchwood Avenue and has a depth of 175 feet. On the lot was an old dwelling which had been damaged by fire when appellant purchased it in January, 1946. Appellant, an experienced contractor and builder, began remodeling the old dwelling on the lot without securing the building permit required by the Building Code of the City of Louisville, and a "stop work order" sign was posted on the promises on March 16, 1946, when it was discovered that a 4-family apartment was contemplated. On March 21, 1946, the chief building inspector refused to issue a building permit because the lot was located in a 2-family residence zone and the proposed construction did not conform to existing zoning regulations. Mr. Polk then made application to the Board of Adjustment and Appeals for a variation from the requirements of the zoning ordinance so as to permit conversion of a residence in a 2-family district into a 4-family apartment. The application was denied on. April 10, 1946. Thereafter appellant requested a rehearing which was denied by the Board on July 24, 1946. During all of this time he continued the construction work which was completed in October, 1946. After rejection by the Board of Adjustment and Appeals of his application for a variation, he went before the Board of Aldermen of the City of Louisville and requested the *500 passage of an ordinance so as to permit him to construct a 4-family apartment on his lot. The Board of Aldermen passed such an ordinance on October 8, 1946. The ordinance was vetoed by the Mayor, and was passed over his veto on October 22, 1946, by a vote of 9 to 3. The ordinance, which is Ordinance No. 180, Series 1946, is entitled: "An ordinance to change the zoning district map so that certain property in the City of Louisville now in the 'B' two-family district shall be in the 'C' apartment district."
Section 1 of the ordinance reads in part:
"That the zoning classification of the below described property, as shown on the District Map accompanying and made a part of Zoning Ordinance No. 194, Series 1931, as amended by Zoning Ordinance No. 25, Series 1945, be and the same is hereby changed from a 'B' Two-Family District to a 'C' Apartment District as shown by the plat hereto attached. Said property is in the City of Louisville and is described as follows:
" 'Beginning at a point an the east side of Birchwood Avenue 927 feet south of what formerly was the right-of-way of the Crescent Hill Street Railway; thence southwardly along the east side of Birchwood Avenue 100 feet and extending back eastwardly of that width throughout between lines at right angles to Birchwood Avenue 175 feet more or less to an alley.' "
The property described is appellant's lot. On October 24, 1946, five property owners who reside on South Birchwood Avenue in the same block in which appellant's lot is located brought this suit to have Ordinance No. 180, Series 1946, declared void, and to enjoin appellant from maintaining his premises as a 4-family apartment house and from renting the premises to more than two families. The chancellor held the ordinance void, and granted the injunction.
It is first argued by appellant that appellees failed to establish that irreparable injury will result to them or that they will suffer any damage distinct from that suffered by the general public, and therefore cannot maintain this action. The general rule is that a private individual cannot maintain an action to abate a public *501
nuisance by injunction unless he has sustained an injury special and peculiar to himself, York v. Chesapeake O. Ry. Co.,
Appellant next argues that Zoning Ordinance No. 25, Series 1945, which zoned a large area including the property on South Birchwood Avenue as a 2-family district, is invalid because no copy of the ordinance was ever recorded in the Jefferson County Clerk's office nor were any of the maps or data which were parts of the ordinance ever recorded in the Clerk's office as provided by KRS
It is conceded that no copy of the ordinance, or maps or other material made a part of the ordinance, was ever filed in the Clerk's office, but appellees say that the master plan provided for by the statute has not yet been adopted by the city, and it is their contention that KRS
Appellant finally insists that if the 1945 ordinance, No. 25, is valid, then Ordinance No. 180, Series 1946, has a substantial relation to the public health, morals, safety and general welfare and is a reasonable and valid exercise of the police power, while appellees say it is arbitrary, unreasonable and discriminatory and has no substantial relation to the public welfare. What is known as "spot zoning" is generally frowned upon by the courts. While the City Council has broad powers in respect to zoning, it is without authority to single out one lot in an amendatory ordinance and arbitrarily remove therefrom restrictions imposed upon the remaining portions of the same zoning district. There must be reasonable ground or basis for the discrimination. It is only where zoning ordinances are related in some way to the health, safety, morals and general welfare that they are valid. Selligman v. Von Allmen Bros.,
And further: "The effect of the amendment is to single out one lot located within what is essentially a residential district and impose restrictions upon this lot that are less onerous than those imposed upon the remaining portions of what is really the same zoning district."
In Page v. City of Portland,
"Since the leading case of Village of Euclid, Ohio v. Ambler Realty Company, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1926, reported in
"Clearly, a city has the power to amend a zoning ordinance from time to time, if there has been a substantial change of conditions and the amendment has some reasonable relation to the end sought to be attained, viz.: furtherance of the public interests. Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., supra; Miller v. Board of Public Works,
To the same effect are Smith v. Board of Appeals of Salem,
The chancellor correctly adjudged that Ordinance No. 180, Series 1946, is arbitrary and discriminatory and therefore invalid, and the judgment is affirmed.
Judge Knight not sitting.