Defendant appeals from decree enjoining enforcement of a zoning ordinance against plaintiffs’ property because unreasonable and confiscatory as applied thereto.
Each of plaintiffs owns 1 of 8 lots on the south ■side of Ford road in the city of Dearborn across from the lots in Dearborn township involved in
Ritenour
v.
Township of Dearborn,
Plaintiffs prayed that the ordinance be decreed to be unconstitutional and void as applied to their lots, that they be decreed to be business property, that defendant be enjoined from enforcing the ordinance with respect thereto, and that a building permit for nonresidential purposes be required to issue as relates to 1 of the lots.
Defendant says the bill is multifarious. . This it. predicates in part on the fact that some plaintiffs acquired lots before, and some after, the ordinance and its subsequent amendment, suggesting that, on the authority of
Hammond
v.
Bloomfield Hills Building Inspector,
Defendant contends that plaintiffs had an adequate remedy at law for testing the validity of the ordinance, namely, mandamus to compel issuing of building permits of a character prohibited by the ordinance. As relates to 7 of the plaintiffs, it does not appear that they were ready to build or desired such permits. From the pleadings it does appear that defendant was about to institute condemnation proceedings against the lots in question and others for park and green-belt purposes. Defendant may not, through the device of zoning for a use to which property is not suited, depress its value preliminary to condemning it for public purpose.
Grand Trunk Western R. Co.
v.
City of Detroit,
Is the ordinance unreasonable and confiscatory as applied to plaintiffs’ lots ¶ It limits use to residences which, under its provisions, cannot be constructed on these lots at a width of more than 10 feet, compa *500 rabie, in this respect, to the situation in Ritenour. Other requirements of the ordinance with respect to area, minimum width of side yards, et cetera, cannot be complied with so as to permit construction of usable residences. Defendant’s answer admits, in effect, plaintiffs’ charge, that the provisions of the ordinance make use of the lots for residential purposes physically impossible, by alleging, in response thereto, that plaintiffs could comply by combining 2 or more lots for the building of residences thereon. We think the decision in Ritenour controlling here. Distinctions between that case and this in the respect that there the plaintiff acquired the property prior to enactment of the ordinance, that the property there involved had once- been zoned for business purposes, and that the action there was brought by plaintiff within a year after adoption of the ordinance while here it was not brought until 22 years later, do not serve to alter the fact that the provisions of the ordinance would render plaintiffs’ property here almost worthless. That the city may not do. Long v. City of Highland Park, supra. Transfer of title, or the lapse of 22 years, after adoption of the ordinance does not relieve the ordinance of its unreasonable and confiscatory character. It is invalid as applied to plaintiffs’ lots.
Finally, defendant urges that plaintiffs have no standing in a court of equity because they did not first apply to the appeal board created under the ordinance. This point was not raised below nor in the statement of reasons and grounds for appeal and, accordingly, is not entitled to consideration here. At all events, it is without merit. The appeal board could not determine the validity of the ordinance nor afford plaintiffs the necessary relief under the circumstances of this case when building-permits were not desired but redress against measures likely to depress value prior to condemnation.
*501
proceedings was sought.
Austin
v.
Older,
Affirmed, with costs to plaintiffs.
