Defendants appeal from a decree enjoining them from enforcing a zoning ordinance *391 so as to prevent plaintiffs’ erection and maintenance-of a clrurcli and school on premises owned by them before adoption-of the ordinance' and situated in a zone thereunder restricted to use for private dwellings only.
The trial court found as a fact, from the evidence in the case, which need not be recounted here, that although the ordinance appeared on its face to allow churches and schools, under special permit only, in 3 zones comprising about 10% of the village’s area while prohibiting them in the fourth zone containing the balance of the village, nevertheless, when applied to existing facts and circumstances, it served, as a practical matter, to exclude churches and schools from the village. The finding is fairly supported by the record.
As authority for the proposition that churches and schools may not be excluded by' ordinance- from residential districts or zones, plaintiffs rely on
City of Sherman
v.
Simms,
143 Tex 115 (183 SW2d
415); Ellsworth
v.
Gercke,
62 Ariz 198 (
The right to full and free use and enjoyment of one’s property in a manner and for.such purpose as the owner may choose, so long as it be not for the maintenance of a nuisance injurious • to others, is one of which he may not be deprived by government without due process of law nor may his property be taken by government without just compensation. US Constitution, ams 5 and 14; Michigan Constitution, 1908, art 2, § 16, and art 13, § 1. The owner’s right to'use is, however, subject to reasonable regulation, restriction and control by the State in the legitimate .exercise of its police powers. The test of legitimacy is the existence of a real and substantial relationship between the exercise of those powers in a particular manner in a given case and public health, safety, morals or the general welfare.
Village of Euclid
v.
Amhler Realty Co.,
*393
The use. of premises for church or school purposes does not amount to a nuisance.
Smith
v.
First United Presbyterian Church,
The ordinance of 1787 for the- governing of the great Northwest Territory, of which Michigan is a part, pronounced a conviction and purpose, reiterated in the Michigan Constitution of 1908, art 11, § 1, which formed the cornerstone of the governmental structures of the territory and of the States subsequently carved therefrom, in these exalted terms:
“Religion, morality and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged.”
Hardly compatible is this with a presumption that exclusion of school and church from an entire municipality is conducive to public health, safety, morals or the general welfare, a presumption which we decline to indulge. A thesis so inconsistent with the spirit and genius of our free institutions and system of government and the traditions of the American people will not be accepted by way of presumption, nor at all in the absence of competent evidence establishing a real and substantial relationship between the attempted exclusion and public health, safety, morals or the general welfare and, hence, the reasonableness and validity of the restriction upon use of private property as a legitimate exercise of the State’s police powers.
*395 Affirmed, without costs, a public question being involved.
