50 S.W.2d 960 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1932
Reversing.
In 1923 the appellant, Standard Oil Company, erected at the corner of High and Broadway streets, in the city of Bowling Green, a gasoline service station. The lot on which the appellant constructed this building was small, just large enough to accommodate the service station which was of the typical drive-in type built of brick and concrete, 14x21 feet in size, and with space for two pumps; the storage tanks being imbedded in the ground. The cost of the lot and building was about *363 $12,000. Since 1924 this service station has been operated by the appellant. On April 29, 1929, the city of Bowling Green enacted an ordinance entitled:
"An Ordinance establishing a residential zone or section of the City of Bowling Green, Kentucky, and prohibiting therein the establishment and operation of gasoline and oil filling stations and the sale of oil and gasoline."
Section 1 of the ordinance delimited the residential zone established which included the place where appellant has its gasoline service station. Section 2 of the ordinance reads:
"In said residential zone or district as set out in Section 1, it shall be unlawful to establish or operate a gasoline or oil filling station or to sell oil or gasoline therefrom; and all persons, firms or corporations are now prohibited from so doing."
The appellant continuing to operate its service station, a warrant was taken out in the Bowling Green police court against appellant's employees who were operating the station, charging them with a violation of the ordinance set out above. On a trial before the police court, the ordinance was held valid, and the employees of appellant were fined. It appearing that other warrants would be issued against appellant's employees because of the continuance of the operation of this service station, appellant brought this suit in the circuit court asking that the police court be enjoined from further prosecuting appellant's agents and servants because of their operation of the service station, and that it be adjudged that the ordinance of April 29, 1929, in so far as it applied to appellant's place of business, be held null and void. On the hearing before the chancellor, the appellant introduced a very large number of affidavits (the proof being taken in such fashion by agreement) to the effect that the place where the service station was located abutted on streets which were broad and wide; that the service station was so erected that its patrons had ample space to stop or park on the property of the appellant for the purpose of being served, and that they did not use the public highway except to approach and leave the station; that the station and its operation did not render any of the abutting streets unsafe or inconvenient for *364 public use or travel; that the station did not in any wise endanger or affect the health of the neighborhood in which it was located, or, indeed, of any of the citizens of the whole city of Bowling Green; that the station did not cause any discomfort to any of the neighbors or the citizens of Bowling Green or any inconvenience to them, and that it did not affect their morals, safety and/or public welfare. Affidavits to the foregoing effect were procured from 54 of the neighbors within the radius of 150 yards of the said station; there being only three residents of that area who declined to sign the affidavit, and the husband of one of these did sign it. There was no proof whatever offered by the city to controvert that offered by the appellant on this score; the city contenting itself with the legislative determination of its council that the prohibition of gasoline and oil service stations within the area in question was needed because of the need of protection to the safety, health, public morals, or general welfare of that community. The chancellor held the ordinance valid and refused the appellant the injunction it sought. From the judgment dismissing appellant's petition, this appeal is prosecuted.
At the outset it must be, as indeed it was and is, conceded that the city of Bowling Green, in the exercise of its police power, has the authority to pass a zoning ordinance reasonably necessary for the preservation of public health, morals, safety, and general welfare of the community. Metzenbaum, The Law of Zoning, passim; Village of Euclid, Ohio, v. Ambler Realty Co.,
"Generally speaking, the courts uphold such regulatory measures if they are related to health, safety, morals, and the general welfare of the community. Usually upon a strict scrutiny of such laws, if the courts find that they are not related in some way to health, safety, morals, and general welfare, they will be declared invalid as an unconstitutional exercise of power by the legislative branch of the government."
The phrase "general welfare," of course, is a very broad one, and it is quite apparent from even a casual reading of the cases bearing on zoning problems that the *365
element of "the protection of the value and usefulness of urban land and the assurance of such orderliness in municipal growth as will facilitate the execution of the city plan and the economical provision of public services" (quoted from Zoning — An Analysis of the Purposes and Legal Sanctions, by Edward D. Landels, American Bar Association Journal, March, 1931, page 163), comes within its purview. It is problematical whether æsthetic considerations do or not; the present state of the authorities perhaps being that they do not. See MacRae v. City of Fayetteville,
The necessity for the exercise of the zoning power may be made to appear either from existing conditions or reasonable anticipation of future growth and development. It must be remembered, however, that in the Euclid Village decision the Supreme Court said in effect that, although it gave its validation to the fundamental theory and philosophy of zoning, yet it did not thereby intend to grant a blanket indorsement of every instance of zoning because, if and when a situation would be presented wherein zoning had been employed for an unwarranted purpose or in an unreasonable manner, the court would not approve thereof, but would exercise the right to declare the same unconstitutional. The court exercised this reservation which it retained to itself in the Euclid Village decision in the case of Nectow v. City of Cambridge,
"The law is clear — its applicability to various circumstances and to situations brought about by the complexity of our civilization is ofttimes difficult. . . . So the real question here, in view of these decisions [of the Supreme Court], is whether the restriction imposed by the zoning ordinance as applied to the particular situation of each separate piece of property involved in the different causes bears any substantial relation to the public health, the public morals, the public safety or the public welfare in its proper sense'."
Pursuing this thought further, we find that, in the case of Village of Terrace Park v. Errett,
"One consideration in deciding whether limitations on private property, to be implied in favor of the police power, are exceeded, is the degree in which *367 the values incident to the property are diminished by the regulation in question, and this is to be determined from the facts of the particular case. . . . The general rule, at least, is that, if regulation goes too far it will be recognized as a taking for which compensation must be paid." (Italics ours.)
The court found that the facts disclosed in the record established that the prohibition of the use of the locus in question as a gravel pit would destroy almost entirely its substantial value, and that the health, comfort, and general welfare of the community would not be imperiled or substantially affected by the operation of the lot as a gravel pit despite the legislative determination involved in the passage of the ordinance to the contrary. On this finding the court held that the zoning ordinance in question, as applied to the particular locus in quo, was invalid. To the same effect, and with the same result, are the cases of City of Youngstown v. Kahn Bros. Bldg. Co., supra; Village of University Heights v. Cleveland Jewish Orphans' Home (C.C.A.)
At all events, in the instant case, as we have seen, the maintenance and operation of the service station in question will not adversely affect the safety, morals, health, or public welfare of the community in which it is located; that the legislative determination to the contrary is completely refuted by the facts, which, save for the legislative determination, are uncontradicted in the record, and that the ousting of this service station will destroy about all the economic value the building and lot upon which it is located have. In such state of case, the zoning ordinance as applied to the particular locus in question is clearly invalid, and the chancellor should have so held.
His judgment is therefore reversed, with instructions to enter a judgment adjudging the ordinance in question as applied to the locus in question invalid, and an injunction enjoining the further prosecution under such ordinance of the appellant or its employees because of the continuance of the operation and maintenance of this service station.
Whole court sitting.