The sole question, therefore, before us is whether or not the defendant, having found that the relator’s property was in a residential district, had power because of that fact to refuse her a permit to build a gasoline filling, station upon the lot in question. In Pritz v. Messer,
If, however, the effect of Youngstown v. Kahn could be avoided and an ordinance passed excluding filling stations from a particular block of the city it appears in this case that no such ordinance has been passed. Section 14 of the ordinance under consideration provides that in a residence district no building shall be erected except those named in that section, and that section does not include gasoline filling stations. Section' 14 does not, however, undertake to say that the district in which the relator’s lot is located is a residence district. Evidently when this ordinance w,as passed in 1927 council appreciated the difficulties of passing a comprehensive zoning ordinance covering the entire city and as a temporary expedient enacted Section 13 as follows:
“In the interest of public health, . safety, convenience, appearance ,and general welfare, the City of Athens, Ohio, shall be divided into three kinds of districts, viz: residence, business and industrial. Until a zoning ordiance is passed in the city definitely defining such districts the inspector of buildings shall determine what parts of the city belong in either of these three districts. His decision shall be subject to approval by the mayor and a majority of the members elected to council.”
The infirmaties of this section are twofold. It avows that one of its purposes is to conserve the public convenience and appearance. With that purpose we are in sympathy. It offends one’s sense of propriety that the beauty of a neighborhood should be violated by a filling station that may conform to the requirements of health, safety and morals and yet offend all the canons of good taste. It seems unfortunate that the police power is adequate to prohibit offensive sounds and smells but is helpless against things that are only ugly in appearance. We are, however, admonished by Judge Allen in Youngstown v. Kahn, and such is the undoubted rule, that the police power can not be invoked by esthetic considerations; that zoning ordinances seeking to promote or portect the beautiful are not authorized and that such regulations can only be sustained to protect or perserve the public health, morals or safety. So far, therefore, as this ordinance sought to preserve the “appearance” of the neighborhood it was unauthorized by law.
If it should be urged, however, that this section of the ordinance might be sustained because it was in the interest of public health and safety as well as in the interest of the public appearance, Section 13 encounters another and, as we view it, insuperable difficulty. It indicates the purpose of council at some time to pass a general zoning ordinance. Until such general ordinance is passed it provides as a stopgap measure that the inspector of buildings shall determine what parts of the city belong in either of the three kinds of districts contemplated. That is to say, the council until such time as it determines for itself *535 what territory shall be a residence district delegates to an administrative officer the power to so determine. If the council has power to delegate its authority in this behalf for two years or two days it has like authority to perpetually abdicate its legislative powers in behalf of a ministerial officer. This it can not do. A municipal council can not delegate to another municipal officer the power to decide upon legislative matters properly resting in the judgment and discretion of the council. The members of a council are chosen by the people to legislate and the public is entitled to the judgment and discretion of those elected for that purpose and not to the judgment and discretion of some other to whom the council may confide it. 19 Ruling Case Law 869. 12 A. L. R. 1436.
The cases are numerous where a legislative body fixes a standard and then delegates to an administrative officer the power of determining 'whether in particular instances such standard is conformed to. That is not, however, this case. Certainly there is nothing that-can come before the council of greater moment than the prescription of the limited uses to which real property may be put. It thereby affects, for better or worse, the value of all property in that locality. It is only in recent years that such power has been sustained at all, and certainly nowhere has it ever been determined that such great power can be delegated by a legislative body to a ministerial officer.
The council was without authority pending the passage of a general zoning ordinance to confer upon the defendant the power claimed by him by virtue of Section 13. That section ;of the ordinance is void.
The relator was entitled to a permit under Section 3 of the ordinance, which is admittedly a valid section.
A writ of mandamus is awarded as prayed for.
