As аt a cornhusking bee, some shucking needs to be done in this case to get down to the major issues presented by this appeal. So we begin by discussing and discarding the general claim of constitutional infirmity in any town in this state providing for conditional use permits as to a commercial operation in an area zoned agriсultural.
Free speech. Appellant contends that the prohibition without use permit of his skeet-shooting range operation is “an abridgement of the right of free speech and of assembly.” 1 As to free speech, while more than verbal or written communication may be involved, we do not see how running the range 'or pulling the trigger comes within a country mile of the constitutional protection. As to the right of assembly, the operation of a commercial enterprise for profit, contrary to a zoning ordinance, comes no closer to the right spelled out and protected.
Equal protection. Appellant’s claim of denial of equal protection aрparently rests on the claim that the ordinance was enforced, or perhaps applicable, only to him. If a classification or category in a zoning ordinance is reasonable, it makes no difference that only one person or enterprise happens to come within such classificatiоn. Even if the proof were, and here it is not, that the town enforced the ordinance in this instance, and not in others, this would not in itself establish a violation of the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment. 2
*648 Due process. Appellant’s claim is that the zoning ordinance, as amended, is an interference and a deprivation of constitutional privileges and immunities . . imposed without due process of law, specifically substantive due process as required by the fourteenth amendment.” 3 We have searched the record to find any reasonable basis for such claim of denial of due process. We have gone through appellant’s brief for authority for the claim of applicability of due process to this situation. We find neither basis in fact nor authority in law for the contention made.
Police power. Appellant’s claim is that by requiring a restrictive permit for the operation of his recreational enterprise, the ordinance exceeds the policе power of the state, and the delegation of zoning power under the statute, 4 . . the two being substantially co-ordinate in extent, . . .” 5 Both the constitutional and statutory power to zone are broad, not narrow, 6 and include the *649 right to use conditional use permits, 7 with control of noise specifically held to be a proper consideration or factor in requiring a сonditional use permit. 8 Neither constitutional nor statutory powers were here exceeded.
With the constitutional challenges to the right of any town to provide for conditional use permits as to commercial recreational operations in an agricultural district thus rejected, we turn to the claim that this оrdinance in this case is unconstitutionally vague. In part, this is an attack on sections of the ordinance relating to residential, commercial and industrial zoning areas, not here involved. Appellant has no standing to raise these matters since they do not affect his rights. 9 As to the *650 claim of vagueness in provisions dealing with agricultural areas, and conditional use permits, the ordinance lists with considerable and commendable particularity the uses of land covered and provided for.
Appellant also contends that there are not, in the zoning ordinance as amended, adequate guidelines for the issuance of conditional use pеrmits. After setting forth the purposes of the ordinance, the zoning ordinance (Ordinance No. 20) provides in sec. 1: “The provisions of this ordinance shall be held to be minimum requirements adopted to promote the health, safety, morals, comfort, prosperity and general welfare of the Town of Richmond As to the issuance of conditional use permits, Amendment No. 6 provides that an application for a conditional use should be made on a form provided by the town clerk. The form shall “show the Applicant’s Name, Address, Description of the property to which the conditional use is to be extended, and shall provide such other information as the Town Board may deem necessary to establish the applicant’s need and intent for a conditional use.” The application must also contain a legal description of the property involved.
Our court has recognized that in zoning matters of the type before us, the town board or city council is “faced with the practical difficulty of defining with precision in advance the conditions under which permits shall be granted.” 10 What is to be avoided is the exercise of *651 purely arbitrary power. 11 Thus, where the “location and plan of operation” was required to be submitted to the city council, an exceptional or conditional use permit requirement was held sufficient as to the operation of a sand and gravel pit in an agricultural area. 12 Likewise, in a most recent case in this state on the subject, where the “location and plan of operation” of the use of the land was required to be submitted to and approved by a planning commission, a conditional use permit requirement аs to gasoline service stations in a zoned district was upheld. 13 With Amendment No. 6 requiring a description of the property to which the conditional use is to be extended, and providing that the town board may require such other information from the applicant “as *652 the Town Board may deem necessary to establish the apрlicant’s need and intent for a conditional use,” we hold the guidelines or criteria for issuance of a conditional use permit to be adequate or sufficient.
Appellant, additionally, claims that his operation of the skeet-shooting ranges is a nonconforming use, 14 and that, if it is not, the town board is estopped from dеnying that his use of the land is a nonconforming use. 15 Appellant concedes that his commercial skeet-shooting ranges went into operation after the zoning ordinance was adopted but contends, that, before Amendment No. 6 was adopted, his use of the land for the ranges was permitted by the ordinance as a “public recreational and community center building and grounds.” 16 Such community center use was permitted under the ordinance in residential and agricultural zone areas. The appellant’s shooting range was open to the public, or, at least, that portion of the public willing to pay a fee to use the facilities. But thе reference in the ordinance goes beyond such being open for a commercial purpose to the public. A tavern or dance hall may serve a recreational or community center function, but that does not mean that it qualifies as a “public recreational and community center building and grounds,” аs referred to in this zoning ordinance. Neither *653 does a skeet-shooting range, operated for profit as a commercial enterprise by a private owner. The reference is to building and grounds used solely for a public purpose, not to commercial businesses open to the public. It follows that the trial сourt was entirely correct in holding that Amendment No. 6 “was passed, in part at least, for the benefit of the defendant.” Without it there was no way for the skeet-shooting range to operate under the ordinance in an agricultural area.
As to the claim that the town board is here estopped, the appellant appears to rely on his testimony that, in the late spring or early summer of 1967, he and his brother were told by the town board that “nothing in the ordinance” (No. 20) prohibited his planned use of the land. However, there was nothing in the town board minutes to support this contention, and the trial court specifically found that the evidence doеs not support the contention that such statement was made by the town board. Additionally, there is the claim that, at a town board meeting where a neighbor had gone to complain of the skeet-shooting noise, such neighbor was told that there was no ordinance to cover skeet shooting. Without stating that such statement wоuld, at such time and under such circumstances, be sufficient to create estoppel, we note that there is no evidence that the defendant was at such meeting. Defendant testified that he did not know whether or not he was present. Actually the evidence here is that the defendant was told, before Amendment No. 6 was рassed, that his commercial enterprise was not in compliance with the zoning ordinance. That the town board did not proceed against him then does not bar the town board from future enforcement of the ordinance. 17 Even if the facts were otherwise, appellant *654 would confront the holding of this court that estoppel “ ‘will not lie against a municipality so as to bar it from enforcing an ordinance enacted pursuant to the police power.’ ” 18 The ordinance and amendment here are enactments made pursuant to the police power of the state as statutorily delegated to the town boards.
Rejecting each and all of the constitutional chаllenges to the zoning ordinance here involved, and finding that this appellant was not a nonconforming user and that the town board was not estopped from denying his status to be such, nothing remains except to affirm the conclusion reached by the trial court that the appellant was operating his commercial skеet-shooting range under a conditional use permit, the conditions of which he violated. We agree with the trial court that it follows that the conditional use permit granted this appellant is to be voided. The judgment of the trial court enjoining activities on appellant’s premises of a commercial nature which are listed as conditional uses in sec. 5, Amendment No. 6, is affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
See: Amendment I, U. S. Const. See also: Wis. Const., art. I, secs. 3 and 4.
State ex rel. Cities Service Oil Co. v. Board of Appeals
(1963),
Appellant’s Brief, page 9.
Sec. 60.74 (1) (a) 1, Stats., providing that, in any county which has not adopted a county zoning ordinance, any town may by ordinance: “1. Regulate, restrict and determine the areas within which agriculture, forestry and recreation may be conducted, the location of roads, schools, trades and industries, the location, height, bulk, number of stories and size of buildings and other structures, the percentage of lot which may be occupied, size of yards, courts and other open spaces, the density and distribution of population, and the location of buildings designed for specified uses, and establish districts of such number, shape and area as may be necessary for such purрoses; . . .”
Appellant’s Brief, page 11.
State ex rel. American Oil Co. v. Bessent
(1965),
State ex rel. Skelly Oil Co. v. Common Council
(1973),
Id.
at page 701, this court holding: “ ‘By this device, certain uses (e.g., gasoline service stations, electric substations, hospitals, schools, churches, country clubs, and the like) which may be considered essentially desirable to the community, but which should not be authorized generally in a particular zone because of considerations such as current and anticipated traffic congestion, population density,
noise,
effect on adjoining land values, or other considerations involving public health, safety, or genеral welfare, may be permitted upon a proposed site depending upon the facts and circumstances of the particular case.’ ” (Quoting with approval from
Zylka v. Crystal
(1969),
Schmidt v. Local Affairs & Development Dept.
(1968),
Lerner v. Delavan
(1930),
Juneau v. Badger Co-operative Oil Co.
(1938),
Smith v. Brookfield
(1956),
State ex rel. American Oil Co. v. Bessent, supra, footnote 6, this court stating at page 551: “The purpose of submitting the location and plan of operation is to furnish sufficient data to the planning commission for its determination that the proposed building or land use by the аpplicant does not defeat the purposes and the objectives of the zoning plan by a permitted use.”
See: Walworth County v. Hartwell
(1974),
See: City of Milwaukee v. Milwaukee County
(1965),
Under Ordinance No. 20, sec. 4, No. 2, “public recreational and community center building and grounds” are permitted uses in residential districts. Under sec. 5, No. 1, any use permitted in a residential district is permitted in an agricultural district.
Westgate Hotel, Inc. v. Krumbiegel
(1968),
Milwaukee v. Leavitt
(1966),
“While municipal and other government units are not wholly immune from application of the doctrine of equitable estoppel, this court is firmly committed to the principle that estoppel ‘will not lie against a municipality so as to bar it from enforcing an ordinance enacted pursuant to the police power.’ ” (Quoting
Milwaukee v. Milwaukee Amusement, Inc.
(1964),
