289 So. 2d 338 | La. Ct. App. | 1973
Lead Opinion
Plaintiffs are property owners in a residential subdivision located in the City of Baton Rouge; defendants are Gulf States Utilities Company (hereinafter called “Gulf States”) and the Board of Adjustment of East Baton Rouge Parish (hereafter called the “Board”).
Plaintiffs bring two separate suits: the first seeking an injunction against Gulf States prohibiting this utility company from erecting an electric power substation on Lot 6 of a resubdivision of Lot 25, situated on the rear portion of Moss Side Place Subdivision, in the City of Baton Rouge; the second seeking the cancellation of an exception to the zoning classification granted by the Board permitting the construction of such substation. The two suits were consolidated for trial, and it is conceded that the parties at interest in the litigation are the plaintiffs and Gulf States.
Many of the facts are undisputed. It is established by the evidence taken in the trial court that engineering studies support the need of another substation between the general area of Lee Drive and Essen Lane, in order for Gulf States to properly serve the electrical users in this vicinity. Following their studies Gulf States purchased the site in question, and in late 1971 began the construction of the substation. Apparently no consideration was given by Gulf States to the fact that the property was zoned residential. Gulf States at some juncture learned that a substation and its use was not permitted at the subject locale under the zoning regulations, and, in order for its intended use of the property to be effectuated, an application was filed with the Board of Adjustment of East Baton Rouge Parish for the issuance of an exception to the zoning regulations.
On January 5, 1972 Gulf States applied to the Board, and, after a hearing on February 5, 1972 at which witnesses for both
The initial suit filed in District Court against Gulf States urged that the substation violated both the zoning laws and the Moss Side Place Subdivision restrictions. About one month later plaintiffs, realizing that the original suit would not accomplish in itself the relief desired, applied for a writ of certiorari, requesting a review of the Board’s decision under LSA-R.S. 33 4727.
After the consolidated cases were tried, the trial court reversed the action of the Board, holding that Gulf States had not made a showing of “compelling necessity.” The trial court in its reasons for judgment noted, in granting the exception to the zoning regulations, that the Board made no reference to any finding of “compelling necessity.” In defining this phrase, the trial court concluded that it meant “the absence of any alternative.” The judgment enjoined Gulf States from erecting the substation on the authority of the exception granted by the Board, and cancelled the Board’s order.
From this judgment Gulf States has appealed alleging errors by the trial court: (1) in reversing the decision of the Board, a quasi-judicial body, in the absence of any evidence rebutting the presumption of the validity of the Board’s action; (2) in holding that the terminology “compelling necessity” used in Sec. 8:402 of the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Baton Rouge and Parish of East Baton Rouge requires the showing of an “absence of any alternative” location before the Board can grant with propriety a valid exception to the zoning regulations.
While the courts should not interject their opinions into zoning cases where the administrative agency has carried out properly the mandate of its governing ordinance or statute, the decisions of zoning boards are subject to judicial review, and where the board violates its ordinance, the courts will reverse. State v. Zoning Board of Appeal and Adjustment, 221 La. 941, 60 So.2d 880 (1952). If, for example, the test of granting a variance is “unusual hardship or difficulty,” the board is without authority to authorize a variance in the absence of such a showing. Uptown Improvement Ass’n v. Board of Zoning Adjust, 243 So.2d 345 (La.App. 4 Cir. 1971). Where the ordinance requires the showing of a “compelling necessity” as in the instant case we believe as did the trial court that the Board must require the applicant for an adjustment to make a showing of compelling necessity.
We find, after reviewing the record, that we agree with the analysis of the trial court. We quote with approval the reasons assigned for reversing the Board:
“The authority for permitting a variation in the use of residential property is found in Section 8:402 of the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Baton Rouge and Parish of East Baton Rouge. This section provides in part that one of the recognized exceptions is the ‘use of premises for public utility and railroad purposes; provided that the Board shall find some compelling necessity for the use . . .’ Unfortunately, in its written reasons for the decision to grant the requested variation, the Board of Adjustment made no reference to a finding of compelling necessity. This opinion reads in pertinent part:
‘It is the opinion of the Members of the Board of Adjustment after inspection of the said property and the holding of the public hearing in which we listened to both parties concerned, that we will grant Gulf States the right to continue construction of the sub-station.
We believe that because of the distance of the sub-station from any local residents that it will not decrease real estate*341 values in this area along with the fact that Gulf States will landscape the entire sub-station site.’
“The Court is therefore faced with the necessity of deciding whether the above constitutes a finding of ‘compelling necessity’, and if not, whether the defendant made a sufficient showing of ‘compelling necessity’ to sustain the decision.
“The Court has not been cited any cases, nor has it been able to locate any construing the term ‘compelling necessity’. As a consequence, the Court must necessarily resort to other means of interpretation.
“Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary defines necessary and necessity as follows:
‘Necessary — la of an inevitable nature: INESCAPABLE b(l): logically unavoidable (2)that cannot be denied without contradiction c: PREDETERMINED d:
COMPULSORY 2: absolutely needed: REQUIRED
Necessity — 1: the quality or state of being necessary: INDISPENSABILITY 2a: pressure of circumstance b: natural compulsion (physical) c: impossibility of a contrary order or condition 3: the quality or state of being in need: esp: POVERTY 4a: something that is necessary : REQUIREMENT b: an urgent need or desire’
Webster’s New International Dictionary defines compelling as:
‘Forcing attention, acquiescence or obedience; having irresistible attraction or urgency . . . ’
It can therefore be seen that the enactors of Section 8:402 envisioned a finding which contemplates the absence of any alternative, and means much more than mere convenience or desirability.
“The Court has examined the minutes of the Board of Adjustment meeting, and has considered in detail the evidence presented before it. It concludes that while defendant has shown a need for a substation in the area of Moss Side Place and the appropriateness of this particular site, it has not shown the compelling necessity required by the Zoning Ordinance.
“This conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the point of the violation of the restrictions of the subdivision. Nevertheless, in order to make the case complete, the Court makes the following observations: There can be little question but that an expropriating body or corporation will not be prevented from utilizing private property by the presence of restrictive covenants. LSA R.S. 19:1, Rev.Civ.Code Art. 2626. With respect to a voluntary conveyance, however, the issue is not so clear. A dis-positive finding on this point does not seem to have been made by our courts, and decisions in other jurisdictions are significant only in that they too apparently concede an expropriation is not barred by restrictions, and differ only on the question of whether the property owners who enjoy said restrictions are entitled to damages as a consequence of the taking. This being the present state of the jurisprudence, the Court is of the opinion that there is no basis in reason to distinguish the instance where a public utility chooses to purchase from the instance where it elects to expropriate. The same result should attach, and this Court so holds.
“While there was a rule issued in Suit No. 154,390, that rule was passed and the suit was consolidated with No. 154,815 and heard on the merits.
“For the above reasons there will be judgment herein in Suit No. 154,390, enjoining and prohibiting defendant, its agents or employees and all other persons, firms or corporations acting or claiming to act in its behalf from proceeding with the construction of an electrical transformer substation in Moss Side Place on the authority of the Board of Adjustment opinion rendered on February 11, 1972.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed at appellant’s costs.
Affirmed.
TUCKER, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent from the decision of the majority of this court in affirming the judgment of the trial court, which set aside the exception to the zoning regulations granted by the Board of Adjustment of the Parish of East Baton Rouge to Gulf States Utilities Company allowing the erection of an electric power substation on the subject property, and maintaining the injunction against Gulf States from the construction of the substation.
The issue which presents the greatest significance in the resolution of these consolidated cases is whether or not the trial court was correct in setting aside the exception to the zoning law granted to the defendant by the Board of Adjustment. The record in my opinion does not support the judgment of the trial court or the majority decision of this court setting aside the exception granted by the Board, a quasi-judicial body.
The cases are legion which hold that there is attached to the acts of Boards, performing their functions in a quasi-judicial character, a presumption of validity, and any person, entity or group of individuals aggrieved by the actions of such Boards, bear the burden of rebutting this presumption of legality. See State v. Board of Zoning Adjustments of City of New Orleans, 197 So.2d 916 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1967). This burden imposes the duty on a relator attacking the validity of such a Board’s action to show an abuse of the body’s discretion, its lack of jurisdiction, or that its action was arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable and without support in law. See State v. Jefferson Parish School Board, 206 La. 317, 19 So.2d 153 (1944).
The law looks with substantial disfavor when courts interfere with the actions of Boards and Commissions having quasi-judicial status, in the absence of a clear showing of a violation of such a body’s considerable discretion. A court should be careful not to usurp the functions of such quasi-judicial bodies where the commission has not acted arbitrarily. See Plantation Anhydrous A. Corp. v. Anhydrous A. Commission, 234 La. 869, 101 So.2d 699 (1958).
Applying the accepted precepts of law to the facts presented here, I simply am unable to find evidence in the record which rebuts and overcomes the presumption of the validity of the exception to the zoning law granted to Gulf States by the Board of Adjustment. The mere fact that the Board’s letter allowing the exception did not recite the phrase “compelling necessity” for the construction of the substation in no sense establishes that the Board did not find a compelling necessity for the construction. In order for the Board to grant the exception, the Zoning Ordinance Sec. 8:402 specifically required it to make such a finding before issuing the exception, and its granting of the exception creates the presumption that it acted in a valid and lawful manner. As so aptly put by counsel for Gulf States the evidence adduced at the court trial served to buttress and support the propriety and validity of the Board’s action.
I entertain doubt that the zoning regulations of East Baton Rouge Parish require a utility to prove that there is a “compelling necessity” for the construction of a power distribution adjunct at a specific location in order to obtain an exception to a zoning classification. However the evidence adduced obviates the necessity of considering this question. The plaintiffs referred to eight alternative sites, which they considered preferable to the lot chosen by Gulf States. As it turned out each such alternative site bore the same zoning classification
The standard imposed on the defendant utility by the majority’s decision will not stand muster. The same arguments lev-elled against Lot 6 for its use as a substation would be just as cogent and prohibitive with respect to the alternative sites suggested by the plaintiffs.
The need for the substation in the general area of the subject property is essentially uncontested and without question. The presumption of the validity of the exception granted the utility company by the Board of Adjustment for the construction of the substation is virtually unassailed.
The Moss Side Place restrictive covenants have no bearing on the outcome of these consolidated cases.
I believe that the decision of the majority is not supported by the law or the jurisprudence.