At issue in this cause is the future use of an undeveloped parcel of real property acquired by Union Oil in December 1966. The property is zoned “R-10, Low Density Residence,” which, under the Worthington zoning system, limits the use of the property, in general, to single-family residential use. Union Oil desires to use its property as the site of a combination gasoline service station and car wash. In Worthington such a use is restricted to property zoned “C-4, Highway and Automotive Services.”
Preliminarily, we address the city’s argument that this cause has been rendered moot by the April 9, 1979, adoption of an ordinance rezoning Union Oil’s property from the R-10 classification to the “C-3, Institutions and Offices” classification.
In Ohio, zoning legislation enacted subsequent to the filing of an application for a building permit does not affect the property owner’s right to receive the permit. Gibson v. Oberlin (1960),
In 1966, the city adopted a “Comprehensive Plan” as a generalized guide for future development in Worthington. The city council, however, as the legislative zoning authority, never rezoned the city as a whole to accord with the zoning suggestions of the plan. Council deferred consideration of rezoning until it had opportunity to act upon individual rezoning applications sought by property owners in connection with specific proposed uses of their parcels of property.
This court has acknowledged that a property owner may bring a declaratory judgment action to challenge the constitutionality of existing zoning legislation as it applies to a specific parcel of property to proscribe the property owner’s proposed use of the property. Driscoll v. Austintown Associates (1975),
Union Oil argues that by declaring existing zoning unconstitutional the court fulfills its responsibilities and should go no further and that, pending adoption of new zoning legislation, the property technically is “unzoned.” The property owner thereafter presumably would be entitled to use the property for any legal purpose.
In Ed Zaagman, Inc., v. Kentwood (1979),
“***Although a technically logical position,**’“restricting the Court’s declaratory powers in such an absolute manner may operate to produce a result neither generally prayed nor argued for by an aggrieved landowner and potentially incompatible with the orderly development of the general community or abutting parcels of property.”
The Michigan court rejected as “impractical and inequitable” the theory that the court should do no more than adjudicate the unconstitutionality of the existing zoning of a specific parcel of property. ■
We agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court’s order was improper. When real property is rezoned from one use classification to another, any one of the several uses permitted under the new classification is legitimized. Where a court orders the use classification of property changed, uses may be authorized for which no evidence of reasonableness has been presented. The record clearly indicates that the city’s preference for the parcel, were the R-10 classification to fail, was that it be zoned C-3, and it can be inferred that the trial court merely deferred to what it believed the city’s wishes were in this cause. Nevertheless, we believe the trial court exceeded its proper judicial role in zoning matters in ordering the property rezoned to a substitute zoning classification. As the Court of Appeals noted:
“It is entirely probable that any given property could be zoned in any one of several classifications and that any one of the several classifications would survive a constitutional attack based upon the ground that the classification was unreasonable, arbitrary and confiscatory and not based upon health, safety, moral and welfare considerations***. The choice between various reasonable alternatives is best left to the legislative body, rather than being usurped by the judiciary.”
Union Oil has been forced by the city’s failure over a period of time to realistically zone the subject property to invest time and other resources in order to relieve its property from the burden of unconstitutional zoning restrictions. However, it does not necessarily follow from the fact that one zoning classification precluding service station use cannot be constitutionally applied, that the city of Worthington may not proscribe service station use of the property. We believe the city should be given an opportunity to rezone the property to a use classification with constitutional restrictions.
In the event the zoning authority either fails to rezone or fails to rezone the property in a constitutionally permissible manner, the court shall examine the reasonableness of the proposed use, and, upon finding that use to be reasonable, enjoin the city from interfering with it.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
