Armin Grosz, Sarah Grosz and Naftali Grosz v. The City of Miami Beach, Florida

721 F.2d 729, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 14384
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 1983
Docket82-5476
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 721 F.2d 729 (Armin Grosz, Sarah Grosz and Naftali Grosz v. The City of Miami Beach, Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armin Grosz, Sarah Grosz and Naftali Grosz v. The City of Miami Beach, Florida, 721 F.2d 729, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 14384 (11th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Senior Circuit Judge:

This case calls for the accommodation of two important values, both embodied in the spirit and letter of the Constitution: free exercise of religion and the effective use by *731 a state of its police powers. That accommodation consists of a balancing process, leading to a scheme of compromise between the two values that best accords with constitutional mandates. The accommodation we make today, between Appellees’ interest in holding religious services in their home and the zoning powers of the City of Miami Beach (“the City”), arises out of the following facts.

I. FACTS

A joint stipulation of facts filed in the court below reveals the background of this case.

1. In 1977 plaintiffs, United States citizens, purchased property at 3401 Prairie Drive, Miami Beach, Florida. Naftali and Sarah Grosz use the house as their principal residence, and Armin Grosz lives there during parts of the year. In addition to a house, the property includes a separate building which was previously used as a garage and a recreational room.
2. For many decades prior to this purchase, the property has been zoned RS-4 by the City, for single-family residential use, and plaintiffs bought the house subject to a standard deed restriction expressly citing this single-family residential restriction. Plaintiffs have not requested rezoning of the property.
3. Some years after the purchase, plaintiffs applied for permits for internal modifications to the accessory structure, stating that the building would be remodeled for “playroom use.” They were specifically informed by the City that the structure could not be remodeled as a religious institution. The accessory structure was not externally modified, but plaintiffs specifically stocked the inside of the building for group religious services, including benches to seat over 30 persons, Torahs, Arks, a Menorah, skull caps, an eternal light, numerous prayer books, shawls, and other items of religious significance. Internally the structure has much of the physical indicia of a small synagogue or “shul,” and is not operated as a playroom. Externally the building was not modified.
4. Prior to the remodeling, plaintiffs were aware that Miami Beach Zoning Ordinance No. 1891 had been construed by the City to prohibit churches, synagogues and similarly organized religious congregations in single-family residential zones, and that this construction had been upheld by the State and Federal trial and appellate courts.
5. Naftali Grosz, a Rabbi and the leader of an orthodox Jewish sect, is aged and somewhat infirm but is not immobile. It is a requirement of his religion to conduct religious services twice daily in a congregation of at least ten adult males, and it is convenient for Naftali Grosz to use this structure for that purpose. For many years the Grosz family has conducted group religious services in whichever home they have occupied. Plaintiffs could, however, conduct such services in many other areas within the City of Miami Beach, including an area within four blocks of their home.
6. Most of the congregation at the Grosz home are friends, family members or neighbors. The typical congregation is between ten and twenty males who regularly assemble at the building for religious services. However, occasionally (generally in the winter months and on Saturdays) the congregation contains as many as fifty persons, some of whom are neither friends, family members or neighbors. Plaintiffs do not exclude members of the public from attending these services and on rare occasions, in order to ensure the presence of ten adult males, have solicited persons to attend the services. Because Naftali Grosz is a leader of a particular orthodox Jewish sect, nonresidents of Miami Beach who belong to the sect use the accessory building as their principal or sole place of worship visiting South Florida. Naftali Grosz has referred to the congregation as a shul, and a witness, who is a neighbor of plaintiffs, has testified that persons have come to her house asking for directions to the “Grosz shul.” Plaintiffs would not refuse *732 contributions for the services, but do not solicit such contributions.
7. The religious services last one-half hour in the morning and one-half hour in the late afternoon every day. On Saturdays and religious holidays each service may take two to three hours. Daily services usually cause no substantial disturbance to the neighborhood, but well-attended services have disturbed neighbors as a result of persons seeking directions to the Grosz shul, as a result of chanting and singing during the services, and as a result of the occasionally large congregations of worshippers at the property.
8. On February 6, 1981, the plaintiffs were given a “notice of violation” by the City threatening prosecution which would result in conviction of a misdemeanor charge. This notice of violation of the zoning ordinance was prompted by citizen complaints to the City.
9. The City did not and would not prosecute plaintiffs for praying in their home with ten friends, neighbors, and relatives, even on a regular basis, but rather because of the specific conduct described above. The City of Miami Beach permits churches, synagogues, and other religious institutions to operate freely in every zoning district of the City except the RS-4 single-family district and has enforced the single-family residential limitation equally against Christian, Jewish and “non-traditional” religious groups. Numerous other residential zones of the City, constituting at least 50% of the City’s territory, specifically and expressly list churches and synagogues as permitted users. 1

The “notice of violation,” mentioned in the stipulations was issued because of the City’s view that Appellees’ twice daily performance of religious ceremonies on their property conflicts with use restrictions embodied in City Ordinance No. 1891 § 6-1 (“the Ordinance”). 2 This conclusion stems from the City’s position that religious ceremonies conducted on the Grosz property occasionally constitute organized, publicly attended religious services. 3

II. PROCEDURE BELOW AND ISSUE ON APPEAL

Appellees sued the City in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, seeking a determination that the Ordinance is unconstitutional on its face because of overbreadth and vagueness, and unconstitutional as it was sought to be applied to them. Appellees prayed for declaratory and injunctive relief and damages. Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court granted a preliminary injunction which restrained the City from bringing criminal prosecutions against Ap-pellees based on “conduct or circumstances which were the subject of the notice of violation.” The court denied the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment, finding that genuine issues of material fact still existed. Because both parties were deter *733

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Bluebook (online)
721 F.2d 729, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 14384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armin-grosz-sarah-grosz-and-naftali-grosz-v-the-city-of-miami-beach-ca11-1983.