Baura v. Thomasma

32 N.W.2d 369, 321 Mich. 139, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 463
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1948
DocketDocket No. 14, Calendar No. 43,921.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 32 N.W.2d 369 (Baura v. Thomasma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baura v. Thomasma, 32 N.W.2d 369, 321 Mich. 139, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 463 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

*141 Bushnell, C. J.

Defendants Thomasma Brothers have been engaged in a wholesale meat business in the city of Grand Rapids since 1916, which was started by their parents in 1885. They have two plants, in which they slaughter animals, process and pack meats. In December of 1942 they secured an option on about four acres of land on Turner avenue, near the outskirts of the city in a commercial zone designated as an “E” industrial district, where the premises may be used for any purpose not in conflict with the ordinances of the city. Under the Grand Rapids zoning ordinance an application to the zoning board of appeals is required if the proposed use in an “E” zone is any one of the 16 named therein. Among these listed uses are: 1. Abattoir, and 14. Stockyards or slaughter of animals.

In accordance with this ordinance, defendants, on December 24, 1942, filed an application with the board of zoning appeals for permission to use the premises known as 1924 Turner avenue, N.W., for “storage and slaughtering of animals for own use.” In accordance- with plans attached thereto, the size of the proposed building was given as 15 feet wide, 40 feet long, 12 feet high. The following statement was included in the application:

“The location of the premises is on the east side of Turner with a northern extremity as the city limits; to the south and rear is the city dump; to the immediate west is vacant property, manufacturing, including petroleum refining. There are only two houses in the block across the street, and approximately 400 ft. away. The use will be strictly for killing for own use and is essential because of necessity for supplying meat in this area. There will be no offensive odors because the offal will be immediately carried away and there will be no rendering.”

*142 Upon the receipt of this application, according to the testimony of the secretary of the zoning board of appeals, post-card notices were sent to property owners within a radius of 300 feet, stating that the board would meet on January 15, 1943, at 1 o’clock for the purpose of considering the Thomasma application. In addition to mailing the post cards, a notice required by the ordinance was published in the Grand Rapids Herald on December 30 and 31, 1942, and January 4, 1943, to the same effect, but without a designation therein of the hour of meeting. It should be noted here that plaintiffs, who are property owners in the vicinity of the land in question, insist that the post-card notices were not sent to all property owners within 300 feet.

The minutes of the board of zoning appeals disclose that at the hearing on January 15,1943, certain interested parties were in attendance, and the attorney for Thomasma Brothers stated that his clients proposed to spend from $25,000 to $35,000 in the improvement of the property, and that, according to the testimony of a Doctor Meyer, the operation of the proposed improvements would not be obnoxious. A representative of the State land board and another property owner, who were present; made no objections. Plaintiff Fred Marger, who lives in his own home at 1905 Turner, however, did object. Defendants’ application was approved by a vote of 5 to 1. The minutes of the board are silent as to protests by others but, according to the testimony of one Helen Sears, the daughter of Michael Siratowicz, who owned the property at 1901 Turner, a petition, signed bv some 26 parties, had been filed the day before the hearing, in opposition to the application.

*143 On or about March 24, 1943, another .petition, signed by 11 property owners, was filed with the zoning board. These petitioners claimed that the application of Thomasma Brothers was “misleading, deceptive and false;” that the notices of the hearing were misleading and insufficient, and that the findings and determination of the board were void because of noncompliance with the zoning ordinance. They asked that the matter be reopened and the permit vacated. On March 26th, after an answer had been filed by Thomasma Brothers, this petition for reconsideration was denied.

Subsequent to these events, defendants exercised their option on the property, expended considerable sums in improving the same, but because of war shortages were unable to proceed with their building operations. On December 13, 1945, defendants secured a building permit from the building inspector’s office of the department of public safety, for the erection of a “slaughterhouse 1 story 101' x 178' brick-steel-concrete” construction at an estimated cost of $100,000. A few days later plaintiffs’ bill of complaint to enjoin the construction of the proposed slaughtering plant was filed.

On the issues framed by the bill and its answer, trial was had at which considerable testimony was presented. The trial judge filed a written opinion and held that defendants should be enjoined from proceeding with the erection of the larger building described in the building permit, but that they should be allowed to use the premises in accordance with the application that was approved by the board of zoning appeals, i.e., for a building costing not to exceed $35,000, of the size described therein, as a slaughterhouse and for the storage of animals. From the decree entered in accordance with the opinion both sides have appealed.

*144 Plaintiffs contend that defendants propose to construct an abattoir, and therefore are required to comply with the ordinance of the city of Grand Rapids regulating the construction and operation of abattoirs.

Defendants conceded that if the structure is an abattoir, they are governed by this ordinance which requires the consent in writing of at least 75 per cent, of the property owners within the radius of one mile, and that in such event plaintiffs are entitled to relief. Defendants, however, contend that the abattoir ordinance is not applicable to the construction and operation of slaughterhouses, that the board had jurisdiction, that permission was validly granted, and that the trial court is without power to go behind the action of the board and impose limitations upon the cost of the building to be erected.

Considerable stress is placed upon the distinction between an “abattoir” and a “slaughterhouse.” In its zoning ordinance the city of Grand Rapids, at least, did not consider the terms synonymous. The distinction urged by defendants is that an abattoir is a public slaughterhouse where animals may be brought by the public to have them slaughtered by the operator of the abattoir, and that a slaughterhouse is a structure of a private nature used exclusively by its owner for his own purposes.

According to Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d Ed.) an abattoir is “a slaughterhouse,” and a slaughterhouse is “a building where beasts are butchered for the market; an abattoir.” These dictionary definitions of these apparently synonymous words must, however, give way in this instance to the action of the city of Grand Rapids in its zoning ordinance’s separate classifications and the language of its abattoir ordinance in which the words “a slaughterhouse” do not appear. Therefore, in the *145

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.W.2d 369, 321 Mich. 139, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baura-v-thomasma-mich-1948.