Botz v. Garrett

159 S.W.2d 367, 236 Mo. App. 566, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 146
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 159 S.W.2d 367 (Botz v. Garrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Botz v. Garrett, 159 S.W.2d 367, 236 Mo. App. 566, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 146 (Mo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinions

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis reversing the decision of the Board of Adjustment of the City of St. Louis denying the application of respondent, Lillian Botz, for a permit to operate a parking lot for automobiles on certain land she owns which is located in a multiple dwelling district as established by the zoning ordinance of the City of St. Louis. [Secs. 160-185, Revised Code of St. Louis 1936.]

The entire parcel of land which respondent owns is located on the northeast corner of Grand Boulevard and Magnolia Avenue, fronting 135 feet on Grand Boulevard, and extending eastwardly between parallel lines for 270 feet to Alhambra Court, a street primarily devoted to residential purposes, which lies one block to the east of Grand Boulevard. The land is bounded on the south by Magnolia Avenue, and on the north by a lot of equal depth, which is occupied by a ten-story apartment building known as the Marmaduke Apartments, which faces on Grand Boulevard, and in the rear of which is a private garage for tenants only, fronting on Alhambra Court.

Under the provisions of the zoning ordinance with respect to use districts, the west half of respondent's land, that is, the portion fronting on Grand Boulevard and extending back to a depth of 135 feet on Magnolia Avenue, is located in a commercial district, while the east or rear half, comprising the remaining 135 feet on Magnolia Avenue and extending back to Alhambra Court, is placed in a multiple dwelling district. *Page 570

As will presently appear, it is such east or rear half of her land that respondent desires to make use of as a parking lot, which character of use, though permitted in a commercial district, is not authorized by the ordinance in the case of land lying in a multiple dwelling district. Consequently, if respondent is to have a permit for the operation of a parking lot upon that portion of her land which lies in a multiple dwelling district, it must either be upon the theory of a nonconforming use of such land at the time of the adoption of the ordinance in 1926, or else upon the theory that because of practical difficulties or unnecessary hardship to be encountered in a compliance with the strict letter of the ordinance, the board of adjustment, in the exercise of a sound and proper discretion in the discharge of the special function conferred upon it, should have varied or modified the application of the ordinance with respect to the use of such portion of her land so as to have permitted the operation of a parking lot upon it, notwithstanding the lack of specific authorization — and therefore the effectual prohibition against such use — in that section of the ordinance (Sec. 164) defining the character of use to which premises situated, in a multiple dwelling district may be lawfully subjected.

The property in question was formerly occupied by Mission Inn, a well-known landmark of the preprohibition days, which fronted the full width of the lot on Grand Boulevard and extended eastwardly for some 120 feet. To the rear of the Mission Inn was a beer garden; and in the rear portion of the lot, on the Magnolia Avenue side, was a garage which was used for the repair, but not the storage, of automobiles, and at which, at least in the latter days of its existence, gasoline and automobile supplies were sold. At one time during the prohibition period a miniature golf course was conducted on the rear portion of the premises. As for the use of such rear portion of the premises for parking purposes, it would appear that during the heyday of Mission Inn, certain of its patrons may have sporadically parked their automobiles upon the lot; and, as a matter of fact, during the course of the hearing on respondent's application for a permit, one of the members of the board recalled that he himself had followed the practice of parking his own automobile there when he would have occasion to visit Mission Inn. It seems clear, however, that such rear portion of the premises was never at any time specifically set apart or utilized as a parking lot; and indeed respondent's counsel himself expressly stated at the hearing before the board that regardless of the fact that automobiles had formerly been parked upon the lot by patrons of the Inn, "apparently it was not used for parking as we wish to use it."

In 1937 the building which had housed the Mission Inn was torn down, and shortly thereafter a building was erected in its place for occupancy by an A. P. market. This building, which faces on *Page 571 Grand Boulevard, extends to the rear for the full distance of 120 feet that the Mission Inn had occupied, but only extends northwardly along Grand Boulevard for a distance of 60 feet in width, leaving a space of 75 feet in width between the store building and the Marmaduke Apartments which at present is utilized as a parking space for the automobiles of customers of the store. This, of course, is in the front portion of respondent's land which is zoned in a commercial district, so that the use of such portion of the premises for parking purposes is entirely permissible under the ordinance, but quite unsatisfactory to respondent herself, who insists that an unnecessary hardship is thereby imposed upon her by being compelled to use her valuable Grand Boulevard frontage for a parking space rather than the relatively much less valuable portion of her premises which fronts on Alhambra Court to the rear.

Being desirous of putting her Grand Boulevard frontage to a more productive use, respondent, on June 14, 1939, applied to the building commissioner for a permit to operate a parking lot on the east or rear half of her property fronting on Alhambra Court, which portion of her property, it will be recalled, is zoned in a multiple dwelling district within which the ordinance does not authorize the use of premises for a parking lot such as respondent proposes to maintain. Her purpose is to provide a lot for the accommodation of the customers of the A. P. store, upon which lot, according to the statement of her counsel at the hearing before the board, the expectation was that "about 50 to 60 cars would be parked at various times."

The building commissioner refused to issue the permit upon the ground that the maintenance of a parking lot did not conform to the uses permitted in a multiple dwelling district, whereupon respondent appealed to the board of adjustment, before which a hearing was held and arguments made pro and con with respect to the question of whether a permit should be issued to respondent.

After taking the appeal under consideration, the board voted unanimously to deny the appeal, or, in other words, refused to take jurisdiction over it, upon the ground that the question presented was properly a legislative matter, and not a matter for the board of adjustment to decide. What the board undoubtedly meant was that in its view of existing conditions, any practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship in the way of carrying out the strict letter of the ordinance was not confined to respondent alone, but extended as well to all the other owners of property in the neighborhood which was zoned as respondent's property was zoned, in which event relief should come, if at all, from the board of aldermen in the form of an amendment to the ordinance, and not from the board of adjustment through a variation or modification of the application of the ordinance with respect to the use of so much of respondent's individual property as lay in a multiple dwelling district. *Page 572

The statute or enabling act provides that any person aggrieved by a decision of the board of adjustment may obtain a review of the legality of such decision by a proceeding in certiorari

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W.2d 367, 236 Mo. App. 566, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/botz-v-garrett-moctapp-1942.