Bowman v. City of York

482 N.W.2d 537, 240 Neb. 201, 1992 Neb. LEXIS 100
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1992
DocketS-89-826
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 482 N.W.2d 537 (Bowman v. City of York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowman v. City of York, 482 N.W.2d 537, 240 Neb. 201, 1992 Neb. LEXIS 100 (Neb. 1992).

Opinion

*203 CAPORALE, J.

I. INTRODUCTION

The City of York, an appellee in this court, through its board of adjustment, granted a zoning variance to York Cold Storage Company, Inc. The abutting property owners, Harold Bowman and his wife, Donna Bowman, also appellees in this court, challenged the board’s decision in the district court. That court reversed the grant of the variance and ordered York Cold Storage to tear down the portion of the structure erected in accordance with the variance. York Cold Storage, which had intervened in the district court, then appealed to this court, assigning as errors the district court’s (1) finding that the variance was granted illegally, (2) failure to find that the Bowmans had waived their right to challenge the variance, (3) failure to find that York Cold Storage had detrimentally relied in good faith on the variance and thus had a vested right to use its property in accordance therewith, and (4) order to remove the offending portion of the structure. The City of York cross-appealed, joining in appellant York Cold Storage’s claim that the district court erred in finding that the variance was granted illegally and adding the assertion that the district court erred in permitting an expert witness to testify. We affirm.

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The Bowmans purchased realty abutting to the east of the realty owned by York Cold Storage. At the time of the Bowman purchase, both pieces of abutting property were zoned residential.

In April 1987, York Cold Storage applied to have its property zoned to permit heavy industrial use. Following a public hearing, the planning commission of the City of York recommended approval of the zoning change notwithstanding the Bowmans’ objection. The City of York then amended its zoning ordinance in accordance with the commission’s recommendation.

York Cold Storage next applied for a permit authorizing it to build a warehouse on its property such that its 30-foot high rear wall would be within 1 foot of the line dividing its property from that of the Bowmans. However, the heavy-industrial-use *204 zoning designation requires a 15-foot rear yard building setback when the property abuts a residential zone. Accordingly, York Cold Storage requested a 14-foot variance from the required rear setback.

Neb. Rev. Stat. § 19-910 (Reissue 1987) provides that a board of adjustment shall have the power,

where by reason of exceptional narrowness, shallowness, or shape of a specific piece of property at the time of the enactment of the zoning regulations, or by reason of exceptional topographic conditions or other extraordinary and exceptional situation or condition of such piece of property, the strict application of any enacted regulation . . . would result in peculiar and exceptional practical difficulties to or exceptional and undue hardships upon the owner of such property, to authorize, upon an appeal relating to the property, a variance from such strict application so as to relieve such difficulties or hardship, if such relief may be granted without substantial detriment to the public good and without substantially impairing the intent and purpose of any ordinance or resolution.

Section 19-910 further provides:

No such variance shall be authorized by the board unless it finds that: (a) The strict application of the zoning regulation would produce undue hardship; (b) such hardship is not shared generally by other properties in the same zoning district and the same vicinity; (c) the authorization of such variance will not be of substantial detriment to adjacent property and the character of the district will not be changed by the granting of the variance; and (d) the granting of such variance is based upon reason of demonstrable and exceptional hardship as distinguished from variations for purposes of convenience, profit or caprice.

The foregoing criteria are also found in the York Code of Ordinances, app. A, art. XXVII, § 10 (1986).

At the hearing before the board, a vice president and director of York Cold Storage, Roger Sack, testified:

Our hardship is potentially financial. But I don’t want to *205 really dwell on that because I think in the broader sense the only representation we can make and we have a past history to back it up, is that the intent of this project is to lead to a substantial increase in local employment. It is not guaranteed but this sure won’t happen without it. We have a substantial prospect for a materially large facility coming in to utilize this building which we cannot get unless we build it up first to prove it. So if we want to talk about adversity it is more along the lines of broader community risk. But going to negotiation is one thing or another - it isn’t really the sort of thing that we can come right out and sit down and tell stories the way we would like to about exactly who we are talking to and what they are saying. But we do want to make the representation that we think the project will not only be a substantial benefit to the community not the least of which is $5,000 of [sic] $6,000 a year in taxes instead of $35----So the adversity I could recite that in dollars but I think it might be inappropriate and it may be technically irrelevant in terms of our own direct situation but I can guarantee you that it would be adverse to the community.

Sack conceded, however, that “it would be mechanically as easy to build the building farther west thereby utilizing the 15 foot setback, however, the building would have to be smaller and that is against the interests of the people who are banging us on the head to provide this facility.” He also said:

With regard to moving it to another location, one of the economies that have these people interested in coming to town has to do with its association mechanically with the Cold Storage Co. The existing engine room facility can be connected by overhead piping to the facility. If this were built as a free standing affair, as we have seen in the past, not only the construction itself may not be more expensive but the site costs, the approach costs, streets, the stuff that don’t exist, independent engine room and operationally a separate staff with separate supervisory force a couple of miles away for example where we own property up north would be economically in that regard a substantial hardship and may damage the economics of it to the point *206 to where the pricing we would have to do to recoop [sic] that extra cost would sort of make our people take a walk.

The Bowmans countered that permitting York Cold Storage to construct the facility within a foot of their lot line would injure them by damaging their garden and fruit trees, interfering with the draft necessary for their woodburning stove, reducing the amount of air circulation and sunlight their property would receive, and creating noise from the “running units on top of the building.”

On June 2,1987, the board unanimously voted to grant York Cold Storage the requested variance.

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Bluebook (online)
482 N.W.2d 537, 240 Neb. 201, 1992 Neb. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowman-v-city-of-york-neb-1992.