Brougher v. Board of Public Works

290 P. 140, 107 Cal. App. 15, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 237
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1930
DocketDocket No. 7081.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 290 P. 140 (Brougher v. Board of Public Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brougher v. Board of Public Works, 290 P. 140, 107 Cal. App. 15, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 237 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying plaintiffs a peremptory writ of mandate directing the Board of Public Works of the City and County of San Francisco and its three members .as commissioners of such board to issue a permit to plaintiffs for the erection of a building, and for damages against the city caused by delay in issuing such permit.

On April 18, 1927, plaintiffs applied to the Board of Public Works for a building permit to erect a ten-story hotel, 110 feet in height, on Jefferson Street in San Francisco, such board being vested by the city charter with the issuance of such building permits, and the application being—as alleged and admitted in the pleadings—in com *18 pliance with the requirements of all building ordinances in force at the time of the application. The board found no objection to the issuance of the permit, but failed to take action thereon until ordinance No. 7519 (new series) was adopted by the supervisors and approved May 9, 1927, by the mayor, under the provisions of which all buildings within a defined area, which included the property on which it was proposed to erect the hotel, were limited to a maximum height of forty feet. The board thereupon denied plaintiffs’ application for the permit on the ground that the proposed height of the building exceeded forty feet. Subsequently plaintiffs—appellants herein .filed a petition for a writ of mandate in the Supreme Court to compel respondents to grant the permit for the erection of the hotel in question. The Supreme Court ordered respondents to show cause why an alternate writ of mandate should not issue. A return to the order to show cause was filed, the petition argued and submitted and the petition was dismissed (Brougher v. Board of Public Works, etc., 205 Cal. 426 [271 Pac. 487, 493]). All questions of law pertaining to the case it appears were disposed of. The dismissal of the petition, however, was made “without prejudice to the right of petitioners to seek in the proper tribunal such relief, not inconsistent with the views herein expressed, as they may be advised they are entitled to.”

It appears that the premises upon which petitioners desire to construct the ten-story hotel as described in the petition have since 1924, by reason of ordinance No. 6222, been within the district classified as “second residential” under zoning ordinance No. 5464, adopted in 1921, which ordinance No. 5464, as to its expressed purposes and objects, will be found to be the subject of a general and historial reference in the opinion of the Supreme Court in Fourcade v. San Francisco, 196 Cal. 655 [238 Pac. 934, 935], in which the use restrictions as found in the ordinance are set forth and commented upon and in which opinion a “second residential” district is characterized as being in brief one “restricted to residential uses exclusively and such uses as public necessity requires.” Under such zoning ordinance the city and county of San Francisco was divided into six classes of districts: First residential district, second residential district, commercial district, light in *19 dustrial district, heavy industrial district and Imrestricted district. Had the board of supervisors, when it so undertook to zone the city and county of San Francisco into districts, prescribed in such ordinance the height limitations of the buildings embraced within the restricted uses of the district, it would have, as it is termed, "zoned for height of buildings” as well as for "uses,” and such zoning as to height of buildings would in effect have been a legislative finding that the maintenance of such height or rather the restriction to such maximum height of buildings, for the uses of each of the classified districts was "necessary” to the "public welfare” (In re White, 195 Cal. 520 [234 Pac. 396]). But as the zoning ordinance zoned for "uses” only it did not specifically nor in terms undertake to make any restrictions as to maximum building height, and, moreover, did not purport to repeal the general building ordinance No. 1008 or any provision in it as to maximum height of buildings. Nor would it seem that there was anything basally wrong or at variance with the theory of zoning in not incorporating within the zoning ordinance at the time of enactment restriction as to maximum height of buildings, for in the absence of express provision to the contrary, it has been held that building regulations are not necessarily inconsistent with zoning regulations and that both sets of regulations may remain in force at the same time, each being referable to the same source—the police power (Norcross v. Board of Appeal of Building Dept. of Boston, 255 Mass. 177 [150 N. E. 887]). To what extent zoning ordinance No. 5464 was before the court in Brougher v. Board of Public Works, supra, is not clear from the language of the opinion, but it is manifest that the pleadings then before the court averred that the ordinance permitted the erection of hotels and apartment houses in the second residential district and that petitioners’ property was within such district. It would therefore appear that the court in not sustaining petitioners’ contention upon petition and answer must necessarily have declined to hold that a forty-foot limitation was on its face manifestly and palpably unreasonable for such declared and districted uses, and that likewise it must have declined to hold that such limitation was on its face manifestly and palpably discriminatory against the petitioners. Consequently if the *20 ordinance is invalid, It must be so by reason of evidence adduced at the trial, under the issues of “discrimination,” “unreasonableness,” “oppressiveness,” “arbitrary action,” “confiscation,” etc.; and in determining this issue the court may not substitute its opinion as to the necessity of a particular enactment for the legislative judgment when the necessity or propriety of an enactment is ’ a question upon which reasonable' minds may differ, for then the propriety and necessity of such an enactment are matters of legislative determination (Wickham, v. Becker, 96 Cal. App. 443 [274 Pac. 397]; Zahn v. Board of Public Works, 195 Cal. 497 [234 Pac. 388]).

Appellants urge that the dismissal of the writ by the Supreme Court was contrary to law and plaintiffs’ rights for the reason that it had already taken jurisdiction by setting for and hearing argument, thereby waiving its rule XXVI,- and that the statute, chapter II, title I, part III, (sees. 1084-1097) of the Code of Civil Procedure gives to suitors an unconditional right to seek relief in either the superior court or the Supreme Court, and that the latter has no power to restrict that right of choice and cannot lawfully make any such condition as is contained in its rule XXVI, i. e., that a reason must be given satisfactory to the court before a suitor may have the relief in the Supreme Court, and cites People v. McClellan, 31 Cal. 101, 103, holding that a “rule which operates to1 deprive a party of a statutory right is repugnant to the statute and therefore to that extent void,” and that jurisdiction of a court conferred by the Constitution or statute cannot be enlarged or diminished by a rule of court (15 Cor. Jur. .907). While it is true that the Constitution (art. VI, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
290 P. 140, 107 Cal. App. 15, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brougher-v-board-of-public-works-calctapp-1930.