Brown v. Fraser

1970 OK 50, 467 P.2d 464
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 24, 1970
Docket42389
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1970 OK 50 (Brown v. Fraser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Fraser, 1970 OK 50, 467 P.2d 464 (Okla. 1970).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice.

This is an appeal from the District Court of Oklahoma County, Oklahoma. The proceeding in the district court was an appeal, by the defendant in error herein, Russell Fraser, from an order of the Board of Adjustment of the City of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. That order denied his request for a 3,000-square-foot variance from the “Intensity of Use” provision of that city’s 1947 zoning ordinance (No. 5936) as applied to his separately-owned 3,000-square-foot tract of vacant land in an “ 'A’ Single Family Dwelling District” established by that ordinance. The district court found, ordered and adjudged that such order of the Board of Adjustment should be overruled, vacated and set aside, and that the requested variance should be granted so that Fraser could be permitted to construct a single-family dwelling upon such tract of land.

J. T. Brown, as Building Superintendent of the City of Oklahoma City, appeals to this court, contending, among other things, that Fraser had failed to sustain the burden of proof imposed upon him by pertinent legal principles. We agree with that contention.

The tract of land involved herein is described in the request for such variance as the South 60 feet of Lots 17 and 18 in Block 16 of Military Park Addition. Fraser had acquired the title to all of said Lots 17 and 18 on October 8, 1963, and the separately-owned tract involved herein resulted from Fraser’s conveyance, on January 29, 1965, of the North 120 feet of those platted lots.

Then, in June of 1965, Fraser applied to the office of the city’s Building Superintendent for a building permit to construct, on this 3,000-square-foot tract of land, a building to be occupied as a single-family dwelling. The Building Superintendent denied the building permit, in writing, on the stated ground that the same would be in violation of the zoning ordinance in that the described tract did not have the required land area.

As authorized by the zoning ordinance, Fraser appealed to the Board of Adjustment from that order and, in connection therewith, requested the variance involved herein. After notice and hearing thereon, that Board entered its order denying the variance and building permit, and Fraser appealed to the district court.

The ordinance provision directly involved herein (which later appears as paragraph 4 of Section 5.04 of Title 13, “Revised Ordinances, 1960, of the City of Oklahoma City”) applied to, and only to, “ ‘A’ Single Family Dwelling Districts.” It reads as follows:

“Intensity of Use. There shall be a lot area of not less than six thousand (6,000) square feet, except that where a lot has less area than herein required and all the boundary lines of that lot touched lands under other ownership on the effective date of the ordinance that *467 lot may be used for any of the uses permitted by this section.” (Emphasis supplied)

Concerning such use, the same section of the ordinance provides (insofar as pertinent herein) that:

“A building or premises in the ‘A’ Single Family Dwelling District shall be used only for the following purposes:
“1. Single Family Dwelling.
it ⅜ ⅜
“6. Accessory buildings which are not a part of the main building, including a private garage, and including one living unit, which living unit shall not exceed one floor level of living space, nor exceed five hundred square feet (500 sq. ft.) of floor area, * * *;
provided, that no permit shall be issued for the construction of such a living unit and no living unit shall be constructed unless the application for such building permit shall be accompanied by the written consent properly signed by at least sixty (60%) of all persons owning property in the block in which the property covered by the application is located; and, provided further, that the construction of such a structure does not violate any other zoning restriction relating to height, yard space, set back, or other requirements. * *

Apparently, Oklahoma City’s power concerning zoning is derived from the Oklahoma statutes now appearing as 11 O.S. 1961, § 401 and following, rather than from the city’s charter. As authorized by one of those statutes (11 O.S.1961, § 407), and in harmony therewith, Oklahoma City’s zoning ordinance creates a Board of Adjustment, and, insofar as pertinent herein, provides (in Section 19.65 of Title 13) that:

“The Board of Adjustment shall have the following powers:
“(a) To hear and decide appeals where it is alleged there is an error in any order, requirement, decision, in the enforcement of this ordinance.
“(b) Powers Relative to Variations. Where, by reason of exceptional narrowness, shallowness, or shape of a specific piece of property at the time of the original adoption of the regulations, or by reason of exceptional topographical conditions or other extraordinary or exceptional situation or condition of a specific piece of property, which condition is not generally prevalent in the neighborhood, the strict application of this ordinance would result in peculiar and exceptional practical difficulties to or exceptional and undue hardship upon the owner of such property, the Board is hereby empowered to attthorize upon an appeal relating to such property, a variation from such strict application so as to relieve such difficulties or hardship.
it * * * »

Before a board of adjustment, or a district court on appeal therefrom, has authority to grant an exception to, or a variance from, the provisions of a zoning ordinance, the person claiming the exception or variance has the burden of showing (a) that the granting of the exception or variance will not be contrary to the public interest, and (b) that the literal enforcement of the ordinance will result in unnecessary hardship to the applicant, and (c) that by granting the exception or variance the spirit of the ordinance will be observed, and (d) that by granting the exception or variance substantial justice will be done. Board of Adjustment of Oklahoma City et al. v. Shanbour (1967), Okl., 435 P.2d 569; Twist et al. v. Kay (1967), Okl., 434 P.2d 180.

In Van Meter et al. v. H. F. Wilcox Oil & Gas Company et al. (1935), 170 Okl. 604, 41 P.2d 904, 910, this court quoted, with approval, from the case of Heffernan v. Zoning Board of Review, 50 R.I. 26, 144 A. 674, 676, as follows:

“ ‘The expressions “contrary to the public interest” and “unnecessary hardship” must be given a reasonable interpretation. As the provisions of the or *468 dinance represent a declaration of public interest, any variance would in some measure be contrary thereto. In this connection, the words “contrary to the public interest” should be interpreted to mean what in the judgment of a reasonable man would unduly, and in a marked degree, conflict with the ordinance provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
1970 OK 50, 467 P.2d 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-fraser-okla-1970.