Brown v. Gambrel

213 S.W.2d 931, 358 Mo. 192, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 564
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 13, 1948
DocketNo. 40621.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 931 (Brown v. Gambrel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Gambrel, 213 S.W.2d 931, 358 Mo. 192, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 564 (Mo. 1948).

Opinions

Appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court in a certiorari proceeding affirming the determination of the Jackson County Board of Zoning Adjustment denying the issuance of a permit and certificate authorizing appellants to use their property for purposes other than "one family dwellings." Appellants, in effect, assert the denial of a permit for other and non-conforming uses, if upheld, will cause loss to them in excess of $7500.

Appeals in proceedings involving appellants' property and its use have heretofore been perfected and decided by this court. Women's Christian Ass'n. of Kansas City v. Brown, 354 Mo. 700,190 S.W.2d 900; and Brown v. Montgomery, 354 Mo. 1041,193 S.W.2d 23. The records and the evidence introduced in the proceedings reviewed in the two former cases were offered and considered in evidence in the instant circuit court certiorari proceeding. The facts stated in the two former opinions of this court are essential to an understanding of the instant case, and reference is made to those opinions for the more complete statements of facts.

After the decision, Brown v. Montgomery, supra, wherein the trial court's judgment was affirmed, the Board of Zoning Adjustment of Jackson County, in compliance with this court's decision, determined the issue of "expansion of the non-conforming use." The Board ordered that no permit authorizing appellants' use of their property as a public dance hall should issue, the order reciting "the former operation of the petitioners (appellants herein) was that of a *Page 195 public stable, this finding being in accordance with the opinion of the Trial Court (in the certiorari proceeding reviewed by this court in Brown v. Montgomery, supra)" and the Board further found "the change by the petitioners in the use of their property from that of a public stable to a dance hall . . . constitutes an expansion of use within the meaning of Section 16 of the Zoning Order of Jackson County." Thereafter upon application of appellants the Circuit Court granted the writ of certiorari to review the Board's findings and order.

Before the Circuit Court heard the cause, however, the City of Kansas City extended its corporate limits, effective January 1,[933] 1947, to include an area containing appellants' property, and by ordinance the area was zoned, as it had been theretofore by the County Zoning Order, for "one family dwellings." In this manner the zoning of the property became governed by the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas City, Missouri, Section 5 of which Ordinance (No. 45608) provides, a "non-conforming use existing lawfully at the time of the passage of this ordinance may be continued (except as hereinafter provided)."

It is provided by Subsection (b) of Paragraph 7, Section 10, of the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas City that no license to conduct any business may issue unless and until the applicant secures a certificate from the Secretary of the City Plan Commission that the business is not prohibited at the stated location by the provisions of the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas City. Accordingly appellants applied to the Secretary of the City Plan Commission for a certificate to use their property as an "indoor amusement park and stadium," a use of the same class as "public stable" as classified in the City Zoning Ordinance, and so in a way comparable to a "public dance hall" as classified in the County Zoning Order.

The application was rejected, by letter transmitted by the Secretary, on the grounds that appellants' non-conforming use of their property as a public stable was abandoned before January 1, 1947; and that the building was remodeled and arranged for the nonconforming use as a public dance hall; but that the non-conforming use as a public dance hall did not lawfully exist on January 1, 1947. Thereafter, the Secretary (and the City of Kansas City) by leave of court and by agreement intervened and undertook to be bound by the judgment in the instant certiorari proceeding. The intervenors, City of Kansas City and the Secretary of the City Plan Commission, requested the court's determinations whether before January 1, 1947, appellants were restricted to the use of their property for "one family dwelling"; whether appellants had abandoned the use of their property as a public stable; whether appellants had the right before January 1, 1947, to use their property as a public dance hall; whether, if appellants before January 1, 1947, had abandoned the non-conforming use as a public stable and had not acquired a lawfully *Page 196 existing right to use their building as a public dance hall, they had any lawfully existing right to use the building for any other non-conforming use; and whether appellants before January 1, 1947, had any other lawfully existing right to use an unenclosed portion of their property for a public parking lot. And Women's Christian Association (plaintiff-respondent in the case of Women's Christian Ass'n. of Kansas City v. Brown, supra) and others were permitted to intervene. The last mentioned intervenors prayed for declarations that appellants had no non-conforming use lawfully existing, within the intent and meaning of the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas City, on January 1, 1947; that appellants are not entitled to a certificate from the City Plan Commission to use their property as a dance and dinner establishment; and that appellants upon proper application are entitled to use their property only in the conforming use for "one family dwellings."

Upon hearing and review by the Circuit Court, the determination of the County Board of Zoning Adjustment was "in all respects affirmed," and the court further found.

"3. That from the effective date of the zoning order of Jackson County until the summer of 1944, plaintiffs (appellants) had the right to use their premises and buildings for a non-conforming use a public stable, but that plaintiffs abandoned or discontinued said non-conforming use in the summer of 1944 and could not thereafter re-establish said non-conforming use within the meaning and intent of Section 16 of the Zoning Order of Jackson County.

"4. That plaintiffs did not have since the summer of 1944 nor do they now have a lawfully existing non-conforming use on their said premises within the meaning of the Zoning Order of Jackson County or within the meaning of the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas City, nor did plaintiffs have lawfully existing at the time (January 1, 1947) the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas [934] City became effective as to plaintiffs' premises, any lawful existing non-conforming use, and in particular plaintiffs did not have a non-conforming use for a dance and dinner establishment lawfully existing at any of the times mentioned herein.

"5. That plaintiffs abandoned their non-conforming use of said building a public stable in the summer of 1944 and had not acquired a lawfully existing right to use said building for a dinner and dance establishment, nor have they acquired the right to use said premises for any other non-conforming use within the meaning of the Zoning Order of Jackson County and the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas City.

"6. That plaintiffs' said property became a part of the corporate area of the city of Kansas City on January 1, 1947, and as such became subject to the Zoning Ordinance of Kansas City, being Chapter 55. Revised Ordinances of Kansas City 1941, under the *Page 197

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 931, 358 Mo. 192, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-gambrel-mo-1948.