City of Colorado Springs v. Smartt

620 P.2d 1060
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 12, 1981
Docket79SC38
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 620 P.2d 1060 (City of Colorado Springs v. Smartt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Colorado Springs v. Smartt, 620 P.2d 1060 (Colo. 1981).

Opinion

HODGES, Chief Justice.

We granted certiorari to review the opinion of the Colorado Court of Appeals in Wood Bros. Homes, Inc. v. City of Colorado Springs, 42 Colo.App. 15, 592 P.2d 1336 (1978), which pertains to a home rule city’s zoning authority. The City of Colorado Springs (the City) in its petition for certio-rari challenged the court of appeals holding that the Colorado Springs City Council abused its discretion and exceeded its authority in imposing an access limitation as a condition for rezoning. We reject this holding and therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.

A motion was granted by this court to substitute Billy H. Smartt as respondent in place of Wood Bros. Homes, Inc. Mr. Smartt now owns the parcel of land involved and desires to continue as party respondent in this case. Wood Bros. Homes, *1061 Inc. as the landowner and applicant for rezoning before the city council, as the plaintiff and appellant in the district court and court of appeals, and as the initial respondent in this court, will be referred to as “the landowner” which term will also include Mr. Smartt where appropriate.

In 1976, the landowner applied to the City for a change in the zoning classification of an 11.086 acre parcel of land which it owned and planned to develop. The property is located at the northwest corner of the intersection of Union Boulevard and Austin Bluffs Parkway. At the time of the rezoning application, both those roads were uncompleted, six-lane, limited access, arterial roads. To the north and west, the property is bounded by Cragwood Drive, which is designated by the City as a collector street. The requested change was from Garden Homes Zone (A-l) to Multi-Family Residential Zone (R-5) with a conditional use for office buildings. With the application for rezoning, the landowner sought a variance from the zoning requirement 1 that a dimensionalized plot plan be filed with the city prior to the grant of a conditional use.

In September 1977, after a hearing, the City Planning Commission considered and denied the application for rezoning and the accompanying request for a variance. The record shows that the City Planning Department had recommended to the Commission that it deny the requests. The primary reason for the recommendation of denial was that, absent the dimensionalized plot plan showing the intended use of the property, an accurate evaluation of the impact of the proposed development on the traffic flow and the surrounding area could not be made. It is also clear from the record that access to the property was another consideration and that only Cragwood Drive would provide access.

The landowner appealed to the City Council and after a hearing, it reversed the Planning Commission’s denial by adopting Ordinance No. 78-7 which rezoned the property as the landowner had requested from A — 1 to R-5 with a conditional use for an office park. Included in the ordinance was a condition that the only access to the property would be from Cragwood Drive.

The landowner then filed a complaint in district court pursuant to C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4) seeking a declaration that the condition was invalid. It alleged that the City Council had exceeded its jurisdiction and abused its discretion when it limited access to the property. The district court found that the evidence in the record regarding air and noise pollution, traffic flow and safety needs supported the City Council’s decision to prohibit access to the property from Union Boulevard and Austin Bluffs Parkway. The district court, relying on Kings Mill Homeowners Association v. Westminster, 192 Colo. 305, 557 P.2d 1186 (1978), dismissed this action.

The landowner appealed to the court of appeals. That court acknowledged that Kings Mill recognized the right of a municipality to impose reasonable conditions upon a rezoning but it stated its view that the condition in the instant case was distinguishable from the condition in Kings Mill. The court of appeals reasoned that the City’s authority to zone extended only to specifying the uses to which particular property may be put, but its authority did not extend to specifying the manner of access to the property. It held that the authority to determine the manner of access to property was properly exercisable only during the platting and subdivision process, not during the zoning process. Concluding that the City Council had abused its discretion by limiting access as a condition to rezoning the property, the court of appeals reversed the judgment of the district court.

The issue presented to us in the petition for certiorari is whether our opinion in Kings Mill, supra, is unduly restricted by the court of appeals’ holding that the City Council lacked authority to impose as a condition of rezoning a limitation on access to the subject property. In broader terms, the issue before us is whether the inclusion *1062 of an access limitation condition in the zoning ordinance involved here is within the scope of the City Council’s zoning jurisdiction. The holding of the court of appeals is consistent with the landowner’s argument that the City Council abused its discretion by imposing such a condition in the zoning ordinance and that an access limitation with regard to this parcel of land may be accomplished only during the subdivision and platting process. Having examined the Colorado Springs City Code and the history of this rezoning action, we conclude that the condition may be properly imposed during either of the processes, and therefore, the City Council’s action was not an invalid exercise of authority.

There is no dispute that Colorado Springs is a home rule city. As such, its zoning policies and authority are governed by its own charter and ordinances. Colo. Const Art. XX, Sec. 6; Service Oil Co. v. Rhodus, 179 Colo. 335, 500 P.2d 807 (1972). Consequently, we look to the City’s charter and ordinances to identify the extent of the zoning and rezoning authority vested in its City Council.

The purposes of the City’s zoning ordinances are set out in section 14-2 of the Code of the City of Colorado Springs. Some of the enumerated purposes are: “to lessen congestion in the streets,” “to facilitate the adequate provision of transportation,” and “in general to promote health, safety and general welfare.” Section 14-81.1 of the City’s Code recognizes the occasional need for allowing special, or conditional, uses of land which differ from the principal permitted uses in a particular zone. The section authorizes the City Council to grant a conditional use and to effectuate amendment of the zoning map accordingly. These two ordinance sections empower the City Council to rezone a parcel of property and to do so subject to conditions to facilitate transportation.

A review of the record shows that at the September 8, 1977 hearing, the Planning Commission heard testimony regarding the potential for increased traffic congestion on the major roads if access were allowed from other than Cragwood Drive.

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