City of Crowley v. Prejean

173 So. 2d 832
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1965
Docket1369
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 173 So. 2d 832 (City of Crowley v. Prejean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Crowley v. Prejean, 173 So. 2d 832 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

173 So.2d 832 (1965)

CITY OF CROWLEY, Louisiana, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Barbara Ann PREJEAN et tutrix, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 1369.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 24, 1965.
Rehearing Denied April 14, 1965.

*833 Edwards & Edwards, by Edwin W. Edwards, Crowley, for defendants-appellants.

Joseph S. Gueno, Jr., Crowley, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before TATE, FRUGE, and SAVOY, JJ.

TATE, Judge.

The City of Crowley sues to enjoin the defendants from operating a trailer park in alleged violation of a zoning ordinance. The defendants are a minor and her tutrix. The minor owns a tract within a residential area of the city. The defendants appeal from judgment enjoining them from using the tract "for the parking of more than one trailer or for any other commercial purpose or any purpose other than residential purposes."

The city contends that the rental of space on a residential tract for one house-trailer is not a use non-conforming with residential restrictions, although the rental for more than one trailer does constitute a non-residential use of the property. The importance of the distinction in this case is this: If the defendants' use of their property for one-trailer rental purposes was indeed a use conforming with residential zoning, then the landowner is clearly not entitled to change the use of the zoned property from one-trailer residential to multi-trailer commercial. On the other hand, if such one-trailer use was non-conforming, then the landowner may have acquired the right to increase the extent of said use within her non-conforming tract—which is what the landowner-appellants contend on appeal.

The defendants' tract[1] is situated in a hensive zoning ordinance of the plaintiff district zoned residential by a comprecity. In 1951, Ogden Prejean, the defendants' predecessor in title, prepared this tract *834 for a four-trailer trailer park, installing plumbing and electrical connections for this purpose. Some neighbors objected to this as a violation of the prior zoning ordinance then in force. Then, according to the stipulated facts, "Prejean was advised [by the city council] that no action would be taken against him if he parked one trailer only, which advice was given at the request of Prejean and on advice of the city attorney that the parking of one trailer on a parcel of ground included in a residential zone did not constitute operation of a trailer park."

From 1951 until 1962 Prejean or (after his decease) the defendants continuously rented, to successive tenants, space for one house-trailer owned by the respective tenants. In 1962, the defendants commenced renting space for two trailers, and this suit immediately ensued to enjoin the operation of a trailer camp on residential property.

1. Was the use of a residential tract to rent space for one house-trailer a non-conforming use?

We agree with the trial court that the use of the defendants' tract under the circumstances above outlined was a nonconforming use of the land within an area zoned residential.

Insofar as a zoning regulation is concerned, it has been held in Louisiana that the renting of space for house-trailers on a tract designed to afford such facilities by appropriate plumbing and electrical connections, is considered a commercial rather than a residential use of property. City of New Orleans v. Louviere, La.App.Orl., 52 So.2d 751. In our opinion, even though only one trailer space is rented within the tract designed to rent space for several trailers, such limited use of the property is nonetheless as commercial as if two or more trailer-tenants were customers of the trailer park.

The comprehensive zoning ordinance regulation in effect at the present time is City Ordinance 769, adopted July 9, 1957.[2] Exhibit P-4. Under Section 7 of this zoning ordinance, it is provided "That, in the residential districts, only residence, outhouses and garages for the housing of vehicles of the occupants of the areas may be erected, upon obtaining the proper building permits from the municipal authorities; no other buildings of any character shall be erected therein and no part of the area may be used or occupied for any other purpose than residential purposes * * *."

It is argued that the furnishing of space for one trailer is no more a commercial use for zoning purposes than would be the construction and renting of a rent house. If this argument were valid, it would mean that the use of the space for several house-trailers would likewise no more be a violation of the residential zoning regulation than would be the construction of several tenant houses on the same area. We think the contention must be rejected as not within the clear intention of the zoning ordinance.

The renting of space for the house-trailer of a tenant does not, under the terms of the statute, constitute the erection of a residence, outhouse, or garage for the housing of the occupants' vehicles, such as constituted permissible residential uses of the area. See Section 7, quoted above. The renting of space for even a single house-trailer of a tenant constitutes a use or occupation of the land for other than residential purposes, as prohibited by the ordinance; it thus constitutes a non-conforming use of the residential property.

The zoning ordinance in question was adopted in 1957, at which time the nonconforming use of the land for one-trailer parking was in existence. Section 9 of the Act (besides containing inapplicable provisions for the continued non-conforming *835 use of a "building") pertinently provides "That the lawful use of land existing at the time of the passage of this ordinance may be continued, although such use does not conform to the provisions of this ordinance."

It may be argued that the initial 1957 non-conforming use of the defendants' tract for one-trailer renting was not "lawful" because it was equally non-conforming under the similar provisions of a prior zoning ordinance (see Footnote 2) repealed by the 1957 regulation. However, LSA-R.S. 9:5625 provides that civil or criminal actions for violations of zoning ordinances are prescribed after two years from the date the governing authorities knew of the violation.[3] Any right to enjoin or punish the violation of the former (or the present) ordinance has prescribed, since this openly non-conforming use of the defendants' tract continued without interruption by legal proceedings from 1951 to 1962, shortly before the present suit was filed.

The city-appellee's able counsel further argues that the ordinance should be interpreted in accordance with its administrative construction over the years to the effect that one-trailer rental did not constitute a non-residential use of the property. See Carrere v. Orleans Club, 214 La. 303, 37 So.2d 715.

While the long-continued administrative construction of an ambiguous statutory provision may be given great weight in the interpretation of the statute's meaning, Roberts v. City of Baton Rouge, 236 La. 521, 108 So.2d 111, the administrative construction is irrelevant and may not be applied when contrary to the unambiguous meaning of the statute. Gulf Shipside Storage Corp. v. Thames, 217 La. 128, 46 So.2d 62; Curet v. Hiern, La.App.Orl., 95 So.2d 699 (building code violation).

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Bluebook (online)
173 So. 2d 832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-crowley-v-prejean-lactapp-1965.