City of Little Rock v. Faith Evangelical Lutheran Church

406 S.W.2d 875, 241 Ark. 187, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1134
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 17, 1966
Docket5-3970
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 406 S.W.2d 875 (City of Little Rock v. Faith Evangelical Lutheran Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Little Rock v. Faith Evangelical Lutheran Church, 406 S.W.2d 875, 241 Ark. 187, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1134 (Ark. 1966).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

This appeal relates to a petition for re-zoning. Appellees own properties on the north side of West Markham Street in Little Rock, lying immediately east of the intersection of Jackson and West Markham Streets. The owners desire to sell their respective properties to the Texaco Oil Company which plans to construct a service station thereon. Under city ordinance, the lands are zoned “B” Residential District, and appellees filed a petition seeking to have the properties re-zoned as “F” Commercial. The Board of Directors of Little Rock denied the petition, thus supporting the view held by the Planning Commission. Appellees appealed to the Pulaski County Chancery Court (First Division), and that court held that the city had acted arbitrarily and capriciously in refusing to re-zone the properties to “F” Commercial; the court enjoined the city from interfering with appellees or their assigns in using the properties in question for purposes permitted under the ‘ ‘ F ” Commercial zoning classification, and directed the city to issue a building permit to appellees or their assigns authorizing the construction of improvements on these properties that met the requirements of an “F” Commercial classification. From the decree so entered, appellant1 brings this appeal. For reversal, it is asserted that the Chancery Court erred in finding that the refusal of the City of Little Rock to rezone the property to “F” Commercial was arbitrary.

Faith Evangelical Lutheran Church is located at the intersection of West Markham and Jackson Streets, and this property fronts on West Markham for a distance of 100 feet from the intersection. The testimony-reflected that the membership of the church had expanded from 57 members in 1959 to 261 members at the present time, and the membership has simply outgrown the church building. The congregation is building a new church at Mississippi and Markham, and desires to sell the present property to Texaco.

The property of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Henry is immediately east of the chnrch property (a distance of 50 feet), and the remaining appellee, Ivan H. Smith, owns the 50 feet immediately east of the Henry property. The residences of Henry and Smith are located on their respective lots.

Mr. Smith testified on behalf of the appellees, and stated that, when he first purchased his property, West Markham was a two-lane street, with no commercial property in the area except for a small barbecue stand on the northwest corner of Markham and Van Burén Streets. A short time after his purchase, the northeast corner of Van Burén and West Markham was re-zoned for commercial property and an Esso station was built thereon. Sometime later the block between Van Burén and Jackson (north of West Markham) was re-zoned as commercial property, and a D-X service station was placed on the corner of Jackson and West Markham, just across from the Lutheran Church. Smith canvassed the neighborhood, taking a- petition to everyone on Monroe Street, the block affected on West Markham, North Jackson and Briekton Place, and he stated that only two people, both in Briekton Place, refused to sign the petition. At the present time, all property bordering West Markham from Jackson Street west to University Avenue is zoned either as ££F” Commercial or i£E-l” Quiet Business.2 Mr. Smith testified that the several houses which are located between Jackson and Monroe Streets are all rental property, except the two belonging to the witness and Henry; that after Markham Street was widened, the traffic increased immeasurably, and the noise has increased to a point where he cannot hear television in the front room of his house if the door is open. Mr. Smith further stated that mercury lights have been installed on Markham “so that the light makes it just like day time all the time,” and that he had put up heavy draperies throughout the house to keep out this light.

Mr. James H. Larrison, a Little Rock realtor and appraiser, testified that the present zoning classification of the properties here involved is not an appropriate one, due primarily to the continuing build-up of traffic on Markham Street; he stated however that, to determine the highest compatible use which could be made of the church property, a study would have to be made, but he was emphatic that it could not be feasibly converted to a single family residence.

Russell McLean, a professional real estate appraiser, testified that there are many nice homes in the general area. He specifically mentioned Brickton Place, a sub-division about ten years old, which is located just north of the properties here under discussion.3 In the opinion of Mr. McLean, the use of the properties belonging to appellees as a service station site would adversely affect the use of other properties in the area for residential use. He stated that the service station on the other side of Jackson Street did not have this same adverse effect because the street itself acted as a buffer. It was his opinion that the highest compatible use of the property presently occupied by the church would be office use; for instance, a doctor’s office or insurance office. Mr. McLean agreed with Mr. Larrison that it would not be economically feasible to redevelop the property for single family residential use. W. D. Kelly, who lives at No. 7 Brickton Place, voiced his objection to the re-zoning of the properties for use as a service station site.

Henry DeNoble, Director of Planning, and Traffic Engineer, for the city, stated that he felt that, since the church group no longer intended to use its building, the property should be rezoned as “E-l” Quiet Business, which fits in with residential type use. Mr. DeNoble agreed with Larrison and McLean that “B” Besidential is not the appropriate zoning classification. It was the opinion of the witness that if the properties here involved were re-zoned to “F” Commercial, there would be nothing to prevent this same zoning all the way down West Markham Street; DeNoble felt that commercial zoning had been successfully stopped at Van Burén because of the use of the “E-l” Quiet Business zone classification.

In rebuttal, appellees offered a report of the Federal Housing Administration (which referred to the property owned by Henry) wherein the F.H.A. denied mortgage insurance because “continuing marketability is too adversely affected by commercial encroachment, fast, heavy traffic, and dangerous vehicular entrance and exit from property to warrant mortgage insurance.”

We think the court erred in holding that the city acted arbitrarily in refusing to re-zone this property as “F” Commercial. We agree that the West Markham Street location is not ideal, mainly because of the large volume of traffic, for residential property, but, as pointed out by the city’s witnesses, the effect of re-zoning upon surrounding property must also be considered. Such re-zoning, according to the evidence, would have an adverse effect upon surrounding residential property, including Brickton Place. Apparently the intersection of Jackson Street and West Markham was considered (by the Planning Commission) a proper boundary for a “break” for the reason that the church building separated the residential property from the commercial property west of Jackson. Of course, the current problem has arisen because of the fact that the present church building is not adequate for the growth of the congregation.

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Related

Smith v. City of Little Rock
648 S.W.2d 454 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1983)
City of Helena v. Barrow
408 S.W.2d 867 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
406 S.W.2d 875, 241 Ark. 187, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-little-rock-v-faith-evangelical-lutheran-church-ark-1966.