City of Memphis v. Qualls

64 S.W.2d 548, 16 Tenn. App. 387, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 548 (City of Memphis v. Qualls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Memphis v. Qualls, 64 S.W.2d 548, 16 Tenn. App. 387, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 21 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The petitioner, S. W. Qualls, filed an -application with the building commissioner of the city of Memphis for a permit to use certain property at 479 Vance avenue, which he owned, for the following purposes: “. . . To occupy downstairs as sales room and display room, office and workroom. No funerals to be conducted therefrom. No vehicles to carry bodies in or out or to enter from Vance Avenue with bodies.”

This permit was denied by the building commissioner, and from the action of the building commissioner petitioner appealed to the board of adjustment of the city of Memphis, and, upon appeal, the application was heard by the board of adjustment, upon the application and the oral evidence of numerous witnesses. The board of adjustment, upon a full hearing, sustained the action of the building commissioner and denied the permit. Whereupon, the petitioner, Qualls, took the *388 matter to the circuit court of Shelby county on a petition for cer-tiorari, where the matter was heard by the trial judge without the intervention of a jury. This trial resulted in a reversal of the action of the board of adjustment. The trial judge held that petitioner was entitled to have the writ of occupation as applied for granted to him. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and the matter is now before this court on appeal prayed and granted from the action of the court in reversing the holding and action of the board of adjustment and in granting the writ of occupancy to petitioner to occupy the premises in question for the purposes as set forth in the application. Numerous errors have been assigned by appellant, the city of Memphis.

Prior to the present proceedings the same petitioner, Qualls, who had acquired ownership of the stone residence on Vance avenue in Memphis, being the same premises involved in the present matter, desired to irse the lower floor of the building as an undertaking establishment and funeral home for colored people, and filed his application with the building commissioner as required by the laws and ordinances of the city of Memphis, and his application was denied/ On appeal to the board of adjustment, upon a full hearing of the application and the evidence of witnesses, the board of adjustment sustained the action of the building commissioner, and denied the application to use the premises for the purpose of conducting a funeral home and undertaking establishment as set forth in the application. On certiorari to the circuit court, the learned trial judge affirmed the action of the board of adjustment, and denied the granting of the application for the writ of occupancy. An appeal was prayed and granted by Qualls to this court, and errors assigned. This court, in an opinion filed (15 Tenn. App., 575), affirmed the action of the trial judge, and petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court was denied. Whereupon, Qualls instituted a new proceedings by filing a new application with the building commissioner of the city of Memphis, and in which he sets forth that he now desires to use the premises in question only for the purposes as set forth in the portion of the application _ hereinbefore quoted, viz., as the salesroom and showroom for the sale of caskets,' and not for the purpose of using the premises as a funeral home or mortuary in which bodies would be prepared for burial dr funerals conducted; and no dead bodies to be taken into the building or out of the building, and the second floor to be used by Qualls as the family residence. It will thus be seen that the purpose or use to which Qualls now seeks to occupy the premises is limited to using the first floor of the building as a display and salesroom for caskets and a work room, and not for the preparation of bodies for burial and not for the holding of funeral services in the building. The building commissioner denied this application to Qualls, and he appealed to the board of adjust *389 ment. The board of adjustment upon a full hearing and upon the evidence of the numerous witnesses heard at the hearing, sustained the action of the building commissioner and denied the application of Qualls to use and occupy the premises for the purposes set forth in the application, and, as before stated, the matter was taken to the circuit court and heard before the trial judge without a jury, resulting in the trial judge reversing the action of the board of adjustment and in granting the writ of occupancy as set forth in the application.

By the provisions of chapter 162 of the Private Acts of 1921, a city planning commission was created for the city of Memphis, and by the same act the city was authorized to establish zoning districts within the corporate limits of said city, for the purpose of better regulating the use of streets and the use of property and sections and districts of the city and to prevent the congestion of traffic, and for the purpose of better protecting the public health, safety, convenience, and general welfare of said city. Under the authority of that act the city of Memphis by proper ordinances laid off the city into zones. The entire machinery for carrying out the purposes of the act was provided by ordinances, and the entire procedure for securing building permits is also provided, and for the issuance of certificates of occupancy and the use of buildings or premises, by an application by the owner or proposed operator or builder made to the commissioner of public utilities, grounds, and buildings. There is provided by the ordinance a board of adjustment consisting of seven members. Among other duties vested in the board of adjustment is that of reviewing on appeal by any person agreed by the action of the commissioner of public utilities, grounds, and buildings, the action of said commissioner. As stated in the opinion by this court in the former case between the same parties (15 Tenn. App., 575) : “Broad discretionary powers are vested in the Board of Adjustment in all matters pertaining to the granting or the refusal to grant applications for permits for the use of premises and buildings within the city limits. ’ ’

By subsection 7 of section 17 of the ordinance it is provided:

“Interpret the provisions of this ordinance in such a way as to carry out the intent and purpose of the plan, as shown upon the map fixing the several districts accompanying and made a part of this ordinance, where the street lay-out actually on the ground, varies from the street lay-out as shown on the maps aforesaid.”

By subsection 8 the duties of the board of adjustment are further set forth as follows:

“Interpret the provisions of this ordinance in harmony with their fundamental purpose and intent where practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships occur.”

*390 In the former ease we further stated in the opinion (15 Tenn. App., 575) :

“We think it clear from the Acts of the legislature authorizing the zoning of the City of Memphis, and the creation of the machinery to carry into effect the purposes of the Act, and also from the ordinances of the City of Memphis, that the Board of Adjustment in its administrative capacity, is vested, with the authority and duty of interpreting the various sections of the zoning ordinance, and is given a broad discretionary power in the matter of determining the questions that come before the Board for Adjustment.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 548, 16 Tenn. App. 387, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-memphis-v-qualls-tennctapp-1933.