City of Muskogee v. Morton

1927 OK 399, 261 P. 183, 128 Okla. 17, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 8, 1927
Docket18306
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1927 OK 399 (City of Muskogee v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Muskogee v. Morton, 1927 OK 399, 261 P. 183, 128 Okla. 17, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 354 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

REID, O.

The parties to the action will be referred to in this opinion as they stood in the trial court.

The plaintiff, being the owner of two cer *18 tain lots in tlie city of Muskogee, and desiring to erect a gasoline filling station thereon, presented his application for u building permit to the defendant, Clyde C. Poole, building inspector of said city. The permit was denied, and the plaintiff brought action against the inspector and the city of Muskogee.

He alleged that his application was >n accordance with the rules and regulations of the city, and in accordance with its valid ordinances, and that it complied with all its ordinances except sections 208 and 209 of the revised ordinances of the city; that said sections of said ordinance were void and not enforceable; were passed without lawful authority; were unreasonable and unjust; and created an unfair discrimination and tended to deprive him of his property without due process of law. He prayed that a writ of mandamus issue directing defendants to issue the permit as requested.

The defendants answered that the lots upon which plaintiff proposed to erect the fil.ing station were within the residential district of the city, and without the lire limits affixed by an ordinance of said city, establishing such fire limits; that the operation of a filling station at the place proposed would be a nuisance and would materially affect the comfort, safety, enjoyment, and use of the property of the owners near the proposed site; that the noise attending the operation of such business, the accumulation of filth, the dropping of grease and oil from cars, storage of gasoline and oil, and the obnoxious odors of poisonous and foul gases arising from cars, and the noise incident to the operation of said business would interfere with the repose, comfort, enjoyment, safety, and use of the inhabitants and residents of said city near the filling-station, if it was permitted to be erected and operated at the place proposed; that the ordinances attacked by plaintiff’s action are reasonable, valid, and constitutional.

The defendants further answered that the plaintiff had failed to comply with the ordinance of said city, relating to the erection of such stations, in that there did not accompany his application the written consent of the owners of two-thirds of the property, estimated by front footage, lying within 300 feet of the proposed filling stations. but that in fact two-thirds of such property owners had filed written protests against the granting of such permit.

The trial court found generally for the plaintiff, and awarded the writ.

While the city of Muskogee had passed an ordinance which is referred to as one establishing the fire limits of the city, it appears to be in effect an ordinance separating, or attempting to separate, the business and residential districts of the city. After the passage of the fire limits ordinance, the city enacted the ordinances which are assailed in this action, and being necessary to proper.y understand the questions presented by this appeal, we quote them in full as follows:

“Section 207. Construction of Gasoline Service Station, etc., Prohibited without Permit from City Clerk. The construction or installation of any gasoline service station, building, plant, machine or storage place for gasoline, any garage for commercial or public use, repair shop, machine shop or black- ' smith shop, within the city of Muskogee, Okla., is hereby prohibited, except upon a permit issued by the city clerk of said city as provided in section 209' hereof.
“Section 208. Regulating Construction outside Eire Limits; Must Obtain Consent Property Owners. The construction, installation or operation of any gasoline service station or gasoline filling station, or of any station, building, plant, machinery, or storage .place for gasoline to be used for or in connection with such gasoline service station or gasoline filling station, or any garage for commercial or public use, repair shop, machine shop, or blacksmith shop within the city of Muskogee, Okla., outside of the fire limits of said city as established by ordinance thereof is hereby prohibited, except with the consent in writing -of the owners of two-thirds of the property, estimated by the front footage thereof, lying within 300 feet of the proposed gasoline filling station, garage for commercial -or public use, machine shop, except upon the issuance of the permit provided for in section 209 hereof.
“Section 209. Must Obtain License Eee. Upon application to the city clerk of said city by any person, firm -or corporation for a permit to erect, install and operate a gasoline service station or gasoline filling station, building, plant, machinery, and storage place for gasoline to be used in connection with such gasoline service station, garage for commercial or public use, repair shop, machine shop or blacksmith shop, and accompanied by a license fee of $5 paid to the said city of Muskogee, if it appears that said plans, specifications and locations are in compliance with this ordinance and other ordinances -of the city of Muskogee, the city' clerk shall issue such permit; provided, that if said proposed location is outside the fire limits of the said city of Muskogee, the application for said permit shall be accompanied by the consent in writing of two-thirds of' the property owners as provided *19 in section 207 hereof; otherwise the permit shall be refused.”

Let us see if the city council had legislative authority to enact the fire limits ordinance, and to also pass ordinances Nos. 207, 208, and 200, making the latter ordinances applicable to a certain district as fixed by the fire limits ordinance. Section 4562, C. O. S. 1921, provides:

“Protection Against Fire. The council may regulate the construction of, and order the suppression of, and; cleaning of, fire-, places, chimneys, stoves, stovepipes, ovens, boilers, kqttles,, forges, or any apparatus) used in any building, manufactory, or business, which may be dangerous in causing or promoting fires, and prescribe limits within which no dangerous or obnoxious and offensive business may be carried on.”

Eliminating from this section that part inapplicable to the question here presented, we have:

“The council may * * * prescribe limit? within which n(o obnoxious and offensive' business may be carried on.”
Webster says the words “obnoxious” and “offensive” in their ordinary use are synonymous; meaning “objectionable,” “disagreeable}” “displeasing,” and “distaste ful. ”

The courts have defined the words con tained in this statute wherein the parties to the action were owners of property, coming in a chain of title from a grantor who had provided in the conveyance that the properties should not be used for anv offensive business or occupation.

In the case of Hibbard v. Edwards (Pa.) 84 Atl. 437, the parties held under deeds containing this restriction. The defendant was about to enlarge to six times its then capacity a small public garage upon his lets, and the plaintiff brought injunction proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 399, 261 P. 183, 128 Okla. 17, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-muskogee-v-morton-okla-1927.