City of St. Petersburg v. Aikin

208 So. 2d 268
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 22, 1968
Docket67-152
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 208 So. 2d 268 (City of St. Petersburg v. Aikin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of St. Petersburg v. Aikin, 208 So. 2d 268 (Fla. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

208 So.2d 268 (1968)

CITY OF ST. PETERSBURG, Florida, a Municipal Corporation, Appellant,
v.
Dean AIKIN and Martha Aikin, His Wife, and William F. Galvin and Kathleen Galvin, His Wife, Appellees.

No. 67-152.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

March 22, 1968.

*269 B. Edwin Johnson, Asst. City Atty., St. Petersburg, for appellant.

Adrian S. Bacon, of Bacon & Hanley, St. Petersburg, for appellees.

PIERCE, Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree entered in favor of appellees named above, plaintiffs in the Court below, in a suit for declaratory judgment filed by them against the City of St. Petersburg, Florida, a municipal corporation, defendant below.

Plaintiffs filed their suit in Pinellas County Circuit Court against the City for a declaratory decree adjudging zoning ordinances numbered 184-Z and 227-Z, previously enacted by the City invalid as it applied to certain described property owned by plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs filed their complaint in the Pinellas County Circuit Court on April 25, 1966, alleging their ownership of the property involved, constituting an entire block of land in the City of St. Petersburg, bounded on the north and south by 22nd Avenue and 21st Avenue respectively, and on the east and west by 57th Street and 58th Street respectively; that prior to April 6, 1965, the tract was zoned R-5 which permitted use for multi-family and office building purposes; that on that date plaintiffs applied to the City for rezoning of the property to C-LD, meaning Commercial Low Density which permitted the use of the property for erection of a gasoline filling station and a neighborhood food store, which said application was in due course denied; but that as applied to said property and its then current surroundings the R-5 zoning was unreasonable, arbitrary and unconstitutional.

The City filed an answer to the complaint, admitting the record facts aforesaid, but averring that Ordinance 75-E of the City prohibited the erection of a gasoline filling station within 300 feet of a church, park or playground. The City also moved to strike certain portions of the complaint, which motion the Court denied.

Final hearing on the issues was had on November 7th and 8th, 1966, at the conclusion whereof the Court made its findings of fact, which, after briefs and argument were incorporated as Findings of Fact in his final order entered on February 14, 1967, which is the order here appealed. The Findings of the able Judge are clearly stated and are amply supported by competent, substantial evidence, and we adopt such Findings as a part of this opinion as follows:

"Plaintiffs are the owners of all the lots shown on the Plat of Block 1, Diston plat of Glenwood Subdivision, situated in the City of St. Petersburg, Florida. The lots were acquired in piecemeal fashion by the plaintiffs over a period commencing in 1954 and ending in 1964. The property, in 1961, was zoned by the City to permit only single family residences but thereafter was rezoned to an R-5 classification which permits multiple residential dwellings, apartment buildings, office buildings, churches, public parks, playgrounds, and similar uses. R-5 is the present zoning classification. Plaintiffs have contracted to sell all of Block 1 aforesaid, subject to having it rezoned to a C-LD classification which permits limited commercial uses of property, and in an effort to change the *270 zoning from R-5 to C-LD, in accord with the zoning laws of the City of St. Petersburg, petitioned the City Zoning Board to rezone the property. The requested change in zoning was denied by the Zoning Board and this denial was affirmed by the City Council of the City of St. Petersburg. Thereupon plaintiffs filed this suit which came on for final hearing in due course. When the case was called for hearing on the merits plaintiffs shouldered the burden of moving forward with the proof, but only after directing to the attention of the Court the recent pronouncements found in Burritt vs. Harris [Fla.], 172 So. (2nd) 820, and Lawley vs. Town of Golfview [Fla. App.], 174 So. (2nd) 767. These cases indicate there has been an about-face in Florida on the rule of who has to sustain the validity of a zoning ordinance. Formerly the rule was that the burden was cast upon the property owner to disprove the need and validity of the zoning classification on his land and a clear expression of this rule is found in Bessemer Properties, Inc. v. Miami Shores Village [Fla.App.], 110 So. (2nd) 87; however, under Burritt vs. Harris and Lawley vs. Town of Golfview, supra, the shoe is on the other foot and the obligation is upon the zoning authority to prove the reasonableness and necessity of a zoning classification when these classifications are assaulted in the courts.

The evidence shows that plaintiffs' property is presently undeveloped and in a wild state consisting in part of boggy wet lands; that when originally platted the lands were situated in an agricultural area which has over the years changed its character to residential. The block of land lies at the intersection of 22nd Avenue and 58th Street North in St. Petersburg. Both of these streets have within fairly recent times become major arterial streets and at their intersection where plaintiffs' property is located some thirty-eight thousand units of vehicular traffic pass every twenty-four hours, the coming and going of which is regulated by traffic controls. 22nd Avenue for a great distance in both directions from plaintiffs' property is a four-laned highway, or street. Located in the areas near to plaintiffs' property is a large tract of city owned land, a portion of which is devoted to a youth center and playground. On one of the corners of the intersection is a combination real estate office and home occupied by Mr. Norman T. Branagan, who it is to be noted testified for plaintiffs that the change of zoning sought by plaintiffs would be helpful to the neighborhood and would not in his opinion injure any other person in their property rights. Immediately to the north of Mr. Branagan's property is a residential area; elsewhere in the immediate vicinity is the Palm Christian Church and the Northwest Elementary School.

Plaintiffs seek the change in zoning in order that a gasoline filling station and a Little General Store might be constructed thereon and plaintiffs have entered into a contract for the sale of this property for these purposes subject to the rezoning prayed for. The filling station would be constructed by the Shell Oil Company and is architecturally described as being a ranch style modern construction; the Little General Store is a type of neighborhood convenience store catering to neighborhood shoppers.

The Court has already determined and found that in its present zoning classification plaintiffs' land has a value ranging between forty thousand and fifty-eight thousand dollars; that if rezoned to C-LD, as sought by plaintiffs, it would have a value of not less than ninety thousand nor more than one hundred thousand dollars. Plaintiffs contend that the present zoning classification is unreasonable, arbitrary, and amounts to confiscation of plaintiffs' property and denies plaintiffs due process of law.

Plaintiffs submitted for consideration by the Court voluminous evidence in the way of documentary proof as well as a distinguished array of real estate experts and city planners. The testimony of the latter led *271

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Bluebook (online)
208 So. 2d 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-petersburg-v-aikin-fladistctapp-1968.