City of Yuba City v. Cherniavsky

4 P.2d 299, 117 Cal. App. 568, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 509
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 1931
DocketDocket No. 4191.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 299 (City of Yuba City v. Cherniavsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California 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 Yuba City v. Cherniavsky, 4 P.2d 299, 117 Cal. App. 568, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 509 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

THOMPSON (R. L.), J.

This is an appeal from a decree denying an injunction which was sought to prohibit the respondents from operating a mercantile business in the residence district of the City of Tuba City.

The respondents own lot 17 of Shasta tract in the City of Tuba City. This lot fronts 127 feet on Teegarden Avenue, and is 266 feet in depth. Prior to February 6, 1928, the respondents owned and operated a small grocery-store which was located at the extreme rear end of this lot. There was no open street at this end of the lot. The store was patronized chiefly by customers from an auto park which was located near by. A pathway led from the auto park to the store, and also communicated with the eastern extremity of Ailer Street. On the last-mentioned date the City of Tuba City adopted a zoning ordinance which included this lot 17 in the residence district. Section 4 of this ordinance prohibits the establishment of any business enterprise within the residence district. That section provides in part:

“In the residence district no building shall be used or maintained for purposes or uses other than those in this section hereinafter set forth; and no building shall be constructed, erected, altered or enlarged, which is arranged, intended or designed for any use or purpose other than as for . . . ” (Here follows a designation of the character of buildings which may be constructed in the residence district. *570 It does not include mercantile establishments or grocery-stores.)

Section 9 of this ordinance contains the following provisions :

“A nonconforming use existing in any district at the time this ordinance takes effect may be continued subject to the following provisions:
“ (a) No nonconforming use shall be extended beyond the confines of the lot which it occupies or upon which it is located;
“ (b) No building arranged, designed, devoted to or intended to be used for a nonconforming use, at the time of the effective date of this ordinance, shall be reconstructed or structurally altered to an extent exceeding in aggregate cost twenty-five per cent of its assessed value, without a permit therefor first being granted by the unanimous vote of the city council, unless the use of said building be changed to a conforming use;
“(c) No nonconforming use shall be changed, unless changed to a conforming use, and shall not thereafter be changed back to any nonconforming use.”

The city council is then authorized to hear and determine applications for “changing, restricting, enlarging or modifying any of the uses permitted in any district”.

After the adoption of this ordinance the respondents obtained a permit to construct a dwelling-house at the extreme northerly end of lot 17, at a distance of 160 feet from the location of the grocery-store. No permit was requested or granted to construct or use the structure as a store building. No permit was procured to remove the store from its original location at the rear end of the lot. The respondents, however, abandoned their former location and removed their merchandise to the new dwelling-house where they are now maintaining a grocery business in violation of the zoning ordinance.

This petition for an injunction to restrain the maintenance of the grocery business in the new locality, contrary to the zoning ordinance, was heard upon stipulated facts, which are in substantial accord with the foregoing recitation thereof. At the trial, findings of facts, favorable to the respondents, were adopted by the court. There was, however, no finding that the ordinance is unreasonable in its *571 application. A decree was accordingly rendered denying the injunction. From this judgment the City of Yuba City has appealed.

The trial court apparently assumed subdivision (a) of section 9 of the zoning ordinance, by necessary implication, authorizes the change of location of an existing business to any portion of the lot where it was formerly conducted. We are of the opinion this is contrary to the spirit and terms of the ordinance. This change of location may not be' allowed except upon specified conditions and with the approval of the council. It is true the ordinance provides that “no nonconforming use shall be extended beyond the confines of the lot” upon which it previously existed. This • clause should be construed with subdivision (b) which follows immediately thereafter. It provides that “no building . . . devoted to ... a nonconforming use, at the time of the effective date of this ordinance, shall be reconstructed . . . without a permit therefor”. Indeed, the ordinance specifically prohibits the granting of a permit to alter any building which was previously used for a nonconforming purpose, at an expense in excess of one-fourth of its assessed value. This ordinance, therefore, precludes the city council from granting permission to “reconstruct or structurally alter” any nonconforming building, at a cost exceeding twenty-five per cent of its assessed value. Clearly this clause prohibits, by necessary implication, the construction of an entirely new building at a place on the lot remote from the original one which was used for a nonconforming purpose. An ordinance should be construed so as to uphold all of its essential provisions if reasonably possible. The construction of zoning regulations is ordinarily governed by the general rules applicable to the construction of statutes and ordinances. (43 C. J. 344, sec. 370.) Paragraph (a) may be reasonably reconciled with the above-quoted portions of paragraph (b), by holding that the ordinance means “no building . . . devoted to ... a nonconforming use, at the time of the effective date of this ordinance, shall be reconstructed . . . without a permit therefor”, and under no circumstances where the cost of such alteration exceeds twenty-five per cent of its assessed value, or when such improvement extends beyond the confines of the lot. In other words, paragraph (a) is a limitation with respect to the *572 location of a building formerly used for a nonconforming purpose, beyond which the council is powerless to authorize any improvement. Any other construction of the application of this clause destroys the spirit and purpose of the zoning ordinance.

It is conceded the city has the authority under its police powers to adopt a reasonable zoning ordinance prescribing the confines of residence, business and industrial districts. (43 C. J. 336, secs. 365-369; People v. Hawley, 207 Cal. 395, 410 [279 Pac. 136] ; Feraut v. City of Sacramento, 204 Cal. 689 [269 Pac. 537] ; Pacific P. Assn. v. Huntington Beach, 196 Cal. 211 [40 A. L. R. 782, 237 Pac. 538].) The reasonableness of the present ordinance is not challenged. It is also conceded this ordinance may not interfere with the maintenance of the business which was previously established under substantially the same circumstances in which it was formerly operated.

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 299, 117 Cal. App. 568, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-yuba-city-v-cherniavsky-calctapp-1931.