Daugherty v. City of Lexington

249 S.W.2d 755, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 857
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 28, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 249 S.W.2d 755 (Daugherty v. City of Lexington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daugherty v. City of Lexington, 249 S.W.2d 755, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 857 (Ky. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

W. S. Daugherty sought a permit from the Board of Adjustment of Fayette County for the erection of a restaurant, filling station and tourist cabin on his property abutting the Richmond Road south of the City of Lexington in Fayette County. The board denied the permit because the proposed methods of water supply and disposal of sanitary waste for the project had not been approved by the Fayette County Health Officer.

[757]*757Daugherty then brought an action against the board, the county zoning inspector, the county health officer, the fiscal court, the City of Lexington, and the Lexington Water Company. In one paragraph of his petition he sought to have the action ■of the board of adjustment reversed as if on appeal, and in another paragraph he sought a declaration of rights as to the legality of the zoning resolution which pre•scribed the requirements for building permits and under which the board of adjustment was established. By an amendment, the petition further sought an injunction restraining the defendants from interfering with the construction of the plaintiff’s proposed buildings.

The circuit court sustained a general ■demurrer to the petition, as amended, and upon the plaintiff declining to plead further the petition was dismissed. On Daugherty’s appeal to this Court, the only ■question is whether the amended petition stated a cause of action.

The substance of the allegations of the petition is that the “Interim Zoning Resolution” adopted by the Fayette Fiscal Court, under which building permits were required, was void because the fiscal court had no authority to adopt zoning regulations, and that, even assuming the resolution to be valid, the action of the health ■officer and the board of adjustment in refusing to grant Daugherty a building per-mit was arbitrary, unreasonable and unlawful, and depriyed Daugherty of his property without just compensation, because the sole motive and purpose in refusing the permit was to protect the purity ■of the water in a reservoir owned by the Lexington Water Company, a privately-owned corporation having a franchise to supply water to the City of Lexington.

Concerning the validity of the zoning resolution, a copy of which was attached .as an exhibit to the petition, it appears that The resolution was adopted in 1948, as a temporary measure pending the preparation and adoption of a “permanent compre'hensive zoning resolution.” The resolution applied to the entire county, except .areas already subject to the zoning regulations of other authorities. It contained standard zoning provisions, including the establishment of residence districts, prohibitions against commercial or industrial uses in residence districts, requirements for building permits or “zoning certificates” for commercial or industrial structures, etc.

At the time the resolution was adopted, there was no specific statutory authority for general county zoning by a fiscal court. Under KRS 100.320 to 100.490, the fiscal court of a county containing a second-class city had authority to join with the city in establishing zoning regulations for unincorporated territory within the “municipal area” of the city, the “municipal area” being defined by KRS ¡100.010(6) as meaning “the surrounding territory which bears relation to the planning and zoning of the city.” From recitations in the interim zoning resolution, it appears that the Fay-ette Fiscal Court previously had joined with the City of Lexington in zoning the territory within two miles of the city limits, thus, at least for the immediate purposes, treating such territory as constituting the “municipal area”.

In 1950, the General Assembly enacted KRS 67.380, which authorized any fiscal court to adopt and enforce “regulations governing the construction, reconstruction, remodeling, repair and maintenance of buildings” in the county, other than agricultural buildings. This statute became effective on June 15, 1950. The Fayette County interim zoning resolution would have expired by its own terms on July 10, 1950, and on that day the fiscal court adopted a resolution “extending” the interim resolution for an additional period of six months. The application of Daugherty for a building permit, and the denial of his application, occurred during this six-month extended period.

Daugherty contends that the fiscal court had no authority to provide for general county zoning, and the original interim zoning resolution therefore was void; that the void resolution could not be given life by the “extending” resolution of July 1950, but even if it could be, KRS 67.380 merely authorized regulation of building construe[758]*758tion, and did not authorize zoning, and since the zoning provisions of the interim resolution cannot he separated from the building construction provisions, the entire resolution must be held void. Daugherty also contends that the extended resolution expired six months after July 10, 1950, but all of the actions he complains of took place during the six-month period, so we do not see how the expiration can affect this case. In addition, the expiration is not alleged in the petition.

Under the view we take of the case, it is unnecessary for us to decide whether the original interim zoning resolution was void. It is our opinion that KRS 67.380, in authorizing the regulation of building construction, gave the fiscal court power to regulate from the standpoint of health as well as from the standpoint of safety, see 9 Am.Jur., “Buildings,” sec. 3, page 200, and therefore the building permit provisions of the zoning resolution were within the powers granted to the fiscal court by KRS 67.380. We also think that the fiscal court, by extending the original resolution after KRS 67.380 'became effective, could validly put in force such portions of the resolution as were within the scope of the powers granted by the statute. The contention that the zoning resolution was inseparable must fail because the resolution itself recites that its provisions are separable, and that if any part or section is held invalid such decision shall not affect or impair the remaining parts of the resolution.

The question of whether the health officer and the board of adjustment, in denying Daugherty’s application for a building permit, acted arbitrarily and unreasonably, and with the sole purpose of protecting the private property of the Lexington Water Company, is a difficult one.

It appears, from the exhibits filed with the petition, that Daugherty’s land lies some 1100 feet from an artificial lake constituting a reservoir of the Lexington Water Company, and the elevation is between 20 and 30 feet above the water elevation of the lake. The-plans submitted 'by Daugherty to the health officer called for a 1000-gallon septic tank for the restaurant, and a 500-gallon septic tank for the tourist cabin, each tank draining into a separate septic field consisting of drain tile in a crushed rock fill. The health officer refused to approve the sewage disposal plans, “thinking only in tei'ms of public health and safety and the topography of land in the proposed area.”

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.2d 755, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daugherty-v-city-of-lexington-kyctapp-1952.