Doull v. Wohlschlager

377 P.2d 758, 377 P.2d 759, 141 Mont. 354, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 147
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1963
Docket10379
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 377 P.2d 758 (Doull v. Wohlschlager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doull v. Wohlschlager, 377 P.2d 758, 377 P.2d 759, 141 Mont. 354, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 147 (Mo. 1963).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court for Missoula County, Montana, denying a petition for a mandatory injunction and overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

In this cause, a rehearing was granted, and it appearing that the opinion heretofore promulgated on September 28, 1962, should be redrafted, the same was hereby withdrawn, new counsel allowed to reargue the case, and the following opinion substituted therefor.

The purpose of the action was to compel the defendant to remove a 44 x 80 foot galvanized steel building from his premises.

The land involved is located in the Rattlesnake Valley, a rapidly growing residential suburb of the City of Missoula. Petitioners are owners of various residential properties situated west of Baymond Street and west of the land owned and occupied by the defendant. The defendant’s land consists of some forty acres; three acres on the valley floor, and the remaining acreage on the steep slopes of Mount Jumbo to the east.

The land located on the valley floor is shaped somewhat like a long narrow triangle. The slopes of Mount Jumbo to the east, and Baymond Street to the west, form the long sides of the triangle.

On the southernmost end, or apex, the defendant maintains [358]*358his residence. Immediately to the north and along the slopes of Mount Jumbo are located several old wooden buildings. The residence and wooden buildings have been on the land for many years. Most of the land on the valley floor is laid out in Lots 7 through 24, of Block 22 of the Platted Park Addition to Missoula.

In the past, the defendant has used one of the wooden buildings for part-time automobile repair work. ‘While the defendant was regularly employed at one of the local auto dealerships, he supplemented his income by purchasing older automobiles and repairing them at home for later resale. There was some evidence that his total income from the part-time repair work amounted to approximately $5,000 during the period from 1946 to April 1955. The defendant also had a hobby of restoring antique autos. The evidence is clear that the lots on which the home and the wooden buildings rested were generally strewn with parts of the cars that the defendant was working on. There is some slight evidence that the storage may have taken place on the more northern lots in question as well.

In 1950, the defendant began using the platted lots to the north plus the hillside acreage for grazing horses. Though the number of horses grazed varied, the defendant generally grazed but two horses.

On April 12, 1955, the defendant applied for and received a used car dealer’s license from the State Board of Equalization. On May 1, 1955, he commenced operation of an auto repair shop on a full time basis. Such operation was conducted in the wooden buildings north of the residence.

At about the same time, pursuant to Chapter 41 of Title 16, R.C.M.1947, at least 60 percent of the freeholders of the Rattlesnake Yalley petitioned the Missoula County Commissioners for the formation of a Planning and Zoning District. The defendant was among those who signed the petition.

Pursuant to the statute, notice was posted, a hearing was [359]*359held, and on May 16, 1955, Missoula County Planning and Zoning District No. 1 ivas created and ordinances applicable thereto were formulated. The defendant’s full time use of the southern or apex land thus antedated the zoning ordinances by sixteen days. The entire district was zoned residential. The ordinances which are important for this decision are as follows:

“10. Any agricultural, horticultural, or stock-raising enterprise may be carried on within the district and in connection therewith buildings such as barns, silos, granaries, machine shops, sheds, milking parlors and the like may be maintained, altered or erected; provided however that such buildings be reasonably designed for use in connection with the purposes specified in this sub-paragraph 10, and be not used for any other purpose.

“11. Any building presently located within the boundaries of Missoula Planning and Zoning District Number 1 may be maintained, and any lawful use presently being made of the lands in the said district may be continued whether the same be in conformity with the provisions of this regulation or not; provided, hoAvever that if any non-conforming use is discontinued for a period of two years, any future use thereafter shall be in conformity with the provisions of this ordinance.”

The defendant soon found that the older buildings were inadequate for his repair work, and in 1958, he purchased sheet steel siding, and stored it upon the horse grazing lots. That same year he had a concrete foundation installed thereon at a cost of $500. In November of 1958, one of the plaintiffs herein notified the County Commissioners that he believed the defendant was about to engage in an infraction of the zoning ordinance applicable to the Rattlesnake Valley. A hearing was held on the matter on December 5, 1958. Thereafter the defendant petitioned the Commission for a variance to construct the building in question. A hearing was held wherein petitioners and others expressed their opposition to the con[360]*360struction of a commercial type building in a residential zone. The Commission nevertheless granted the defendant’s petition for a variance on Friday, January 30, 1959.

On Saturday, January 31, 1959, the defendant was advised and had full knowledge that an appeal was to be taken from the decision. On Sunday, February 1, 1959, the defendant and many of his friends commenced construction of the building, and did not cease until late at night when the building exterior was virtually completed.

Subsequent thereto, the defendant was served with a notice of appeal, and pursuant to a hearing, the district court reversed the order granting the variance. No appeal was ever taken from the decision of the district court.

The defendant was a named party defendant in that first action, and many of the plaintiffs herein were parties as well.

After the decision in that first action, Judge Shallenberger presiding, the defendant used the building only for storing hay, a farm truck, and farm machinery. No auto repair work was allowable.

That first summer of 1959, plaintiffs commenced this action, Cause No. 10379. After hearing the evidence, the trial court ruled that the question was moot based upon the decision in the district court by Judge Frank I. Haswell, in City of Missoula v. Missoula County, declaring the act to be unconstitutional.

Thereafter an appeal was taken to this court, and in Doull v. Wohlschlager, 139 Mont. 274, 362 P.2d 542, citing our decision upholding the act in City of Missoula v. Missoula County, 139 Mont. 256, 362 P.2d 539, we ruled that the question was not moot, and remanded the case to the district court for further proceedings.

Thereafter the district court, with the Honorable Judge E. Gardner Brownlee presiding in the instant case, held that under its interpretation of the act, section 16-4102, R.C.M.1947, the County Planning and Zoning Commission must first make [361]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
377 P.2d 758, 377 P.2d 759, 141 Mont. 354, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doull-v-wohlschlager-mont-1963.