Dunbar v. Board of Zoning Adjustment

387 S.W.2d 164, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 714
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1965
DocketNo. 24214
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 387 S.W.2d 164 (Dunbar v. Board of Zoning Adjustment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunbar v. Board of Zoning Adjustment, 387 S.W.2d 164, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 714 (Mo. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

SPERRY, Commissioner.

The receiver of the Arizona Savings and Loan Association, Franklin J. Stowell, filed application for authorization to construct a temporary sewage lagoon in Kansas City, Missouri (North), before the Board of Zoning Adjustment. After a hearing thereon the Board approved the application. Appellants, plaintiffs below, instituted a certiorari proceeding in the Circuit Court of Platte County, seeking a review of the above order and ruling. Defendants are Mr. Stowell and the members of the Board. From an adverse judgment, plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

Plaintiffs are the City of Weatherby Lake, the Weatherby Lake Improvement Company, and citizens, property owners and residents of the City of Weatherby Lake who use the waters of the lake, around which the residences of the city are built, for drinking, domestic purposes, boating, swimming and fishing. Their contention is that, since the effluent of the proposed lagoon, including detergents, will drain into Rush Creek, from whence it will enter Weatherby Lake, one and three-eights (1)4) miles below, it will result in poisoning and contaminating its waters to the great injury of the health and welfare of the citizens of the City of Weatherby Lake, and to the great economic loss to property owners thereof because of lower property values which will follow.

Our scope of review, in this case, is as stated in Veal v. Leimkuehler, Mo.App., 249 S.W.2d 491, 495-496. We are to determine whether the decision of the Board of Zoning Adjustment is supported by competent and substantial evidence upon the whole record. We may not substitute our judgment on the evidence for that of the Board, but we shall decide whether the Board reasonably could have made its findings and reached its result upon consideration of all the evidence before it; and we will set aside such decision if it is clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

[166]*166( Weatherby Lake is a body of fresh water, of two hundred sixty-eight (268) acres, ■of an average depth of probably thirty (30) feet, located in the center of the Fourth Class City of Weatherby Lake, which is zoned for residential uses only. There are about six hundred (600) owners of property. There are one hundred thirty-four (134) homes occupied by year round residents of the City. The homes are valued at from $15,000.00 to $90,000.00. The assessed value thereof is $690,000.00, and the actual value is about $2,000,000.00. Great numbers of people in the area enjoy recreational facilities of the lake, consisting of swimming, boating, fishing and picnicking. Many residents of the City pump water from the lake into their homes and use it for general domestic purposes. Some drink it without any kind of treatment and many drink it after treatment by filtration or other purification. Sewage is handled by septic tanks and there has been no evidence of ill health due to the water supply.

The appellants seek authority to construct a waste stabilization lagoon on property located twenty-five hundred (2500) feet north of Highway T and twenty-eight hundred (2800) feet west of Highway 71, in Platte County, on property zoned for agricultural use. The proposed site would consist of two — two acre cells on an 11.4 acre tract of land. Each cell would serve one hundred (100) houses and, ultimately, the capacity would be raised to four hundred (400) houses by the addition of an aeration unit, and chlorination. It would serve eighty-seven (87) acres of unplotted land lying to the southeast, and forty-five (45) lots in Prairie Point Manor, lying immediately north of Missouri Highway T.

,' This property was originally owned by the defunct Elbel Construction Company. It was acquired by defendants through foreclosure of notes and deeds of trust executed to Arizona Savings and Loan Association by Elbel, in the sum of $565,000.00.

The record consists of three hundred fifty (350) pages, transcripted from the hearings before the Board, plus exhibits consisting of four (4) pounds of typewritten, mimeographed and printed documents, and a forty-three (43) page transcript of the certiorari proceeding. The Board denied the application on the first hearing but, upon motion, granted a rehearing. Some additional evidence was heard and, at the conclusion of the second hearing, the application was approved. That decision was approved by the learned Circuit Judge of Platte County.

It would make this opinion an unconscionably long, document if we should set out the record in detail or discuss separately the testimony of the numerous well qualified professional witnesses who gave testimony for the respective parties. Such an opinion would probably not add materially to the accumulated legal knowledge on this subject. We will, therefore, set out the pertinent facts and issues, as gleaned from the entire record, as briefly as we may in order to dispose of this appeal on the issues presented.

The Plan Commission and the Public Health Engineering Division of Kansas City recommended approval of this application. A previous similar application had been approved by the Platte County Board of Zoning Adjustment, and by the Water Pollution Control Board. That approval was in 1958, but the permit was revoked because of the failure of the applicant, Elbel, to complete construction. Since that time the area has been incorporated into Kansas City. It was shown that the Division of Health of Missouri had surveyed the water supply of the people of Weather-by Lake and had officially reported it to be unsatisfactory from a health standpoint, for domestic use; that sewage disposal facilities were inadequate from a health standpoint; and that the lake waters were unsatisfactory for swimming purposes.

It was established that the Department of Health, of Missouri, approves the use of lagoon type sewage treatment plants, as modeled by a plant built and operated under . [167]*167the supervision of the U. S. Public Health Department, at Fayette, Missouri.

There was competent engineering evidence to the effect that, subsequent to the approval of the plans submitted by Elbel, construction began and that that project was 47% completed, at a cost of $20,000.00, prior to its abandonment; that this type of lagoon, as such lagoons are -presently designed and operated, will remove 99.9% of the Coliform (disease producing bacteria), and 85 to 90% of the organic matter; that the effect of treatment of sewage in-such plants is greatly improved over what it was prior to 1962; that this plant, as designed, will not increase pollution of the waters of the lake to any greater degree than the waters are polluted as of now; that permissible loading, of people per acre of water, at the time the hearing was held, is one half what had been permissible when other lagoons in the area were constructed; that lagoon planning and performance, at this time, is far superior to that prevailing when other lagoons in the area were built; that the health department has made “on the ground” studies and has approved the site and the proposed plans for construction of this project; that aeration of the effluent, as it progresses one and three-eights (1¡HÍ) miles down Rush Creek, before entering the lake, will further aid the process of purification and reclamation of the water, and will eliminate foam engendered by detergents.

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Wolfner v. Board of Adjustment
672 S.W.2d 147 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)
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Bluebook (online)
387 S.W.2d 164, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbar-v-board-of-zoning-adjustment-moctapp-1965.