Flex Enterprises, Inc. v. City of New Orleans

780 So. 2d 1145, 2000 La.App. 4 Cir. 0815, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 311, 2001 WL 170957
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 2001
DocketNo. 2000-CA-0815
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 780 So. 2d 1145 (Flex Enterprises, Inc. v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Flex Enterprises, Inc. v. City of New Orleans, 780 So. 2d 1145, 2000 La.App. 4 Cir. 0815, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 311, 2001 WL 170957 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

| t PLOTKIN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Flex Enterprises, Inc., appeals a trial court judgment upholding a decision of Paul May, the New Orleans Director of Safety and Permits (“Director May”), and the New Orleans Board of Zoning Adjustments (“BZA”), which decisions denied Flex Enterprises’ application for a building permit and application for an occupational license allowing it to renovate and operate a “health club” at 700 Baronne Street in the City of New Orleans. For the reasons explained below, we reverse the trial court judgment and grant mandamus directing Director May and the BZA to issue the requested building permit and occupational license.

Facts

The zoning classification for 700 Bar-onne Street, the property in question in this case, is CBD-7, Central Business District; that zoning classification has been in effect at all times pertinent to the instant appeal. Operation of a business that qualifies as a “health club” under the following definition, set forth in the ^Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance (“CZO”) for the City of New Orleans, is a permitted use for property zoned CBD-7:

An establishment containing a minimum of 4,000 square feet of floor area, which provides a service to the public involving an exercise program; aerobics; martial arts; spas, and/or hot tubs; pools; gymnastics. Such establishment must provide modern exercise equipment in good operation, which equipment shall be subject to inspection by the Department of Safety and Permits and/or Health Department of the City or State. If massage therapy is offered on the premises, the masseuse must be licensed in accordance with Chapter 35-A-l, massage therapy, of the City Code (Ordinance 828 M.C.S.). The establishment may provide a pool or hot tub which shall be subject to inspection by the Department of Health of the City and/or State. The type of clientele (i.e., men only; men and women; or family) and the hours of operation must be posted in an obvious place in the entry way of the establishment; the fees must be indicated upon request. For the purpose of this definition, a spa, exercise club, gymnasium, public pool or hot tub, martial arts school, aerobics club, or gymnastics school shall be considered a health club.

City of New Orleans Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance, Ordinance 4264 M.C.S., as Amended and Reenacted by Ordinance 16,976 M.C.S., As Amended.

The property located at 700 Baronne Street was acquired by Martin Benson on November 17, 1979, and later transferred to the Martin Benson Trust. During the entire time the property was owned by Mr. Benson and Martin Benson Trust, an occupational license issued and renewed by the City allowed the operation of a health club on the property. However, the business closed on June 1, 1998, after Mr. Benson died. On February 5, 1999, Flex Enterprises purchased the property from the Martin Benson Trust.

After Flex Enterprises acquired the property, renovations began and exercise equipment was ordered. However, because Flex Enterprises had failed to secure a building permit from the City of New Orleans allowing the renovations, a “Stop |;jWork” order was issued. Thereafter, Flex Enterprises applied for an occupational license to operate a health club, as well as a building permit. Following an inspection of the property, Director May denied the application in writing, citing two reasons for his decision:

1. His determination “that the property has not maintained legal non-conforming status because the use was vacant for a period of 6 consecutive months.”
[1148]*11482. His determination, after review of the “intended use and as designed,” that “the establishment cannot be classified as a health club.”

Flex Enterprises appealed Director May’s decision to the BZA. At a July 12, 1999, hearing before the BZA, Flex Enterprises challenged both of Director May’s determinations stated above. The attorney for Flex Enterprises testified at the hearing, as did Director May and a number of citizens, neighbors of 700 Baronne Street, all of whom opposed the issuance of the occupational license and building permit. Mr. May testified as follows:

Um, they.applied for an occupational license for a health club. At the time they applied for it, it [sic] raised two (2) issues relative to the zoning laws. One, was it simply a change of owners. unintelligible.legal non-conforming use, and the license could be approved. After meeting with their attorney, Mr. Hand, and the evidence he submitted, we took the position that this was not a question of non-conforming status. The Martin Benson Trust or the Trust that was created had full control of the property and they could have sold it, leased it or operated the business. And it had indeed been vacant for more than six (6) months. So we felt that the non-conforming use issue or the vacancy issue was not relevant, it is already expired. So now the question was is this a legitimate health club under the provisions of the zoning code.
On our inspection of the building they are correct, there was no exercise equipment, they told me it was on order from, I believe from Arizona or someplace and it was coming,.unintelligible .... so you can bring it in the building, but do not use and occupy the building. I have not been back there to see the exercise equipment. What I did receive from their attorney was a set of plans for this four-story building. The first floor, as I recall, was basically an office in an entryway.
[[Image here]]
14Second floor was basically some hot tubs and both of the walls were with showers, I mean lockers. On the third and fourth floor you had 52 cubicles that were approximately 5 feet by 10 feet or 6 feet by 11 feet, very small cubicles with a little pallet on it and a canvas covered mattress on the pallet.
Our reservation about calling it a health club is that in the health clubs that I’ve approved over the years and the ones I’ve inspected in the city ..., I have never seen anything like the 52 little cubicles, um, which I felt was just not part of a typical bonafide health club.
The exercise equipment, my concern right now would be what percentage is devoted to the exercise equipment, um, since it was not there at the time of inspection, I cannot say if it was 10 percent of the building, 5 percent, or 50 percent. But if you’re familiar with any health club, it’s almost 80 to 90 percent of the health club facility.
So I would be very concerned about the breakdown of the actual use of the building. So we’ve denied it as a health club as presently laid out, presented to us, um, and we do not feel they’re entitled to an occupational license. That’s our decision at this time.

Most of the opposition from citizens was based on complaints about the business previously operated at the same location by Mr. Benson and the Martin Benson Trust. Also speaking at some length was Attorney John Rawls, who appeared as an officer of the court and “for informational purposes only.” Mr. Rawls testified that the business run by Mr. Benson and Martin Benson Trust was not a health club at all, but a “gay bathhouse,” which he said was “clearly a spa as defined by our zoning ordinances.”

In response to questions and to the statements made by Director May, Walter Fisher, appearing at the hearing on behalf of Flex Enterprises, stated that the build[1149]

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780 So. 2d 1145, 2000 La.App. 4 Cir. 0815, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 311, 2001 WL 170957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flex-enterprises-inc-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-2001.