Granader v. Village of Beverly Hills

145 N.W.2d 359, 4 Mich. App. 697, 1966 Mich. App. LEXIS 601
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 25, 1966
DocketDocket 838
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 N.W.2d 359 (Granader v. Village of Beverly Hills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Granader v. Village of Beverly Hills, 145 N.W.2d 359, 4 Mich. App. 697, 1966 Mich. App. LEXIS 601 (Mich. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

Fitzgerald, J.

Plaintiffs attacked the validity of a zoning ordinance of the village of Beverly Hills as it applied to their property located on the southwest corner of Fourteen Mile road and Southfield road in Oakland county, and described in their complaint as having dimensions of 101.59 feet on Southfield road by 110 feet on Fourteen Mile road. Fourteen Mile road is 2-lane and comes to a dead-end about one-fourth mile west of the property, and the zoning ordinance limits uses of parcels along it to nonretail businesses in the village of Beverly Hills.

The classification B-l limited the use of plaintiffs’ property to nonretail business. They requested defendant village to rezone the parcel to a B-2 classification, retail business, so that they could construct a filling station. This request was denied and the instant court action ensued.

Plaintiffs claimed that the Beverly Hills zoning ordinance, insofar as it affected their property, bore no reasonable relationship to the public health, safety, welfare or morals of the inhabitants of the village, and asked that the ordinance, No 29, adopted in 1959, be declared unconstitutional, void, invalid and of no legal force and effect. Following trial of the matter with the taking of considerable expert testimony, the court granted defendant village’s motion to dismiss at the close of plaintiffs’ proofs.

*699 On appeal, plaintiffs maintain that they established a prima facie case that the ordinance in its application to their property was confiscatory, unreasonable, unconstitutional and therefore invalid. They further allege that the trial court committed error in finding that plaintiffs could use as additional parking area, a strip of land lying between their lot line and the highway, thereby enlarging the usable dimension of their property.

At the outset, we are met with the presumption of validity which cloaks zoning ordinances of this nature. The particular facts and opinions adduced here, however, provide an excellent place for application of the observation that each zoning case stands by itself and must be judged by the circumstances present.

An exhaustive review of the record before us leads us to temporarily defer consideration of appellants’ contention concerning the making of a prima facie case of unreasonableness as the ordinance applies to their property and to dwell on the finding that they had available to them for development a considerably larger area, increasing plaintiffs’ usable land by 64 feet on each side, yielding what is called in the trial court’s finding of law and fact, a parcel “which is 174 feet by 165 feet.” In its opinion, the trial court makes the following statement:

“At the point involved now is a two-lane highway. The evidence shows that it is soon to be a four-lane highway, and that a right-of-way extends west of the projected future four-lane highway so that there is 64 fee.t of unoccupied right-of-way beyond the westerly part of the paved future highway and running from that to the front line of the lots in question; namely, the easterly line of the property in question.”

*700 Later in the opinion, the trial court indicates a belief that such area could be used for parking.

But from whence comes the basis for awarding plaintiffs the use of this quantum of property which is admittedly highway right-of-way?

A review of the transcript indicates that the genesis of this figure was from the lips of the attorney for defendant village as he cross-examined plaintiffs’ witness, and architect:

“Q. And are you aware that there presently exists 64 feet from the south side of Fourteen Mile road to the property line here?

“A. I wasn’t aware of the exact distance. I knew it was considerable.

“The Court: Do you gentlemen agree that is the same on both sides ?

“Mr. Allen: I don’t agree. I don’t really know what the right-of-way of the county right-of-way is.

“Mr. Dillon: We will have testimony.”

But the testimony does not materialize. The figure, however, becomes implanted in the mind of the witnesses, counsel, and the court, not however, without considerable confusion arising therefrom as demonstrated by this portion of the transcript:

“Q. Now, if my figures are correct regarding the 64 feet on both sides of the road here on Southfield and on Fourteen Mile road, this would add, would it not, an additional 18,000 square feet surrounding the property; that is, along its width north and south on Southfield road and east and west on Fourteen Mile road?

“Mr. Allen: I would object to that, Your Honor, because this is Oakland county property.

“The Court: You may take an answer.

“A. Would you ask that again.

“Q. 64 by 64 is 18,000, is that right?

“A. 64 and 64.

*701 “Q. I am taking the dimensions of the property, the lengthwise and adding the additional 64 feet. “The Court: 64 by 110, 64 by 100.

“Q. Would you agree?

“A. Would you ask the first part of the question again, please.

“The Court: This is a mathematical question, statement. I think we can accept the answer as •mathematics brings it out.

“Q. Would you agree with me this would add an additional 18,000 square feet to the property.

“Mr. Allen: Now, Tour Honor, again I would object to the question as calling for a conclusion, and an interpretation of law.

“The Court: I will take judicial notice of that. “Mr. Dillon: That it does add an additional 18,000 square feet, Your Honor?

“The Court: Yes.”

The testimony and confusion compound in the -following exchange:

. “The Court: On the record here I don’t agree with .your 18,000 square feet of usable highway space. Maybe I missed a point. But it seems to me there is 100 feet by 64 feet on Southfield.

“Mr. Dillon: 101.

“The Court: Well, 101.

# : “Mr. Dillon: Your Honor, Mr. Allen, himself, on rthe testimony here, said 101 by 110 feet is the size ,of-these lots, of this property.

“Mr. Allen: The topographical matter is 101.69 ifeet on Southfield, and 110 on Fourteen Mile,

- ■ “The Court: That is what I mean. My question was that you got 64 times 101, which is 64,000, well, 6,464 feet. Now, on the other, Fourteen Mile road, -you got 110 feet deep by 64, which would be 7,040.

“Mr. Dillon: Just one moment, please.

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Related

Kensington Hills Dev. Co. v. Milford Twp. and Milford Village
159 N.W.2d 330 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.W.2d 359, 4 Mich. App. 697, 1966 Mich. App. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granader-v-village-of-beverly-hills-michctapp-1966.