Green v. County Planning & Zon. Com'n of Sussex Cty.

340 A.2d 852, 1974 Del. Ch. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 18, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 340 A.2d 852 (Green v. County Planning & Zon. Com'n of Sussex Cty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. County Planning & Zon. Com'n of Sussex Cty., 340 A.2d 852, 1974 Del. Ch. LEXIS 84 (Del. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor:

The complaint herein, as amended, was filed by owners of interests in certain parcels of land situate in Baltimore Hundred, Sussex County. On these parcels are located single family beach residences situate near the large tract here in issue which is owned by the defendant Sea Colony, Inc. Joined as plaintiffs are two nonprofit corporate associations which are concerned with the protection of the alleged rights and interests of the present residents of the area, including those of plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs seek the entry of a declaratory judgment in the form of a permanent injunction against the carrying into effect of governmental action taken by the defendants County Planning and Zoning Commission of Sussex County and County Council of Sussex County which culminated in the purported rezoning of the tract' owned by the defendant Sea Colony, Inc. here in issue. As a result of such rezoning the defendant Sea Colony is at least tentatively authorized to build high density high rise (HR) residential facilities in what has been until now an area of medium density single family dwellings (MR).

The parties have entered into a stipulation of agreement on what they deem to be the relevant and material facts involved in this controversy, and this is the opinion of the Court on the opposing parties’ oral motions for final judgment.

As noted above, the defendant Sea Colony is the owner of lands located in close proximity to those of plaintiffs, its tract of land here in issue containing some twenty-three acres, which extend from Route 14 on the west to the Atlantic Ocean on the east. The developed community nearest to the Sea Colony tract is Cotton Patch Hills on the north, while the development nearest to such Sea Colony tract to the south is Ocean Village.

According to the stipulated facts on which the opposing parties’ motions for judgment are based there are at the present time no high rise buildings between Bethany Beach, which is south of the area here in issue, and Indian River Inlet to the north. Of the approximately twenty-five miles of Delware ocean coastline, fifteen are owned by the State. Of the remaining ten miles, only two miles of coastline remain for development. There is apparently a demand for condominiums in the coastal area, of which the tract in issue is a part, however, there is evidence of speculative dealing in such type of ownership, some 12% of recent purchases of such type of residential structure having been almost immediately resold. It is stipulated that had the individual plaintiffs been called to testify, they would have testified that in the event that the construction of the high rise buildings which Sea Colony proposes to erect is not enjoined, plaintiffs’ adjoining properties will lose both material and esthetic value. The factors which lead to such conclusion are apparently concerned with the afternoon shadows which would be cast by the high rise buildings in question were they to be erected, the crowding of the beach resulting from increased population in the area of such buildings, the resulting traffic congestion, as well as the water and sewage problems which would ensue as a result of such erections. Other well recognized disadvantages which accompany high density living are also stressed by plaintiffs.

Pursuant to the provisions of title 9 Del. C. § 6802, which became effective on July 13, 1967, a governmental body for Sussex County was created 1 known as the County *854 Planning and Zoning Commission 2 of Sussex County, charged with the duty, inter alia, of preparing a Comprehensive Development Plan 3 for Sussex County as well as for making recommendations concerning applications for amendments to a proposed zoning map of Sussex County, promulgated such a plan for such county in which the area in which the plot of twenty-three acres here in issue is located was classified as land appropriate for medium density single family residential use. However, notwithstanding such designation, a zoning change has been granted the defendant Sea Colony, Inc. by the defendant County Council for the tract here in issue, after approval of such change by the Planning and Zoning Commission of Sussex County, namely a change from medium density single family residential (MR) use to multifamily residential (HR) use, the lowest category for residential zoning. Such rezoning action was approved by the Planning and Zoning Commission on June 22, 1972 after a public hearing held on June 8, 1972, which action was upheld by the County Council on June 27, 1972, again after a public hearing. If the relief sought by plaintiffs is denied, the defendant Sea Colony will apparently be free to build high density housing of up to thirty units per acre to a height of one hundred sixty-five feet, whereas the former zoning for such area permitted only, four units per acre of a height of not more than thirty-five feet.

Plaintiffs now contend that such zoning change must be declared to be illegal and void for a number of reasons and thereupon enjoined from being effectuated, it being argued that were the zoning change which has been effected to become a reality, such change would drastically and improperly alter the character of the beach area in which plaintiffs own property and pay taxes by permitting the construction of residential buildings of a height of up to sixteen stories in close proximity to the single family residential homes in which plaintiffs and others reside. Plaintiffs further complain that unless the proposed high rise apartment-type buildings, which the defendant Sea Colony is now free to construct, are enjoined, they will rise above the relatively flat beach area in which plaintiffs’ properties are situate, and will destroy the present cottage character of the area by blocking views, putting the adjacent beaches in shadow in the afternoon and create an overcrowding of adjacent beaches, an overloading of roads and sewer facilities in the vicinity of the proposed construction, and bring about an increase in local taxes, thereby damaging plaintiffs’ property interests in what to date has been, according to plaintiffs, essentially a single family residential community.

In opposing plaintiffs’ application for in-junctive relief, counsel for the defendant Sea Colony, Inc. contend that this Court’s inquiry into the governmental action of which plaintiffs complain must be limited *855 to a consideration of whether or not the County Council of Sussex County acted within the bounds of its authority in granting the complained of rezoning application of Sea Colony here in issue, and, if so, whether or not the decision in favor of Sea Colony’s application was “ * * * arbitrary, capricious or illegal.”

Contending that both the Commission and the Council acted properly within the prerogatives of their legislative capacities after hearings at which the claimed rights of objectants to cross examine and to present evidence were not constitutionally guaranteed, defendants go on to argue that valid rezoning action was taken both by the County Planning and Zoning Commission and the County Council and that the record is devoid of any showing that the rezoning action of such governmental defendants, which is here in issue, was arbitrary, capricious, or in any way illegal. Defendants therefore ask that judgment be entered in their favor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 A.2d 852, 1974 Del. Ch. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-county-planning-zon-comn-of-sussex-cty-delch-1974.