Haas v. City of Mobile

265 So. 2d 564, 289 Ala. 16, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1013
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 10, 1972
Docket1 Div. 699
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 265 So. 2d 564 (Haas v. City of Mobile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haas v. City of Mobile, 265 So. 2d 564, 289 Ala. 16, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1013 (Ala. 1972).

Opinion

*18 HEFLIN, Chief Justice

Appellants-complainants George A. Haas, Robert E. Finch and Dr. C. Adrien Bodet bring this appeal from an adverse decree to their declaratory judgment action in which appellee-respondents City of Mobile, John K. Codings and Alletta Turner, and appellee-intervenor Baldwin Development Corporation, were parties in the Circuit Court of Mobile County, in Equity. The bill of complaint sought to declare void and unconstitutional Zoning Ordinance No. 80-142, which amended The Zoning Ordinance of the City of Mobile by rezoning a 12.25 acre tract of wooded land within a R-A (Residence-Agriculture) district to a R-3 (Multiple-Family-Residence) district so that luxury type apartment buildings could be built.

Appellants-complainants George A. Haas, Robert E. Finch and Dr. C. Adrien Bodet are owners of residences in the neighborhood of the 12.25 acre tract. Appellee-respondent John K. Codings is the owner of the 12.25 acre tract and appellee-respondent Alletta Turner holds a vendor’s lien on that land. Baldwin Development Corporation obtained an option on the 12.25 acre tract from Codings and intervened in the proceeding below. The Attorney General of the State of Alabama was served and filed a waiver as to future notice. Hereinafter the appellants-complainants will be referred to as appellants, and where the term “appellees” is used it will include John K. Codings, Alletta Turner, Baldwin Development Corporation and the City of Mobile.

The 12.25 acre tract is the middle portion of a rectangularly shaped tract of land, which apparently was approximately 40 acres in size, bounded on the north by Old Grant Street, on the east by Cottage Hill Road, on the south by Eslava Creek and on the west by Sage Avenue. In the neighborhood to this 12.25 acre tract there : are residential areas, a private swimming pool, commercial areas, a church and one tract which had been previously rezoned R-3.

Appellants are owners of residential property, located both on the eastern portion of the large rectangularly shaped tract and in the residential sections to the north of Old Grant Street directly across from the 12.25 acre tract. The residences range in value from $30,000 to $100,000.

The general area was zoned R-l (best residential classification), however, the swimming pool had been granted a variance, the commercial buildings had been favored with variances, and some of the property had been rezoned to R-3 on a previous occasion. The 12.25 acre tract originally was zoned R-l but in 1967 was rezoned to R-A.

Efforts to rezone the 12.25 acre tract from R-A to R-3 began with an application filed with the Zoning Administrator who, based upon studies of the area, location, traffic consideration, etc., recommended to the Planning Commission that the land be rezoned. The Planning Commission held two public meetings where extensive discussion and argument occurred on the proposed rezoning. The Planning Commission’s recommendation to the City Commission was in favor of amending the zoning ordinance with a condition that a second means of ingress and egress to the property be made by opening the proposed apartment complex to be built on the 12.25 acre tract to the proposed Eslava Creek *19 Parkway. A planning consultant also recommended approval. After hearing considerable debate by persons for and against the proposed rezoning, the Mobile City Commission unanimously approved the rezoning.

According to the “Major Street Plan” of the City of Mobile, the proposed Eslava Creek Parkway will be one of the major highways connecting Airport Boulevard with Cedar Point Road and Mobile Bay Parkway. Some construction of said Es-lava Creek Parkway has already begun in close proximity of the 12.25 acre tract.

Ordinance No. 80-142 provided, among other things, the following:

“ * * * and further provided, however, that no lot or parcel of land hereinabove described shall be used for any use allowed in a R-3 district until all of the conditions set forth below have been complied with: subject to reservation of the right-of-way for Eslava Creek Parkway and that a second means of ingress and egress to the proposed Eslava Creek Parkway be provided.”

The Chancellor decreed that Zoning Ordinance 80-142 was valid and constitutional. From such decree the appellants have perfected their appeal.

The first contention raised by the appellants is that Ordinance No. 80-142 is void because the conditions precedent to the use of the property require a reservation of the right-of-way for Eslava Creek Parkway and a second means of ingress and egress to the proposed Eslava Creek Parkway in the area reclassified. The appellants contend that a municipality has no authority to amend a zoning ordinance subject to a collateral agreement (or a collateral deed) to be executed between the city and the property owner because such constitutes “contract zoning”.

In support of their position appellants rely upon Hartnett v. Austin (Fla.), 93 So. 2d 86; Baylis v. City of Baltimore, 219 Md. 164, 148 A.2d 429; Treadway v. City of Rockford, 24 Ill.2d 488, 182 N.E.2d 219; and Lewis v. City of Jackson (Miss.), 184 So.2d 384.

In an article entitled, “Zoning by Contract. With Property Owner”, by Ralph W. Crolly and C. McKim Norton, 133 New York Law Journal 4 (1955), “contract zoning” is defined as follows:

“The principle involved may be simply stated. A municipality has no power to make any agreement or deal which will in any way control or embarrass its legislative powers and duties. Neither the police power of the state itself nor that delegated by it to a municipality is subject to limitation by private contract; nor is the exercise of such power to be alienated, surrendered or limited by any agreement or device. Zoning of properties by a municipality being legislative in character cannot be bargained or sold. The rezoning of a parcel of property by a municipality based in any way upon an offer or agreement by an owner of property is inconsistent with, and disruptive of, a comprehensive zoning plan.”

On the other hand, it is well established that a zoning ordinance may place upon a property owner reasonable restrictions and requirements in the use of the zoned property and this court has expressly approved such restrictions and requirements. Walls v. City of Guntersville, 253 Ala. 480, 45 So.2d 468; Southern Rock Products Co. v. Board of Zoning Adjustment, 282 Ala. 186, 210 So.2d 419. See also Sections 774, 776 and 777 of Title 37 of the Code of Alabama, 1940.

The precise question of the validity of the requirement of landowner dedication for highways, streets and alleys as a prerequisite for zoning applicability has been treated in three jurisdictions: Kansas—Arkenberg v. City of Topeka, 197 Kan. 731, 421 P.2d 213; and Hudson Oil Company of Missouri, Inc. v. City of Wichita, 193 Kan. 623, 396 P.2d 271; Washington—State ex rel. Myhre v.

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Bluebook (online)
265 So. 2d 564, 289 Ala. 16, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-v-city-of-mobile-ala-1972.