Hawkins v. Talbot

80 N.W.2d 863, 248 Minn. 549, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 1, 1957
Docket36,962
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 80 N.W.2d 863 (Hawkins v. Talbot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawkins v. Talbot, 80 N.W.2d 863, 248 Minn. 549, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 535 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Dell, Chief Judge.

Plaintiffs seek to permanently enjoin the operation of a gravel pit located in the village of Coon Rapids on the ground that it is being operated in violation of a village ordinance, and on the further basis that it constitutes a nuisance. The matter was tried by the court without a jury. Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment for the defendant.

The evidence and the unchallenged findings of fact indicate that the plaintiffs 1 owned and occupied certain dwellings along the Mississippi River. The defendant, Paul Talbot, and his predecessors, who shall hereafter be referred to collectively as the defendants, 2 owned the land directly across a public highway from the plaintiffs. For many years the defendants used their land for agricultural purposes. Beginning in 1940, they commenced removing sand and gravel from a portion of their property and continued such removal intermittently until the issuance of the restraining order in this action. The remainder of the land apparently continued to be used to grow feed for dairy cattle. On July 1, 1953, the Coon Rapids Village Council passed an ordinance zoning the defendants’ property *551 as “residential.” However, this ordinance also provided as follows (Coon Rapids Ordinance No. 17, § 2.16):

“Non-Conforming Use
“Except as otherwise provided in this section the lawful use of any land or building existing at the time of taking effect of the ordinance may be continued although such use does not conform to the regulations provided by this ordinance for the district in which such land or building is located, provided, however, that no such non-conforming use of the land shall be enlarged or increased nor shall such non-conforming use be extended to occupy a greater area of land than that occupied by such use at the time of the adoption of this ordinance; nor shall any such non-conforming use be moved to any other part or parcel of land upon which the same is conducted at the time of the adoption of this ordinance.”

In July 1953 the size of the gravel pit was 175 feet by 150 feet by 6 feet deep. In October 1951 the dimensions were 175 by 150 by 7 feet. As of the date of trial, in September 1955, the pit was 210 by 210 by 8y2 feet. Until August 1955 the removal operations had been accomplished by a power shovel and, in one instance, a rock screen was also used. After this date the defendant began using a rock crusher as a part of the removal operation which screened and crushed the rock and sand to meet certain specifications.

Plaintiffs first contend that the enlargement of the gravel pit and the use of the rock crusher constituted an extension of a “non-conforming use” in violation of the zoning ordinance. Zoning ordinances have long been upheld as legitimate exercises of the police power as long as they conform to the usual limitations governing the exercise of that power. 3 One limitation traditionally imposed on the right of a governmental body to enact zoning restrictions is that such restrictions must be subject to the vested property interests of lawful businesses and uses already established within the zoned district. 4 Where these nonconforming uses are specifically *552 exempted, the question of the right of the owner to extend or enlarge such use has been the subject of considerable litigation. 5 It is not uncommon for the zoning ordinance to provide, as here, that there shall be no enlargement of the nonconforming use. These restrictions have generally been upheld. 6

Cases testing restrictions prohibiting extension of nonconforming uses have usually involved the size of buildings or other improvements and, therefore, even though the restrictions were upheld, the owner could indefinitely continue his business with the existing facilities. However, in the instant case we are confronted with a diminishing asset. If the defendant is to be limited to the area of land actually excavated at the time of the adoption of the ordinance, the restriction, in effect, prohibits any further use of the land as a gravel pit. Nevertheless, some courts have apparently adopted this view. For example, in Town of Billerica v. Quinn, 320 Mass. 687, 688, 71 N. E. (2d) 235, 236, the court said:

“It is plain that the Legislature intended that existing uses should be preserved. It is equally plain that under the statute and the bylaw they are not to be extended. The difficulty comes in reconciling these propositions where the use consists in stripping loam for sale, and where no more loam can be stripped without extending the denuded area beyond its existing boundaries. Nothing in the statute or by-law indicates a legislative intent to subordinate the zoning principle in favor of existing uses of such a character that they cannot be continued without extending them. The exception in favor of an existing use is expressly limited by the statutory words ‘to the extent to which it is used at the time of adoption of the ordinance or by-law.’ A use which cannot be so limited is not within the exception and is not preserved at all. This is, in effect, what the statute says.” (Citing case.) 7

*553 Even assuming that such a construction is not violative of constitutional protections of vested property rights, it is unwarranted under the language of the ordinance here involved. We are of the opinion that the phrase “occupy a greater area of land than that occupied by such use at the time of the adoption of this ordinance” should be interpreted, in the case of a diminishing asset, to mean all of that part of the owner’s land which contains the particular asset, and not merely that area in which operations were actually being conducted at the time of the adoption of the ordinance. In other words, since the gravel here “occupied” a larger area than the part actually being mined at the time of the adoption of the ordinance, the entire area of the gravel bed could be used without constituting an unlawful extension of a nonconforming use.

A number of courts have adopted this view. For example, in Lamb v. A. D. McKee, Inc. 10 N. J. Misc. 649, 651, 160 A. 563, 564, the court said:

“* * * We think the tract as a whole was used for excavating purposes even though only a part of it was actually being dug. Under prosecutor’s reasoning a land owner would be entitled to continue a previous non-conforming use only on the precise spot where it was being done. We think that is not so, and was not the intention of the legislature in enacting section 11 of the act of 1928. We think that the tract was a single unit and that it was put to a nonconforming use as a whole before the act of 1928 was passed.” 8

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.W.2d 863, 248 Minn. 549, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-talbot-minn-1957.