Hedgcock v. People Ex Rel. Arden Realty & Investment Co.

57 P.2d 891, 51 P.2d 891, 98 Colo. 522
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 6, 1936
DocketNo. 13,566.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 57 P.2d 891 (Hedgcock v. People Ex Rel. Arden Realty & Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hedgcock v. People Ex Rel. Arden Realty & Investment Co., 57 P.2d 891, 51 P.2d 891, 98 Colo. 522 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hilliard

delivered the opinion of the court.

An action in mandamus. Writ issued requiring plaintiff in error, building inspector of Denver, to grant relator, appearing in the name of the people, defendant *523 in error, a permit to erect a store building on its property. The reason assigned for refusing the permit was that relator’s property is within an area zoned for residence purposes, as evidenced by Denver’s zoning ordinance of 1925.

As to zoning designation, not denied by relator, the contention is that, as applied to its property, the ordinance is “arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, oppressive and discriminatory,” and operates to deny it the “equal protection of the laws as provided by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and deprives relator of its property and of the use thereof without due process of law and without just compensation contrary to the provisions of the Constitution of the United States and of the Constitution of the state of Colorado and of sections 3, 15 and 25 of the Bill of Bights of said Constitution.”

The property involved faces south on East Twenty-third avenue, immediately west of an alley between Cherry and Dexter streets. The alley is twelve feet wide. Across the alley to the eastward is a two-store business building some forty feet high, extending rearward the full length of relator’s property, and facing East Twenty-third avenue. The room next the alley is occupied by a grocer, and the adjoining one by a druggist. At the rear of the drugstore is an activity known as the Park Hill Book Club, and another known as the Frances Permanent Wave Shop, the latter conducted commercially. A barber shop is operated in the basement of the building. Farther to the rear, 2317 Dexter street, in a separate building is the Park Hill Beauty Salon. Immediately across from the drugstore on Dexter street, is the Park Hill School of Music, operated for business purposes. Directly across East Twenty-third avenue from relator’s property, are two stores: fruit and vegetables, cleaning and dyeing. Eastward from the stores last mentioned, across the alley and facing the same avenue, are six other stores, in which are conducted the following *524 businesses: grocery and market, tailor and cleaner, bakery, dry goods, hardware, including plumbing and heating, and a second drugstore. Across the street southwesterly from relator’s property, and adjoining the fruit store mentioned above, is a house in which is conducted an insurance and real estate business. Many other businesses are conducted in the vicinage. In the main, the major businesses referred to were in full operation before, and at the time of, the adoption of the zoning ordinance. Generally, the testimony shows that for about a block the territory east and west of relator’s property has long been used mostly for business, and is unattractive for residence purposes. A double track street railway traverses East Twenty-third avenue at the point in question and for many blocks eastward and westward therefrom. Automobiles and trucks in great numbers are constantly parked in and around what the witnesses call this “business center.”

Six witnesses, four called by relator and two by respondent, were examined. Of these, one was a woman familiar with the situation, four were experienced real estate operators and the other was secretary-engineer of the public activity having* to do with the administration of the zoning ordinance. The three real estate men testifying on call of relator were generally in accord to the effect that the block on East Twenty-third avenue between Cherry and Dexter streets, was a business center, seventy-five per cent thereof being used as business property, and that there was great demand for additional store space in that vicinity. They said that other than some downtown districts, this particular business center is one of the very best in Denver, in popularity as such and in rental values; that for business purposes relator’s property is worth $3,500, while for residence purposes it is worth from $200 to $350. The clear inference from their testimony is that prior to the adoption of the zoning ordinance the block referred to was a business center and has continued so, and that it ought never to have *525 been zoned otherwise. One of these witnesses, having unchallenged knowledge, said that for a period of sixteen years not a residence had been built within two blocks of this business center. He explained that he attributed the condition “to the fact there was business — everybody considered that a business zone or district. ’ ’ The woman witness, long acquainted with the premises, said that business had increased at this point, as had noise and traffic. In short, all these witnesses believed, and testified, that the proposed store building was needed, would not adversely 'affect values, and would constitute but additional business facilities in an area already devoted to business, and where there was demand for more business housing.

Although an experienced and qualified witness, called by respondent, testified that the erection of the proposed store building would reduce the value of neighboring residence property — he being the only witness so testifying — the court was justified in deducing from all he said, that the witness believed the center involved in this controversy ought not to have been zoned for residential purposes and is not such a community now. We quote two questions and his answers:

“Q. Can you refer * * * to any situation in the City and County of Denver where a business center has developed in the nature of that on East Twenty-third avenue between Cherry and Dexter streets, that has been zoned as Residence A? Can you find any other place where this situation exists, to have a dozen or eighteen business houses zoned as Residence A? A. I don’t think there is.
“Q. There is no other section of that character? A. That is, not as bad as that. That’s a bad situation there.”

The secretary-engineer witness gave no testimony calculated to justify the original zoning of the district for residential purposes; on the contrary, the plain inference to be drawn, from what he said is that the area is a business center and that the zoning ordinance should have conformed to that evident fact. “I don’t think,” he *526 said, “there is any other place within the City and County of Denver where there is a business territory óf this character that has been zoned as a Residence A zone.” He further testified that, “With reference to any other place within the City and County of Denver where business has been placed in a Residence A zone, or a Residence A zone has been created, that has as many business places as this, * * * I can’t mention one now where it is as intensively developed.” Again he said: “I will say there are business centers that are as extensively developed, but they are shown on the zone map as business zones.”

Considering the entire testimony, we conclude the trial judge was well advised in his findings, which we quote:

“The situation shown by the evidence to exist in the district involved in this litigation has no parallel anywhere else in the city.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mahnke v. Coughenour
458 P.2d 747 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1969)
City and County of Denver v. Denver Buick, Inc.
347 P.2d 919 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1960)
Hoskinson v. City of Arvada
319 P.2d 1090 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1957)
Bohn v. Board of Adjustment
271 P.2d 1051 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1954)
Cross v. Bilett
221 P.2d 923 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1950)
Carter v. City of Bluefield
54 S.E.2d 747 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1949)
Beszedes v. Board of County Commissioners
178 P.2d 950 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1947)
People Ex Rel. Friedman v. Webber
132 P.2d 183 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1942)
Serv-Us Chain Stores, Inc. v. Arden Realty & Investment Co.
105 P.2d 850 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1940)
Weber v. City of Cheyenne
97 P.2d 667 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P.2d 891, 51 P.2d 891, 98 Colo. 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedgcock-v-people-ex-rel-arden-realty-investment-co-colo-1936.