Hoffman v. City of Stillwater

1969 OK 190, 461 P.2d 944
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 25, 1969
Docket42717
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1969 OK 190 (Hoffman v. City of Stillwater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. City of Stillwater, 1969 OK 190, 461 P.2d 944 (Okla. 1969).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice:

Plaintiffs below, plaintiffs in error herein, have appealed to this Court from a declaratory judgment of the district court upholding the validity of an ordinance enacted by the Board of City Commissioners of the City of Stillwater which rezoned certain property located in that city.

The property rezoned by the ordinance challenged herein is located on the south side of West Sixth Avenue in the western edge of the City of Stillwater. West Sixth Avenue, which is also State Highway No. 51, runs east and west and is a four lane heavily traveled street. The tract, which consists of several lots, is bordered by Western Avenue on the west and has 140 feet of frontage on that street and 376 feet of frontage on West Sixth Avenue. In 1951, the property was annexed to the City of Stillwater and came into the city zoned for single family residences.

Surrounding the rezoned tract on the east, south and north are single family homes of the value of $25,000 to $40,000. There are restrictive covenants in effect on these residential lots which prohibit any commercial activity. Immediately to the west of the property, the land fronting West Sixth Avenue is zoned for commercial use and is presently being used for that purpose.

At the time the rezoning ordinance in question herein was enacted, the rezoned property was vacant and apparently had been since its annexation by the City in 1951. The land immediately adjoining the rezoned property to the south and to the east is also zoned for residential use and is vacant with the exception of a bulk oil storage plant to the south which was on the property at the time of its annexation *946 and zoning and is operated as a non-conforming use.

In 1962, the City of Stillwater enacted its Ordinance No. 1044 which was a comprehensive zoning plan for the City. This ordinance maintained residential zoning for the property involved herein. Sometime subsequent to the enactment of that ordinance, the owners of the various lots comprising the tract herein involved sought to have it rezoned but this request was denied by the Board of Commissioners. On appeal, this Court upheld the decision of the Board. See Preston v. City of Stillwa-ter, Okl., 428 P.2d 215.

In 1967, the Metropolitan Area Planning Commission, a joint city-county planning commission formed under the provisions of 19 O.S.1961, § 866.1 et seq., recommended, by a vote of 6-1, to the Board of Commissioners that the zoning of the property involved herein be changed from single family residence (classification R-l) to local commercial (C-l). Pursuant to 11 O.S. 1968 Supp. § 404, the recommendation of the Metropolitan Area Planning Commission was considered by the Board at a public hearing held on March 20, 1967. At the public hearing, the Board of Commissioners heard evidence and arguments from both proponents of and protestants to the proposed rezoning. The protestants, most of whom were owners of residences in the area surrounding the property, introduced a protest purportedly signed by owners of 2Q% or more of the lots immediately abutting either side of the property for which rezoning was sought. Protestants also filed a request for the disqualification of Commissioner B. K. Shaw as a voting member of the Board of Commissioners on the ground he had a personal interest in the matter. As one of its five members was absent, the Board, after receiving the protest, voted to continue the public hearing on the proposed zoning change to the next regular meeting or until all members were present. Protestants objected to this continuance.

At the next regular meeting of the Board, all members were present and the hearing on the proposed zoning change was reconvened over the objections of protestants. The City Attorney reported to the Board that protestants’ petition had the requisite number of signatures, i.e., at least 20% of the abutting landowners as required by 11 O.S.1961, § 405, and the Board recognized the petition as sufficient. Although given the opportunity, protestants did not re-present their arguments to the Commissioner who had been absent from the previous meeting and the proposed zoning amendment proceeded to a vote. On roll call, Commissioner Shaw, who did not disqualify, and three other Commissioners, one of whom was the Commissioner absent at the previous meeting, voted “aye” on Ordinance No. 1205 changing the zoning of the property in question herein from single family residence to local commercial, while the fifth member of the Board voted “nay”.

Thereafter, plaintiffs, who were some of the landowners surrounding the rezoned property, filed a declaratory judgment action naming the City of Stillwater as defendant and seeking a determination that Ordinance No. 1205 was invalid. In their petition, plaintiffs alleged the ordinance was invalid on the grounds that there was no substantial evidence to support the change in zoning; that the Board could not enact the ordinance at the next regular meeting subsequent to the one for which the required public notice had been given of the consideration of the proposed ordinance; that Commissioner Shaw’s personal and business relationships with one of the owners of the rezoned property required his disqualification; that the commissioner absent from the original meeting at which the ordinance was initially considered should not have been allowed to participate in the vote on the ordinance at a subsequent meeting; that the ordinance constituted spot zoning and was arbitrary and unreasonable; and, that the ordinance is contrary to the purposes and uses set forth in the comprehensive zoning plan previously enacted by the City of Stillwater.

*947 Thereafter, the various owners of the rezoned property were allowed to intervene by the trial court.

At trial, plaintiffs introduced evidence relative to the character and use of the rezoned property, the history of the zoning applicable to it and the property surrounding it, and the proceedings before the Board in its consideration and eventual passage of the ordinance, all as outlined above. In addition, other evidence was offered by plaintiffs.

The chief of police, City of Stillwater, testified that if the property in question were developed for commercial purposes, the traffic hazards on heavily traveled West Sixth Avenue would increase unless arrangements and improvements were made to accommodate the increased traffic.

The city planner for the City of Stillwa-ter testified that after an investigation, which took into consideration the nature of the character of the surrounding properties and the purposes of the comprehensive zoning plan, it was his opinion the property involved herein should be zoned for multi-family residential use, rather than for commercial use. He further testified that he made such recommendation to the Metropolitan Area Planning Commission prior to that body’s adoption of its recommendation to the Board of Commissioners that the property be rezoned for local commercial use.

Various owners of the residential property surrounding the rezoned tract testified, in summary, that when they purchased their homes they had relied on the residential zoning then applicable to the tract and had it been zoned commercial at the times of their purchases, they either would not have purchased their homes or would not have paid the prices they did.

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Bluebook (online)
1969 OK 190, 461 P.2d 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-city-of-stillwater-okla-1969.