In Re Auditorium, Inc.
This text of 84 A.2d 598 (In Re Auditorium, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re AUDITORIUM, Inc.
In re 704 WEST ELEVENTH ST., WILMINGTON.
Superior Court of Delaware, New Castle.
David F. Anderson, of Berl, Potter & Anderson, Wilmington, for petitioner.
Herbert B. Warburton, Asst. City Sol., Wilmington, for Board of Adjustment of Mayor and Council of Wilmington.
Heard by RICHARDS, P. J.
*601 RICHARDS, President Judge.
It is admitted that the building located at 704 West Eleventh Street owned by The Auditorium, Inc., the petitioner, was there before the Act of the Legislature approved April 26, 1934, 39 Del.Laws, c. 22, providing for the adoption of zoning ordinances by legislative bodies of cities and incorporated towns in this State, and before the adoption of the building zone ordinances by the Mayor and Council of the City of Wilmington.
This being the case, under the provisions of Chapter 1699, Section 2 of the building zone ordinance, the owner of the building was not required to change its then existing use regardless of whether it conformed to the provisions of said ordinance.
The petitioner contends that the building zone ordinance is illegal and void as applied to the premises in question, because there is no building zone map accompanying the ordinance providing for the establishment of the bundaries of zoning districts, on which said zoning districts are shown, as required by Section 1 of said ordinance; and for the further reason that such building zone map is not kept in the custody of the clerk of council pursuant to the provisions of an ordinance of the Mayor and Council of Wilmington.
Mr. Willitts, city clerk and clerk of City Council, testified before me that there is a printed pamphlet of the building zone ordinance of the city of Wilmington as passed by the City Council, accompanied by a map which is declared to be a part of said ordinance. He further testified that this map is kept in the office of Mr. Fidance, the building inspector, that it is the only map he knows of and the one used by the building inspector.
Mr. Fidance testified that when he became building inspector for the city of Wilmington in 1934 a map which was considered the original building zone map of the city was in the office and has remained there since that time; that this map is used to determine the boundaries of the various zoning districts of the city; that in the square in which the building in question is located there were three different districts, a business B district, an apartment district and a residence C district; and that the entire block is in a residence district with the exception of the corner at Eleventh and Madison Streets.
Mr. Koester testified that he was chief engineer of the Street and Sewer Department and in that capacity served as a member of the Board of Adjustment for Zoning Appeals and was secretary of said Board. He further testified that in 1936 another map was prepared by the Street and Sewer Department which has been recognized since that time as the official map of the city of Wilmington and is the one used by the Board of Adjustment for Zoning Appeals.
It appears that the custody of the building zone map on which the zoning districts are shown, to be used in the enforcement of the building zone ordinance has been uncertain, but there seems to be no doubt that there is such a map which is referred to by both the building inspector and the Board of Adjustment in determining the boundaries of zoning districts. I am, therefore, unable to find that the building zone ordinance is illegal and void because of the failure to provide such a map.
The further contention is made that the boundaries established by the Mayor and Council of Wilmington for zoning districts are too vague, indefinite and uncertain to be applied to the petitioner's premises. It must be admitted that the boundaries established for the various zoning districts could be more clearly defined, *602 and that the building inspector and Board of Adjustment for Zoning Appeals could adopt a more certain method for determining where said boundaries are located, but it cannot be said that they are so vague that the petitioner's rights cannot be determined and that the ordinance cannot be enforced. Both Mr. Fidance and Mr. Koester testified that there was a definite rule which was used in determining the boundaries for the districts which was applied in this case.
I am convinced from the evidence before me that The Auditorium located at 704 West Eleventh Street is in either a residence or apartment district. This appears from the testimony of both Mr. Fidance and Mr. Koester and is supported by the order of the Board of Adjustment made on August 23, 1940. Paragraph 1700, Section 3, of the ordinance which specifies the manner in which buildings can be used or designed or arranged to be used in residence or apartment districts does not include an amusement center where athletic exhibitions would be held as is contemplated by the petitioner.
As stated above, the building at 704 West Eleventh Street owned by the Auditorium, Inc., the petitioner, was erected long before the zoning ordinance was adopted and was used for many years for just such purposes as Mr. Ward proposes to use it. It was permitted to be used for the same purposes after the adoption of the zoning ordinance notwithstanding the fact that such use was not permitted in the district in which it was located, because said ordinance does not require a change in the then existing use of any building. If, however, any existing nonconforming use of a building is abandoned for more than two years, it cannot be resumed. Special permission of the Board of Adjustment is necessary if the nonconforming use of an enterprise is extended beyond the limits of the present lot and a non-conforming building, once made conforming, cannot be changed back so as to be non-conforming again.
There is no doubt that the owners of the building in question could have continued to use it in the same manner and for the same purpose that it was used at the time the zoning ordinance was adopted. This was not done, however, but on August 28, 1940, upon application of the owner permission was granted by the Board of Adjustment for the building to be used for a furniture store and furniture exhibitions, and it has continued to be used for that purpose since that time. This order of the Board of Adjustment changed the non-conforming use of the premises to an entirely different non-conforming use, and at the same time, reserved the right to use the building for wrestling and boxing bouts as well as for furniture store and furniture exhibitions. Under my interpretation of the ordinance, the Board of Adjustment for Zoning Appeals had no right to grant the owner of the building permission to change the non-conforming use for which it was used at the time the ordinance was adopted to another non-conforming use, or to allow the owners to reserve the right to use the building for the original non-conforming use.
The Auditorium in question has not been used for athletic events since 1940 and to permit it to be used for that purpose now would be in direct conflict with that portion of the ordinance prohibiting the resumption of the non-conforming use of a building after it has been abandoned for more than two years.
No one knows better than the petitioner that the purpose for which The Auditorium was originally used was abandoned more than two years ago and that it has not been used for that purpose for more than ten years.
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84 A.2d 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-auditorium-inc-delsuperct-1951.