Jackson Municipal Airport Authority v. Evans

191 So. 2d 126
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1966
Docket44190
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 191 So. 2d 126 (Jackson Municipal Airport Authority v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson Municipal Airport Authority v. Evans, 191 So. 2d 126 (Mich. 1966).

Opinion

191 So.2d 126 (1966)

JACKSON MUNICIPAL AIRPORT AUTHORITY and City of Jackson, Mississippi,
v.
Dr. J.W. EVANS et al.

No. 44190.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

October 17, 1966.
Suggestion of Error Overruled November 7, 1966.

*127 E.W. Stennett, Robert E. Perry, N.W. Overstreet, Jr., Overstreet, Kuykendall, Perry & Phillips, Jackson, for appellants.

Watkins, Pyle, Edwards & Ludlam, John H. Stennis, Jackson, for appellees.

ROBERTSON, Justice.

This is an appeal from the decree of the Hinds County Chancery Court sustaining a general demurrer to the Bill of Complaint filed by the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority and the City of Jackson, Mississippi. Complainants prayed for the issuance of a preliminary injunction against the defendants requiring defendants to immediately top or remove 15 offending trees growing on defendants' land near the Jackson Municipal Airport. It was alleged that the defendants permitted these trees to grow into the restricted area, that is to say, the area more than 50 feet above the surface of defendants' land, which area had been declared within an instrument approach zone and a transition surface zone, as defined and set forth in a zoning ordinance adopted by the Joint-City of Jackson, Hinds County, Rankin County-Airport Zoning Board. The Chancellor sustained a general demurrer and dismissed the Bill of Complaint. We affirm the judgment of the lower court.

This is a case of first impression in this State. The Mississippi Legislature in 1950 passed a comprehensive act known as the "Airport Zoning Act," Mississippi Code Annotated 1942 sections 7544-01 through 17 (Recompiled 1956), which defined airport hazards, provided for the creation of a joint airport zoning board, and granted power to the joint board to adopt, administer and enforce under the police power airport zoning regulations for such airport hazard area. The Airport Zoning Act set forth in detail the procedure for adopting zoning regulations, cautioned that the regulations must be reasonable, provided for non-conforming uses, the issuance of permits and the application for and action on variances. The Act further provided for: the designation or creation of an administrative agency to administer and enforce the airport zoning regulations, the appointment of a Board of Adjustment to hear complaints and appeals from the decisions and orders of the administrative agency, and finally for judicial review.

The Act also provided for acquisition of air rights, aviation easements, or other estates or interests in land, in the following language:

"In any case in which: (1) it is desired to remove, lower, or otherwise terminate a nonconforming structure or use; or (2) the approach protection necessary cannot, because of constitutional limitations, be provided by airport zoning *128 regulations under this Act; or (3) it appears advisable that the necessary approach protection be provided by acquisition of property rights rather than by airport zoning regulations, the political subdivision within which the property or non-conforming use is located or the political subdivision owning the airport or served by it may acquire, by purchase, grant, or condemnation in the manner provided by the law under which political subdivisions are authorized to acquire real property for public purposes, such air right, aviation easement, or other estate or interest in the property or nonconforming structure or use in question as may be necessary to effectuate the purposes of this Act." Miss. Code Ann. 1942, § 7544-13 (1956).

Under the authority of this Act, the City of Jackson, Mississippi; Rankin County, Mississippi; and Hinds County, Mississippi, created a Joint Airport Zoning Board. In 1959 the said Joint Airport Zoning Board adopted a zoning ordinance containing airport zoning regulations and detailed plats illustrating the regulations, which ordinance was made an exhibit to the Bill of Complaint. The ordinance on its official plat placed the 80 acres owned by the defendants within an Instrument Approach Zone and a Transition Surface Zone as defined and set forth in the ordinance. In such zones, the Ordinance, by a complicated formula, imposes graduated height restrictions, the height of structures and trees on the defendants' land being limited to 50 feet.

The complainants, in their Bill of Complaint, charged that since 1959, the date of the adoption of the zoning ordinance, the defendants had permitted 15 trees on their land to grow and continue to grow within the restricted height elevation as provided in the zoning ordinance. The complainants further charged that the offending trees were scrub trees without any value, and that the said restricted area into which the trees protrude, was not within the reasonable and ordinary useable air space above defendants' land.

The exact footage that each tree protrudes into the restricted area is shown on a plat attached as an exhibit to the Bill of Complaint and it is not disputed that these 15 trees, being 14 oak trees and 1 hickory tree, extend into the restricted area as shown on said plat. The minimum extension is 1 foot and the maximum extension is 13 feet.

Of course, all facts well pleaded in the Bill of Complaint and exhibits thereto, are admitted by the general demurrer. Thus all facts necessary for a final determination of the case were before the lower court.

At issue is the narrow and precise question of whether the Bill of Complaint, taking all well pleaded and material facts as true, shows that the complainants under guise of a perhaps otherwise valid zoning ordinance have so interfered with and restricted the use and enjoyment of these defendants' private property as to constitute a taking or damaging thereof for public use without due compensation being first made to the owners, as required by Section 17 of The Constitution of the State of Mississippi.

The development of the common law with respect to airspace rights in the United States has been summarized as follows:

"At common law and until the development of the airplane the right of property which an owner had in the airspace above his land was recognized as absolute. Like his title to that which lay beneath his land the right was based upon the Latin maxim, `Cuius est solum, eius est usque ad coelum et ad inferos.' The early cases dealt with that part of the airspace which was directly above the land such as was occupied by projecting parts of buildings, over-hanging trees, and telephone and telegraph wires, or through which shells were fired or light beams projected.
*129 "With the development of travel by air the rights of the landowner and the rights of those traversing the air above his land came into seeming conflict. This conflict has been resolved by an adjudication which partially repudiates the ad coclum doctrine. While the owner does not in any physical manner occupy the stratum of airspace immediately above his land or make use of it in the conventional sense, he does use it in somewhat the same sense that space left between buildings for the purpose of light and air is used. The super-adjacent airspace at this low altitude is so close to the land that continuous invasions of it affect the use of the surface of the land itself. Invasions of such super-adjacent airspace are in the same category as invasions of the surface. (Emphasis added.)
"

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 2d 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-municipal-airport-authority-v-evans-miss-1966.