Lakeside Day Care Center v. Board of Adjustment
This text of 121 So. 2d 335 (Lakeside Day Care Center v. Board of Adjustment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
LAKESIDE DAY CARE CENTER, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT, CITY OF BATON ROUGE, Louisiana, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*336 Breazeale, Sachse, Wilson & Hebert, McGehee & McKinnis, Baton Rouge, for appellant.
R. Gordon Kean, Jr., City Atty., John V. Parker, Asst. City Atty., Burton, Roberts & Ward, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
Before TATE, MILLER, and PUTNAM, Judges.
MILLER, Judge ad hoc.
This suit arises under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 33:4727 which grants to any person aggrieved by a decision of the Board of Adjustment the right to ask for a writ of certiorari from the District Court directed to the Board by way of petition "* * * setting forth that the decision is illegal, in whole or in part, specifying the grounds of the illegality. * * *" Appellant, Lakeside Day Care Center, Inc., contends that the Board of Adjustment for the City of Baton Rouge was in error when it refused to permit plaintiff to establish its "nursery school" as contended by the plaintiff, or its "day care center" as contended by the defendant, within the area zoned "A-1" as essentially a residential area in the City of Baton Rouge.
On June 15, 1959 Mrs. Lillian F. Hoover made an application to the Building Official of the City of Baton Rouge for a certificate of occupancy to operate a "Day Care Center for Children", at 3324 Morning Glory Avenue in said City. The application for occupancy indicated that the applicant proposed that the property was: "To be used as a Day Care Center for *337 Children, infants thru five years, maximum to be 60, 5 employees." In addition:
"The Center will be opened from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. six days a week."
After the Director of Public Works had indicated in a memorandum dated June 23, 1959 addressed to the Mayor-President and members of the City Council that the proposed use was permitted in an "A-1" Residential Area as defined by Section 2.201 of the Zoning Ordinance, Mrs. Mary B. Owen and other property owners in the area, alleging to be aggrieved by that indication, and availing themselves of the provisions of Section 8.3 of the Zoning Ordinance, appealed to the Board of Adjustment. A hearing was conducted by the Board on July 7, 1959. The issue was whether this "day care center" was a "nursery, prekindergarten, or kindergarten school" and thus a permitted occupancy in the "A-1" district under the provisions of Section 2.201 of the Zoning Ordinance.
Subsequently, the Board rendered judgment reversing the "ruling of the Building Official" and declaring that the operation contemplated by Mrs. Hoover was "not a school under the terms of the Ordinance and certainly not by the facts presented to the Board." In so concluding, the Board stated:
"The Board of Adjustment heard this appeal at its regular meeting on July 7, 1959, and listened to testimony by interested parties as well as arguments of counsel for both sides, and at the close of this hearing requested that each of the attorneys submit a brief in support of their arguments propounded to the Board and that any interested parties on either side of the question submit to the Board any pertinent information or argument either for or against the operation of a day care center for children.
"Each member of the Board was supplied with copies of briefs, letters and other documents submitted to the Board, and after proper review of these documents, on Friday, July 24, 1959, met with all members of the Board present and voting.
"It is the opinion of this Board that the proposed use of the premises as a day care center for children is not a permitted use under the section of the Zoning Ordinance heretofore quoted (Sec. 2.201); it being the opinion of this Board that such a center is not a nursery, kindergarten, or pre-kindergarten school but it is truth and in fact a day care center which this Board interprets to be, a commercial operation to care for children for periods and hours substantially different from those normal school activities.
"The testimony and information supplied to the Board of Adjustment indicates that the contemplated use would be for twelve (12) months per year, six (6) days per week, approximately eleven (11) hours per day, all of which indicates that the proposed use is substantially different and at variance with normal `school' (emphasis added) operation either parochial, private or public."
Thereafter, Lakeside Day Care Center, Inc., filed a petition praying, "for a writ of certiorari", directed to the Board of Adjustment "pursuant to the provisions of L.R.S. 33:4727 and related statutes." The essence of the petitioner's application for judicial review is that the Board's action was illegal in that it refused to permit a use of the property authorized for A-1 residential areas by the zoning ordinance.
After hearing the case, both on the exceptions filed by counsel for the Board and on its merits, the Trial Court, for written reasons assigned, held that the "evidence does not reveal that the action of the Board was illegal", and thus dismissed petitioner's demands at its costs. From this adverse judgment, the corporate plaintiff appealed.
*338 Appellant complains that the lower court refused to consider the question of whether or not the Board of Adjustment properly exercised its discretion, but rather limited its inquiry to whether or not the Board's action was illegal. The trial court stated:
"Under the law, since no appeal is granted from the action of the Board of Adjustment, the Court is limited in its consideration of the proceedings to a determination of the legality thereof and the Court is not authorized to resolve the question as to whether or not the intended use of the property comes within the uses permitted by the ordinance, nor to substitute the Court's discretion for that vested in the Board but is circumscribed to the extent of determining whether or not the acts of the Board were legal.
"I am of the opinion that in arriving at the conclusion adjudicated by the Board, it exercised legally a discretion vested in said Board and therefore this Court is powerless to disturb its ruling."
In our opinion, our learned trial brother incorrectly concluded that upon judicial review the court is "not authorized to resolve the question as to whether the intended use of the property comes within the uses permitted by the ordinance." In the only Louisiana case cited which is relevant to the question, our Supreme Court has held that a classification of property by a zoning board in violation of the basic zoning ordinance is an illegality subject to review and reversal by the courts. State ex rel. Harris v. Zoning Board, 221 La. 941, 60 So.2d 880. Likewise, subject to judicial review as an illegality is the refusal of a zoning board to permit property to be used as authorized by the zoning ordinance.
Thus the primary issue is properly before this court for judicial review under LSA-R.S. 33:4727, namely, whether or not the intended use of the property comes within the uses permitted by Section 2.201 of the Zoning Ordinance at issue. In other wordsis a "day care center" the same as a "nursery school" or "prekindergarten school" as provided for in Section 2.201 of the Baton Rouge Zoning Ordinance?
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121 So. 2d 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeside-day-care-center-v-board-of-adjustment-lactapp-1960.