Leach v. City of North Richland Hills

627 S.W.2d 854, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 3810
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1982
Docket18532
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 627 S.W.2d 854 (Leach v. City of North Richland Hills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leach v. City of North Richland Hills, 627 S.W.2d 854, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 3810 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

JORDAN, Justice.

James M. Leach and twenty-two other landowners filed suit against the City of North Richland Hills to have the City’s Ordinances Nos. 253, 255, and 262, amending the City’s Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance by rezoning approximately fifty acres from single-family residence to multi-family residence and local retail, declared null and void. The suit also sought a temporary injunction enjoining, the City from granting any building permit for construction on said property except as permitted under the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance. The owners of the rezoned property intervened. The trial court, in a trial without a jury, upheld the validity of the amendatory ordinances rendering judgment for the City.

We affirm.

Plaintiffs are each homeowners who reside in the Holiday North Addition in the City of North Richland Hills, Texas, each of whom own parcels of this vacant land in this addition.

A brief review of the facts is necessary to an understanding of the judgment which is the subject of this appeal.

In 1967, the City adopted Ordinance 179, a Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance, rezoning the entire City of North Richland Hills. As part of Ordinance 179, an official zoning district map was adopted. Under this ordinance, the Holiday North Addition, which includes all plaintiffs’ homes as well as the rezoned tract in question, was zoned single-family residence.

In April of 1969, the City of North Rich-land Hills enacted two amendatory zoning ordinances on undeveloped land within the *856 Holiday North Addition. The first, Ordinance No. 253, changed the zoning of approximately 19 acres from single-family to multi-family. The second, Ordinance No. 255, changed approximately twenty-five acres from one family to local retail. On July 14, 1969, by ordinance No. 262 a third tract of land containing approximately 13.-66 acres was rezoned from single-family to multi-family residence and local retail.

Intervenors in this case are Dr. Donald E. Pentecost and wife, Rosemary Pentecost, owners of 36.084 acres of land rezoned by Ordinance'Nos. 253 and 255, and Omar Harvey and C. T. Beckham, owners of 13.66 acres of land rezoned by Ordinance No. 262. The intervenors acquired their respective interests in the property in question after the rezoning ordinances had been passed and did so in reliance on the property’s zoning classification at the time that they acquired their respective interests.

The Pentecost and Harvey tracts are adjacent to one another with the Pentecost tract lying immediately north of the pie-shaped 13.66 acre Harvey tract. Both tracts are bounded on the west by Holiday Lane, a major thoroughfare. Immediately south of the Harvey tract is a 100 foot wide power line easement. Both tracts lie within a flood plain and have a drainage way running from north to south through them. The City’s comprehensive plan developed in 1967 designates the property for “public and semi-public” use and shows the streets at the west and north boundaries of the Pentecost tract to be “secondary thoroughfares” with industrial property across the street to the west, low density residential adjoining on the east, and more “public and semi-public” to the south. The 1967 map shows the area adjoining on the west as “AG” (agriculture), to the north and south as “1F-9FP” (single family) and to the east as “1F-9” (single family).

Plaintiffs filed suit challenging the validity of the three ordinances in question more than eleven years after their adoption by the North Richland Hills City Council. Plaintiffs alleged in their petition that at the time that the City Council adopted the rezoning ordinances in question there was no evidence before the Council which justified said zoning change and that the amendatory ordinances were arbitrary and unreasonable spot zoning bearing no substantial relationship to the public health, safety, and welfare of the City and its inhabitants. Plaintiffs sought an injunction prohibiting the issuance of any building permit by the City on said property except as permitted under the provisions of the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance and a declaratory judgment declaring the three amendatory ordinances to be null and void.

The defendant City of North Richland Hills answered by general denial, but did not actively participate in the trial, leaving it to the intervenors to present the defense in the ease. The intervenors answered by separate petitions generally denying plaintiffs’ allegations and pleading in defense that the zoning ordinances in question had been validated by the Texas General Validation Statutes, Articles 1174a — 9, 974d-22, and 1174a — 10 and that the plaintiffs were barred by laches from attacking and challenging the validity of the 1969 zoning ordinances which zoning took place 10 years or more prior to plaintiffs filing their suit.

The case was tried to the court alone, which held that the North Richland Hills Zoning Ordinances 253, 255, and 262 are valid subsisting ordinances of the City.

No findings of fact or conclusions of law were requested or filed; therefore, we must presume that the trial court made the findings necessary to support its order, indulging every reasonable intendment in favor of the decision of the trial court. Frederickson v. Cochran, 449 S.W.2d 329 (Tex.Civ.App.—Beaumont 1969, writ ref’d n. r. e.); Renfro Drug Co. v. Lewis, 235 S.W.2d 609 (Tex.1950).

Plaintiffs appeal contending that the trial court erred in:

(1) finding that North Richland Hills Zoning Ordinance Nos. 253, 255, and 262 were valid ordinances;

(2) failing to find that Ordinance Nos. 253, 255 and 262 constituted spot zoning, and as such, were null and void;

*857 (3) in failing to find that the ordinances in question were arbitrary, unreasonable and capricious violations of the City’s Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance; and

(4) failing to find that the Texas General Validation Statutes cannot be used to cure a constitutionally defective zoning ordinance.

The threshold question to be considered is whether all the plaintiff-homeowners had standing to bring this action against the City. The record shows that only one of the plaintiff-homeowners purchased his home before the adoption of the amendatory zoning ordinances in 1969. James Leach testified that he purchased his home in August of 1965. Plaintiffs Carl Braaks and Nancy Strausser testified that they purchased their homes in May of 1972 and April of 1973 respectively, long after the amendatory zoning ordinances were adopted. No other plaintiffs testified nor is there any evidence in the record as to when the other plaintiffs purchased their homes. We hold that those plaintiffs who purchased their homes after adoption of the 1969 amendatory ordinances did so with notice of the rezoning ordinances and they cannot now be heard to complain. City of Corpus Christi v. Jones, 144 S.W.2d 388 (Tex.Civ.App.—San Antonio 1940, dism’d judgm. Cor.). See also Taylor v. Schlemmer,

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

Related

City of McKinney v. OH Skyline/380, L.P.
375 S.W.3d 580 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2012)
Julio Cesar Delacruz v. State
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2006
Super Wash, Inc. v. City of White Settlement
131 S.W.3d 249 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
City of Corpus Christi v. Taylor
126 S.W.3d 712 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
City of Canyon v. McBroom
121 S.W.3d 410 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2003)
Kinkaid School, Inc. v. McCarthy
833 S.W.2d 226 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1992)
Cottonwood Farms v. Board of County Commissioners
763 P.2d 551 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1988)
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion
Texas Attorney General Reports, 1987
Murmur Corp. v. BD. OF ADJ., CITY OF DALLAS
718 S.W.2d 790 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
627 S.W.2d 854, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 3810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-v-city-of-north-richland-hills-texapp-1982.