Lewis v. City of Jackson
This text of 184 So. 2d 384 (Lewis v. City of Jackson) 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.
Opinion
Mrs. Myra LEWIS et al.
v.
CITY OF JACKSON and Colonial Country Club, Inc.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*385 Lawrence J. Franck, Butler, Snow, O'Mara, Stevens & Cannada, Jackson, for appellants.
Wells, Thomas & Wells, E.W. Stennett, Alex A. Alston, Jr., Roland D. Marble, Jackson, for appellees.
INZER, Justice:
This is a zoning case. The principal question to be determined is the validity of an ordinance of the City of Jackson which amended its zoning ordinance so as to rezone 8.93 acres of land owned by the Colonial Country Club, Inc. from A-1 residential to commercial. We hold that the action of the City Council under the facts and circumstances of this case was unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious, and for that reason, the ordinance is invalid.
Appellee, Colonial Country Club, Inc., hereinafter referred to as the Club, owns a tract of land situated in the northeast part of the City of Jackson. The Club is a non-profit organization consisting of about 351 stockholders and over 500 members who pay dues. The Club was in existence and operating when the city limits of the City of Jackson were expanded in 1960 so as to include its property within the City. All of the Club's property was then zoned A-1 residental. The Club made no objection to being included within the City or to the zoning of its property as residential. In June 1964 the Club made application to have 8.93 acres of its land rezoned from residential to commercial. This land was vacant property, and after the application was granted, the Club proposed to build thereon an enclosed mall shopping center. The tract of land is located on the west side of the 5700 block of Old Canton Road. On the south, it is bounded by Parkway Drive and is bounded on the north by North Park Drive. On the west, it joins other property owned by the Club. The City Council referred the application to the zoning committee of the Planning Board of the City of Jackson. The committee gave notice and held hearings on the application. Appellant, Mrs. Myra Lewis, and other residents and property owners in the community objected to the granting of the petition. After hearing the matter, the zoning committee filed its report and recommended that the application be denied. After giving notice, the City Council conducted a hearing, and appellant and others again objected and protested to the granting of the petition. On January 12, 1965, the City Council entered an order granting the petition and amending its zoning ordinance so as to rezone the property from A-1 residential to commercial, upon certain conditions set out in the order. From this order, appellants appealed to the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County. The circuit court affirmed the action of the *386 Council, and appellants then appealed to this Court.
The order appealed from recites that the objections and protests were overruled and that the petition for the rezoning would be to the best interest of the City of Jackson, and should be granted, subject to the conditions and limitations therein set out. After making these findings and describing the property, the order recites the following conditions:
* * * (B)e and the same is hereby rezoned from residential A-1 to commercial uses and purposes, and the City Engineer be and he is hereby authorized and directed to make note of the change on the zoning map of the City. It is specifically provided, however, that the said property is hereby rezoned and changed from residential to commercial uses and purposes on the condition that the owners thereof will begin commercial activity on the said property within two years from the date of this ordinance and that their failure to begin such commercial activity, which commercial activity includes but is not necessarily limited to construction and arrangements for leases, financing and the establishment of a shopping center on the said property, and conditioned further that upon their failure to so do within the said period of two years then the rezoning of said property shall revert from said commercial uses and purposes to residential A-1; provided, further that before a permit is issued for any commercial buildings on the said property adequate off-street parking facilities must be provided by the owner and developer thereof; and provided further that a low-rise screen, consisting of either a fence or adequate hedge development not to exceed the average and ordinary height of an automobile hood, be constructed and installed along the boundary line of the property above described where the same abuts the north line of Parkway Drive so as to protect the residents of the area on the opposite side of said Parkway Drive from automobile lights in the area; and conditioned further upon provision being made for the widening of the Old Canton Road along the east line of said property to a width not to exceed one hundred feet (100').
Appellants assign as error on the part of the circuit court the following:
The Court erred in holding that the Ordinance passed by the Council of the City of Jackson on January 12, 1965, and appearing in Minute Book "R", at page 285 thereof, in the records of said City, was adopted in the lawful exercise of the legislative authority of the City of Jackson, Mississippi.
The Court erred in holding that the aforesaid Ordinance was within the power of the said City Council to enact.
The Court erred in entering its judgment dated the 24th day of May, 1965, upholding and confirming said Ordinance and in denying and dismissing the appeal perfected to said Court by the Appellants herein.
We are of the opinion that the Circuit Court was in error in affirming the action of the City Council for the reasons hereinafter stated. These reasons make it unnecessary to decide and we prefer to defer any decision as to whether the so-called "spot zoning" is illegal under our zoning statute and whether the conditions and limitations set out in the ordinance invalidate it. This case is controlled by the law announced in the case of City of Jackson v. Bridges, 243 Miss. 646, 139 So.2d 660 (1962), and the authorities therein cited. We held in the Bridges case, supra, that the burden of proof was upon the petitioners seeking the change in a zoning ordinance to prove a public need for the change. We further held that before rezoning, the proof must show that there was either some mistake in the original zoning or that conditions in the area had changed so as to warrant the rezoning.
*387 The record reflects that the zoning committee conducted at least two hearings relative to this application. It made a study of the area involved and the characteristics of the housing units within an eighteen-block area. It heard numerous witnesses, both for the petitioners and for the protestants. A summary of the evidence that was before the committee is in their report to the City Council. After a thorough investigation and study, the committee was of the opinion that any further rezoning in the area, and particularly the property in question, would be an encroachment upon the residential values in the neighborhood and would be detrimental to the health, safety, morals and welfare of the community. It recommended to the City Council that the request for rezoning be denied. The findings and recommendations of the zoning committee are not binding on the City Council. The zoning committee acts only in an advisatory capacity. Thereafter the City Council held a public hearing on the application.
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184 So. 2d 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-city-of-jackson-miss-1966.