Mayor of Wilmington v. Turk

129 A. 512, 14 Del. Ch. 392, 1925 Del. Ch. LEXIS 39
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 129 A. 512 (Mayor of Wilmington v. Turk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Wilmington v. Turk, 129 A. 512, 14 Del. Ch. 392, 1925 Del. Ch. LEXIS 39 (Del. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The ordinance, following the authority of the statute, deals with four general subjects for regulation and [396]*396prohibition, viz., (a) the use of buildings, (b) the height and size of buildings, (c) areas and dimensions of open spaces and building lots, and (d) density of population. In the instant case we are concerned only with that portion of the ordinance which deals with (a).

Section 8 of the statute provides remedies available to municipal officers for the enforcement of the zoning ordinances authorized by it. Said section is as follows:

"Section 8. Remedies: — In case any building or structure is erected, constructed, reconstructed, altered, repaired, converted, or maintained; or any building, structure or land is used in violation of this act or of any ordinance or other regulation made under authority conferred thereby, the proper local authorities of the municipality, in addition to other remedies, may institute any appropriate action or proceedings to prevent such unlawful erection, construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair, conversion, maintenance or use to restrain, correct or abate such violation, to prevent the occupancy of said building, structure or land or to prevent any illegal act, conduct, business or use in or about such premises.”

Inasmuch as we are here dealing with the question of the use of a building, it would seem that the clause in the foregoing section authorizing preventive process is the one which specifies the case of a building “used in violation of this act or of any ordinance.” The defendant is not in possession of the building in question, nor is she its owner. It is not being “used” in violation of the statute, nor of any ordinance, nor of any regulation. What right has the city, therefore, to now seek injunctive relief in this .court?

The parties have chosen to ignore this question. I ought perhaps to answer it myself and, if the conclusion should be that the bill is prematurely filed, decree a dismissal. An outcome based on such a reason, however, would probably serve only to defer to a later time a decision on the substantive points; and' I shall, therefore, proceed to consider the case in the light of the contentions as they were shaped by the solicitors at the argument and on their briefs.

Throughout this opinion- it will be assumed that the defendant’s business which she proposes to conduct at No. 615 West Eighteenth Street will be the same as she now conducts at her present home, an assumption upon which solicitors for both parties to the cause have based their respective contentions.

[397]*397First. Is the defendant’s place of business properly embraced within the meaning of the term “hospital” as the same is used in the ordinance? The argument which the defendant makes under this head is, that the clause of the ordinance which banishes hospitals from Residence “A” Districts groups them with “charitable institutions, sanitariums or municipal firehouses”; that the contextual associates of “hospitals” are all things having what the solicitor for the defendant calls an institutional nature, and that such a place as the defendant’s hospital, if it be such, having no institutional badges or features and being private, cannot have been meant to be covered by the ordinance. An examination of the brief of the solicitor for the defendant leaves the mind in doubt as to the precise idea he means to convey by the words “institution” and “institutional nature.” If, as I gather, it is meant that only those hospitals which are public and charitable in nature are intended to be described by the ordinance, then private hospitals however elaborate and extensive they may be would not be excluded from Residence “A” Districts. Private hospitals are well known to exist throughout the .country in great numbers. It is difficult to believe that the legislative body of the city intended to base its banning of hospitals upon the somewhat irrelevant circumstance of how and by whom they are supported, whether by private funds or by public and charitable donations. If hospitals are the proper subject for hostile legislation, the nature and character of their organization, operation and support cannot serve to make them less so. In the named category of things in which hospitals are included, we find sanitariums. Now, sanitariums are generally privately conducted and supported. If so, it is apparent that the ordinance within itself negatives the idea that it was intended by the City Council that only institutions of a public and charitable nature were intended to be embraced within the category of things in which hospitals find themselves listed. If the defendant’s place of business, notwithstanding she resides there, is a hospital in the ordinary meaning of the term, it falls within the general scope of the term as used in the ordinance.

Is it, then, a hospital? The Century Dictionary defines a hospital as “an establishment or institution for the care of the sick or wounded, or of such as require medical or surgical treat[398]*398ment.” It is unnecessary to quote from other dictionaries of accepted authority for definitions of like import. It is very clear that Mrs. Turk’s residence is a hospital in the general acceptation of the term and as conducted by her constitutes a non-conforming use as defined by the ordinance.

Second and Third. These contentions are that the defendant is excepted from the operation of the ordinance’s prohibition because (a) her place of business is the office not of a physician, to be sure, but nevertheless of “a similar professional person residing on the premises,” and (b) that her business is, in the language of the ordinance, a “customary home occupation such as dressmaking or millinery conducted by a resident occupant with the assistance of not more than an average of two employees.” Whether the defendant in the conduct of her profession can be said to have an office similar to that of a physician, and whether she can be said to be engaged in a customary home occupation such as dressmaking and millinery, I need not pause to consider. This is for the reason that the ordinance specifically permits hospitals in districts other than Residence “A” Districts, and it would be a torturing of logical interpretation to assume that the legislative authority of the city meant by the use of general language of uncertain extent to permit something in Residence “A” Districts which it had by special mention allocated to other districts. The conclusion is that the ordinance assumes to prohibit the defendant from conducting her hospital at 615 West Eighteenth Street, which is located within a Residence “A” District.

Fourth. The contention made under this head raises the most difficult as well as the most interesting question in the case. Is the ordinance as applied to the defendant a constitutional exercise of authority? If valid, it must rest upon the police power of the State for its support. The extent and scope of that power is incapable of definition. That it may, notwithstanding it impinges upon rights vouchsafed by the literal language of constitutional provisions designed for the protection of the citizen in the use and enjoyment of his property, be exercised in the interest of the public peace, good order, safety, health and morals, has been repeatedly decided by the courts; and uncompensated loss or damage to the property owner occasioned by the legitimate exercise of the power [399]

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 512, 14 Del. Ch. 392, 1925 Del. Ch. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-wilmington-v-turk-delch-1925.