McKibben v. City of Jackson

193 So. 2d 741
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1967
Docket44288
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 193 So. 2d 741 (McKibben 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.

Bluebook
McKibben v. City of Jackson, 193 So. 2d 741 (Mich. 1967).

Opinion

193 So.2d 741 (1967)

Dale H. McKIBBEN et al.
v.
CITY OF JACKSON, Mississippi et al.

No. 44288.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

January 16, 1967.

*742 Butler, Snow, O'Mara, Stevens & Cannada, Harold D. Miller, Jr., Joe T. Patterson, Atty. Gen., by John E. Stone, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellants.

Valentine Surgis, E.W. Stennett and W.T. Neely, Gene A. Wilkinson, E. Grant Tharpe, Jackson, for appellees.

PATTERSON, Justice.

This is an appeal from a final judgment of the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County. The judgment of the circuit court affirmed an order of the City Council of Jackson, Mississippi, dated February 15, 1966, which adopted the recommendation of the zoning committee rezoning the involved property from residential use to commercial use.

The property is located on the south side of Lakeland Drive near its intersection with Ridgewood Road. It abuts proposed State Highway No. 25 to the north, the property of Mississippi Power & Light Company and its substation to the east, vacant and undeveloped property to the south, and Southerland Street to the west. Across the proposed State Highway No. 25 to the north is the property of the State of Mississippi upon which the Mississippi Research and Development Center is to be located, and diagonally to the northeast across said road is the property of River Hills Club. Both of these properties are nonresidential. The lots immediately to the west and across Southerland Street are vacant, though further west and adjoining the vacant property there are residences. The property of the protestants lying south of proposed State Highway No. 25, west of Southerland Street, north of Lakeside Drive and east of Lakeward Drive is zoned residential A-1. A more precise description of the property in question may be found in the order of the city council which reclassified this property from residential to commercial, the proceeding being designated Case No. 338-B on the city docket.

W.B. Sims, one of the appellees, filed a petition for rezoning on October 11, 1962, which was designated as Case No. 338. On May 14, 1963, the zoning committee recommended *743 that the petition be denied, and thereafter on September 15, 1964, the city council denied this application. This decision was not appealed.

On August 20, 1965, eleven months later, the appellees filed a petition for rehearing. This proceeding was designated Case No. 338-B, and the petition was approved by the zoning committee. Thereafter the zoning committee recommended that the property be rezoned to commercial usage with certain restrictions. After a hearing, the city council on February 15, 1966, rezoned the subject property from residential A-1 uses and purposes to commercial uses and purposes, thereby approving the advisory recommendation of the zoning committee. The order of the city council was affirmed by the circuit court from which this appeal is perfected.

The protestants most vitally concerned, though all of their properties are not within 160 feet of that sought to be rezoned, are those who live or own property in the block immediately to the west of the litigated property. The facilities of the Research and Development Center, an agency of the State of Mississippi, will be located on stateowned property situated across Lakeland Drive (proposed State Highway No. 25) to the north. Though it filed no formal protestation to the rezoning petition, the State of Mississippi joins with the other protestants in their brief on this appeal. It seeks legal status as a party to this suit.

The appellants contend that the adoption of the rezoning ordinance and the subsequent action of the circuit court in affirming it were erroneous for the following reasons:

I. There has been no material change in circumstances since the initial decision on this petition for rezoning (Case 338), and the proper application of the doctrine of res judicata required a denial of this petition.
II. The ordinance rezoning appellees' property from residential to commercial is a clear example of "spot zoning" and, therefore, is an unlawful exercise of the City's legislative authority.
III. There was no evidentiary justification for the City's action and its amendment to the zoning ordinance in this instance is unfair, arbitrary, and capricious, and it cannot be sustained.
IV. The State of Mississippi, acting through its duly created agency, has the power and the right to oppose the commercialization of the subject property.
V. The City Council denied appellants their constitutional rights by denying them their right of cross-examination and confrontation of adversaries.
VI. The City Council erred in admitting appellees' rebuttal proof into evidence.

The first assignment of error necessitates a finding of whether there was a material change of circumstances during the eleven months that intervened between the first petition for rezoning, which was denied, and the subsequent petition which resulted in the property being rezoned. City of Jackson v. Morgan and Fowler, Miss., 193 So.2d 555 (1967); City of Jackson v. Wilson, Miss., 195 So.2d 470 (1966); and Westminster Presbyterian Church v. City of Jackson, 253 Miss. 495, 176 So.2d 267 (1965). The following findings of the city council on the appellants' petition for rehearing are significant in regard to the alleged change in circumstances:

(1) The contract has been let and construction begun for the construction of Mississippi Highway No. 25, and said Highway abuts the entire frontage of said property and materially affects said property.
(2) The Legislature of the State of Mississippi has authorized the construction of a Research and Development Center and Hinds County, Mississippi, on April 6, 1965, by public vote authorized issuance of bonds in the amount of $2,000,000 for construction of additional buildings in *744 connection with said Research and Development Center; that the said facility, costing millions of dollars, would materially change the immediate area involved; that the site for the construction thereof has been fixed and located on said Highway No. 25, across from the petitioner's property.
(3) The contract has been let and construction begun for an all-directional ingress and egress interchange from said Highway 25 with U.S. Interstate Highway No. 55, which connection is just west of and which interchange will substantially affect the property in question.

The evidence on the rehearing and the petition for rezoning the property substantiate the changes during this time. The protestants contend, however, that the changes found by the council to have occurred during the intervening period were in effect considered by the council on the first hearing, since evidence pertinent to the then-proposed changes was at that time introduced. We are of the opinion this contention is not well taken since we consider the difference between a proposed bond issue of $2,000,000 and a bond issue of $2,000,000 in fact to be both significant and material. We consider also the transformation from a proposed state highway to a highway under construction, as is evidenced by the letting of a contract therefor with exact description as to its location and other details, to be material and significant. Additionally, a legislative enactment creating the Research and Development Center was passed July 1, 1964, (Miss. Laws 1964, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 2d 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckibben-v-city-of-jackson-miss-1967.