Monte v. Parish of Jefferson ex rel. Coulon

898 So. 2d 506, 4 La.App. 5 Cir. 1059, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 255, 2005 WL 356622
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 2005
DocketNo. 04-CA-1059
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 898 So. 2d 506 (Monte v. Parish of Jefferson ex rel. Coulon) 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.

Bluebook
Monte v. Parish of Jefferson ex rel. Coulon, 898 So. 2d 506, 4 La.App. 5 Cir. 1059, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 255, 2005 WL 356622 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

I «SOL GOTHARD, Judge.

The issue presented for our review in this matter is whether the Parish of Jefferson was arbitrary and unreasonable in its denial of a petition to change the zoning classification of a certain piece of property in Jefferson Parish.

The owner of the property in question, Lucille Monte, filed a zoning change application with the Clerk of the Jefferson Parish Council seeking reclassification of the property at 2332 Metairie Road in Metair-ie from a designation of R-1A (single residential) to GO-2 (general office). In the application, Ms. Monte stated that the property is currently being used as a single family residence, and she wishes to sell it for commercial use to receive a higher price. Ms. Monte asserted that five other buildings in the same block are already used for commercial purposes. It is clear from the record that the plaintiff, Lucille Monte, has been placed in a nursing home and is no longer living in the house. Her adult children have attempted to sell the house as residential and have been unable to do so because of its location fronting Metairie Road in an area of mostly commercial use | ^buildings. This home, built in the 1950’s, is one of only three left on the block used as a single family dwelling, due to the changes made to Metairie Road over the last 50 years.

The application for re-zoning was considered by the Jefferson Parish Department of Planning, which subsequently rec[508]*508ommended a denial of the application to the Jefferson Parish Council. Reasons given for the recommendation were:

The purpose of the petition is for the sale of the property at its highest market value. Reclassifying the petitioned property from R-1A to GO-2 would not result in a nonconforming use, as a single-family dwelling is a permitted use in the GO-2 district. The reclassification, however, would result in a spot zone. Spot zones confer rights and privileges on a single property owner, which are not enjoyed by owners of other similarly situated properties. In addition, the proposed zoning change would increase the potential for deterioration of the residential neighborhood, in that uses (other than single-family dwellings) permitted in the GO-2 district can create nuisances such as increased traffic, noise, light, trash, etc. Such permitted uses include banks, professional offices, beauty/barber shops, medical clinics, and florist shops.

The Jefferson Parish Council followed the recommendation of the Planning Board after considering its reasons and the petition of 42 nearby property owners, most of who live on Arlington Drive directly behind the property in question, and denied the application for re-zoning.

Ms. Monte filed a “Petition for Relief from a Denial to Re-Zone Property from R-1A to GO-2 Classification” in the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court. After a trial on the merits, the trial court found in favor of plaintiff and rendered a judgment ordering the Parish of Jefferson to “immediately change the zoning classification” of the property at issue “from its present zoning designation of R-1A to a zoning designation of GO-2.” Defendant, Parish of Jefferson filed a motion for new trial asserting the trial court exceeded its scope of authority. After a hearing on the motion, the trial court rendered an amended judgment in which it decreed that “the denial by the Parish of Jefferson to change the zoning | ¿classification” of the property in question “was arbitrary and unreasonable and bore no rational relation to the health, safety and welfare of the public.” The Parish of Jefferson appeals this amended judgment.

At the hearing, the plaintiff offered evidence from Butler Ball, a real estate broker, who testified that he has tried to sell the property in question from September 24, 2003 to March 24, 2004 at the listed price of $349,500.00. During that time he made every effort to sell the property to no avail. He received between fifty and seventy-five inquires about the property in response to various marketing efforts, but received no offers. The majority of the inquires concerned the zoning of the property. Mr. Ball testified that those who called were primarily interested in using the property for commercial use and lost interest when they discovered the property was still zoned residential. Mr. Ball’s expert opinion was that the R-l zoning made the property unmarketable.

Toni Tanner, a real estate broker for Re-Max, testified that she had the property listed several months before the listing with Mr. Ball and was unable to sell it. The original listing price was $500,000.00, but was later reduced to $400,000.00. Ms. Tanner stated that she had several buyers interested in the property until they discovered the zoning was residential. Ms. Tanner explained that the prospective buyers assumed it was zoned commercial because of its location, in the midst of many commercial properties fronting Metairie Road. Ms. Tanner explained that, although the zoning map shows residential property surrounding the property in question, the map is misleading because the area in-[509]*509eludes a library and a twenty to thirty unit apartment complex.

Keith Donaldson, a real estate broker and owner of a real estate education company, was accepted by the court as an expert in zoning issues. Mr. Donaldson testified that he was hired by the plaintiff to review the zoning issue regarding the subject property. He testified that he visited the site three times and drove around |,;the blocks surrounding the property in both directions. He observed the traffic flow on Metairie Road and on Arlington, where most residents are opposed to the zoning change. His opinion is that rezoning the subject property would have no effect on Arlington. He explained that Arlington is a residential street behind the property. However, the property at issue is at the edge of the sub-division and faces Metairie Road, which is largely a commercial area at that point. Mr. Donaldson stated that most sub-divisions in Jefferson Parish are set up that way, with a commercial street at the beginning of the area and a residential street directly behind it.

Mr. Donaldson described the block of Metairie Road in question as having “spot zoning,” which he explained as a system whereby one property is zoned differently than those around it. There are some legitimate uses for spot zoning and it is done all over Jefferson Parish. Mr. Donaldson stated that the classification of this property as residential is spot zoning because the properties around it are all GO-2. He explained that there is a holdout of three homes built in the fifties in this block that are still zoned R-l.. Mr. Donaldson testified that this area of Metairie is unique because this one block has several different zones. It has residential, commercial and GO-2. There’s a library, a church, a hospital, professional offices, a large apartment building, and single family dwellings left over from the 1950’s. Mr. Donaldson further testified that the GO-2 zone does not allow the selling of wares, so it does not cause any additional delivery truck traffic.

Mr. Donaldson opined that the reason for the method of zoning used in this block of Metairie Road was an effort by parish officials originally to keep commercial use on the north side of the road and GO-2 and R-l on the south.

Maps introduced with this testimony show that the entire block across Metairie Road from the property is commercial. On plaintiffs side of the street the block is bordered by a public library and a church. The block also contains a Rdental office and a law office.

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Bluebook (online)
898 So. 2d 506, 4 La.App. 5 Cir. 1059, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 255, 2005 WL 356622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monte-v-parish-of-jefferson-ex-rel-coulon-lactapp-2005.