Moore v. City of Lexington

218 S.W.2d 7, 309 Ky. 671, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 1083
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 7, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 218 S.W.2d 7 (Moore v. City of Lexington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. City of Lexington, 218 S.W.2d 7, 309 Ky. 671, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 1083 (Ky. 1948).

Opinions

Opinion o.f the Court by

Judge Knight

— Affirming.

Appellant is the owner of the property located on the west side of Broadway between second and third streets in the City of Lexington, known as 253 and 255 North Broadway, title to which he acquired from Edith Berryman Van Meter by deed dated July 26, 1945. The *673 lot has a width of 77 feet on Broadway and extends back 210 feet to an alley 10 feet wide. On the front portion of this lot, distant 18 feet from Broadway, is a large brick residence built in 1881 which has now been converted into four apartments, this conversion having been made previous to its purchase by appellant. On the rear of this lot at its northwest corner is a brick building 32.2 feet in length, 28.2 feet in width and 20 feet high which was built for and used as a carriage house from the time of its construction in 1881 until the time when carriages were displaced by automobiles, since which time it has been used as a garage. The building is two stories high, the upper floor being divided off into three rooms, and was used as living quarters by the coachman in the horse and buggy days, later by the chauffeur and perhaps still later as living quarters by servants of the owners of the big house. The last occupant of these quarters was a colored nurse employed by Mr. Charles H. Berryman, who lived in one of the apartments in the main building with his daughter, Mrs. Van Meter. This nurse and her husband, who was employed elsewhere in or around Lexington, by agreement with Mrs. Van Meter, continued to live in the servants’ quarters for about a year after Mr. Berry-man’s death and the acquisition of the property by appellant, rent free. There has never been any commercial renting of the three-room apartment above the garage.

In August 1946, appellant applied to the building inspector of the City of Lexington for a permit to repair and improve the second floor over the garage and to convert it into a modern efficiency apartment for commercial renting. The application was refused on the ground that its contemplated use as a residence would violate the zoning ordinance of the City of Lexington which, among other things, forbids residences in a rear yard except under certain conditions. Upon appeal to the Board of Adjustment and after a hearing conducted by that body, permit for the contemplated improvement and conversion was denied. This suit was then filed in Circuit Court by appellant, owner of the property, for a review of the action of the Board of Adjustment and for a mandatory injunction requiring the issuance of the permit. After oral argument and submission on briefs of counsel, demurrer to the petition was .sustained *674 and the petition was dismissed upon plaintiff’s failure to plead further. Prom that judgment, which the parties have treated as a judgment on the merits and which we shall treat as such, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The Zoning Ordinance.

The zoning ordinance in effect at the time this application was made was adopted by the City of Lexington in 1930, and was extended in 1942 to include all territory in Payette County within two miles of the city limits. The pertinent sections of the ordinance read as follows:

“Section IY — General Provisions — (1) (Zoning Affects every Structure and Use) Except as hereinafter specified, no building, structure or premises shall hereafter be used and no building or part thereof or other structure shall be erected, raised, moved, reconstructed, extended, enlarged or altered, except in conformity with the regulations herein specified for the district in which it is located.
“(6) (Rear Dwellings Prohibited) No lot shall contain any building used as a residence unless such lot abuts for at least 20 feet on at least one street, or unless it has an exclusive unobstructed easement of access or right of way at least 15 feet wide to such street, and there shall not be more than one building for each such frontage or easement, except that a common easement of access at least 40 feet wide may be provided for three or more such buildings.
“No building in the rear of a principal building on the same lot shall be used for residence purposes except only for domestic employees of the owners or of the tenants of the principal building, unless in addition to conforming to the open space requirements in this Ordinance for a principal building, it shall also conform with the above street frontage or easement of access requirements, and for the purpose of determining the front yard in such case, the rear line of the rear yard required for- the principal building shall be considered the front lot line for the building in the rear.
“Section YE (D) (1) (Side Yards Required) In Every Residence “B” District there shall be a side *675 yard along each side lot line on every lot except as hereinafter provided. The least width of any side yard and the least sum of the widths of both side yards shall be as follows:
No. of Stories Side Yard-Least Widths Sum of Widths of Both Side Yards
1 and lVs 5 feet 12 feet
2 and 2% 6 feet 15 feet
3 8 feet 20 feet

For each resident family in excess of two families two feet shall be added to the herein prescribed least widths of each side yard at each story level. ’ ’

Is Ordinace Violated?

It is shown by the proof and the plat filed as an exhibit that the main bnilding on the front part of the lot has a width of 50 feet leaving a space of 12 feet between the building and the lot line on the north side and a space of 15 feet between the building and the lot line on the south side. This is all yard space. There is no road or driveway on either side of the building leading back to the garage although there is a sidewalk on one or perhaps both sides of the house and back to the garage. It is obvious, therefore, that there could be no “exclusive, unobstructed easement or right of way at least 15 feet wide to a street,” as required by Sec. IV-6 of the ordinance, in order to reach Broadway through the yard of the main building from the proposed apartment. Especially would this be true if Sec. VI-D-1 of the ordinance is complied with which, as quoted above, requires every residence in a “B” district, which this is, to have side yards of 6 feet or a total of 15 feet in width for both side yards for a 2 story building such as occupies the front part of this lot. These side yards are further cut down by the fact that the main building is a four-family building requiring 2 feet of additional width for each side yard for each family in excess of two families.

The only street other than Broadway to which occupants of this proposed apartment could have access is Third St. which lies 70 feet east of the garage apartment and the only possible access to Third Street is over the paved alley which extends south from Third Street a distance of 231 feet. This alley is at the rear of appel *676 lant’s lot and is a dead-end service alley for Ms lot and three other lots which abut thereon.

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Related

Ball v. Oldham County Planning & Zoning Commission
375 S.W.3d 79 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2012)
Kline v. Louisville & Jefferson County Board of Zoning Adjustment & Appeals
325 S.W.2d 324 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W.2d 7, 309 Ky. 671, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 1083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-city-of-lexington-kyctapphigh-1948.