Morris v. City of Los Angeles

254 P.2d 935, 116 Cal. App. 2d 856, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1152
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1953
DocketCiv. 19234
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 254 P.2d 935 (Morris v. City of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. City of Los Angeles, 254 P.2d 935, 116 Cal. App. 2d 856, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1152 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

SHINN, P. J.

Prior to March, 1950, Sam Stephanian owned a lot at the corner of Pennsylvania Avenue and Fiekett Street in the city of Los Angeles. The lot has a frontage of 45 feet on Pennsylvania Avenue and depth of 120.9 feet on Fiekett Street. There are two houses and a double garage on the lot; one house faces Fiekett and the other faces Pennsylvania. The area is zoned R4 (multiple dwelling zone) and the Los Angeles Comprehensive Zoning Plan, adopted as a part of the municipal code by ordinance No. 90,500, by an amendment adopted in 1950, provides that in an R4 zone “every lot shall have a minimum width of fifty (50) and a mini-mum area of five thousand (5,000) square feet.” (Mun. *857 Code, § 12.11-C, 4.) Although Stephanian’s lot was nonconforming as to minimum area it did not violate the ordinance. This, because the lot was so constituted at the time the ordinance was adopted and the ordinance by its terms did not apply to such lots. However, the zoning ordinance further provides: “No lot or parcel of land held under separate ownership at the time this Article became effective shall be separated in ownership or reduced in size below the minimum lot width or lot area required by this Article. ...” (12.21-C, l(k), Ordinance No. 92,066 adopted August 19, 1947.) In March, 1950, Stephanian sold the entire lot to plaintiffs and they, in turn, sold the northerly 40 feet (40x45) and the house fronting on Pickett Street to other persons. The remaining portion of the lo.t (45x80) with the other house was retained by plaintiffs. Section 11.00 (m) of the Los Angeles Municipal Code declares that it shall be unlawful for any person to violate any provision or to fail to comply with any of the requirements of the code and provides punishment by fine or imprisonment for such offenses. After the sale by plaintiffs a criminal prosecution was commenced in the Los Angeles Municipal Court by the People against Mr. and Mrs. Morris complaining that by the division and sale of their lot they had committed misdemeanors, not only in selling the 40 x 45-foot part, but also in maintaining the 45 x 80 that remained. That proceeding is still pending.

Plaintiffs brought this action seeking to enjoin prosecution of the municipal court action and for a declaratory judgment that sections 12.11-C, 4 and 12.21-C, l(j) and (k) are invalid for various reasons and for an injunction against criminal prosecution or other interference with the use of their property. The trial court found that both residences have been on the subject property for more than 25 years as have the majority of the buildings in the neighboring area and that practically all of the corner lots in the area have more than one dwelling unit thereon. The court further found that each of the dwelling units had separate utility connections and that: “Corner lots having thereon two or more separate and unconnected dwelling units, when such lots are divided and sold, together with a residence, to separate owners who occupy the same, are better kept, maintained or occupied by a better type of occupant and have fewer occupants than those which are tenant occupied, and neither public health or sanitary regulations are adversely *858 affected where such corner lots are sold and the residences thereon are occupied by separate owners. ’ ’ From the findings the court concluded that: “Sections 12.11-C, 4, 12.21-C, l(j) and 12.21-C, l(k) of the Los Angeles Municipal Code, as applied under the evidence in this case to the subject property, are invalid, arbitrary, discriminatory and unconstitutional and are not a reasonable use of the police power vested in the City of Los Angeles, and the enforcement of the said sections, as against the subject property, would in no way tend to accomplish the purposes for which the Comprehensive Zoning Plan and the other provisions of the Los Angeles Municipal Code were intended.” The court further concluded that the sale of the northerly 40 feet of the property was legal, proper and valid and that insofar as the above mentioned sections of the Los Angeles Municipal Code purport to forbid the sale of the remaining 80 feet of the property, such sections are void. On the basis of its conclusions the court adjudged sections 12.11-C, 4, 12.21-C, l(j) and 12.21-C, l(k) to be unconstitutional as to plaintiffs and permanently enjoined the city of Los Angeles from prosecuting or bringing any civil or criminal action based on said sections against either of the plaintiffs by reason of the accomplished sale of the northerly 40 feet or by reason of the maintenance or future sale of the southerly 80 feet. (§ 12.21-C, l(j) would apply only as § 12.21-C, l(k) applies to the present ease.) From this judgment the defendant city appeals.

It is defendant’s contention that all the issues of this case were settled adversely to plaintiff by Clemons v. City of Los Angeles, 36 Cal.2d 95 [222 P.2d 439], and the trial court erroneously refused to follow that decision. We cannot agree.

The Clemons decision went no further than to sustain the ordinance as applied to the particular state of facts established by the agreed statement of facts and the findings of the trial court.

The pertinent facts were the following: Clemons had acquired a bungalow court on Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles, some 20 years old, containing nine units; by deeds or 99-year leases he subdivided the court into nine parcels, each with a building thereon, and proceeded to sell or lease them separately; two of the units had no access to a street or alley; with each parcel was conveyed an easement over the walkways of the court to Beverly Boulevard; the entire property was serviced by only one incinerator and two sewer *859 connections. From the facts, 1 ‘ experts in the field of community development” evolved certain theories which impressed the trial court as realities and were carried into the findings. These related to the distressing conditions which the experts envisioned as a result of separate ownership of units in the bungalow court. These opinions of the experts were received as evidence and furnished the foundation of the trial court’s findings, which, in turn, were deemed controlling on the appeal. We quote from the opinion (p. 99) : “In support of its view that the ‘ordinance is an important factor in the orderly development of the city,’ the trial court found that the ‘attempted cutting up’ of such property as plaintiff’s bungalow court would ‘tend to create and accelerate the creation of slum conditions’ and ‘overcrowd[ing].’ thus ‘militating against orderly, quiet and peaceful living’; that ‘health and sanitary regulations and laws would be more difficult to enforce’ if the bungalow units ‘were sold to various separate owners’; and that therefore ‘said ordinance has a reasonable relation to the public health, safety and general welfare, and was enacted for the public good.’ ” Referring to a written opinion of the trial judge the court said (pp.

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Bluebook (online)
254 P.2d 935, 116 Cal. App. 2d 856, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1953.