Patchak v. Township of Lansing

105 N.W.2d 406, 361 Mich. 489, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 341
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1960
DocketDocket 55, Calendar 48,283
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 105 N.W.2d 406 (Patchak v. Township of Lansing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patchak v. Township of Lansing, 105 N.W.2d 406, 361 Mich. 489, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 341 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Kavanagh, J.

Once again we are cast in the role of a glorified zoning board. Defendant city of Lansing has appealed from a decree of the Ingham county circuit court, in chancery, in which the court held that ordinance No 8 of the township of Lansing- as applied to plaintiffs’ 15 acres was void; that the action of the township board in refusing to rezone the 15 acres was arbitrary, capricious, and confiscatory; that the reasonable and proper use of the property was for a trailer camp park; and that the entire 15 acres could be developed and modernized as such, continuing its nonconforming use subject to certain restrictions.

Plaintiffs’ predecessor in title, on October 5, 1942, owning 15 acres of land on the south side of West Mt. Hope avenue in the township of Lansing, made application to the Michigan department of health for a permit to construct and operate a trailer coach park of 4 acres located at 3407 West Mt. Hope ave- ■ nue. The annual license fee of $25 was paid.

*492 In September, 1943, the then owner, Mr. Hause, filed an application to operate a trailer coach park and add to the existing facilities. No acreage was given. The following year an application to operate a trailer park of 2 acres was filed by Mr. Hause and license was approved on October 12, 1944. An application was made by Mr. Hause in the fall of 1945 for a trailer coach park of 3 acres.

The township board of the township of Lansing adopted its zoning ordinance No 8, which became effective throughout the township on October 26, 1945. The property now owned by the appellees, then owned by Mr. Hause, and most of the surrounding land, was, by ordinance No 8, zoned “D” small farms and agriculture. The ordinance placed trailer camps in “E” apartment-shop zone.

In September, 1946, ordinance No 8 being operative, the owner, Mr. Hause, again made an application to operate a trailer park of 2 acres .and alter .existing facilities.; License fee of $25 was. paid.. Mr. Hause made application each year thereafter up to the sale of the property on October 23, Í953, to appellees, who thereafter made applications .to the Michigan department of health for the year 1954 and following years up' to the time of the trial..

During all the years the trailer park was operated, only the north 5 acres was actually used as a trailer coach park. The license fee paid each year was $25. The acreage was designated as 5 acres or less for all years 1942 through 1957, except 1947, 1953, 1955, and 1956, when the acreage was designated as 15 acres- in the application, and in the years .1943, 1949, and 1954, when no acreage was given in the applications.

During the year 1954, after Hause; had sold .the premises on October 23,1953, to appellees, the township of Lansing amended zoning ordinance No 8, removing -..trailer . parks- from “E” apartment-shop *493 zone and placing trailer coach parks in “Gr” light industrial zone, and requiring the location of such sites to be approved by the township planning commission, board of appeals and township board.

In May, 1956, appellees made application to have their property, being 15 acres, rezoned from “D” to “Gr.” Their application being denied, appellees took steps under the provisions of ordinance No 8 and amendments thereto to expand their trailer coach park to the full 15 acres. Being denied that right, they instituted the present suit on November 7, 1956.

On July 30, 1958, the property became a part of the city of Lansing following annexation proceedings. The written opinion of the trial court was filed June 3, 1958. In this opinion the trial court found, as a matter of fact, that the proofs showed no trailers had been located on the south 10 acres. It further found little, if any, use had been made of the south 10 acres; that it had remained as an open space — like a country backyard — to the trailer park; and that some incidental drainage and other minor uses of the land closest to the trailer park had been made. The trial court further stated in its opinion:

“That it could be.<¡an unreasonable use of police .power.for the government of Lansing township to restrict the plaintiffs to the north 5 acres under all the facts and circumstances shown to exist in relation to the lands of plaintiffs.”

The court further found:

“The area was farm land when the. trailer park was built about 1943. It was the same all around •the. trailer park in 1945 when the ordinance was . adopted. It is- the same today except some of-.the areas to the west, northeast and east have been, subdivided.”

*494 The court went on to say:

“That the work permitted to be done under this holding, is improvement, modernization, and development of an existing trailer park and not an extension of said park. The zoning classification of “D” small farms is not set aside by this court. The plaintiffs’ north 10 acres will remain, even when fully developed, as a nonconforming use.”

The court then set -forth some restrictions under , which it could be used.

On July 24,1958, following the filing of the opinion, . plaintiffs made a motion for rehearing, alleging that to comply with the requirements of the court’s opinion would deprive plaintiffs of any use whatsoever of the south 5 acres of their property, and to limit its use by set-backs from the lot lines, in the fashion the court suggested, would cost plaintiffs $32,000. Plaintiffs asked that the opinion be changed.

Oral hearings were had on the motion for rehearing, and on other motions presented, on February . 2, 1959. The trial court admitted he had become confused in drafting his original opinion and described the limitation to the north 10 acres a mistake and authorized its correction in the decree, so that plaintiffs could use their entire 15 acres as a nonconforming use. It is impossible to tell what reasons the court had for holding the ordinance void as to the 15 acres, except from the following language it ’ might be inferred that, contrary to his previous findings of fact, he now was finding as a matter of law a nonconforming use as to the 15 acres:

“That it shall be nonconforming in the zoning as it now is or was at the time of the trial, and that whatever the zoning is shall remain. The trailer park will be permitted to stay as a nonconforming •use. * * *
*495 “The evidence indicated in some instances away back years ago the whole parcel was considered as a trailer park, even though they never built back from Mt. Hope, perhaps the north 5 acres, and when they went down to pay the fee, when Mr. MdKim was in office, sometimes it said 10 acres and sometimes 15 acres.”

Appellees made no attempt to show, and do not now argue, that Lansing township zoning ordinance No 8 as an ordinance is unconstitutional and void, contending only that it was unconstitutional and void as applied to their land.

Justice Carr said in Anderson v. City of Holland, 344 Mich 706, 709:

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Bluebook (online)
105 N.W.2d 406, 361 Mich. 489, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patchak-v-township-of-lansing-mich-1960.