Pearce v. Village of Edina

118 N.W.2d 659, 263 Minn. 553, 1962 Minn. LEXIS 813
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 5, 1962
Docket38,464
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 118 N.W.2d 659 (Pearce v. Village of Edina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearce v. Village of Edina, 118 N.W.2d 659, 263 Minn. 553, 1962 Minn. LEXIS 813 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

Thomas Gallagher, Justice.

Plaintiffs, Katherine Pearce and Marie Pearce, sisters, bring this action against defendant, village of Edina, for a declaratory judgment invalidating certain zoning ordinances of defendant under which their real property in the village has been zoned for office building purposes with building restrictions which limit the use of such property in many respects and which deny them the right to construct thereon a shopping center or community stores similar to those in the adjacent area. They contend that the ordinances are discriminatory, arbitrary, and confiscatory; that they destroy valuable interests in their property without due process or without just compensation therefor; and that they deny to them uses thereof which other ordinances authorize for similar adjacent property. The trial court ordered judgments in plaintiffs’ favor on all issues. Defendant appeals from these judgments as hereinafter outlined.

Plaintiffs’ property is comprised of two parcels. The smaller parcel, referred to herein as the triangular parcel, is a tract bounded on the south by the north line of 66th Street and on the north and west by the northwest line of York Avenue as it extends northeasterly from 66th Street into Xerxes Avenue. Its east line is approximately 200 feet west of and parallel to the west line of Xerxes Avenue. The larger parcel, referred to herein as the upper parcel, is rectangular in outline. It has a southerly frontage of 200 feet on the north line of 66th Street. It extends northerly from 66th Street at a width of 200 feet and more for a distance of 400 feet. Its east line is 200 feet west of and parallel to the west line of Xerxes Avenue. Xerxes Avenue separates the village of Edina to the west from the village of Richfield to the east.

In this area 66th Street is a main artery of traffic to Southdale Shopping Center. The latter is bounded on the north by the south *556 line of 66th Street, a portion of it lying directly opposite and across 66th Street from plaintiffs’ upper parcel. Its east boundary is the west line of. York Avenue. The tract between Xerxes Avenue and York Avenue has been zoned for regional shopping by Edina for .a distance of four blocks to the south of 66th Street.

On the southeast comer of the intersection of 66th Street and Xerxes Avenue in Richfield and diagonally across from plaintiffs’ property a large tract has been zoned by Richfield for commercial uses. It is presently occupied by a structure used for an automobile accessory market. Directly opposite it to the west in Edina on the southwest corner of this intersection a large drive-in restaurant has been constructed across 66th Street from plaintiffs’ property. To the north of 66th Street and on the east side of Xerxes Avenue in Richfield a large tract is likewise zoned for commercial uses. This tract is now occupied by a service station, a large shopping center, a supermarket, and other commercial structures extending 400 feet north and opposite plaintiffs’ two parcels to the west of Xerxes Avenue.

On the northeast comer of 66th Street and France Avenue South, Edina has zoned a large tract for regional medical uses. On the northeast corner of the intersection there has been constructed a six-story medical building with a large parking area adjacent thereto. On the first floor of this structure there are a number of enterprises, including a large restaurant, a pharmacy, and a photography salon. East of this medical center and north of 66th Street are two small tracts upon which houses were constructed some years ago. They lie between plaintiffs’ upper parcel and the medical center described. Their owners have not participated in these proceedings, and it appears that their property would be more valuable were it zoned for regional shopping or community store purposes in accordance with the plaintiffs’ objectives.

Farther to the west, fronting on France Avenue and north of 66th Street, several large tracts have been zoned by Edina for regional shopping uses. Presently, several commercial buildings or office buildings have been constructed thereon. To the south of 66th Street and adjacent to the west line of France Avenue, opposite Southdale Shopping Center, a large tract of land has been zoned by Edina for regional *557 shopping uses. Up to the present no structures have been erected thereon.

It is apparent from the foregoing that in the immediate vicinity of plaintiffs’ property at the intersection of 66th Street and Xerxes Avenue regional shopping areas and commercial uses have been authorized under the zoning ordinances of Edina and Richfield for all but plaintiffs’ property, which in fact is surrounded by a typical regional or community shopping area.

Edina is southwest of Minneapolis. In 1935 it enacted a zoning ordinance which created and established various use districts. Under this ordinance and subsequent amendments thereto, the following classifications are included among others:

1. Multiple residence district. (Plaintiffs’ property was zoned for multiple dwelling from 1958 to early in 1961 when it was rezoned for office budding uses.)

2. Community store district. (This permits use of property for multiple dwelling and retail establishments.)

3. Regional shopping district. (This permits uses authorized in its community store district but requires a low ratio of building to land.)

4. Regional medical district. (This authorizes construction of hospitals, medical offices, laboratories, and certain retail facilities.)

5. Office building district. (This authorizes the construction of business and professional offices and permits certain enumerated retail sales and service facilities, accessory to the office building. No separate stores may be erected for shopping purposes. Total floor area authorized for such accessory uses may not exceed 10 percent of the gross floor area of the building. Signs therefor on the exterior of building may not project more than one foot beyond face of the building and may not indicate more than the name and type of accessory use.)

On July 24, 1959, plaintiffs petitioned defendant village that their properties “be rezoned so as to permit the erection of improvements thereon of the kind now permitted in your community store district, your commercial district and your regional shopping district.” Their petitions were denied on September 9, 1959.

*558 This action was instituted October 22, 1959. The complaint therein alleged that plaintiffs had submitted their petitions to the village to rezone their property so as to permit the erection thereon of the kind of improvements authorized for its community store district and certain other districts as described in their petitions; that such improvements would be innocuous and completely harmless to any residents occupying property adjacent or near theirs; that such petitions had been denied by defendant and that the latter’s action in so doing was arbitrary, confiscatory, discriminatory-, and unconstitutional.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.W.2d 659, 263 Minn. 553, 1962 Minn. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearce-v-village-of-edina-minn-1962.