Plebst v. Barnwell Drilling Company

148 So. 2d 584, 243 La. 874, 1963 La. LEXIS 2170
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 14, 1963
Docket46273
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 148 So. 2d 584 (Plebst v. Barnwell Drilling Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plebst v. Barnwell Drilling Company, 148 So. 2d 584, 243 La. 874, 1963 La. LEXIS 2170 (La. 1963).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

This case, which reaches us on the appeals of the Police Jury of Caddo Parish and the plaintiffs in suit, involves primarily the constitutionality of Act 34 of 1954 insofar as It granted to Caddo Parish, through its Police Jury, planning and zoning authority relative to that part of the Parish outside of the City of Shreveport and within five miles of the city limits as they might exist from time to time. That Act gave similar comprehensive authority to the City of Shreveport to zone within its corporate limits and empowered the City and the Police Jury of the Parish to create a joint planning commission for the purpose of regulating subdivisions of land in the metropolitan planning area, as defined in the statute, to the end that the physical development of the area could be carried out as a whole.

Pursuant to this legislative authority, the Planning Commission was organized and, in •1956, a “master plan” was adopted by the Police Jury throughout part of the area within five miles of the city limits of Shreveport and a similar master plan was adopted by the City of Shreveport, insofar as it related to areas within the city limits. In keeping with the plan, the Police Jury passed Ordinance 798 of 1957, after public hearing and due advertisement, classifying all of the property situated within the suburban area outside the City limits as R-l One-Family Residence District, under which zoning regulation the property owners were prohibited from making any commercial or industrial use of their land.

At that time (1958), a portion of a four-acre tract situated in the zoned district was owned by Barnwell Drilling Company (hereinafter referred to as Barnwell), one of the defendants herein. Notwithstanding the prohibitions of the zoning ordinances, Barn-well constructed, during the year, 1959, shops, storage and parking facilities upon its property. Upon notification to Barnwell that it was violating Ordinance 798 of 1957, Barnwell filed an application to have its land rezoned for commercial uses. This application was refused by the Commission on March 22, 1960 and' its action'wás approved on May 11, 1960 by the Police Jury. *879 Thereafter, on May 23, 1960, Barnwell filed suit in the First Judicial District Court attacking the constitutionality of Act 34 of 1954 and Ordinance 798 of 1957. The Police Jury filed exceptions to Barnwell’s petition in that suit hut the exceptions were overruled by the court. No further action was taken in the suit but, on September 29, 1961, Barnwell filed a second application with the Metropolitan Zoning Commission for the rezoning of its property from R-l One Family Residence to 1-2 Heavy Industry. The Planning Commission approved the new application and, on January 15, 1962, the Police Jury sustained the action of the Commission, simultaneously passing Ordinance 917 of 1962, a rezoning ordinance which carried approval of the new application into effect.

A few days later plaintiffs, ten property owners whose lands are situated in the zoning district, brought the instant suit against the Police Jury 1 and Barnwell seeking the following relief:

1. Declaring Act 34 of 1954 and ordinances enacted pursuant thereto to be unconstitutional;
2. Alternatively, in the event the Court finds that Act 34 of 1954 is constitutional, then the rezoning Ordinance 197 of 1962 is invalid, being violative of Act 34 of 1954 and the general zoning Ordinance 798 of 1957;
3. Alternatively, again, that the Barn-well rezoning Ordinance 917 of 1962 is unconstitutional being an. unreasonable and arbitrary exercise of police power by the Police Jury;, that it is discriminatory and operates as a taking of petitioners’ property without due process of law and denies them an equal protection: of the law;
4. And, finally, ordering a permanent injunction against Barnwell to abate its violation of Ordinance 798 of 1957 as a nuisance per se.

To this petition various pleadings were-filed by the Police Jury and Barnwell, including exceptions of no right or cause of action. The exceptions filed by the Police-Jury were founded in part upon the theory that the suit, being one for a declaratory-judgment, could not lie because there was. no justiciable controversy between the parties but, mainly, on the ground that the assailed statute and ordinances were constitutional on their face. The trial judge overruled these exceptions and held that Act 34-of 1954 is unconstitutional. He found that: the power to zone private property couldc' *881 -only be conferred on the Legislature and ■other lesser governing bodies, such as municipalities and police juries, by specific constitutional authority and he referred to the fact that that had been the practice since the adoption of the LSA-Constitution of 1921 which, by Section 29 of Article 14, authorized all municipalities to zone their 'territory, and constitutional amendments ■subsequently passed which authorized the ■creation of airport zones and empowered certain specified parishes to zone property ■within their jurisdictions.

Additionally, the judge sustained the exception of no right or cause of action interposed by Barnwell to plaintiffs’ petition T>eing of the view that, since Act 34 of 1954 .and all ordinances passed under the authority thereof were unconstitutional, Barn-well’s use of its property was not a nuisance jer se.

In due course, the Police Jury answered plaintiffs’ petition, admitting the salient facts stated therein but denying the legal effect attributed thereto. Whereupon, plaintiffs moved for a summary judgment, which is authorized by Article 966 of the LSA-Code of Civil Procedure. The motion was maintained and judgment was rendered thereon in accordance with the previous view expressed by the judge, in passing on the exceptions of no right or cause of action, declaring Act 34 of 1954 and all ordinances of the Police Jury enacted pursuant thereto to be unconstitutional, null and void. The Police Jury has appealed and plaintiffs have prosecuted a separate appeal from the judgment maintaining the exceptions of Barnwell and dismissing it from the proceedings. 2

Before the case was submitted for decision in this Court, the district attorney of Caddo Parish, representing the Police Jury, filed in the record a certificate of the'Secretary of State, Hon. Wade O. Martin, Jr., attesting that a constitutional amendment, proposed by Act 529 of 1962, to further amend Section 29 of Article 14 of the Constitution by giving to the Parish of Caddo specific authority to zone property within five miles beyond the city limits of the City of Shreveport, was adopted by the people at the general election held throughout this State on November 6, 1962. This amendment also expressly validates and ratifies all legislation enacted in 1962 to carry the constitutional provision into effect, and *883 specially ■ ratifies and validates Act 34 of 1954.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 2d 584, 243 La. 874, 1963 La. LEXIS 2170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plebst-v-barnwell-drilling-company-la-1963.