Raabe v. City of Walker

174 N.W.2d 789, 383 Mich. 165, 1970 Mich. LEXIS 143
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1970
DocketCalendar 37, Docket 52,011
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 174 N.W.2d 789 (Raabe v. City of Walker) 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
Raabe v. City of Walker, 174 N.W.2d 789, 383 Mich. 165, 1970 Mich. LEXIS 143 (Mich. 1970).

Opinion

Black, J.

The defendant city of Walker is an adjacent suburb of Grand Rapids. By letter dated February 28, 1966, addressed to its city commission and city planning commission, defendants Greater Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce and Grand Rapids Industrial Corporation requested that a tract of 180 acres, situated in Walker, be rezoned “for heavy industry.” The request, pressed from the beginning for nimble action, was referred promptly to the Walker planning commission and by that commission to the city’s planning consultant, Robert C. Dieball. We shall come presently to their view of the request.

March 16, 1966, the city clerk published notice of a special public meeting of the city commission to consider the request. The meeting was set for March 25, 1966, and conducted as noticed. The plaintiff homeowners appeared by counsel and unsuccessfully opposed the request. The amendatory ordinance in question was enacted by the city commission at close of the meeting. This suit to enjoin followed immediately. The circuit judge found invalid the rezoning effected by the amendatory ordinance. Appeal by the defendants resulted in *168 reversal. Raabe v. City of Walker (1968), 10 Mich App 383. We granted leave to review September 30, 1968.

Adopted as our own is the basic statement of facts prepared by the circuit judge. It proceeds:

“This action involves the validity of the zoning as industrial of approximately 180 acres of land situated in the city of Walker and now zoned ‘agricultural.’ Permitted in this zone are uses permitted in the residential districts, farming, greenhouses, country clubs, and accessory uses.

“As rezoned, the largest portion of the 180 acres is zoned for so-called heavy industrial use, and permitted in such a zone are any uses permitted in the light industrial zones and a considerable number of other industries such as leather fabrication, cement packaging, concrete products manufacture, coal yards, breweries or distilleries, flour or grain mills, forge and foundry works, meat processing, metal fabrication, wood and fibre products manufactures.

“A portion on one end of the area is rezoned as light industrial, and permitted here are biological, chemical, electronic or pharmaceutical manufacturing, furniture manufacturing, food processing and packaging, machine shops, glass fabrication, plastics manufacturing, truck terminals, and other similar uses.

“The rezoning resulted from an application for that purpose by the Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce and the Grand Rapids Industrial Corporation, which latter corporation proposed to acquire this 180 acres of land, all of which is under option, except one parcel which has been purchased, and hold it for sale to industries which can be persuaded to locate in the metropolitan area of Grand Rapids. Eventually it is intended that the area will be developed under the direction and control of the industrial corporation as an ‘industrial park’, subject to certain restrictive covenants which, *169 although not yet executed, have been prepared and were received in evidence.

“The surrounding area has in recent years been developed as a residential community and there are a considerable number of fairly expensive residences in the neighborhood. The owners of these homes, some of whom live in the adjoining city of Grand Rapids, and total in number several hundred, oppose [opposed] the rezoning before the city’s legislative body.

“The land rezoned is in itself suitable either for residential use or industrial use. It is not in any sense confiscatory, it is zoned as agricultural-residential. It further meets the requirements more or less agreed upon by the expert witnesses for an industrial park, subject to the question whether such use is compatible with the community. It has access to a railroad siding and to a main express highway. It will within a reasonable time have available utility services and it has a suitable topography.

“Walker City lies directly west of the city of Grand Rapids. It was formerly the township of Walker and that part of the township which had not been annexed to the city of Grand Rapids, incorporated as a city. It has about 10,000 population.” 1

As oral argument of this latest zoning case proceeded with responses of counsel to successive inquiries submitted from the bench, rightful determination of the appeal did not appear quite so difficult as on initial perusal of the respective briefs. Like the application granted August 3, 1967, for review of Bishe v. City of Troy (1969), 381 Mich 611, the application of these plaintiffs brought to primary attention the absence of that which, since *170 the effective date of PA 1931, No 285, has been required of the planning commission of any municipality which, by ordinance as done here, has created “a planning commission with the powers and duties herein set forth” (from § 2 of the act), that is, the formal adoption under § 6 of the act of “a master plan for the physical development of the municipality”. 2

The issue being one of validity of rezoning, we were impelled primarily to grant leave for test of the circuit judge’s finding No 1 in array with the contrary view of Division 3. The following selections, from the respective opinions below, adequately pose the array:

The circuit judg’e found:

“1. The regulation must be made in accordance with a plan. In this case there was no general plan, and the rezoning was not a part of any such general plan.” 3

Division 3, reversing upon reference to the “enabling statute”, that only (CL 1948, § 125.581; MCLA § 125.581; Stat Ann 1969 Eev § 5.2931), treated the point this way (p 390):

“The enabling statute requires, among other things, that the zoning be made ‘in accordance with a plan’. The plaintiffs contend that the absence of a master plan or some overall comprehensive scheme invalidated the disputed zoning. The enabling statute does call for a plan but does not require that there be a written master plan before amendments be made to the existing zoning. To concur in such a position would severely hamper the growth of any *171 community similar to the city of Walker. We read the statute to require that prior to zoning there be evidence of some rational procedure to insure that the property in question will be put to its best use in keeping with the physical, economic, and social needs of the general community.”

Walker’s planning commission does not seem to have taken kindly to the rezoning which the defendant Chamber and Industrial Corporation proposed. After the issue had been referred to it, and but a few days prior to the special meeting of the city commission at which the rezoning was approved and ordained, the planning commission wrote the city commission:

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.W.2d 789, 383 Mich. 165, 1970 Mich. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raabe-v-city-of-walker-mich-1970.