Red Acres Imp. Club, Inc. v. Burkhalter

241 S.W.2d 921, 193 Tenn. 79, 29 Beeler 79, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 326
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 241 S.W.2d 921 (Red Acres Imp. Club, Inc. v. Burkhalter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Red Acres Imp. Club, Inc. v. Burkhalter, 241 S.W.2d 921, 193 Tenn. 79, 29 Beeler 79, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 326 (Tenn. 1951).

Opinion

*81 Mb. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This bill was filed by fifteen owners of residences in a residential subdivision in Memphis and by the corporation connected therewith known as Red Acres Improvement Club. The defendants, Dr. Burkhalter and wife, are the owners of a rather handsome residence in that subdivision. Dr. Burkhalter is a physician and maintains a doctor’s office in that dwelling. The allegation of the bill is that he is conducting at this dwelling a “medical business house”, and that in so doing he is violating the Zoning Ordinance of Memphis, and thereby causing a very substantial depreciation in the value of the residences in that subdivision. The purpose of the bill is to permanently enjoin Dr. Burkhalter and wife from operating in that dwelling “a medical clinic of any kind or general offices for the practice of medicine, or holding himself out to the public in any manner whatsoever as being available for the practice of medicine within” that dwelling.

The Chancellor made a studious analysis of the great quantity of evidence which had been submitted and concluded that Dr. Burkhalter “is carrying on a business or profession of practicing medicine in the residence here involved” beyond the limits permitted under the City’s Zoning Ordinance and enjoined the defendants from further so practicing in that dwelling, but with the provision that such injunction should not interfere with his practicing in that dwelling “his profession as far as such practice is accessory only to the main purpose of using that place as a residence”. It was the Chancellor’s opinion that the professional operation carried on at that dwelling by Dr. Burkhalter amounted to the mainte *82 nance of a medical clinic there. The Chancellor said that two of the main factors upon which he based his conclusions were the number of assistants employed, and the large concrete parking space and general set up, all of which will be more hereinafter noticed.

As a matter of deference to the insistences of the contending parties the Court of Appeals discussed numerous phases of the evidence which it did not consider really material to the issue involved, and, after discussing in great detail the facts and law applicable, this opinion concluded “ (1) that the office of the defendant doctor in this case was incidental to his dwelling; and (2) the use made of it is not shown to be beyond what was customary in such offices”; that, therefore, the defendants were not violating the Zoning Ordinance. Accordingly, the Chancellor was reversed and the bill dismissed.

Certiorari was granted and the case has been ably presented on all sides in this Court by brief and oral arguments. In as much as the opinion of the Court of Appeals responds at length to practically all of the contentions made, this Court will confine its discussion and conclusions to that which it conceives to be determinative of the case.

Dr. Burkhalter’s residence is located in an area which the Memphis Zoning Ordinance puts in an “ ‘A’ Residence District”. There is no question but that under the express provisions of that ordinance, as will be hereinafter more explicitly pointed out, a physician may maintain some kind of a professional office in his residence in that district. Under this Zoning Ordinance in those areas classified as a ‘B’ Residence District” a medical clinic may be maintained. Necessarily, therefore, the Zoning-Ordinance intends to make a distinction between a doctor’s office and a medical clinic. However, the ordinance *83 does not undertake to define wliat it, the ordinance, intends tlic distinguishing feature or features shall he.

Dr. Burkhalter is a pediatrician. He has an uptown office where he receives patients from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. He receives patients in the office at his dwelling from 4 P. M. to 8 P. M., and an average of somewhere between fifteen and twenty-five patients per day come during those hours to his residence office and are given professional attention by the doctor.

That part of the residence occupied by Dr. Burkhalter, his wife and three children as their home consists of seven rooms and two baths downstairs, and two bedrooms upstairs. That part of his residence in which he maintains his professional office consists of a reception room and two small rooms in which he sees patients. There are to he found in these rooms such paraphernalia as would he expected in a doctor’s office. There is also a lavatory, a wash basin, a built in cabinet and a refrigerator in which he keeps those medicines pertinent to the treatment of the physical ills in which he specializes. Thus, the physical situation above described manifests the fact that the building is primarily and mainly a residence, with the doctor’s office incidental.

No other doctor is associated with Dr. Burkhalter in his residence office. In this office there is one lady who is the secretary and stenographer. Her hours are from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. The doctor’s records are kept there and she has supervision of them. The usual telephone is also there. A receptionist is on duty from 4 P. M. to 9 P. M. and for two or three months in 1949 there was another young lady who assisted in this office. They were dressed as trained nurses, hut they were not nurses. They rendered such assistance to the doctor as would *84 ordinarily be expected of such, employees in such an office.

The doctor’s name plate appears at some appropriate place on the outside of the office to be seen by those who may be looking for his office or for a doctor of his kind. Adjacent to the residence and a part of the premises is a concrete space used by patients and others for the parking of their automobiles while in the office or residence. The space is sufficient for the parking of perhaps fifteen to twenty-five cars.

The Court is supposed to know and take note of that which is generally known. It is generally known that the office above described is in character and operation a modern doctor’s office in a city or large town, or medium sized town, for that matter. Hardly such an office could be found that did not contain the number of rooms, furnishings, equipment, etc. similar to those in the office which Dr. Burkhalter maintains at his residence. It would be most unusual not to find one or more ladies employed in such an office. Now the question is does the maintaining of such an office by Dr. Burkhalter in his residence violate the Memphis Zoning Ordinance † Unless it does, the fact that the maintenance of such office at that place may substantially depreciate the value of nearby property can make no difference.

In considering this Zoning Ordinance with reference to the facts of this case, there must be kept in mind and applied the law so well stated in the opinion of the Court of Appeals as follows: “Zoning ordinances, being in derogation of common law and operating to deprive the owner of property of the use thereof which would otherwise be lawful, are to be strictly construed in favor of the property owner. Yoldey: Zoning Law and Practice, page 3, Section 3, and cases cited. They *85

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W.2d 921, 193 Tenn. 79, 29 Beeler 79, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/red-acres-imp-club-inc-v-burkhalter-tenn-1951.