Sabo v. Monroe Township

232 N.W.2d 584, 394 Mich. 531, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 259
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1975
Docket54953, (Calendar No. 16)
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 232 N.W.2d 584 (Sabo v. Monroe Township) 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
Sabo v. Monroe Township, 232 N.W.2d 584, 394 Mich. 531, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 259 (Mich. 1975).

Opinion

Levin, J.

In each of the three cases which, although separately submitted, are being decided today, the plaintiffs seek to use land zoned single family residence (Sabo and Nickola) or agricultural (Smookler) to construct a mobile-home park.

I write separately because I do not agree, in Nickola 1 and Smookler; 2 that on proof that a community has excluded a legitimate use, here mobile-home parks, it necessarily becomes obliged to grant a request for rezoning to permit that use. *536 The land sought to be rezoned may not be suitable for development for the excluded use. In Sabo I do not agree that the failure of a planning commission to adopt a master plan per se invalidates all zoning ordinances. 3

I

Even if present zoning is not unreasonable 4 or confiscatory, 5 a proposed use should be permitted if *537 reasonable under all the circumstances. Kropf v Sterling Heights, 391 Mich 139, 164 ff.; 215 NW2d 179 (1974) (concurring opinion).

We would require that the proofs now adduced in circuit court be presented administratively and restrict judicial review to whether the record evidence supports the administrative finding on the issue whether the proposed use is reasonable. Kropf v Sterling Heights, supra (concurring opinion). However, it is the present practice to present the proofs in circuit court and for a reviewing court to make its own independent examination and analysis of the record. Kropf v Sterling Heights, supra (majority opinion).

In each of these cases the Court of Appeals held that the proposed use should be allowed. The record in each establishes that the proposed use (which happens to be a partially or totally excluded use) is reasonable. 6 On that ground we join in affirming the decision of the Court of Appeals.

*538 II

In this case of Sabo, my colleague would hold the Monroe Township Zoning Ordinance invalid because the "community has neither adopted such a [master] plan, nor even taken the first steps to produce one”.

The Township Rural Zoning Act does require that "provisions of the zoning ordinance shall be based upon a plan”. MCLA 125.273; MSA 5.2963(3). The township planning act provides that the township "planning commission shall make and adopt a basic plan as a guide for the development of unincorporated portions of the township”. MCLA 125.326; MSA 5.2963(106).

While most zoning enabling acts require that zoning be in accordance with a "plan” or more commonly "in accordance with a comprehensive plan” (from the Standard State Zoning Enabling Act), "the 'comprehensive plan’ with which zoning was to accord has hardly ever been identified with the 'master plan’ established by the Planning Act”. Hagman, Urban Planning and Land Development Control Law, § 24, p 55.

"It is thus clear that the 'comprehensive plan’ of the zoning statute is not identical with the 'master plan’ of the Planning Act and need not meet the formal requirements of a master plan.” Kozesnik v Montgomery Twp, 24 NJ 154, 166; 131 A2d 1, 7 (1957).

The "plan” limitation in the zoning enabling act requires that the community zone in a pre-established and comprehensive manner rather than on an ad hoc basis. The "plan” required for zoning purposes is not dependent on the adoption of a *539 master plan and may properly emanate from the zoning ordinance or map itself. 7

In Michigan, and generally elsewhere, zoning enabling acts and zoning ordinances were enacted before legislation authorizing planning commissions and adoption of master plans.

"As a result, there appears to have been a judicial tendency to interpret the statutory directive that zoning ordinances shall be 'in accordance with a comprehensive plan’ as meaning nothing more than that zon *540 ing ordinances shall be comprehensive — that is to say, uniform and broad in scope of coverage. The lack of a master plan is deemed irrelevant to the validity of zoning measures. And this is hardly surprising. For when one considers the usual chronology of the legislative enactment of zoning and planning enabling legislation in any state, the indefinite statutory language, and the far greater prevalence of zoning than planning at the municipal level, it would strain judicial reasoning to the breaking point to imply a legislative intent that zoning ordinances be considered authorized only if drafted in accordance with a previously enunciated master plan. ” Haar, In Accordance With a Comprehensive Plan, 68 Harv L Rev 1154, 1157 (1955). (Emphasis supplied.)

With the exception of states where the zoning enabling act specifically provides that zoning shall be "in accordance with the master plan for land use”, 8 no case has been found requiring adoption of a master plan as a precondition to the enactment of a valid zoning ordinance. The authorities are uniformly to the contrary. 9

There is no statutory requirement that a township establish a planning commission; the statute authorizing the creation of township planning commissions is permissive. MCLA 125.323; MSA 5.2963(103). Requiring that any township that does establish a planning commission immediately adopt a master plan or otherwise face invalidation *541 of its previously enacted zoning ordinances would serve as a strong deterrent to taking the initial step toward long-range planning — the creation of a planning commission.

Substantial time may be required to develop and adopt a sound master plan. "If no zoning regulation were possible until the master plan was completed and adopted, in counties where fast growth was occurring, it might do so in an incongruous and uncontrolled manner which the planning commission would find it difficult or perhaps impossible to keep abreast of, or to devise a master plan that would be of much benefit; and thus the whole purpose of effective zoning might be frustrated.” Gayland v Salt Lake County, 11 Utah 2d 307, 310; 358 P2d 633, 635 (1961).

Invalidation of otherwise valid zoning regulations solely because they were enacted in the period between creation of a planning commission and actual adoption of a master plan would result in wholesale invalidation of zoning regulations leaving an absolute void of any land use regulation.

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Bluebook (online)
232 N.W.2d 584, 394 Mich. 531, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabo-v-monroe-township-mich-1975.