Schueller v. Board of Adjustment of City of Dubuque

95 N.W.2d 731, 250 Iowa 706, 1959 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 8, 1959
Docket49621
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 95 N.W.2d 731 (Schueller v. Board of Adjustment of City of Dubuque) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schueller v. Board of Adjustment of City of Dubuque, 95 N.W.2d 731, 250 Iowa 706, 1959 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 503 (iowa 1959).

Opinion

Thornton, J.

Intervenor, Wartburg Theological Seminary, a nonprofit religious and educational institution located in Dubuque, owned and operated by the American Lutheran Church, a religious corporation, applied to the building commissioner of Dubuque for a permit to erect a married students’ dormitory to house twenty married students, their wives and children, on its campus on a vacant lot adjoining plaintiff’s property. The application states that this is the first of five such dormitories intervenor plans to erect on its campus.

The campus of intervenor consists of thirty-three acres acquired in 1888. The seminary began operation in 1889.

Plaintiff acquired his property in 1954 and completed a home thereon, at a cost of about $100,000, in 1956.

The properties are adjoining and located in the single family residence district under the provisions of the Zoning Ordinance adopted in 1934 pursuant to what is now chapter 414, Iowa Code, 1958'.

The building commissioner, after obtaining an opinion from the city solicitor, granted the application. Plaintiff, joined by fifteen other property owners in the same residence district, appealed to the Board of Adjustment. The board denied the appeal by a three to two decision and this action followed.

The pertinent parts of the zoning ordinance are as follows:

“Article II. Single Family Residence District.
“Section 1. Use Regulations.
“No building or premises shall be used and no building or structure shall be erected or altered to be used in whole or in part, unless otherwise provided for in this ordinance, except for the following purposes:
(a) Single family dwelling.
(b) Educational, religious or philanthropic use, exclud *708 ing business school and college or correctional institutions.
(j) Accessory use on the same lot with and customary incident to’ any of the above permitted uses. * *
“Article IY. Multiple Residence District.
“Section 1. Use Regulations.
“No building or premises shall be used, and no building shall be erected or altered to be used in whole or in part, unless otherwise provided for in this ordinance, except for the following purposes:
(a) Uses permitted in a Two' Family Residence District.
(b) Multiple Dwelling. ”

Said zoning ordinance defines a múltiple dwelling as follows: “A building designed for or occupied by three or more families living* independently of each other.” '

The able trial court found as a matter of fact and as a conclusion of law the contemplated use of the building for married students, their wives and children, will serve both an educational and religious use and purpose, and is a permitted use in the single family residence district, and as a matter of law that such building is not a “multiple dwelling” within the terms of the ordinance. With this holding we agree.

Intervenor introduced testimony of Dr. Virgil M. Haneher, president of the State University of Iowa, Dr. Alfred IT. Ewald, president of intervenor, and five other educators to establish that married students’ dormitories are a proper and appropriate educational and religious use. And they are considered to be a necessary responsibility of educational institutions in light of the number of married students, particularly at the graduate and professional level. Plaintiff offered no evidence on this point and concedes it here. See Trustees of Griswold College v. State of Iowa, 46 Iowa 275, 26 Am. Rep. 138; The Church Divinity School v. County of Alameda, 1957, 152 Cal. App.2d 496, 314 P.2d 209.

The hearing in the trial court was de novo to' determine the legality of the action of defendant, Board of Adjustment. The hearing in this court is on assigned errors, the findings of fact of the trial court having the force of a jury verdict. *709 Sections 414.15 and 414.18, Code of Iowa, 1958; rule 318, Rules of Civil Procedure. See also Anderson v. Jester, 206 Iowa 452, 221 N.W. 354; Crow v. Board of Adjustment, 227 Iowa 324, 288 N.W. 145; Granger v. Board of Adjustment, 241 Iowa 1356, 44 N.W.2d 399.

The question for decision is one of law, the interpretation and application of apparently conflicting provisions of an ordinance. Western Theological Seminary v. City of Evanston, 325 Ill. 511, 156 N.E. 778; Missionaries of Our Lady of La Salette v. Village of Whitefish Bay, 267 Wis. 609, 66 N.W.2d 627; Livingston v. Davis, 243 Iowa 21, 50 N.W.2d 592, 27 A. L. R.2d 1237; Crow v. Board of Adjustment, 227 Iowa 324, 288 N.W. 145.

Plaintiff contends that a married students’ dormitory, which as a matter of fact serves a religious use and purpose, is a multiple dwelling and prohibited in the single family residence district. It is apparent that the dormitory is constructed like an apartment house. The definition of a multiple dwelling as contained in the ordinance is set out above. This contention is fully answered in the Western Theological Seminary case, supra. In that case the Illinois court in dealing with the contention that a single men’s dormitory and dining hall should be excluded from an “A” residence district as a tenement house, hotel, lodging house or boarding house allowed only in “B” districts, said at page 520 of 325 Ill., page 782 of 156 N.E.:

“The provision of the ordinance authorizing the erection and use of buildings for schools and colleges in a residence district does not refer to the same subject matter as tenement houses, hotels, private dubs and fraternity houses, boarding and lodging houses, referred to in the provision of the ordinance with respect to a ‘B’ residence district.”

The wording of the ordinance is plainly directed to the use to be made of the land and buildings. Each Article provides: “Use Begulations. No building or premises shall be usted and no building or structure shall be erected or altered to be used * * :!f”, and paragraph (b), section 1 of Article II makes an exception for: “Educational, religious or philanthropic use * * (Italics supplied.)

There is no need to construe this ordinance. The plain *710 words provide for the use, not the particular type of building. It follows that a building that may be used as an apartment house or multiple dwelling is not SO' used when in fact it is being used as a married students’ dormitory, an educational and religious use.

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95 N.W.2d 731, 250 Iowa 706, 1959 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schueller-v-board-of-adjustment-of-city-of-dubuque-iowa-1959.