State ex rel. Housing Authority of St. Louis County v. Wind

337 S.W.2d 554, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 502
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1960
DocketNo. 30459
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 337 S.W.2d 554 (State ex rel. Housing Authority of St. Louis County v. Wind) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Housing Authority of St. Louis County v. Wind, 337 S.W.2d 554, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 502 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

DOERNER, Commissioner.

This case involves the validity of forty-eight building permits which were granted to the respondent Housing Authority of St. Louis County for the construction of part of a public housing project upon a tract of approximately twenty-nine or thirty acres owned by the Housing Authority in the. Jefferson Barracks area of St. Louis County. Respondents Fischer & Frichtel Construction Company and Design and Construction, Inc., are the general contractors engaged in building the project, and respondent Herbert G. Poertner is the Public Works Director of St. Louis County. The only appellants are Gus Tomich and Ann Tomich, his wife, and Joseph Ñothum and Mariann Nothum, his wife, who were permitted to intervene in the proceedings in the circuit court.

Beginning in late September, 1958, surface grading of the area was commenced on the project. No permit for such grading was required. On November 24, 1958, William Guhman, the then Public Works Director of the County, issued ninety-six individual permits to the Housing Authority, forty-eight of which were for the erection and construction of four-family buildings and the remaining forty-eight of which were for two-family units. For a reason which is not clear from the transcript, the permits for the forty-eight two-family buildings were revoked on November 28, 1958, but were reissued on December 12, 1958. On January 9, 1959, appellants Tomich and Nothum filed their appeal with the Board of Zoning Adjustment of St. Louis County praying for the revocation and rescission of all ninety-six permits. After a hearing held on January 28, 1959, the Board, on February 18, 1959, unanimously held that the Public Works Director had erred in issuing the permits for the two-family dwellings, reversed his decision, and “requested” the Director to revoke such permits.

Thereupon the respondents herein petitioned the Circuit Court of St. Louis County for a writ of certiorari to review the decision of the Board of Zoning Adjustment. Pursuant thereto, thé writ was issued (presumably to the members of that Board, though the transcript is silent on the matter) and a certified transcript of the proceedings before the Board of Zoning Adjustment was filed in court on March 19, 1959. Meanwhile the appellants Tomich and Nothum, having sought and been granted leave to intervene, filed what they termed a cross-petition, in which they asked the court to ratify and affirm the order of the Board. The cause was argued and submitted on April 2, and on June 1, 1959, the Circuit Court entered a judgment and decree reversing the decision of the Board of Zoning Adjustment and dismissing appellants' cross-petition. Following an unavailing motion for a new trial, appellants Tomich and Nothum appealed to this court.

Various contentions made during the proceedings below by the respective parties have been abandoned. Indeed, the legality of the forty-eight permits for the four-[557]*557family dwellings is no longer questioned by the appellants. Analyzing the points in the briefs of the parties, the issues presented to us are: (1) whether the Housing Authority is subject to the zoning ordinances of St. Louis County; (2) whether appellants were such “aggrieved parties” as could appeal to the Board of Zoning Adjustment; (3) whether, if they were, their appeal was timely filed; (4) whether the circuit court erred in substituting its own judgment for that of the Board; and (5) whether the court erred in interpreting the provisions of the zoning ordinance.

Presumably relying on the theory that the best defense is an offense, respondents argue in their brief that the Housing Authority is exempt from the zoning ordinance of St. Louis County because it is a municipal corporation, exercising public and essential governmental functions, and has the right to acquire lands by t,he exercise of the power of eminent doma^ It is true that a Housing Authority created pursuant to the statutes has been both legislatively and judicially declared to .be a municipal corporation. Section 99.080 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.; Laret Investment Co. v. Dickmann, 345 Mo. 449, 134 S.W.2d 65; Schmoll v. Housing Authority of St. Louis County, Mo., 321 S.W.2d 494. It is likewise true that it is given the right “ * * * to acquire by the exercise of the power of eminent domain any real property in fee simple or other estate * * Section 99.080(4); Section 99.-120. But it does not follow, as respondents contend, that a housing authority is therefore immune from local zoning laws or ordinances. Indeed, as respondents admit, by Section 99.130 the General Assembly specifically provided:

“All housing projects of an authority shall be subject to the planning, zoning, sanitary and building laws, ordinances and regulations applicable to the locality in which the housing project is situated. In the planning and location of any housing project, an authority shall take into consideration the relationship of the project to any larger plan or long-range program for the development of the area in which the housing authority functions. (R.S.1939, § 7865)”

Respondents argue that that section “ * * simply authorizes the regulation of housing projects with respect tO' matters directly and vitally related to health and welfare matters, but does not even purport to make the location of projects a subject of local cognizance.” The answer to this argument is that the location of the project is not in dispute. Appellants do not contend that a housing project may not be located on the tract involved; what they question, as will be more fully developed later, is whether, under the zoning ordinance of St. Louis County, two-family dwellings may be interspersed with four-family buildings.

Furthermore, while it was said in State of Missouri ex rel. Askew et al. v. Kopp, Mo., 330 S.W.2d 882, 888, that “* * * Local zoning ordinances are not applicable to public uses of property for which ah agency of the government has the power to acquire lands by the exercise of the power of eminent domain * * *,” the court was careful to point out that the state and its agencies would be within the purview of such regulations if “ * * * an intention to include them is clearly manifest * By the first sentence of Section 99.130 the legislature stated in plain and unequivocal language that all housing authority projects shall be subject to local zoning and building laws and ordinances of the locality, thus clearly manifesting its intention that housing projects are not to be immune from such local regulations.

Section 1004.100, St. Louis County Revised Ordinances, 1958, relating to the Board of Zoning Adjustment of St. Louis County, provides that an appeal to the Board may be made “ * * * by any person * * * allegedly aggrieved by the grant or refusal of a use and occupancy permit or by any other administrative de-[558]*558cisión based or claimed to be based, in whole or in part, upon any Zoning regulations, or the Zoning District Map.” Respondents contend that appellants are not aggrieved parties because “ * * * Private individuals lack standing to complain of alleged zoning violations without proving themselves specially and peculiarly injured * * * ”; and that no showing of special damage was made by appellants in this case. However, in the latest case cited by respondents, Kellog v.

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Bluebook (online)
337 S.W.2d 554, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-housing-authority-of-st-louis-county-v-wind-moctapp-1960.