State Ex Rel. Loraine, Inc. v. Adjustment Board of City of Baton Rouge

57 So. 2d 409, 220 La. 708, 1952 La. LEXIS 1123
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 14, 1952
Docket40523
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 57 So. 2d 409 (State Ex Rel. Loraine, Inc. v. Adjustment Board of City of Baton Rouge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Loraine, Inc. v. Adjustment Board of City of Baton Rouge, 57 So. 2d 409, 220 La. 708, 1952 La. LEXIS 1123 (La. 1952).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

The appellants — the City of Baton Rouge, James W. Phillips, Building Official of said City, and Intervenors to the petition of relator — prosecute this appeal from a judgment of the district court decreeing the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance of 1950 of the City of Baton Rouge to be unconstitutional and ineffective in so far as it classified Relator’s property as A-l Single Family Dwelling, ordering that the alternative writ of mandamus be made peremptory and that appellants, City of Baton Rouge and James W. Phillips, Building Official, .reissue to relator the building permit’ previously issued, to construct a commercial establishment on his property.

The property in question, having a frontage of 300 feet on Stanford Avenue in the City of Baton Rouge and a depth of about 120 feet between parallel lines, at the time of its acquisition by the relator was unzoned, being located between two residential districts in lowland formerly a swamp which had been drained to render the land useful. Prior to the purchase, a comprehensive zoning plan was in the process of revision by the City Planning Commission, and the relator — a private business corporation of this State engaged in the development of real estate and the construction of commercial buildings for lease —seeking to insure that the property was free and would remain free of any restrictions as to its commercial use, prompted its vendor to secure a letter from the Planning Engineer of the City Planning Commission, dated July 27, 1949, which stated that in the revision of the comprehensive zoning plan then in process the classification of D-l Commercial was proposed for the property in question. An examination by relator’s attorneys of the preliminary zoning map (prepared by the Planning Commission for submission to the City Council as a part of the comprehensive zoning plan) confirmed the fact that according to the proposed plan the property would be zoned as D-l, suitable for stores, shops, etc. The sale was consummated on August 18, 1949, for a consideration of $7,875. A few days later (August 24) the local newspaper carried a full page reproduction of the above-mentioned preliminary zoning map which showed relator’s property as bearing the symbol for Local Commerce, and at the bottom of the page there appeared an explanatory statement of which the following is an excerpt: “The proposed ordinance, if passed, will ,pot have a retroactive effect.”

The relator, having secured an agreement with Capitol Stores (operators of “super markets”) for a ten-year lease, proceeded immediately with a topographic survey and soil tests, and with plans and specifications for a suitable building. These were submitted to the City Building *714 Permit Section on April '12, 1950; permit No. 4363 was duly issued on April 19 to erect a store building at a cost of $64,800; the land was then cleared and piling tests were undertaken preliminary to commencement of construction; however, upon request of the Commission, relator agreed to withhold construction pending the final outcome of public hearings on the proposed zoning plan.

Meanwhile, on April 11, the day before relator applied for his permit, the Zoning Commission had caused to be published in the official journal a notice of public hearings, accompanied by a smaller reproduction of the zoning map differing from the one previously published in that the “Local Commerce” symbol had been removed from relator’s property — this being the only change in a relatively large area — and it appeared thereon under the symbol designating “Single Family” use; also, no statement was appended concerning the non-retroactive effect of the proposed ordinance. Six days later the Zoning Commission adopted a resolution requesting the Mayor-President to inform proper departments to cease issuing permits not in conformity with the proposed plan. Public hearings were begun on April 24, during the course of which objection was made to the construction of the proposed store and to the contemplated use to be made of the property; and following a recommendation by the Commission that the property be reclassified as A-l residential, the City Council at a meeting on August 2, 1950, adopted the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance of 1950 — in which relator’s property was classified as A-l Single Family Dwelling and which provided (Sec. 5, par. 11) : “Any building permit issued after April 11, 1950 [the date of publication of the second proposed zoning map and notice of hearings] for the construction in an ‘A-l’ Single Family Dwelling district” of a building such as plaintiff proposed to construct “shall be and is hereby revoked and shall be recalled by the Building Official.” Shortly thereafter relator was notified by James W. Phillips (appellant herein) that building permit No. 4363 dated April 19, 1950 was revoked, and no construction could proceed thereunder; whereupon relator sought every means possible to reactivate the permit by appealing to the Board of Adjustment under procedure provided in the Ordinance, and, upon the Board’s refusal to pass on the relief requested, the present suit was instituted, in which relator sought a writ of certiorari to bring up the proceedings had before the Board so that determination could be made whether it had properly refused jurisdiction, praying also that the revocation of his permit of April 19, 1950 be set aside and that an alternative writ of mandamus issue directed to the appellants, the City and the Building Official, ordering the reissuance of the said permit and recalling the action of the City in its ordinance inso *716 far as it attempted to classify the' property of relator as other than D-l Commercial.

Exceptions of no cause and no right of action filed on behalf of the Board of Adjustment were sustained below for the reason that the power and authority of the Board is restricted to minor variations in harmony with the general intent of the zoning restrictions and, being a creature of the City Council, a legislative body, it cannot change the law of its creator. Relator’s suit as to the Board was dismissed, and no appeal was taken from that phase of the judgment.

The remaining respondents also filed exceptions of no right and no cause of action, and answered to the merits, stressing the highly residential character of the sections adjoining respondent’s property and upholding its Family Dwelling classification as furthering the general welfare of the entire community. Owners of property in the adjoining residential subdivisions, nine in number, intervened and joined in the defense by resisting the relator’s demands, and to this petition of intervention relator excepted, and answered. All exceptions were referred to the merits, and after trial judgment was rendered overruling the exceptions of the respondents and intervenors; and on the. merits the trial judge found that the inclusion of relator’s property within an A-l Single Family Dwelling district had no substantial relation to the general welfare and that such inclusion constituted a taking of relator’s property without due compensation.

In this Court the appellants are reurging the exceptions of no cause and no right of action, contending that since mandamus is an.

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Bluebook (online)
57 So. 2d 409, 220 La. 708, 1952 La. LEXIS 1123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-loraine-inc-v-adjustment-board-of-city-of-baton-rouge-la-1952.