State ex rel. Rabenau v. Beckemeier

436 S.W.2d 52, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 585
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 1968
DocketNo. 33130
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 436 S.W.2d 52 (State ex rel. Rabenau v. Beckemeier) 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. Rabenau v. Beckemeier, 436 S.W.2d 52, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 585 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

DOERNER, Commissioner.

This appeal involves a variance granted by the St. Louis County Board of Zoning Adjustment to Bernard H. Dorenkamp from the building or set-back lines established by law for the major highways in that county. By certiorari, in which Doren-kamp was permitted to intervene, the respondents sought and obtained a review of the Board’s decision by the Circuit Court. The court reversed the decision of the Board, from which Dorenkamp brought this appeal.

Dorenkamp was in the business of developing subdivisions, and prior to the one under consideration had developed two other subdivisions. In December, 1965 he sought to subdivide a tract of land he owned fronting on Sappington Road, in St. Louis County, which subdivision was named Seneca Estates. On his behalf his engineer prepared and submitted a preliminary plat of Seneca Estates to the Planning Commission, on which plat the building or setback line from the edge of Sappington Road was shown as 30 feet. The plan for major highways in effect for St. Louis County provided that the set-back line for buildings on major highways, including Sappington Road, was 40 feet from the edge of the road. The Planning Commission refused to approve the preliminary plat, presumably because it failed to comply with the setback requirements for major highways, but whether Dorenkamp learned of the reason for the Commission’s rejection is not clear from the record. He then submitted a revised plat of the proposed subdivision which specified a 40 foot set-back line. The Planning Commission approved that revised plan on December 13, 1965, and it was filed with the Recorder of Deeds on January 3, 1966.

Shortly thereafter Dorenkamp sought to effect a change of the set-back line from 40 to 20 feet, because the prospective purchasers for the improvements to be constructed on Lot 20, a corner lot, wanted the house to face Tioga Drive rather than Sappington Road, and the contemplated house and attached garage could not be so built unless the set-back line was changed. He consulted Edward P. Walton, Deputy Zoning Enforcement Officer of St. Louis County, and inquired as to what procedure had to be followed to change the set-back line. Walton, who appeared as a witness for Dorenkamp at the hearing before the [54]*54Board of Zoning Adjustment, testified that when Dorenkamp consulted him he examined the zoning map and found that the tract was in the R-2 Density District, in which a set-back line of only 20 feet was required. Walton freely admitted that he failed to check the set-back line for Sap-pington Road established by the major highway plan, and related that he informed Dorenkamp the change could be effected by the filing of record of an instrument amending the approved plat. Dorenkamp then went to “my title company” (unnamed) and had a George Benson prepare an instrument changing the set-back line on Sappington to 20 feet, obtained its approval by the owners of the relatively few lots in the subdivision which he had theretofore sold, and filed it with the Recorder of Deeds on February 21, 1966.

About six months later, on August 20, 1966, Dorenkamp entered into a sales contract with a couple named Toenges for the sale of Lot 20, together with a house and attached garage to be built thereon, contingent upon the sale by the Toenges of the home they then owned. On March 8, 1967, almost seven months after the date of the sales contract, Dorenkamp applied for and was granted a building permit to construct a house on Lot 20, facing Tioga Drive, with the attached garage opening towards Sappington Road and 20 feet distant from the edge of that road, all as shown by a plot plan filed with the application. Walton testified that he wrote up the application for Dorenkamp and issued the permit as Deputy Zoning Enforcement Officer, but apparently he again failed to check the set-back requirements of the major highway plan. Dorenkamp testified that, “After the issuance of a building permit” on March 8, 1967, he began construction of the improvements, but the precise date on which work was begun was not stated. According to Dorenkamp, the excavation was dug and the concrete foundation poured, and then the project “ * * * sat like that for about two weeks * * Thereafter the subfloor was installed, the framing for the wall sections of the house and the garage were erected, the roof was put on, and about half of the brick veneer facing was completed when he received a stop order from the County’s Field Inspector to cease work on the garage because its location was in violation of the set-back line on major highways.

Raymond W. Rabenau, one of the respondent trustees of Cordington Heights, the back of which borders that of Seneca Estates, testified that he saw the foundation for the house, and that at that time it was in line with “the other building,” by which we understand he referred to a house directly across Tioga Drive that was located at least 40 feet from Sappington Road. At that time, according to Rabenau, the area where the garage was later located was graded smooth and no foundation for the garage had been poured. About March 22 or 23, 1967, he first noticed that a garage was being erected on the Sappington side of the house, within about IS feet of the edge of the road as he judged the distance. On March 27, 1967 he went to the County Courthouse, talked to Walton, and asked to see the plot plan. Walton told him on that day he could find nothing and had no record of a building permit having been issued on that lot. Walton said he would check further, and advised Rabenau to call back the next day. Ra-benau did not do so, however, because he heard that another resident in his subdivision, named Elhart, had talked to the County Field Inspector and had been informed by the latter that the garage was over the building line. He did, however, go back to the County Courthouse the following day, March 29, but “ * * * that same day I couldn’t find nothing * * * ” and he then contacted his counsel and requested him to investigate.

Walton made no denial and offered no explanation concerning Rabenau’s testimony of his inability on March 27 to locate any record of the issuance of the building permit. He did testify that after the complaint was filed he sent an inspector to the lot in question and “ * * * at the time [55]*55he (Rabenau) claimed, I think, nineteen feet or fifteen feet from the street or something like that at the time inspection was made. * * * ” Walton then called Dorenkamp and requested him to have a spot survey made, because at the time Walton thought it might be a matter of a discrepancy of inches or one foot and he wanted a survey showing exactly where the improvements were located on the lot. Dorenkamp then had R. M. Harrison, a licensed surveyor, make a survey and the plat prepared by him shows that the garage was set back only about 20½ feet from the edge of Sappington Road. The exact date on which the stop order was issued is not clear from the record, but Dorenkamp’s recollection was that it was on April 6 or the first part of April.

After the issuance of the order stopping work on the garage Dorenkamp filed a petition with the Board of Zoning Adjustment. The date on which it was filed does not appear in the Board’s record before us, nor is the petition included in that record. We gather, however, that what Dorenkamp requested was a variance from the set-back requirements of the major highway plan, in order that he might complete the construction of the attached garage at the setback line shown on the Harrison survey.

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Bluebook (online)
436 S.W.2d 52, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rabenau-v-beckemeier-moctapp-1968.