Stengel v. Crandon

23 So. 2d 835, 156 Fla. 592, 161 A.L.R. 1228, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 941
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 27, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 So. 2d 835 (Stengel v. Crandon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stengel v. Crandon, 23 So. 2d 835, 156 Fla. 592, 161 A.L.R. 1228, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 941 (Fla. 1945).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

The appellant was alleged in his bill of complaint to be the owner of a tract of land in Dade County extending from Coral Way to Tamiami Trail, with a frontage on the former of one mile and on the latter of eight hundred feet. The east boundary is approximately two miles west of Red Road, the west boundary of Coral Gables, and the land is situated about nine miles from the post office in Miami.

Many years ago the appellees, or their predecessors, divided the county into zones where respective types of businesses may be conducted and buildings constructed. The appellant’s property falls partly in districts designated GU, RU-2, RU-3, and BU-2. A narrow strip across the north part of it, bordering the Tamiami Trail, is in RU-3; a narrow strip along the east side is in RU-2; a small rectangular piece in the southeast corner is in BU-2; and the remainder, the bulk of it is in GU.

*594 Before proceeding further we shall give in abbreviated form the regulations pertaining to the zones designated by these symbols. We must abridge them because these regulations, dealing not only with types of buildings but also with uses in each of the four areas, are quite elaborate.

The area designated as GU covers the entire unincorporated part of Dade County not included in other zones. The restrictions peculiar to this district deal, for instance, with conformation of building lines, for both residential and business structures, “setback” requirements, comparative sizes of one- and two-story buildings, the proportionate area of a given lot to be occupied by buildings, the type of accessory structures, the relative locations of industries and schools, and the like. Buildings in RU-2 may be used only for one- or two-family residences, depending upon the area of the particular lot. Here again are detailed specifications as to type, location, and relative position of structures. In RU-3 there may be built any edifice of a type permitted in RU-2 and also those to be employed as rooming houses, day nurseries, churches, colleges, and so forth. There may-be erected in the área called BU-2, in addition to buildings of the kind permitted in the “RU-zones,” business buildings of almost every conceivable kind, ninety-one of which are specially named. In the zone titled BU-3, otherwise designated as “Business Districts — Liberal,” in which appellant wishes his property placed, the land may be used for any purpose in the preceding RU and BU zones and thirty-three others, including “Airports, Airplane Hangars or Airplane Repair Shops.”

As is pointed out in the pleading, in none of the zones we have defined, save BU-3, may an airport and its accompanying hangars and shops be maintained.

The appellant applied to appellees’ zoning director for revision of the regulations and restrictions, so that his property, which we shall presently describe, would be incorporated in zone BU-3, thus enabling him to use it as an airport. As provided in the “Zoning Regulations,” notice was given of a public hearing, and one was held, but no protests were offered, and all members of the commission in attendance approved his request. When, however, the recommendation of the com *595 mission that his petitioh be granted reached the Board of County Commissioners, that body did not concur.

It is directly charged in the bill that the restrictions upon the use of the property are not in keeping with present or reasonably anticipated conditions of the land in question or the land surrounding it. On the north side of Coral Way, so it is averred, for a mile eastward from the southeast corner of appellant’s tract there are two dwellings and one service station; on the south side of Coral Way, opposite appellant’s property, which it will be recalled extends along that thoroughfare • one mile, the section is unimproved; on the south side of Coral Way, east of this unimproved land, there lies a large tract also unimproved except for the tracks of the Florida East Coast and Seaboard Airline railways, a wood preserving plant, an incinerator, and five houses; on the north side of Coral Way in the section of land immediately west of appellant’s there are but four houses and some small parcels used sporadically for farming and gardening.

The appellant insists that his property is particularly suitable for development as an airfield because of its size and for the reason, too, that for a considerable distance around it there has been slight improvement. He represents that the location has been approved fob such purpose by the Civil Aeronautics Administration of the Department of Commerce of the United States, and that the War and Navy Departments have approved it as a site where the usual activities of an airfield will not interfere with army and navy operations in the county. There is a demand; so he claims, for such an airport in the vicinity. •

It is charged that the action of the Board of County Commssioners. amounts to confiscation, thus depriving him of a valuable property right without due process of law, and that the restrictions of the zoning law, which so severely curb his use of his land, are discriminatory, and unreasonable.

A decree was sought to enjoin the imposition of any restrictions, except those applicable in zone BU-3, and to direct the Board of County Commissioners to allow appellant to utilize his land as an airport. The bill was dismissed on motion, and the appellant appealed.-

*596 At the outset of our discussion of the applicable law it should be expressly pointed out that appellant makes no attack on the constitutionality of the act authorizing the County of Dade to be zoned, but only upon the validity of the restrictions adopted pursuant to that law as they affect his parcel of land, remote as it is from the congested areas and surrounded as it is for a considerable distance by property on which there has been little improvement or construction.

Our observation will, therefore, be confined to a determination of the question whether interference with the use of this land amounts to a deprivation of property to such a degree that, as to it, enforcement of the regulations authorized to be adopted by the act constitutes a violation of guaranties vouchsafed to appellant by organic law. This method of approach to the problem seems to have been adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States, Euclid v. Amber Realty Company, 47 S. Ct. 114, 272 U.S. 365, 71 L. Ed. 303, 54 A.L.R. 1016, and by this court in City of Miami Beach v. Ocean and Inland Company, infra, where we said in hearing the merits of such a controversy “the facts peculiar to the particular case [would] govern.”

This thought doubtless prompted Mr. Justice BROWN when he wrote the opinion for the court in Forde v. City of Miami Beach, 146 Fla. 676, 1 So.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 2d 835, 156 Fla. 592, 161 A.L.R. 1228, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stengel-v-crandon-fla-1945.