WC McMinn Co., Inc. v. City of Little Rock

516 S.W.2d 584, 257 Ark. 442, 1974 Ark. LEXIS 1371
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 23, 1974
Docket74-92
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 516 S.W.2d 584 (WC McMinn Co., Inc. v. City of Little Rock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WC McMinn Co., Inc. v. City of Little Rock, 516 S.W.2d 584, 257 Ark. 442, 1974 Ark. LEXIS 1371 (Ark. 1974).

Opinions

Dan M. Burge, Special Justice.

This is a zoning case involving a total of nine and one-half (9 Vi) lots owned by the Appellant, W. C. McMinn Co., Inc., out of a total of twelve (12) lots in Block 206 of the original City of Little Rock, which block is located between 15th and 16th Streets, Broadway and Arch Streets, in the City of Little Rock.

The North side of Block 206 adjoins and is immediately adjacent to the south boundary of the Central Little Rock Urban Renewal District. There are numerous lots along Broadway used and zoned as F Commercial as well as on other streets within the immediate area of Appellant’s property. The south half of the adjoining block facing Broadway and within 200 feet of the southeast corner of Appellant’s property is used commercial as is the entire west half of the block adjoining Appellant’s property on the west side. There are service stations located on Broadway within 300 feet of Appellant’s property, both to the north and to the south. There are also numerous vacant and undeveloped lots in the immediate area of Appellant’s property.

Appellant commenced the acquisition of its lots in 1967 and purchased the last lot in 1972, all of which purchases were made after this Court handed down decisions in 1964, through 1966, approving F Commercial Zoning on South Broadway in this area. Prior to Appellant’s purchase, said lots had various zoning classifications. Before purchasing its largest and most expensive single tract from the Third Baptist Church at a cost of SI35,000.00, Appellant required and the church did join with Appellant in obtaining rezoning of all of the church’s and Appellant’s property in Block 206 to F Commercial in February 1971. Thereafter, Appellant renovated the church property for commercial use at a cost of 1100,000.00 and leased it to a tenant with usage clearly within the F Commercial classification. In 1972, Appellant purchased its last lot in Block 206 for a total investment of approximately $350,000.00. It requested that this last lot be rezoned F Commercial, but the City refused, and the same was classified E-l for quiet business use.

At the time of the 1972 application and hearing, the City Board of Directors requested the City Planning Commission to make a land use study of the South Broadway area from 14th Street to the North to Roosevelt on the South, Louisiana Street on the East to High Street on the West. The Planning Commission then reduced the area of its study to include a 63 block area bounded by 15th Street on the North, Roosevelt Road on the South, Center Street on the East, and the alley line between Chester and Izard Streets on the West. Appellant’s property in Block 206 being located on the West side of Broadway between 15th and 16th Street is in the extreme North edge of the study area. In February 1973, following the Planning Commission’s Study, the City adopted Ordinance No. 12,739 reclassifying and rezoning various properties in the South Broadway study area whereby all of Appellant’s property in Block 206 was rezoned from F Commercial District to E-l Quiet Business District over its objections.

Appellant then filed suit in the Pulaski Chancery Court seeking to restrain and enjoin the Appellee City from denying its use of its property for F Commercial purposes, alleging that the action of the City in rezoning its property was arbitrary, unreasonable,, capricious and unconstitutional as applied to Appellant. The Trial Court denied the relief requested and Appellant brings this appeal.

Prior to the trial in the Pulaski Chancery Court, and over Appellant’s objections, certain intervenors, who were property owners within the 63 Block area, were permitted to file interventions opposing the relief sought by Appellant. They have also filed a separate brief and argument in this appeal. We hold that this participation was not an abuse of the Chancellor’s discretion, as such interventions have been approved in other zoning cases. Fields v. City of Little Rock, 251 Ark. 811, 475 S.W. 2d 509.

We have also been favored with excellent amicus curiae briefs and arguments filed by the Little Rock and North Little Rock Board of Realtors, Inc. in support of the Appellant and in behalf of the Quapaw Quarter Association in support of the Appellee. These briefs and arguments have been considered by the Court.

Twenty-six (26) witnesses testified in this trial and numerous and voluminous exhibits were introduced into evidence. It would unduly prolong this Opinion to separately summarize the testimony of each witness or separately discuss each exhibit. Accordingly, after carefully reviewing all the evidence, we will merely summarize same as it applies to each party’s contentions and the applicable law.

Between 1960 and 1970 the census records for the City of Little Rock revealed that the South Broadway area included in Ordinance No. 12,739 decreased 11.1% in population while the City as a whole increased 23%; owner occupied property in the area was reduced 20.9% while for the City as a whole there was an increase of 41%; tenant occupied property in the area increased to 74.2% while for the'City as a whole tenant occupied property was only 40%; vacancy rate increased in the area to 15.4% while for the City as a whole it was only 6.6%; and employment, income, school age children and other factors reflect similar comparisons.

Numerous witnesses in behalf of the Appellant and Appellee testified to the effect that the area continued to be a declining neighborhood in the twilight zone or transition period which was obviously depressed with a high vacancy rate. They further testified that practically all of the building activity in the area was for the renovation of existing homes into multiple apartments and rooming houses and that there were no new family dwellings being constructed in the area, with the area adjacent to Appellant’s property becoming progressively undesirable for single family dwellings. Testimony further revealed that when an existing home or apartment building burned or deteriorated to the point it could not be used the property normally remained vacant or undeveloped.

The testimony from witnesses for both Appellant and Appellee clearly revealed that this trend evidenced by the census reports continued after 1970 and up until the time of the trial of this cause. In fact, Appellees’ own witnesses, Mr. Russell McLean, Chairman of the Little Rock Planning Commission, Mr. Jim Finch, a member of the Department of Community Development Staff, and Mr. Donald Venhaus, a Director of the Department of Community Development, all testified to the fact that the neighborhood adjoining Appellant’s property continued as a declining or depressed area with high vacancy rates, approximately two and one-half times that of the City of Little Rock as a whole.

Mr. Russell McLean, Chairman of the Little Rock Planning Commission and Appellees’ own expert witness, further testified that he would favor permitting F Commercial zoning on Broadway Street from 15th to 18th Street, which area includes all of Appellant’s property. Other witnesses testified in behalf of the Appellant to the effect that the highest and best use of Appellant’s property was for commercial purposes; and that the use of the former Baptist Church property at the time of the adoption of the rezoning ordinance was F Commercial and after the adoption of said ordinance it became a nonconforming use.

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Bluebook (online)
516 S.W.2d 584, 257 Ark. 442, 1974 Ark. LEXIS 1371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wc-mcminn-co-inc-v-city-of-little-rock-ark-1974.