McCormick v. City of Pensacola, K-176
| Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
| Writing for the Court | WIGGINTON |
| Citation | McCormick v. City of Pensacola, 216 So.2d 785 (Fla. App. 1968) |
| Decision Date | 10 December 1968 |
| Docket Number | No. K-176,K-176 |
| Parties | William A. McCORMICK and Bessie M. McCormick, husband and wife; William B. Mancil and Ernestine M. Mancil, husband and wife; James D. Beasley and Margaret L. Beasley, husband and wife, Appellants, v. The CITY OF PENSACOLA, a municipal corporation; Forest Park, Inc., a Florida corporation; Alexander Forhetz, et al., Appellees. |
Barksdale, Tucker & Worley, Pensacola, for appellants.
Caton & Caton, Pensacola, for appellees.
Appellants brought this action pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 87, F.S., seeking a declaration of their rights under the zoning ordinances of the City of Pensacola and the restrictive covenants of record applicable to their respective parcels of land. From a final judgment denying their prayer for relief, this appeal is taken.
Appellants are the owners of lots in a developed subdivision situate in the City of Pensacola on which each of them occupies and maintains his residence. The property in the subdivision is zoned for residential use only. Each lot therein is subject to restrictive covenants limiting its use to residential purposes.
Appellants' lots are located adjacent to the intersection of two four-lane arterial thoroughfares. The proof fairly establishes that when they originally purchased their property it was in a quiet residential neighborhood and the streets providing access to the subdivision carried only a normal amount of traffic. Since that time, however, the City widened the two streets bordering their property which now carry an extremely heavy flow of traffic moving both north and south as well as east and west through that section of the City. In addition, the two corners of the intersection on the opposite side of the four-lane street bordering appellants' property on the east in an area zoned residential have been rezoned commercial in accordance with a prior nonconforming use and are now occupied by filling stations and a shopping center.
Appellants contend that the proof establishes there has been a change in the condition of the neighborhood as a result of the increased flow of traffic by their homes and by the commercialization of the two corners of the intersection across the street from the subdivision in which their property is located. Appellants urge that as a result of the change in condition the property owned by them is no longer suitable for residential purposes as it was before the change took place, and that the highest and best use to which their property is adapted is for commercial as distinguished from residential purposes.
By the final judgment appealed herein the trial court found and determined from the evidence adduced at the trial that the covenants of record restricting the use of plaintiffs' property to residential purposes are enforceable and that plaintiffs failed to establish by a preponderance of evidence such a change in condition as to justify judicial interference with the established contractual rights between the plaintiffs and other objecting property owners in the subdivision who intervened as defendants in the cause. The court further found and determined that the reasonableness of the zoning ordinance of the City of Pensacola restricting the use of appellants' property to residential purposes is fairly debatable and should be upheld. Appellants' prayer for injunctive and other relief was accordingly denied.
Appellants assert that they have carried the burden of proving their property to be unsuitable for residential purposes as presently zoned, and that appellees have failed to carry the burden of proving a substantial need for continuance of the zoning restrictions on their property in the interest of public health, morals, safety, or welfare. On this state of the record appellants insist that both the zoning ordinance and the restrictive covenants should be held to be no longer applicable to their land on the authority of Burritt v. Harris, 1 and Lawley v. Town of Golfview. 2 Appellants' position is not without a modicum of validity.
In Burritt v. Harris, supra, the landowner sought a rezoning of his property from residential to industrial use. The trial court found and held that the reasonableness of the ordinance as applied to the landowner's property was debatable and therefore refused to disturb the zoning board's denial of the landowner's petition for relief. In affirming the trial court's decision on appeal, this court held:
* * *' 3
Appellant petitioned the Supreme Court by certiorari to review this court's decision. In reaching an opposite conclusion from that adopted by this court, the Supreme Court held:
'The uncontradicted testimony, including that of the respondents, shows the property to be unsuitable for residential use * * *.
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'It is not established that the zoning restriction here imposed bears substantially on the public health, morals, safety or welfare of the community. * * *
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'The constitutional right of the owner of property to make legitimate use of his lands may not be curtailed by unreasonable restrictions under the guise of police power. The owner will not be required to sacrifice his rights absent a substantial need for restrictions in the interest of public health, morals, safety or welfare. If the zoning restriction exceeds the bounds of necessity for the public welfare, as, in our opinion, do the restrictions controverted here, they must be stricken as an unconstitutional invasion of property rights.
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'The decision of the district court is quashed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in accord with the views herein expressed.'
In its attempt to follow the clear and unambiguous holding of the Supreme Court in Burritt, even though the rule of law propounded thereby was a departure from the settled law of this and other jurisdictions, the Second District Court of Appeal in Lawley v. Town of Golfview, supra, held:
'In Burritt, the landowner's application for rezoning had been denied by the zoning commission. The circuit court dismissed the suit brought by the landowner seeking relief against the ordinance on the ground that the reasonableness of the ordinance was fairly debatable, and the chancellor would not substitute his judgment for that of the zoning commission. The decision by the First District Court of Appeal affirming the trial court's decree of dismissal was quashed by the Supreme Court in the opinion which it rendered in the case. In its opinion the Supreme Court pointed out that the evidence failed to establish that the zoning restriction there in question bears substantially on the public health, morals, safety, or welfare of the community. By this holding the Supreme Court has created an innovation in the zoning law of Florida by casting on the zoning authority the burden of establishing by a preponderance of evidence that the zoning restrictions under attack 'bear substantially on the public health, morals, safety or welfare of the community' if the ordinance is to be sustained. * * *
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