Weaver v. Bishop
Decision Date | 05 November 1935 |
Docket Number | Case Number: 24233 |
Citation | 174 Okla. 492,1935 OK 1093,52 P.2d 853 |
Parties | WEAVER et al. v. BISHOP et al. |
Court | Oklahoma Supreme Court |
¶0 1.Municipal Corporations--Procedure for Procuring Building Permits Where Provision not Made in Zoning Ordinance for Notice to Property Owners.
Where a zoning ordinance does not pro vide the procedure in relation to notice to adjacent property owners of the presentation of applications for building permits, or other pertinent matters, the rule is that the procedure to procure same under such ordinance is governed by the same rules which apply in obtaining municipal building permits generally.
2.Same--Function of Building Permits--Mutual Rights of Property Owners not Determined.
The function of municipal building permits is to evidence compliance by the applicants with the applicable ordinances and regulations and to furnish evidence to the proper authority that the proposed construction will meet building requirements, and not to determine the mutual rights of property owners, and the issuance of such permits is not a hearing upon or an adjudication of such mutual rights of property owners who are not parties to the proceedings.
3.Same--Validity of Zoning Ordinances and Classifications of Property Therein--Judgments of Municipal Legislative Bodies Controlling.
It is well settled that zoning ordinances based upon the Standard Zoning Enabling Act are valid enactments and are not repugnant to the provisions of the Constitution of the United States or of the state, and that where classifications of property in a comprehensive zoning plan, adopted by the legislative authority of the municipality, are attacked, it is assumed that the same are fair and reasonable, and where the validity of the classifications is fairly debatable, the expressed legislative judgment embodied in the ordinances must be allowed to control, and the courts will not substitute their judgments for that of the legislative bodies of the municipalities, and the conclusions of such bodies as expressed in the ordinances will not be disturbed, although in the very nature of things such classifications must in many instances be more or less arbitrary.
4.Same--Authority to Classify Retail Filling Stations as Proper Commercial Installations and to Zone Street Intersection for Such Commercial Uses.
A drive-in filling station, operated in the usual and proper manner for the sale of gasoline, oil, and other like commodities, is not a nuisance per se, or in law, that is, a nuisance at all times and under all circumstances, without regard to location, environment, and manner of conduct-however, such filling station may be a nuisance in fact, or per accidens, on account of its location and surroundings and the improper manner in which same may be conducted.The legislative body of the city of Tulsa had the power under the Zoning Enabling Act to classify retail filling stations as being proper commercial installations, and to zone the intersection involved for such commercial uses, and such classification and zoning do not appear from the evidence or the findings of the trial court to be improper or unreasonable.
5.Same--Force and Effects of Municipal Ordinances and Regulations That of Statutes.
The general rule is that "municipal ordinances or regulations duly enacted by municipal governing bodies, in pursuance of statutory authority and within the powers that a municipal corporation ordinarily has, have within the territorial jurisdiction of the corporation, and as to those persons against whom the municipal power may be exercised, the same force and effect as statutes or legislative enactments."
6.Same--Erection of Filling Station at Designated Intersection in Accord With Zoning Ordinance May not Be Enjoined as Nuisance.
Under the provisions of section 11492, O. S. 1931, where specifically designated property located at a street intersection is duly zoned in an ordinance regularly enacted by a municipality, under the authority of the Zoning Enabling Act, for commercial use, which use by the terms of the said ordinance includes the operation of retail filling stations, and a permit is duly issued for the construction in a proper manner of such filling station, the erection of same at the designated intersection may not be enjoined as a nuisance, in the absence of a showing that the filling station is being either improperly erected or that the same will be negligently or improperly conducted.
7.Same--That Vicinity of Intersection Had Been Improved as Exclusive Residential District Held Immaterial in Determining Whether Erection of Filling Station Should Be Enjoined.
That the vicinity of the intersection involved has been partially occupied and substantially improved as an exclusive residential district on the mistaken assumption and belief that same was zoned as such. and that same would remain so, is immaterial in determining whether the plaintiffs are entitled to injunctive relief against the erection and operation in a proper manner of a filling station thereat, where it appears that in fact the district has been regularly zoned for commercial as well as residential use for a number of years, and it does not appear that such zoning was unreasonable.
8.Same--Property Owners Held not Entitled to Enjoin Erection of Filling Station Though Damage Would Result to Them Therefrom.
Where it appears that the intersection involved was duly zoned for commercial use, which in terms includes retail filling stations, prior to 1927, and was included in the city of Tulsa during that year; that pursuant to the provisions of said zoning ordinance, application was made by and a permit issued to the defendant in regular form to erect thereat a filling station of the better class, size, style, appearance, surroundings, landscaping, and to be conducted and maintained as an ordinary filling station, the plaintiffs are not entitled to a decree enjoining the construction of such filling station, even though it appeared that damage would result therefrom, unless it is further made to appear that such injury would result because of improper construction or improper operation of the filling station.
9. Same.
Property owners are generally entitled to injunctive relief against the creation or maintenance of a nuisance to their damage in proper cases, and ordinarily an action for the recovery of damages that may result from the creation or maintenance of a nuisance is not deemed adequate relief; however, under the found and admitted facts in the case at bar, no such cause for equitable relief existed, and the plaintiffs at all times since the enactment of the said zoning ordinance clearly possessed the right and adequate remedy of applying to the board of adjustment for the amendment or modification of the classification of the intersection herein involved.
10.Appeal and Error--Injunction--Reversal of Decree Granting Injunction--Liability on Bond for Temporary Injunction.
Where a temporary injunction is granted the plaintiffs in a cause, it is proper for the trial court, in entering a decree on the merits which grants a permanent injunction, to discharge the sureties on the bond for temporary injunction from further liability; however, where the said decree is reversed on appeal, the said bond for temporary injunction remains in full force and effect until final decree determining as to whether or not the plaintiffs were entitled to the said temporary injunction.
Appeal from District Court, Tulsa County: Thurman S. Hurst, Judge.
Action by W. Bishop et al. against O. G. Weaver and another for a permanent decree of injunction against the erection of a drive in filling station.Decree granted, and defendants appeal.Reversed.
H. O. Bland and G. E. Conway, for plaintiffs in error.
Horace H. Hagan and T. Austin Gavin, for defendants in error.
¶1The plaintiffs, as the owners of three of the corners at the intersection of Twenty-First street and Louis avenue in the city of Tulsa, filed this suit on March 10, 1932, praying a decree against the defendants constructing and operating a service and filling station on the northeast corner of the said intersection.The grounds alleged as a basis of the injunctive relief prayed are, in substance, that the residences of four of the plaintiffs are located on or in the vicinity of the northwest and southeast corners of the said intersection, and that the remaining plaintiffs operate a school for young ladies in the vicinity of the southwest corner of said intersection, and that the defendant Weaver intends and is about to construct a service and filling station on the remaining northeast corner of said intersection; that said premises are located in an exclusive residential section of the city; that plaintiffs have expended large sums of money in so improving their said property on the assumption and belief that said premises were and would continue to be so restricted, and would not be classified as commercial or business property, and that at least a portion, if not all of said premises, has been classified or zoned for residential purposes.
¶2Plaintiffs further alleged that on June 8, 1932, the defendant Weaver procured from the defendant Lightfoot, as building inspector, a permit to erect a filling station on the said northeast corner of said intersection; that said permit was obtained without notice to or the knowledge of the plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs were unaware of the issuance of said permit until February 13, 1932, and at which time the plaintiffs filed objections and protests against the issuance of same with the board of adjustment of the city; that a hearing was had thereon before said board, and on February 16, 1932. the secretary of the said board, acting on behalf of the board, adjudged the issuance of the said permit an error, and instructed the building inspector to stop work under the said permit; that said building inspector treated the objections...
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Martin v. Williams
...68 Cal.App. 770, 230 P. 203; Bartlett v. Moats, 120 Fla. 61, 162 So. 477; Pigford v. State, 184 Miss. 194, 183 So. 259; Weaver v. Bishop, 174 Okl. 492, 52 P.2d 853; Collins v. Wayne Iron Works, 227 Pa. 326, 76 A. 24, 19 Ann.Cas. Recalling the pertinent expression of Judge Dent in his dissen......
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...debt limitations.]. See also, Muskogee Urban Renewal Auth. v. Excise Bd. of Muskogee County, note 10, supra. 36. Weaver v. Bishop, 1935 OK 1093, ¶ ___, 174 Okla. 492, 52 P.2d 853; In re Seltenreich, 1952 OK CR 250, 95 Okla.Crim. 250, 244 P.2d 37. Title 62 O.S. Supp.1997 § 861(A)(2), see not......
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...operation by Appellant in violation of agency requirements, creation of a nuisance or pollution would result. See Weaver v. Bishop, 174 Okla. 492, 52 P.2d 853, 861-867 (1935) (business properly permitted under valid municipal zoning ordinance may not be enjoined absent showing it would be i......
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