Currie v. Ryan
Currie v. Ryan
Opinion
These six cases involve the zoning of certain real property owned by Mrs. Alexander Currie, Alex Currie, Overton Currie and Dan Currie (hereinafter Currie). United States Highway 49 runs from northwest to southeast where it intersects United States Highway 11, which runs from northeast to southwest at that point. This intersection and all property mentioned herein is situated within the corporate limits of Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Currie owns about fifty-five acres of land lying east of Highway 49 and north of Highway 11. This property (Currie North) is the subject of the litigation between the Curries and certain protestants.
The other Currie property involved in this litigation (Currie West) is situated west of Highway 49 and north of Highway 11.
Upon motion of some of the parties all of these cases, except No. 46125, were consolidated for hearing before this Court before briefs were filed. All six cases were consolidated for oral argument. Separate judgments will be prepared by the clerk in each case.
NOS. 45981; 45982; 45983; and 45985
All of the above numbered cases on appeal to this Court involve the land designated as Currie North. It is necessary to discuss briefly these four appeals for a proper understanding of their disposition and the disposition of No. 46125. The City of Hattiesburg, one of the appellees in these cases, confessed error insofar as that part of Currie North between Eddy Street and Arcadia Street is concerned.Currie appealed to the Circuit Court of Forrest County, and the order of the City Council was affirmed by that court on May 21, 1969, from which order an appeal was prosecuted by Currie to this Court. The issues in this cause are moot in view of the fact that in a later action *Page 50 of the City Council that part of Currie North lying north of Eddy Street and south of Arcadia Street, consisting of about sixteen additional acres, was rezoned from residential to commercial, and for the reasons to be stated upon consideration of the appeal in No. 46125, we are of the opinion that the action of the City Council involved in No. 46125 should be reinstated. The appeal in this case is therefore dismissed.
No controversy exists between any of the parties as to any of the property in Currie North, except that lying between Eddy Street and Arcadia Street.
The broad question for our decision is whether the ordinance of the City Council rezoning that part of Currie North between Eddy Street and Arcadia Street was validly adopted. This question has the following points of inquiry: (1) was the rezoning order arbitrary, capricious, discriminatory or unsupported by substantial *Page 51 evidence and (2) did the evidence show that the character of the neighborhood had changed to such an extent as to justify reclassification. This rezoning question is a legislative matter for the governing authorities of the City of Hattiesburg, and within the limited scope of judicial review, we find no grounds for judicial interference with the order of the City Council.
The City Council had before it the various exhibits and a large mass of evidence transcribed as the hearings on the previous petitions of Currie. Additional evidence was offered on this petition, most of which involved the changes that had taken place on and near the subject property since the last zoning order. The evidence on behalf of Currie tended to show, among other things, the following:
Currie North consists of fifty-five contiguous acres of land lying northeast of the intersection of Highways 49 and 11. At the time this petition was filed, eighteen acres lying south of Eddy Street were zoned commercial. The part sought in this petition to be rezoned commercial was bound on the south by property zoned commercial, on the east by property zoned commercial, on the west by Highway 49, and on the north by approximately twenty acres of vacant property owned by Currie.
This twenty acre tract of undeveloped woodland located north of Arcadia Street is from 420 feet to 630 feet wide and lies between Arcadia Street and the residential area to the north where the protestants live. The eighteen acre commercial area is insufficient in size to be used for development of an all-weather, regional shopping center which requires a minimum of thirty or thirty-five acres. The rezoning of the three blocks of property between Eddy Street and Arcadia Street would provide sufficient area for such regional shopping center. The other commercial areas in the City of Hattiesburg are not as suitable as Currie North for the development of a regional shopping center. There is a public need for the development of a regional shopping center in the city which would promote the economic progress and tax structure of the municipality. The development of a regional shopping center on Currie North would not depress property values of the residential areas to the north. Additional evidence of the changes Currie claims to have intervened since the previous hearing are stated hereinafter.
The evidence on behalf of the protestants tended to prove, among other things, the following:
Because of the traffic congestion, noise, and safety problems, the value of the residential property in the neighborhood would be reduced by a total of $600,000. There was no public need or necessity for the rezoning of the Currie North property. The rezoning would entail the expenditure of large amounts of public funds to construct access streets, frontage roads, and ramps in order to handle traffic that would result from such rezoning. The best use of the Currie North land would be for residences. There was already sufficient commercial acreage in the City of Hattiesburg to provide the needs of commercial development. The development of a regional shopping center, as proposed by Currie, would create safety problems, and the accident rate in the vicinity of Currie North was already high and would be increased if the property was rezoned commercial.
In applying the law to the mass of evidence for and against the rezoning of the Currie North property between Eddy and Arcadia Streets, it is appropriate to restate the scope of judicial review in zoning matters.
The order of the city governing board is a legislative function and is presumed to be valid. Ridgewood Land Co. v. Moore,
Applying these established standards to the evidence in this case, we find no basis to justify a decision that the order of the City Council rezoning the property between Eddy Street and Arcadia Street from residential to commercial was arbitrary, capricious, discriminatory, illegal or without a substantial evidential basis. The case for all parties was fully and ably developed. The City Council could have decided the question either way. The question was clearly one for the City Council. There was ample evidence to support the rezoning order.
The remaining question is whether the evidence showed that the character of the neighborhood had changed since the previous order to such extent as to justify rezoning. What has been said as to the scope of judicial review applies with equal force to this question. Whether there has been a change of circumstances to such an extent as to justify rezoning will not be disturbed on judicial review if the question is fairly debatable. Martinson v. City of Jackson,
Any one of these changes alone would probably be insufficient to justify a change in zoning the property in question, but when all are considered together, we are of the opinion that the findings of such change by the municipal authorities were justified. The City Council found as a fact that there had been a change in conditions. The City Council found that the Currie North property south of Arcadia Street was insufficient in size for the construction of a mall-type regional shopping center. Among the other specific findings of fact in favor of Currie, it found that the buffer zone ranging from 420 to 630.5 feet, between Arcadia Street and the residential neighborhood to the north, would adequately protect the residential neighborhood of protestants.
A proper regard for the authority of this Court and the scope of judicial review in a zoning case requires the reinstatement of the order of the City Council.
Other questions are raised by the parties, principally procedural in nature, none of which require discussion. *Page 53
The order of the circuit court is reversed and the rezoning ordinance of the City Council is reinstated.
No. 46125 reversed and rendered.
No. 45984 reversed and remanded.
Nos. 45982; 45983; 45981; and 45985 dismissed.
JONES, PATTERSON, SMITH and ROBERTSON, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mrs. Alexander Currie, Edward Alexander Currie, Jr., Overton A. Currie and Daniel M. Currie v. Jerome B. Ryan and the City of Hattiesburg.
- Cited By
- 28 cases
- Status
- Published