Judges: CHARLES FOTI, JR., Attorney General.
Filed Date: 12/5/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mayor Smith:
You recently requested that this Office provide an opinion on matters related to zoning in your area. In your request, you present a hypothetical scenario to illustrate several zoning questions that you anticipate might arise in Zachary in the future. This hypothetical scenario has a developer requesting a zoning reclassification based on a series of specific development plans presented to the City Council ("the Council"). Once the reclassification is approved by the Council, the developer deviates from the submitted plans, constructing something that is not what was envisioned by or approved by the Council. In general, your request asks what recourse the City Council may have against a developer under those circumstances. Specifically, the request that you submitted raises the following questions:
(1) Can reclassification of a zoned area be made conditional upon the requirement that the requester of the reclassification adhere to plans submitted to the City Council in order to obtain the reclassification?
(2) Can the City Council adopt an ordinance that requires reclassification requesters to adhere to submitted plans lest the reclassification lapse back to the original zoning classification upon failure to comply with the submitted plans?
(3) Can the City Council adopt an ordinance that would require the completion of projects within a certain amount of time?
(4) More specifically to the hypothetical scenario presented in your request, if there is no conditional language in the reclassification ruling by the City Council and a reclassification was issued before the City Council adopts one of the ordinances noted above, can a *Page 2 reclassification be revoked for the failure of the requester to adhere to the plans submitted to secure the reclassification?
Each of the above questions is answered, in the order in which they are presented. However, first a brief review of the general tenets of zoning law is warranted.
As you know, zoning is the common practice of controlling urban planning. This is accomplished through the classification of certain areas according to their uses or intended uses and is primarily employed to ensure that nuisances and nonconforming uses of land occur only where their impact on the area as a whole can be minimized. Wright and Gitelman have characterized the validity of zoning thus:
The validity of zoning is predicated on the police power — the power to regulate for the advancement and protection of the health, morals, safety or general welfare of the community. Whether a particular zoning regulation will be upheld depends generally on whether it represents a valid exercise of the police power.
Robert R. Wright and Morton Gitelman, Land Use, 4th ed., 180 (West 2000). Of particular relevance to your request, the United States Supreme Court has long held that zoning, as an exercise of a municipality's police power, is an appropriate means for protecting single-family dwellings from encroachments by commercial uses, industrial uses, and even multi-family dwellings. Village of Euclid, Ohio v. Ambler Realty Co.,
As a primary matter in assessing the validity of any zoning ordinance, and subsequently any deviation therefrom, one must look to the enabling authority of the local government to ensure that the authority to create zoning plans for the locality exist and to ensure compliance with rules for creating deviations therefrom when creating variances. That being said, the Louisiana Supreme Court has stated that all zoning ordinances are afforded a presumption of validity and that the challenger has the burden of proving that the ordinances are invalid. Palermo Land Co.,Inc. v. Planning Commission of Calcasieu Parish,
The City of Zachary is a Home Rule Charter city. Therefore, rather than looking to the general provisions of Title 33 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes on zoning, we must look to Zachary's Home Rule Charter and Code of Ordinances in order to understand the legal limitations on zoning within the City. La. Const. Art.
The Louisiana Constitution, Art.
In the first question, you ask if a rezoning by the City can be conditioned upon a developer's adherence to plans submitted in order to secure said rezoning. The answer to this question is in the affirmative. See generally, Reeves v. North Shreve BaptistChurch,
In the second question, you ask if the City Council can adopt an ordinance that would cause the zoning reclassification to lapse back to its original zoning *Page 4
classification if the applicant does not adhere to the plans that were submitted to secure the reclassification. The answer to this question is in the affirmative. It is well within the police power of the municipality to control its zoning ordinances.Village of Euclid, supra. Allowing a developer to continue to construct a structure that is not in accordance with the plans that the Council relied upon in making its decision to rezone the property is tantamount to rewarding the developer for not complying with the law. We note that the penalties for zoning ordinance violations provided for by Zach. Code Ord. § 90-371 are likely not sufficient to deter would-be violators if they are able to realize a substantial return on their investment. Thus, it is our opinion that the Council could pass such an ordinance that requires developers to either conform to the original plans under which the reclassification was approved, lest the reclassification reverts to the original zoning. In the event that there is such a reversion, the structure would constitute a zoning violation that must be removed or fined (or both). We would caution, however, that such an ordinance should only apply prospectively, as questions of the taking of private property may arise if it were to be applied retroactively. See generally, La. Atty. Gen. Op. No. 04-0047. Additionally, though the conditions upon which a reclassification may revert to its original status may have to be application-specific, based on the particular facts of each case, we recommend that the Council, should it decide to proceed with this course of action, adopt a general ordinance that grants the Commission the power to so condition reclassifications in order to avoid equal protection problems under the
In the third question, you ask if the City Council can adopt an ordinance that would require the completion of projects within a certain amount of time. Again, the answer to this question is in the affirmative. There is no law in Louisiana that would prohibit the adoption of such an ordinance. Additionally, as part of a comprehensive zoning plan, such an ordinance could reasonably be tied to the goals of protecting the public health, safety, and welfare by requiring that structures not sit partially completed (and presumably in a hazardous state) for long periods of time. See e.g., City of Stamford v. Stevenson,
In your final question, you want to know if a zoning reclassification can be revoked, in the absence of one of the ordinances discussed above, if a developer fails to comply with the plans that were approved by the Council. As a primary matter, at least minimal penalties for such action on behalf of a developer already exist in the Zachary Code of Ordinances. The "Penalties" section of the Code applies to "[a]ny person or corporation . . . who shall build or alter any building in violation of any detailed statement or plan submitted andapproved" by the Council. Zach. Code Ord. § 90-371 (emphasis added). Thus, at a minimum, a developer who deviates from a plan submitted to and approved by the Council can be held in violation of the zoning ordinances of the City and treated accordingly under Zach. Code Ord. § 90-371 et seq. Although such penalties are available under the Code, we again take notice of the reality that these penalties are minimal when compared to the return on an investment made by a developer in most cases, thus reducing the penalties' value as a deterrent to zoning violations. However, unlike the scenario detailed above, wherein an ordinance is created that notifies would-be violators that the zoning reclassification will revert to its original classification upon failure to adhere to submitted plans, this scenario does not so notify the developer. This failure to notify the developer that failure to adhere to the plans will result in a reversion of the reclassification undermines the ability of the Council to simply revert the reclassification upon such failure. Such action would likely constitute a violation of the developer's due process rights under the
Under an obligations analysis, we view the developer's proposal in an application for rezoning as an offer and the subsequent approval of the application as the Council's acceptance of the offer. Conversely, this scenario would also work if *Page 6
the conditions placed on the rezoning act as a counteroffer by the Council and acceptance of the conditions as acceptance by the developer. The same practical effects of the following discussion apply to either approach to the initial obligation. It should be borne in mind as we proceed through this analysis that the above discussed offer and acceptance, under La. C.C.
First of all, we note that La. C.C. Art.
Another avenue under the law of obligations for causing the reclassification to revert to its original classification is by finding fraud under La. C.C. Art.
Under either of the two constructions of the initial obligation noted above, the Council's cause for the obligation remains the same. The Council's cause for accepting the offer or for counteroffering is the developer's adherence to the plans that were submitted in order to secure the rezoning. As with consent under La. C.C. Art.
We hope this sufficiently answers your inquiry, however if we may be of further assistance please do not hesitate to contact our office.
Sincerely yours,
CHARLES C. FOTI, JR. ATTORNEY GENERAL*Page 8By: ________________________ RYAN M. SEIDEMANN Assistant Attorney General
OPINION NO. 04-0047Dear Mayor Lindsey:174 — Zoning
Honorable Theodore Lindsey LSA-Const. Art. VI, § 17 Mayor, City of Tallulah LSA-R.S.
33:4721 — 4729 204 North Cedar Street Tallulah, Louisiana 71282 Local governmental subdivisions have the authority to adopt zoning regulations for the location of mobile homes; however, the retroactive application of zoning restrictions may be unconstitutional.
Your request for an Attorney General's opinion has been forwarded to me for research and reply. Specifically, you ask if your city council can pass a zoning ordinance which restricts the moving of mobile homes into Tallulah?
You also ask if this restriction on mobile homes can be applied retroactively?
Your first question is answered by Article
For the purpose of promoting health, safety, morals, or the general welfare of the community, the governing authority of all municipalities may regulate or restrict . . . the location and use of buildings, structures, and land for trade, industry, residence, or other purpose.
It is clear that Section 4721 grants the authority to regulate the location of mobile homes within the city limits of Tallulah.
Your second question asks if zoning restrictions can be applied retroactively. As stated above, the city council is given the authority to enact zoning restrictions prospectively. The issue of zoning ordinances which restrict property retroactively was addressed by the Louisiana Supreme Court in Redfearn v.Creppel,
A use which lawfully existed prior to the enactment of a zoning ordinance, and which is maintained after the effective date of the ordinance although it does not comply with the use restrictions applicable to the area in which it is situated.
The opinion goes on to state that nonconforming uses of property are designed to avoid hardship, injustice, and the doubtful constitutionality of compelling the immediate removal of objectionable buildings and uses already in the area.
This is the situation with the zoning ordinance which prohibits trailers, mobile homes, modular homes and metal buildings from being allowed to remain in Tallulah. Rather than retroactively applying zoning ordinances, municipalities generally allow for nonconforming uses of property. Otherwise, the City of Tallulah may be effecting an unconstitutional "taking" of private property if residents are required to move mobile homes, trailers or modular homes. This may actually be a deprivation of property without due process and without just compensation which is prohibited by the United States Constitution, Amendment
Therefore, it is the opinion of this office that the retroactive application and enforcement of the zoning ordinance may be unconstitutional. According to the Layne (supra) court, whether or not this zoning restriction constitutes an unconstitutional taking is a factual determination. *Page 10
We trust your questions have been sufficiently answered. However, if you should need anything further from this office, do not hesitate to call.
Very truly yours,
CHARLES C. FOTI, JR. ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: __________________________ Frances J. Pitman Assistant Attorney General
Palermo Land Co. v. Planning Com'n of Calcasieu Parish ( 1990 )
Four States Realty Co., Inc. v. City of Baton Rouge ( 1975 )
Viterbo v. Friedlander ( 1887 )
Reeves v. North Shreve Baptist Church ( 1964 )
Carpenter v. Williams ( 1983 )
Layne v. City of Mandeville ( 1993 )