MITCHELL et al.
v.
BARFIELD et al.
No. 751.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
June 9, 1950.*811 Fuller, Reade, Umstead & Fuller, Brawley & Brawley, and James L. Newsom, all of Durham, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Claude V. Jones and Marshall T. Spears, Durham, for defendants-appellants.
ERVIN, Justice.
The findings of fact of the judge of the Superior Court had ample support in the evidence at the trial. In consequence, they must be accepted as final truth upon the appeal to the Supreme Court. Marshall v. Bank of Beaufort, 206 N.C. 466, 176 S.E. 314; First Nat. Pictures Distributing Corp. v. Sewell, 205 N.C. 359, 171 S.E. 354; Eley v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 165 N.C. 78, 80 S.E. 1064.
In reaching this conclusion, we do not ignore the seven assignments of error based on the refusal of the judge to find facts in accordance with requests of the defendants. These assignments are untenable. When he passed on the requests for findings, the judge necessarily weighed the evidence in his capacity as trier of the facts, and his refusal was tantamount to an affirmative finding that the matters and things embodied in the requests for findings did not exist. 5 C.J.S., Appeal and Error, § 1656. Indeed, the requests for findings were diametrically opposed in the main to the findings of fact actually made by the judge.
The zoning ordinance of the City of Durham provides for the division of the municipality into nine different classes of districts or zones, and permits the construction and operation of hotels in all of such districts or zones.
The facts found by the trial judge show that the application of the plaintiffs for a permit to build a hotel upon their premises in an "A Residence Zone" in the City of Durham meets all the requirements of applicable state and local laws and regulations relating to the construction of hotels. In fact, the defendants concede in their answer that prior to the commencement of this action the building inspector of the City of Durham, who is the administrative official charged with the enforcement of the zoning ordinance, examined the application of the plaintiffs for the building permit, and ascertained that it complied "with the building and zoning regulations of the City of Durham." These things being true, the plaintiffs had a clear legal right to the building permit sought by them, and the defendants had no discretionary power to withhold it. Kenney v. Building Commissioners of Melrose, 315 Mass. 291, 52 N.E.2d 683, 150 A.L.R. 490.
Moreover, the facts found by the trial judge disclose in specific detail that plaintiffs have been denied the building permit for improper reasons. The defendants asserted at the trial that the governing body of the City of Durham caused the permit to be withheld from plaintiffs because it concluded that they intended to use the proposed building as a nursing home, infirmary, or hospital, and not as a hotel as recited in their application. The court found that "there is no competent evidence to support such conclusion, and that no basis in fact has been shown therefor, and that said conclusion is arbitrary and unreasonable." Moreover, it is to be noted that the municipal authorities had no legal power to refuse a building permit for the cause assigned even if they had grounds for believing such cause to exist. The law declares that "if the right of the applicant to erect the building for which the permit is sought is otherwise absolute, it is no ground for the denial of the permit or of a mandate to compel its issuance that the applicant intends to put the building when erected to an improper use; the question as to the legality of the alleged intended use must await determination in proper proceedings after such use is attempted to be made of the building." 34 Am.Jur., Mandamus, section 188. See, also, in this connection: G.S. § 160-179, and 62 C.J.S., Municipal Corporations, § 227(3).
*812 The action of the defendants in refusing the permit to the plaintiffs can not be justified by Ordinance No. 990 of the governing body of the City of Durham. This ordinance is void for conflict with the statute now codified as G.S. § 160-178, which clearly contemplates that procedures for the enforcement of zoning ordinances shall be uniform.
For the reasons given, the judgment is
Affirmed.