Robertson v. City of Lowell

David Newbern, Justice.

In this municipal land use zoning case we must determine whether a land use which violated a zoning ordinance became a permitted, preexisting, non-conforming, use when the zoning ordinance was repealed and replaced by another zoning ordinance. We hold that a nonconforming use of land which violated a previous zoning ordinance is not a permitted non-conforming use under a subsequently enacted zoning ordinance. The decree of the chancellor to that effect is affirmed.

The case was submitted to the chancellor upon a stipulation of facts. In 1985, Robert L. and Opal Robertson, the appellants, owned a 40-acre tract, zoned “agricultural,” on which they had one mobile home. At that time Ordinance 177 of the City of Lowell, the appellee, allowed one mobile home per 20 acres of land in an agricultural district or zone, subject to approval of the Lowell Planning Commission. A neighbor who wished to place a mobile home on his one acre of land adjoining that of the Robertsons deeded his land to the Robertsons. The planning commission approved the placement of a second mobile home on the tract which then consisted of 41 acres. Ordinance 222, passed onApril9,1985, amended Ordinance 177, but it made no change in the provision pursuant to which the second mobile home on the tract was approved.

Sometime prior to June 17,1986, the Robertsons moved yet another mobile home onto the tract without planning commission approval. The stipulation states that they deeded back to their neighbor the one acre previously added to their 40-acre tract, but it does not state when that occurred. The Robertsons do not deny that the third mobile home was placed on their land in violation of Ordinances 177 and 222, thus we presume the deed back to the neighbor was executed after the third mobile home was placed on what was then a 41-acre tract.

On July 8,1986, the city adopted its third zoning ordinance. This one was a comprehensive ordinance which repealed “[a] 11 ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict” with it. It provided that mobile homes could be placed only in mobile home parks and that “[n] on-conforming use of land and structures may be continued and improved but not expanded so long as it remains otherwise lawful.” The city sought an injunction to have the second mobile home on the now 40-acre tract of the Robertsons removed because it was in violation of Ordinance 238. The Robertsons contended that the two mobile homes remaining on the 40-acre tract constituted a non-conforming use permitted under the ordinance. They did not contend in their brief to the chancellor, and they do not contend here, that their deed back to their neighbor caused their land to conform to Ordinance 222 and thus to constitute a lawful non-conforming use permitted under Ordinance 238. The record does not demonstrate when that deed was executed, thus no such argument can be the basis of a decision in favor of the Robertsons on this appeal.

The Robertsons’ argument is that their use is a permitted non-conforming use under Ordinance 238 because, by repealing the preceding zoning ordinances, the city made lawful all uses preceding Ordinance 238. The city argued, and the chancellor found, that Ordinance 238 was a repeal and reenactment of the zoning law. Thus he concluded the repeal was “neutralized,” and the Robertsons’ extra mobile home was at all times in violation of the city’s zoning laws and therefore did not qualify as a remaining non-conforming use under Ordinance 238.

We need not discuss whether the enactment of a comprehensive zoning law necessarily completely repeals a preceding comprehensive zoning law because we agree with the chancellor’s conclusion that, to the extent there has been a repeal, the repeal is “neutralized” with respect to continuation of the rights and liabilities under the preceding law. In Chism v. Phelps, 228 Ark. 936, 311 S.W.2d 297 (1958), we held that where a statute is repealed and all or some of its provisions are simultaneously reenacted, the reenactment is considered a reaffirmance of the old law, and the provisions of the repealed act thus reenacted are continued in force. The Robertsons argue, however, that the provisions of Ordinances 177 and 222 with respect to mobile home regulation were not continued or reenacted because Ordinance 238 established a complete set of new rules applicable to them. That argument disregards the apparent intent of the city not to repeal the old zoning law so as to legalize every land use in violation of it, but to expand the scope of impermissible uses.

In the Chism case it was contended, in effect, that by repealing the law establishing the comparative negligence standard in torts cases and reenacting it with changes, the general assembly had reinstated the contributory negligence standard with respect to an automobile accident which occurred before the repeal and enactment of the new law. We rejected that argument, pointing out that the general assembly intended no such thing. We noted that by reenacting a comparative negligence rule the general assembly “demonstrated a clear disinclination to restore the common law rule.” 228 Ark. at 942, 311 S.W. at 300. Paraphrasing that decision, and applying it by analogy to these ordinances, we say here that by reenacting a comprehensive zoning ordinance the City of Lowell demonstrated a clear disinclination to return to being a city without land use regulation.

To be valid, a nonconforming use must have been a lawful use when established, and so a use which was established in violation of either public law or private property rights is usually not recognized as a nonconforming use. If the previous use was a zoning violation, the case is clear that such use cannot attain the status of a nonconforming use under the same (or a subsequent [)] zoning ordinance [footnote omitted].

N. Williams and J. Taylor, 4A Williams American Planning Law, § 110.02, p. 89 (1986). See also R. Anderson, 1 American Law of Zoning, § 6.14, p. 481 (1986).

Affirmed.

Purtle and Glaze, JJ., dissent.