Dissenting Opinion.
Hunter, C. J.I respectfully dissent from the main opinion in this cause for the reason that I do not believe the Appellate Court has jurisdiction to determine this case. In the main opinion it is readily apparent that the opinion turns on the question of injunctive relief which in my belief is not the principal question presented either at the trial court or at this level. In the majority opinion it seems to me that the main and principal question has been evaded and that the opinion is based upon a general rule of law that there must exist or be alleged to exist some property right which allegedly will be violated by enforcement of the ordinance and while this is a correct statement of the general rule of law, nevertheless it is my opinion that the appellants (plaintiffs below) stated a cause of action *586in their amended complaint at least sufficient to withstand a demurrer filed thereto.
It is stated in the main opinion “The complainant must show that enforcement of the ordinance will affect his personal or property rights, and that it will cause him personal, direct and irreparable injury, and not merely that he suffers in some indefinite way in common with people generally.” It is further stated therein “it is radiantly clear that this complaint fails to state facts sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of equity . . . consequently the amendment involved in this controversy does not constitute a taking of any of their property ...” and “The only damage or injury sought to be alleged by appellants may be termed resultant and problematical...”
The amended complaint may be summarized as follows: plaintiffs (appellants) bring this action in behalf of themselves and other owners of businesses and business properties in downtown Richmond, the owners of real estate in the immediate vicinity of the downtown business section, and the owners and operators of businesses and business properties in the existing shopping center. Appellant Ratner, as trustee, is the owner of the real estate lying to the east of the Scott property. The Ratner property is zoned for business and utilized as a shopping center. The owners and operators of businesses in the existing shopping center are lessees of Ratner. The latter and his lessees have invested substantial sums of money in the existing shopping center and in developing the same. The Ratner real estate, the leases, and the business interests incident thereto constitute valuable property rights. Appellant Rinehart is the owner and operator of commercial business property in downtown Richmond and has substantial sums of money invested therein and has a valuable property in*587terest therein and in the preservation and normal expansion of said downtown business section. Appellant Birek has a similar property interest and in addition he is the owner of residence properties located in the area adjoining downtown business section of Richmond. The value of said residence properties reflect and is enhanced by the elements of said properties’ nearness to the downtown business section and their availability for normal expansion of the commercial and business area of Richmond. Appellants and other citizens similarly situated are taxpayers of Richmond and have an interest in the integrity and preservation of the Master Plan Zoning Ordinance and interested in amendments thereto being made only in accordance with law. If the proposed shopping center or other commercial businesses are constructed on the Scott property there will result an overdevelopment and concentration of shopping centers creating traffic congestion and confusion in the area around the existing shopping center bringing about vacant and distressed retail store locations in the downtown Richmond business section damaging to property values and interests in the existing shopping center such as the properties and interests of appellants and others similarly situated. In addition, appellants would be subjected to illegal zoning of the real estate in question. All of the above will be to the great and irreparable damage of plaintiffs and for which they have no adequate remedy at law.
The majority opinion continues by stating “It is also alleged in the amended complaint that appellants, as taxpayers of Richmond, have an interest in the ‘integrity and preservation’ of the Master Plan Zoning Ordinance and in the amendments thereto being made ‘in accordance with law.’ Such ‘interest’ however, in the Master Zoning Ordinance and the amendments thereto *588is not sufficient of itself, standing alone, to invoke the power of the court of equity to enjoin the operation of the amending ordinance. There must exist, or be alleged to exist, some property or civil right which allegedly will be violated by the enforcement of the ordinance or a statement of circumstances showing that a great and irreparable injury will result to the complainant by the enforcement thereof.” Citing in support thereof 16 I. L. E., Injunction, §75, notes 40 and 41, page 54; Indianapolis Market Association et al. v. City of Indianapolis et al. (1934), 207 Ind. 356, 192 N. E. 754; Males, Mayor v. Elbert (1932), 203 Ind. 512, 180 N. E. 193; 28 Am. Jur., Injunctions, §190, page 694.
It is further stated therein that:
“The complainant must show that enforcement of the ordinance will affect his personal or property rights, and that it will cause him personal, direct, and irreparable injury, and not merely that he suffers in some indefinite way in common with people generally.” 28 Am. Jur., Injunctions, §191, p. 696.
It is significant that equity may be called upon to provide relief in new and changing circumstances. 12 I. L. E., Equity, §3, page 269, provides:
“Absence of precedents. The absence of precedents presents no obstacle to the exercise of the jurisdiction of a court of equity, and to the award of relief in a proper case, it being the distinguishing feature of equity jurisdiction that it will apply settled rules to unusual conditions and mold its decrees so as to do equity between the parties. Such a court may well feel itself justified in applying a . recognized principle under circumstances where it seems never to have been applied before.”
“As stated by the Supreme Court in Dood v. Reese, 1940, ‘the jurisdiction of a court of equity does not depend upon the mere accident of the court having in some previous case, at some distant time *589granted relief under similar circumstances. If it were so, equity would not have grown and developed/ ”
12 I. L. E., Equity, §81, page 287, states: “equity will not suffer a wrong to be without a remedy. Equity acts specially, and will insist upon acting, at such time as will afford relief with the least inconvenience or injury to others. And at page 288, equity regards substance rather than form. “Equity will disregard mere forms, and will not permit a substantial right to be defeated by the interposition of merely nominal or technical distinctions.” (my emphasis).
The case of The Columbian Athletic Club v. State ex rel. McMahan (1895), 143 Ind. 98, 40 N. E. 914 established the principle that equity may intervene to enjoin the commission of a crime. That case therefore would seem to state a strong argument for injunctive relief under the facts in the instant case if, as in that case, equity will enjoin the commission of a crime it would seem reasonable to declare that equity may be importuned to enjoin the execution and enforcement of provisions of an invalid or void ordinance. It would seem the majority opinion in upholding the trial court in its ruling on the demurrer has judicially decreed the impotency of equity and further has by judicial approval decreed that the encompassing and embracing arms of equity shall be constricted. In the Columbian Athletic Club v. State case, supra, at page 102, there appears a pertinent and compelling statement accredited to Lord Chancellor Cottenham as follows:
“That it is the duty of the courts of equity ... to ‘adapt its practice and course of proceeding, as far as possible, to the existing state of society, and to apply its jurisdiction to all those new cases which, from the progress daily making in the affairs of men, must continually arise, and not from too strict *590an adherence to forms and rules established under very different circumstances, decline to administer justice, and to enforce rights for which there is no other remedy.’ ”
This rule is commented upon as being worthy of one of the ablest, wisest and best judges that ever administered the chancery law of England or America. Therefore I am of the opinion that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint.
As was stated at the outset of this dissent, it would seem that the principal question turns upon the invalidity of an amendment to the zoning ordinance and the persuasive issue in this case involves the meaning of certain pertinent statutory provisions.
In §53-719, Burns’ 1951 Replacement, we find the following language:
“A majority of members shall constitute a quorum. No action of the commission is official, however, unless authorized by a majority of the commission »
It is the appellants’ contention that this provision required a vote or authorization of at least six (6) of the eleven (11) member Commission.
Appellees, however, seem to argue that the provision means a “majority of a majority” or “a majority of a quorum”.
The question as presented is simply this: If the Commission’s action to be official requires an approval by six (6) members of the eleven (11) member Commission, then clearly the Appellate Court would not have jurisdiction to determine this cause but rather the jurisdiction would reside in the Supreme Court of Indiana pursuant to §4-214, Burns’ 1946 Replacement, Clause #1 thereof.
*591In the view of this writer the statute means that the vote of five (5) in favor and four (4) against the amending ordinance would result in one of two alternatives, either that it was:
(1) no official action and report of the Plan Commission, in which event the Common Council of the City of Richmond had no power under the statute to adopt the amending ordinance; or
(2) that such was an adverse action and report, in which event the Common Council of the City of Richmond had no power to adopt the amending ordinance by a vote of six (6) in favor and three (3) against, such not being 75% (that is seven [7]) of the members of the Council as required by statute.
§53-765, Burns’ 1951 Replacement, provides in part as follows:
“In the event the report of the Plan Commission is adverse to a proposed ordinance referred to it, the ordinance shall not be passed except by an affirmative vote of at least seventy-five (75) per centum of the members of the city council.”
Thus the wording of the above quoted sections manifests a legislative intent that a majority of the members of the Commission must concur in any action in order that it be official. Contrariwise, if a majority of the members do not concur, then there can be no official action.
It may also be presumed that the Legislature was in possession of the knowledge that, absent a provision to the contrary, the common law rule is that approval of the majority of the members present, a quorum existing, is sufficient for binding official action. This is an elementary principle of the law of bodies politic. 4 McQuillin, Officers, Employees, Council Meetings, §13.27, *592et seq., p. 478 (3d Ed. 1949). Therefore when the Legislature chose to employ the word “however” as a word of qualification or reservation this could only have reference to the first sentence in the section, “A majority of the members shall, constitute a quorum,” and thereby expressly qualified that sentence and its meaning.
“However” is defined:
“(1. In whatever manner, way, or degree: by whatever means or to whatever extent — used adversatively ... 2: NEVERTHELESS, NOTWITHSTANDING, YET, STILL — often used to indicate a reservation after something conceded or a decision after consideration of adverse points . . .” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged, p. 1097 (14th Ed. 1961).
It seems readily apparent that by the use of “however” the Legislature declared an alternative intention. The appellants in their brief asked the question “what is the meaning of the sentence which the word 'however’ qualifies?” I agree with their statement that the idea of a quorum is that when the required number of persons are assembled as a body, the votes of a majority thereof are sufficient for a binding action. Hence it would seem that the Legislature in using the word “however” intended that this sentence be qualified and a reservation made, and that it could not, in such usage, intend otherwise. It cannot be reasonably inferred that the import of the §53-719, supra, is that a majority of a “quorum” was intended as a condition precedent to official action when the word “quorum” was not used, but instead the Legislature chose to use the word “Commission”. The Commission is composed of eleven (11) members, therefore it should be logically concluded that eleven (11) members constitute the Commission.
*593In the purview of our Indiana statutes pertaining to zoning ordinances, amendments, modifications or changes thereto, it is indispensable that a majority of the members of a statutorily constituted full commission is necessary to constitute an official action by said Commission.
It further appears that before any action by the Common Council may be taken that all of the procedures enumerated under the statutes must be fully and strictly complied with. The general rule seems to be that legislation enabling local units of government to adopt zoning ordinances and providing for amendments and modifications thereto may only be authorized under the exercise of the police power of the State. Therefore all stéps taken under said power and grant of authority must clearly conform to the terms of the grant. In other words the extent of the powers granted as well as the manner of their exercise must conform to the provisions of the statutes involved. Thus any amendment to a master plan zoning ordinance must be pursuant to, and in substantial conformity with, the enabling statute authorizing it, and all of the statutory provisions governing the conduct of the zoning commission’s official action, including the number of members present and the number of members required for the adoption of a plan or any amendment thereto, must be strictly complied with. 8 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations, Zoning, §25.58 (8d Edition 1958) and 8 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations, Zoning, §25.243 (3d Edition 1958).
The clear import of §53-719, supra, is that while a majority of the members shall constitute a quorum, nevertheless no action of the Commission is official unless authorized by a majority of the Commission, i. e., six (6) or more. Thus in the instant case the record *594affirmatively demonstrates, and indeed the appellees do not deny, only five (5) members of the Commission approved the amendment to the master plan and four (A) disapproved. Thereafter only six (6) members of the Common Council of the City of Richmond voted favorably thereon, whereas a majority of seventy-five per cent (75%) of the City Council would have been necessary to adopt an adverse report pursuant to §53-765, supra, all of which in my opinion clearly demonstrates the invalidity of the amendment to the ordinance.
In summarizing this dissent, it is my opinion that:
(1) Where as it appears from the record here, the invalidity of the amendment to the ordinance has been demonstrably shown and pleaded, this court in its affirmance of the trial court’s ruling on the- demurrer has erected a barricade which cannot be breached by equity to guard against the execution and enforcement of its invalid provisions. If the Appellate Court has jurisdiction of this appeal then I am of the opinion the trial court erred and should be reversed;
(2) However, since equity has been importuned to enjoin the enforcement of an invalid and void amendment to a zoning ordinance, it is my belief that the validity of the amendment is the controlling issue, therefore the Supreme Court of Indiana has jurisdiction of this appeal under §4-214, supra.
For all of the foregoing reasons, I am in dissent with the majority opinion.
Note.—Reported in 201 N. E. 2d 49.