TURKISH
v.
CITY OF WARREN
Docket No. 20408.
Michigan Court of Appeals.
Decided May 29, 1975.Bodman, Longley, Bogle, Armstrong & Dahling (by Michael B. Lewiston), for plaintiffs.
John J. Murray, for defendant.
Before: J.H. GILLIS, P.J., and QUINN and R.M. MAHER, JJ.
Leave to appeal applied for.
QUINN, J.
Plaintiffs' complaint attacked the constitutionality of defendant's zoning ordinance as applied to their property which was zoned R1-C (single family residential). The complaint also attacked defendant's refusal to rezone the property to R3 (multiple dwelling), as unreasonable and arbitrary and as preventing any feasible use of the property and alleged such action to be unconstitutional. Trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiffs which ruled the ordinance unconstitutional as applied to plaintiffs' property and enjoined defendant from interfering with plaintiffs' use of their property *437 in accordance with defendant's R3 zoning classification.
Plaintiffs' property is roughly a long rectangle with about 160 foot frontage on Hoover Road at the west end, running east approximately 1,335 feet to Herbert Street where the frontage is about 156 feet. The property contains about 4.8 acres. When plaintiffs obtained the property in 1956, the area north of plaintiffs was largely farm land divided into parcels about the shape and size of plaintiffs' property. There was a residential subdivision south of plaintiffs' land.
Anticipating future development of the farm land area, plaintiffs went to defendant's city planner as early as 1966 to ascertain, if the development occurred, whether their parcel could be developed jointly with the parcel adjoining on the north. Plaintiff testified that he was assured of the joint development, and this was not disputed.
Late in 1968, plaintiffs learned that a plat of the property north of them had been submitted to the authorities. Concerned over how the proposed plat would affect their property, plaintiffs went to defendant's planning commission. They were shown the proposed plat and objected to it because the road system in the proposed plat provided no access to their property except at the northeast corner. Plaintiffs made this same objection to defendant's council but the plat was approved. Defendant's city planner corroborated or did not deny much of the foregoing which is derived from plaintiff's testimony.
A glance at plaintiffs' exhibit 1, a copy of which is appended to this opinion, discloses the problems plaintiffs have incurred in relation to the development of their property because of the development of the property north of them under the plat to *438 which they objected. Defendant's lot size requirements for single family residential development are 60 foot frontage with 120 foot depth. Defendant's requirement for street right-of-way is 60 feet. Due to the size and shape of plaintiffs' property and the foregoing lot size and right-of-way requirements, the only possible single family residential development of plaintiffs' property would be one tier of lots running east and west and not exceeding 11 lots.
The development of the property north of plaintiffs caused them to apply for the rezoning of their property from R1 to R3. When this application was denied, this action followed.
The trial court found that, as applied to plaintiffs' property, the zoning ordinance was unreasonable and confiscatory, and the record fully supports these findings. This conclusion and Smith v Village of Wood Creek Farms, 371 Mich. 127; 123 NW2d 210 (1963), require affirmance.
If we were not bound by existing precedent, we would hold otherwise. The law of zoning is a hodgepodge of confusion. It is possible to find authority in support of practically any position one desires to take in a given fact situation. It represents a failure on the part of the courts to provide some definitive policy for standards to determine whether the zoning action judicially reviewed is legislative or administrative. This leaves municipal authorities, land owners, land developers, attorneys and trial courts in a dilemma which breeds litigation. With no claim to omniscience, we here suggest a possible path out of this jungle.
The way is suggested in Justice LEVIN'S concurring minority opinion in Kropf v Sterling Heights, 391 Mich. 139, 164 et seq.; 215 NW2d 179, 190 et *439 seq. (1974), in which reasonable guide lines for determining whether the zoning action being judicially reviewed is legislative or administrative are set forth. In their complaint, plaintiffs attacked the denial of their request for rezoning. This presents the issue to which Justice LEVIN'S reasoning is applicable.
At the outset, Justice LEVIN differentiates between legislative and administrative action in zoning matters because the separation of powers doctrine restricts court review of legislative action. The criterion to be used in determining whether the action is legislative or administrative is succinctly stated:
"Whether official action is legislative or administrative depends on the nature of the decision and the process by which it is reached as well as the governmental authority that makes the decision.
"When action is based on general grounds, the decision is ordinarily legislative. When it is based on individual grounds, it is ordinarily administrative."
Creation of zoning use restrictions is general, and thus legislative. Maintenance of a zoning use restriction is individual, and, thus administrative.
If the action judicially reviewed is legislative, the review is limited "to an inquiry whether the action is irrational (and thus a denial of substantive due process) or violates some other constitutional limitation". One attacking a legislative use restriction must prove that no use permitted is reasonable. If the action judicially reviewed is administrative, the inquiry on review should be the reasonableness of the proposed use. The standard of review should be, "there must be a hearing and the inquiry on review, under the Michigan Constitution, is whether the decision is `supported *440 by competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record'". If the determination of the administrative authority is that the proposed use is unreasonable and that determination is supported by competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record, the court should affirm that determination. If the proof does not meet that test, the administrative determination should be overturned by the court.
Applied to the case before us, we find that plaintiffs' proposed use of their property for multiple family dwelling is reasonable according to competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record of the trial court. However, that record contains nothing from which the trial court or this Court can determine whether defendant's action in denying plaintiffs' request for rezoning to R3 is supported by competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record before the agency which made that determination. That is the court review to which plaintiffs are constitutionally entitled, Const 1963, art 6, § 28.
We would prefer to reverse without prejudice to an application to the legislative body of defendant seeking an administrative hearing with regard to the reasonableness of plaintiffs' proposed use. A stenographic or recorded record of that hearing should be made, and such record should be the basis for the legislative body of defendant making its administrative determination of whether plaintiffs' proposed use is reasonable or unreasonable. At that hearing, plaintiffs shall bear the burden of establishing that the use they propose for their property is reasonable in light of all the circumstances. We do not prejudge what must be shown to meet that burden, but suggest as possible considerations the items detailed by Justice LEVIN in *441 Kropf, supra, commencing at the bottom of page 172 and continuing to the top of page 173. The items of proof made by plaintiffs in the trial court in this case should also merit consideration. Thereafter, if court review is sought, that record shall be the subject of the review under the standards prescribed by Const 1963, art 6, § 28.
We hope that defendant will apply for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court and that that Court will grant leave. In Brae Burn, Inc v Bloomfield Hills, 350 Mich. 425, 430-431; 86 NW2d 166, 169 (1957), the Supreme Court said: "this Court does not sit as a superzoning commission". Eighteen years later, the trial courts, the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court are still sitting as superzoning commissions. We see this case of Turkish as the appropriate vehicle for putting courts back in judicial business and leaving zoning with local communities where it belongs.
Affirmed, but without costs, a public question being involved.
*442 Jan. 5, 1970
Part of Sectional Map of Section 23, Warren, Michigan showing plate N-642-A in relationship to New Sub-divisions "Twinbrook" (N-641-C & D) and "Victoria Woods" (N-641-A & B) installed during 1969.