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Indiana Court Rules Burritos and Tacos Qualify as Sandwiches
The decision exemplifies a longstanding issue in legal theory. It also highlights the absurdity of zoning rules.

An Indiana court recently touched off a firestorm of media attention and online debate by ruling that burritos and tacos are sandwiches. The decision exemplifies a longstanding issue in legal interpretation: how to figure out the "ordinary meaning" of words in a statute or regulation. It also highlights the absurdity of zoning rules restricting the development and use of property.
The case arose because developer Martin Quintana wanted to use a property he owned in Fort Wayne, Indiana for commercial purposes. In order to be able to do that, he had to get the Fort Wayne Plan Commission (a local government agency) to "upzone" the area from allowing single-family residential housing only, to allowing some types of commercial uses. The Commission was only wlling to do that in exchange for Quintana signing a "Written Commitment" (required at the behest of a local NIMBY group) under which only certain types of restaurants would be allowed in the area. The restrictions imposed by the Commitment became new zoning rules for these tracts. Specifically, the Commitment bars "restaurants, including fast food-style restaurants," except for the following:
A sandwich bar-style restaurant whose primary business is to sell "made-to-order" or "subway-style" sandwiches (which by way of example includes, but is not limited to, "Subway" or "Jimmy John's", but expressly excludes traditional fast food restaurants such as "McDonalds", "Arbys" and "Wendys"), provided that any such restaurant shall not have outdoor seating or drivethrough service….
One of the businesses Quintana recruited as a tenant for the new development is a Famous Taco establishment - a Mexican restaurant that (as the name implies) serves tacos and burritos. The Plan Commission contended the Famous Taco should be barred because these food options are not "sandwiches." Indiana Superior Court Judge Craig Bobay rejected that argument, concluding that burritos and tacos are, in fact sandwiches:
The proposed Famous Taco restaurant falls within the scope of the general use approved in the original Written Commitment. The proposed Famous Taco restaurant would serve made-to-order tacos, burritos, and other Mexican-style food, and would not have outdoor seating, drive-through service, or serve alcohol. The Court agrees with Quintana that tacos and burritos are Mexican-style sandwiches, and the original Written Commitment does not restrict potential restaurants to only American cuisine-style sandwiches. The original Written Commitment would also permit a restaurant that serves made-to-order Greek gyros, Indian naan wraps, or Vietnamese banh mi if these restaurants complied with the other enumerated conditions.
In Indiana, as in most jurisdictions, courts are generally required to interpret laws (or, in this case, an agreement that has the force of law, by virtue of being embodied in a zoning restriction) in accordance with their "ordinary meaning." The Supreme Court of Indiana recently reiterated that rule in its February decision in Spells v. State.
Do tacos and burritos fall within the ordinary meaning of "sandwich"? It's hard to say. I think most Americans would not usually refer to these items as sandwiches. On the other hand, it's not hard to see why a taco or a burrito would fall under what most ordinary people would understand to be the general concept of a sandwich: meat and/or vegetables encased in bread or some other similar wrap. Thus, it may be that Judge Bobay was right to conclude that tacos and burritos are "Mexican-style sandwiches," even if few people would actually refer to them in that way. It all depends on whether ordinary meaning depends on usage or on people's intuitive theoretical understanding of the concept in question.
This ruling diverges from a controversial 2006 Massachusetts state court decision, which held that tacos, burritos, and quesadillas do not fall within the ordinary meaning of "sandwich," because that term normally refers to a food item encased in two pieces of bread, while these Mexican foods usually only feature one. Judge Bobay does not cite the Massachusetts precedent, which - in fairness - isn't binding in Indiana. He also doesn't consider the issue of whether a sandwich must have two pieces of bread, as opposed to just one.
To my mind, food encased in a single continuous piece of bread (or tortilla roll) still counts as a "sandwich." The top and bottom of a hamburger bun or hot dog roll are sometimes connected to each other. But that doesn't mean hamburgers and hot dogs can't qualify as sandwiches. My wife (who is both a lawyer and much more knowledgeable about food than I am) points out there are "open-face sandwiches" that use only one piece of bread.
Perhaps these kinds of issues reveal the limits of "ordinary meaning" interpretive rules. Ordinary people (at least those who aren't lawyers) usually just don't think about these kinds of conundrums. Thus, when an issue like whether burritos qualify as sandwiches comes up, there may not be any unequivocal "ordinary meaning" answer to the question at hand.
Whichever way you come down on the definition of "sandwich," this case also highlights the absurdity of zoning restrictions on development. Barring some kind of significant danger to public health or safety (of which there is no evidence here), Quintana should not have had to get special permission to use his property for commercial purposes in the first place. It makes even less sense to allow restaurants that serve "'made-to-order' or 'subway-style' sandwiches," but not those that serve other kinds of food. This distinction appears to be based on little more than the esthetic preferences of the Covington Creek Association, the NIMBY group that pressured the Plan Commission into imposing this restriction on the development.
Such NIMBYism causes real harm to both property owners (who are deprived of the right to use their own land as they see fit) and consumers who wish to patronize their services. I don't especially like tacos and burritos, myself. But many people do, which is why there is a substantial demand for restaurants like Famous Taco.
In a forthcoming Texas Law Review article, Josh Braver and I argue that exclusionary zoning rules restricting housing construction violate the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Restrictions on commercial development are a more complicated case. But under the originalist theories discussed in Part II of the Article, such restrictions also violate the right to use property protected by the Takings Clause, unless they protect against a serious threat to public health or safety, and thereby fall within the "police power" exception (see Section II.C). Things may be different under the living constitution approaches covered in Part III of the article.
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Please tell me this is an April Fools post that missed the deadline.
Ikr, arguing the, admitedly fun, minutia of if a taco is a sandwich, a follow on to years past about hot dogs, and how dogs should wear pants before that.
The real question is what is a local government doing outlawing restaruants except Subway style. Follow the money, it doesn't lie.
“…tacos, burritos, and quesadillas do not fall within the ordinary meaning of "sandwich," because that term normally refers to a food item encased in two pieces of bread…”
Subway and many other sandwich shops only use one piece of bread to make their sandwiches. Apparently, the Massachusetts judges who made this ruling have never actually had a fast food sandwich. Too lowbrow for them.
It's only 90% of Massachusetts Judges who make the rest look bad.
---- Howie Carr
Is this serious?
Many places that make sandwiches use a sort of short baguette-shaped loaf, sliced lengthwise to insert the fillings.
So if they slice all the way through it's a sandwich, and if they leave the two parts attached it's not??
What would Blackstone have to say?
Blackstone would say "I was wrong, bring back dueling!".
Yes please. Ellington protocols, not pusillanimous Dreyfus protocols.
Baguettes at dawn!
Please explain why a "Big Mac" is not a sandwich?
It has THREE slices of bread, along with lettuce, tomato, cheese, pickle, and French dressing, in addition to two hamburg patties.
This was a racist decision.
Big Mac, clearly not.
Quarter pounder, otoh....
And what of hot dogs?
Cool thing Ilya. So you'll have zero objections to me putting a mushroom farm in down the block from your home, right? With all your free bullshit there will be no shortage of fertilizer.
Clearly, tacos and burritos are not sandwiches because they are pie slices and calzones, respectively.
Shoot! I posted the Youtube equivalent below.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AD4aHTut_Ko
The Mass. court is of course correct, the Indiana one horribly wrong.
"what most ordinary people would understand to be the general concept of a sandwich: meat and/or vegetables encased in bread"
Bread for sandwiches does not "encase" the meat. It covers, it does not "enclose in or as if in a case".
So, tacos qualify but burritos don't?
He also doesn't consider the issue of whether a sandwich must have two pieces of bread, as opposed to just one.
Where is Jonathan Swift when you need him?
Perhaps these kinds of issues reveal the limits of "ordinary meaning" interpretive rules.
Perhaps??? Should we go look for what James Madison thought about this issue?
Ordinary people (at least those who aren't lawyers) usually just don't think about these kinds of conundrums.
Because they don't give a FF.
Isn't this a case where the purpose of the ordinance, rather than some silliness about the definition of "sandwich?"
So what is the purpose?
Well, maybe drive-through places create traffic or noise, or trash problems. So ban drive-throughs.
Maybe volume cooking generates more garbage or odors than "made-to-order" places. So deal with that problem with fees or limits or..
Look. When negotiating something like this, more complicated than a zero-sum deal over the price of a new car, it is best, IMO, to begin by identifying the problem the other side wants to address. Try not to let them just say, "No McDonald's." Instead, ask what problem they see McDonald's creating. Only then can you start to work out an agreement that addresses that problem.
What we have here, it seems, is a badly written agreement. Dictionaries won't help us understand it. Finding out what the parties were arguing about might.
So are sandwiches American-style tacos?
No, that doesn't follow. If tacos are a kind of sandwich, then all tacos are sandwiches, but not all sandwiches are tacos.
By way of example, a dog is an animal. It is a particular kind of animal. All dogs are animals. However, not all animals are dogs. There are also cats, cows, sheep, goats, etc.
What is a sandwich?
Answers it in 55 seconds.
In Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co. (1926), a 6-3 Court upheld zoning, which was at the time a relatively new concept. A realty company owned 68 acres in the village of Euclid, Ohio. In order to prevent industrial encroachment from Cleveland, the village placed certain use restrictions on that land. The realty company sued, claiming this was an unconstitutional Taking which had reduced the value of its land. (That the value was reduced was undeniable). The Court rejected this argument, which is the same argument Somin is making, though, of course, Somin is arguing the Ambler case was wrongly decided.
I currently live in a part of town zoned for single-family homes. If my town were to change this and allow multi-family units like duplexes and apartments, the value of my home and all the homes in the neighborhood would collapse. Homeowners would be robbed of untold millions of equity. If this practice, which Somin strongly advocates, were to be repeated throughout the country, the loss of equity would be in the trillions. How would this not be an unconstitutional taking under Somin's logic? Perhaps he will address this in his paper.
OR -
The value of the land your home is on would skyrocket, giving you windfall profits large enough to send the taxman straight for your throat.
Your claim to increased property value is no more valid than a tenant claiming property value from reduced rents due to rent control, or a slave owner demanding compensation after the 13th Amendment was passed.
No, because he bought his lot as zoned land. He did not buy the rights to build an apartment complex.
He bought his land with certain attached government privileges, which can be withdrawn and modified at any time.
"If my town were to change this and allow multi-family units like duplexes and apartments, the value of my home and all the homes in the neighborhood would collapse. Homeowners would be robbed of untold millions of equity. If this practice, which Somin strongly advocates, were to be repeated throughout the country, the loss of equity would be in the trillions. How would this not be an unconstitutional taking under Somin’s logic? Perhaps he will address this in his paper."
Let's assume, for the sake of discussion that you are correct. A rezoning to allow for multi-family buildings would destroy a significant part of the value of your home. Would that rezoning therefore be a violation of the Takings Clause?
I don't think so. In order for the Takings Clause to be operable, there has to be something taken. The text says "nor shall private property be taken for public use, except with just compensation."
On its face, this prohibits the government from acquiring property for itself (public use) without "just compensation," which presumably means paying the private owner the market value of the property. In your hypothetical, the government would be destroying part of the value of the property, but not taking it for itself (public use).
Yes, this leads to the weird conclusion that the government could burn down entire cities and not pay a penny, as that is "destruction," not "taking."
We might then propose an a fortiori argument. If the government is not allowed even to take private property for public use (where the property continues to exist, but is merely repurposed) without just compensation, how much more so must the government not destroy private property without just compensation!
Granted this argument, I still don't think that your case would be covered by the Takings Clause. In the absence of any government action whatsoever, your neighborhood (like all neighborhoods) has no zoning restrictions. The value of the property is equivalent to the greatest value it can produce, given the availability of all possible uses.
Assuming that (somehow) the zoning restrictions increase the value of the property from $X to $X + $N, this value ($N) must be external to the property itself, a "goodie" provided by government action. After all, in a "no-zoning" scenario, the property is only worth $X. So the extra $N must be attributable to the government's choice to forbid certain usages, such as multi-family buildings.
If so, then the Takings Clause cannot apply here. The Takings Clause, after all, forbids the government to "take for public use" what is yours. It does not require the government to "give for private use" what belongs to the public. The extra $N of value, being external to the property, are in the gift of the government, and the government is entirely within its powers to choose no longer to give that gift.
If you can't taxed on unrealized gains under the theory that you haven't actually made any money yet, why would we then care about an unrealized loss?
People concerned about the loss of their homes *estimated* value need to accept that either they can be taxed on those paper gains or not?
If my town were to change this and allow multi-family units like duplexes and apartments, the value of my home and all the homes in the neighborhood would collapse. ...
Why? Wouldn't at least some homeowners be able to sell their property to developers for much more than they could sell it for without the change? Far from collapsing, the value of their property might well go up, maybe substantially, due to the zoning change.
How would this not be an unconstitutional taking under Somin’s logic?
How would it be? Let's say you don't sell, but want to remain in your house? Has the government kicked you out, taken a room to use for a government office, otherwise required you to do anything that keeps you from living there as you have always done?
Once again, Winston Churchill is proven correct:
"The best argument against democracy is spending five minutes speaking with an average voter".
A sandwich is not a taco, and a taco is not a sandwich. Breading holding filling is broad: Empanada; Hot dog; Apple pie; Rarebit; Pizza; Pork dumplings. As Somin pointed out, the problem is giving one breaded vessel legality over another. Let all comers make their food. But, being Indiana, one can infer antipathy to brown, ethnic food stuffs
This is an example of an activist judge redefining terms to get the outcome he wants. Maybe he like tacos.
Who does not?
I'll tell you who....Communists don't like tacos.
Have you ever seen a commie eat a taco, Mandrake?
Borscht, that's what they eat, isn't it? Never tacos.
"Breading holding filling" defines fried chicken.
Bread holding fillings defines a sandwich, a taco, a blintz, a burrito, a Bahn mi, a Gyro, a Pita, etc. I could argue that Pizza is also bread holding filling - just not especially well, mechanically.
Reject the whole thing as an impermissible spot-zoning proposal, and forget the sandwich kerfuffle.
Too many local authorities delight in what they take to be unlimited power to get into particulars of individual cases. Hold the line on the notion that there will be zero usage exceptions to properly enacted zoning laws.
Use variances only were necessary to ease unobjectionable exceptions to regulatory particulars, in cases which leave the usage style unchanged. For example, if some odd parcel needs an exception on a setback requirement in order to accomplish a use the law otherwise permits, consider that on its merits. Tell applicants to get lost if they want to introduce new usages into established zones.
Consider usage changes only in context of a rezone encompassing far more than a single parcel. Require rezones to conform to a pre-established planning policy, already passed and published.
Doing it that way controls both zoning abuses, and regulatory shakedowns.
I like this approach. Having fewer rules that are harder to change makes people think before passing something.
This is a weak argument. Every law, good or bad, wise or foolish, is going to have some ambiguities and borderline cases. As Justice Holmes wrote, even day and night have no exact boundaries, only shades of gray, yet this hardly makes them useless concepts.”Sandwich “ is no more ambiguous than that.
This is a bit like arguing that evolution is scientifically impossible because it violates the second law of thermodynamics. Logic is essential to being a lawyer. If one wants to be taken seriously as an adult scholar, it is essential to refrain from making childish arguments.
It is one thing to respond to insult with insult and bombast with bombast. It is another thing to make an intellectually bogus argument out of the blue.
Logic is essential to being a lawyer as being a lawyer is not essential for logic. Logic used legally to usurp law is illogical - what this case should be about is not sandwiches, but re-zoning.
Yet the law certainly defines day and night - for aviation, anyway
And has different definitions for logging day and night in different instances.
Exactly. There are probably cases where whether something happened during the day or night was disputed. And what does the fact that such cases exist, as they undoubtedly do, tell us about the reasonableness of regulating aviation or logging, or anything else? Or any particular regulations on these subjects? Nothing. Nada. Zilch.
even day and night have no exact boundaries, only shades of gray, yet this hardly makes them useless concepts.”Sandwich “ is no more ambiguous than that.
It is one thing to say they are generally useful concepts, quite another to say that, without further definition, they can be intelligently used is statutes and legal agreements. Apartment leases, or condo rules
In fact, their use is often, IME, avoided. Tenants are not generally subject to noise limits, to take a common example, "at night," but rather "between X PM and before Y AM."
It is much wiser to rely on the stately clock, as it stands against the wall, than to argue about when the jungle shadows fall,
According to what clock? Do leap seconds count? (look them up. It’s a thing). Between Z pm and Y amIt might be fine for logging rules. But for, say, financial trading, where fractional seconds matter, it’s not nearly precise enpugh. And at some point you reach Heisenberg uncertainty. Perfect precision is impossible.
According to what clock?
The stately one, against the wall.
Or, you could rely on the <a href="https://www.nist.gov/blogs/taking-measure/keeping-time-nist National Institute of Standards.
From 2020:
Perfect precision is impossible.
Perfect precision is unnecessary for time-related dispute among humans. You only need an agreed on standard, publicly available, whose accuracy is at least that of any other clock used by human beings.
Sure, and when that comes up we can try to figure out what to do. Or we can
Every 1L learns that logic doesn't work for sandwiches. They are the basis of the textbook example of equivocation.
P1: Nothing is better than eternal happiness (true).
P2: A ham sandwich is better than nothing (true).
C: A ham sandwich is better than eternal happiness (entailed from 1 and 2).
Beaten to the Cube Rule punch.
“Whichever way you come down on the definition of “sandwich,” this case also highlights the absurdity of zoning restrictions on development. ”
Actually, it doesn’t. Here’s a better example that shows just the opposite.
The little town of Rothbardville does not have any zoning regulations. So, this is why we have ice cream shops, brothels, day care centers, crackhouses, porn theaters, and churches all right next to each other. That’s because everyone’s FREE from the contraints of order, purpose, rightful ends, virtue, tradition, and the common good. Can't you feel the freedom?
You're right. Every example you give provides some form of pleasure...except one.
It only happens like that when no one cares about anyone else, and no one cares about making money. That's why statists like you have to have such stupid rules, to control everyone else, because only you have the common sense to see that those businesses are all incompatible.
For values of, "only you," pertaining to the vast majority of the population. Throw in a rendering plant and the vast majority will encompass absolutely everyone except the guy who owns the rendering plant.
I think there are legitimate reasons to separate loud industrial areas from residential areas. But the zoning commission has no business saying "you can sell sandwiches, but you can't sell tacos". Regardless of the exact definition, there's no legitimate reason I can think of to allow one but not the other.
How about the town saying you can sell hamburgers, but not McDonalds?
"there’s no legitimate reason I can think of to allow one but not the other."
There is, and it has to do with waste and odors, not to mention traffic (with drive-throughs)
Having lived next to a McDonalds in my past, there is a certain odor associated with it. The scent of fried food is not localized to the restaurant, but permeates outside of it. There are dumpsters associated with it. Cooking oil, other items, higher degrees of waste, etc.
A "sandwich shop" by contrast doesn't generally do cooking.* Everything comes in cold, everything goes out cold.* The odors associated with it are far less, as is the waste. The hours tend to be restricted to just the daytime (lunch crowd), as most don't go to a sandwich shop for dinner. That changes traffic patterns as well.
*(Yes, there are a few isolated exceptions, ie, meatball subs. But most everything is cold).
But Burger King passes? Or Joe's Hamburger Grill?
"But Burger King passes? Or Joe’s Hamburger Grill?"
Of course not. They clearly do cooking.
Talk about convenience though. Someone could confess/repent their sins at the church right after hitting the crackhouse and the brothel. By the time they get home, their soul is as pure as the day they were born. As long as they only go for ice cream after church, and not to the porn theater.
I really dislike it when someone creates a fictional entity (eg Rothbardville) and then attribute all sorts of imaginary horrors to it, when there are examples of unzoned places that have been studied, to compare and contrast zoning vs unzoned.
Reason TV even has videos on this. One is on Houston, TX, and how things aren't as bad as Zoners would expect you to believe. Another video (or maybe just article, can't remember for sure) talked about the controversy of a small town where all of the sudden, the town board wanted to impose zoning regulations -- and the residents were stringently fighting them.
Devolving into the minute hides a responsibility to the purpose of government. If decisions are made, results follow according to those decisions. Having land, a largely finite resource, requires responsibility to the land for its health in the future. Unfettered use is never absolute, nor wise no matter ones view on freedom is.
Use of land is paramount to survival in the present lives and must not be treated as an infinite resource to be exploited, for its properties are from its location and its surroundings. It can be used for where it is and what it contains. Removal of its properties may be a one-time thing and then it's done, such as mining. If for food production its life will be longer, but it too may not last long without replenishment. Misuse of land for temporary gains could spoil that land for future uses.
Please.
The problem here is not what "sandwich" means.
Somin hints at the problem, but can't bring himself to discuss it in detail, when he writes:
Perhaps these kinds of issues reveal the limits of "ordinary meaning" interpretive rules.
The rules everyone is using here are in fact the problem. Quintana and the city agreed to something and, no matter how many sandwiches we throw at each other, we are not going to figure out what that was. Quite possibly they themselves don't know, because they are operating with different definitions of the word "sandwich." As, BTW, the judge may also be doing.
"The rules everyone is using here are in fact the problem. Quintana and the city agreed to something and, no matter how many sandwiches we throw at each other, we are not going to figure out what that was. "
It's pretty clear what it was. They wanted to zone for sub-shops, delis, and other types of restaurants that primarily provide traditional "sandwiches*" without opening it up to fast food, hot foods, bars, formal restaurants, etc. The type of place you would get lunch at, but not dinner.
*Sandwich.
Under the most open definition of the term, a "sandwich" is any product that has a filling between or on "bread"...leavened or unleavened. This of course is over-inclusive to the common usage because it includes pizza, burritos, potentially dumplings, beef wellington and more.
*Sandwich - Common American usage: A food item whereby the one or two pieces of room temperature leavened bread are used with a filling that is typically eaten cold, without needing to be cooked shortly beforehand. Any meats used are typically cooked long before hand, then stored cold. With selected examples, those cold meats can be reheated just before serving the sandwich (*Hot Pastrami, Hot Corned beef, meatball sub), but these examples can also be eaten cold without reheating.
Common American usage for "sandwich" typically does not refer to those food objects which are intended to be cooked and eaten hot, and which are never intended to be eaten without being cooked. i.e., "hot dog" "hamburger" "Chicken Sandwich (yes, I get the irony), burrito, taco, pizza, etc
It’s pretty clear what it was. They wanted to zone for sub-shops, delis, and other types of restaurants that primarily provide traditional “sandwiches*” without opening it up to fast food, hot foods, bars, formal restaurants, etc. The type of place you would get lunch at, but not dinner.
Strengthening my point. Because not everyone agrees with your definition of "sandwiches." And we can argue about the whole reheating business. Does it matter if I make my meatball subs to order rather than cook them ahead of time and just reheat them when ordered? Does one approach make them sandwiches, while the other doesn't?
Do you see anything silly there?
Common American usage for “sandwich” typically does not refer to those food objects which are intended to be cooked and eaten hot, and which are never intended to be eaten without being cooked. i.e., “hot dog” “hamburger” “Chicken Sandwich (yes, I get the irony), burrito, taco, pizza, etc
This is bullshit. You don't get to define "common American usage," which in fact will change over time. Here, for example, is Merriam-Webster.
hamburger
noun
1
a
: ground beef
b
: a patty of ground beef
2
: a sandwich consisting of a patty of hamburger in a split typically round bun
"Does it matter if I make my meatball subs to order rather than cook them ahead of time and just reheat them when ordered? "
Yes. Because we are talking about a "sandwich shop". There are far more in the way of regulations, equipment and requirements when dealing with raw meat, (ie "made to order meatballs") rather than reheated, already cooked meat.
Under the most open definition of the term, a “sandwich” is any product that has a filling between or on “bread”…leavened or unleavened. This of course is over-inclusive to the common usage because it includes pizza, burritos, potentially dumplings, beef wellington and more.
You're being ridiculous, or dishonest, or both.
What you are trying to do is win the argument over what is or is not a sandwich by setting yourself up as the authority, and then announcing that you are right because, after all, you are the authority.
Do you wonder why you have no credibility whatsoever? This kind of idiocy, along with your frequent lies and distortions, are the explanation.
I'm old enough to remember older people using the no-longer common phrase "hamburger sandwich." For more current usage, I defer to the Food Network show The Sandwich King, which had an episode on hamburgers as well as one on hot dogs. Maybe I'll check to see if it had one on tacos.
Indeed, bernard,
Under the armchair's definition toast with chunky peanut butter is a sandwich, but toast with smooth peanut butter is not.
But of course. Toast with smooth peanut butter is really just a thick soup in a bread bowl. 😉
*(Both are actually sandwiches, but I digress.)
I like the thick soup idea especially if the peanut butter has not been in the fridge
There are long standing arguments on why a pizza is really a sandwich. And why a taco is really a sandwich.
But, as an American, if I go to a "Sandwich Shop" I don't expect to order a pizza or a burrito. I expect to be able to order a certain type of food item, which will involve some version of a cold ham and cheese on the menu. Likewise, if I want a pizza, I go to a pizza place. Not a Sandwich shop. And if I want a burrito, I go to a Burrito place. Not a Sandwich shop. And I wouldn't expect a burrito place to have a cold ham and cheese sandwich.
Perhaps you think differently.
No one in Napoli would call a pizza sandwich.
This is just the net neutrality argument, but for tacos. If by “net neutrality” you mean that network providers should act as common carriers, then you will be OK only with rules that regulate network-related access and abuse such as spamming, denial of service, etc. OTOH, if by “net neutrality” you mean that network providers should act as content moderators, then you will be OK with rules that regulate specific types of content.
Should zoning regulate only those things which affect other people's use of adjoining property, or should it regulate what can be done with your property?
Personally, I want to live in the first environment. People should be left alone as much as possible.
Is salsa a vegetable? How about pico de gallo?
We know ketchup isn't. Former Senator John Heinz, heir to the Heinz ketchup fortune, told us so himself.
Hot dogs are tacos. This is known.
https://cuberule.com/
Is oral sex “having sex”? Most people would say no. But a President using the most understood meaning got accused of perjury and was impeached.
It is hypocrisy to say that sandwich-or-no-sandwjch silly hairsplitting, if you supported the above silliness.
now do sexual assault
As the Kinky Friedman song famously said: "eatin' ain't cheatin'." I have not, however, persuaded my wife of this.
I have noted that many restaurants have dropped the term "sandwiches" replacing it with the term "handhelds". This broader term would include tacos and even gyros. Perhaps the zoning ordnances need to be update in the same manner.
I wonder if Ilya would be happier with a less absurd law without the exception. You may not use your property to sell food no matter what the cube rule or common sense says. We see weird line-straddling cases with other zoning restrictions too.
I think stupid restrictions on making a living violate the Constitution, but it doesn't seem like the judiciary is willing to reach this conclusion yet, as it would upend a lot of laws.
I agree with Prof. Somin that this zoning restriction is ridiculous.
I agree with the court that Tacos can be sandwiches.
I disagree with the court that Tacos are "subway style sandwiches."
There's no universal rule defining what a "sandwich" is because that category has been defined by historical usage and not through a consistent set of logical rules. It is more helpful to ask what the word means in the context of this particular provision. I would look to the examples of "sandwiches" listed in the document and infer that any other proposed "sandwich" must be of a similar type. The document gives Subway and Jimmy Johns as examples of "made to order" sandwiches that are allowed. The document also excludes McDonald's, Arby's, and Wendy's on the ground that they are "traditional fast food," regardless of whether or not they are sandwiches. We therefore have at least 2, and as many as 5, examples of what the document means by "sandwiches." All of the examples given involve ingredients placed between pieces of sliced, leavened bread (I don't find the number of bread slices used relevant), and none of the examples are primarily wrapped in tortillas or other flat bread. I would therefore construe this document not to allow tacos or burritos.
Assuming Professor Somin’s real argjment is not that the word “sandwich” can be ambiguous, but the idea that a zoning board would be so specific as to specify a sandwich shop in the first place is absurd, I’ll simply point out one of my general arguments. This zoning board decision was a compromise between a neighborhood desire to retain a residential character and the property owner’s desire to build a commercial building. So only commercial uses deemed least disruptive to the residential character, rightly or wrongly, were allowed.
A common feature of compromises is that, because they represent a balance between conflicting principles, they often don’t appear to make any sense. They particularly don’t appear to male any sense to partisans of one and only one of those principles. They are therefore often easily ridiculed by principled partisans, as Professor Somin is, and is doing, here.
But this ridicule is misplaced. Compromises are not only entirely rational things to do, they can be essential to keeping the peace among people with divergent values, goals, and interests, and hence critical to effective civil government in a diverse society.
In general, if government can adapt either of conflicting principles or policies, it can adapt any compromise between those principles or policies, even if that compromise may seem to an outsider to be somewhat messy and not intellectually justifiable arguing from first principles. Compromises, by their nature, don’t neatly fit into first principles.
This is as true here as anywhere else.
How does the type of food served affect whether a business is disruptive to the residential character? Size of the business, sure. Maybe even type of business, such as restaurant vs. hardware store. Features specified above such as the presence of a drive through, or outdoor eating, sure. Maybe whether it serves alcohol. Amount of parking. But Taco Bell vs. Subway?
"My wife (who is both a lawyer and much more knowledgeable about food than I am) points out there are "open-face sandwiches" that use only one piece of bread."
OOooo, you seriously need to look into the Sandwich War of 1958, where, in the age of highly-regulated air travel, Scandinavian Airlines started serving super elaborate open-faced sandwiches, and various long-gone American airlines, which were unable to compete with their boring chicken-salad or roast beef sandwiches, objected that this was unfair competition!