1055 Stamford v. 33 Broad Street, No. X05 Cv 02 0190216 S (Oct. 31, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 13908
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 31, 2002
DocketNo. X05 CV 02 0190216 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 13908 (1055 Stamford v. 33 Broad Street, No. X05 Cv 02 0190216 S (Oct. 31, 2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1055 Stamford v. 33 Broad Street, No. X05 Cv 02 0190216 S (Oct. 31, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 13908 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION REGARDING MOTION TO DISMISS
The plaintiff, 1055 Stamford Associates Limited Partnership ("plaintiff" and/or "1055"), has commenced this civil action seeking to (i) set aside the conveyance to ("33 Broad Street Associates") of certain Parcels, by the Urban Redevelopment Commission ("URC"), and (ii) enjoin the development of the 33 BSA Property by Target Corporation ("Target"). The defendants have moved to dismiss Counts one through eight and Counts fifteen and sixteen of the Amended Complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction based upon the plaintiffs lack of standing.

Facts
A. The Parties

After a five day evidentiary hearing, the court makes the following findings of fact. The plaintiff is a Massachusetts limited partnership engaged in the business of developing real property. Pursuant to a 105-year lease, the plaintiff is the lessee of property located at 1055 Washington Boulevard, Stamford, CT. This property, including a ten story office building, is owned by the estate of Oscar DeLima (the "DeLima property").

The defendant, the City of Stamford (the "City"), is a municipality organized pursuant to the laws of the State of Connecticut. The defendant, the Urban Redevelopment Commission for the City of Stamford ("URC"), is a redevelopment agency within the meaning of C.G.S. §§ 8-124 et seq. (the Redevelopment Act) that operates within the City of Stamford. The defendant, 33 Broad Street Associates, LLC ("33 BSA") currently holds title to property comprised of contiguous parcels which encompasses the street addresses 15 Broad Street through 55 Broad Street in Stamford, Connecticut. 33 BSA obtained certain parcels now comprising CT Page 13909 parts of the 33 BSA property by way of a 1998 Settlement Agreement with the City and the URC. The 33 BSA property abuts the plaintiffs property along parts of the plaintiffs northerly and easterly borders.

The defendant, Target Corporation ("Target"), is a Minnesota corporation with a principal place of business in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 33 BSA has contracted to sell the 33 BSA property to Target, and Target has applied to the City for permission to develop that property with a 510, 000 square foot, six-story structure. The City has approved Target's development proposal.

B. The URC and The Urban Renewal Plan

On March 4, 1963, the Board of Representatives of the City, acting under authority of the Connecticut Redevelopment and Urban Renewal Act (the "Act"), approved an Urban Renewal Plan for the Southeast Quadrant (Extended) — Urban Renewal Project Conn. S-43 (the "Plan") and conferred upon the URC certain regulatory authority over the Southeast Quadrant. The Southeast Quadrant included Block 9 (bounded by Broad Street, Washington Boulevard, West Park Place and Summer Street) and Block 8 (bounded by Broad Street, Summer Street, Main Street and Atlantic Street).

The Plan, which has been amended thirty one times since 1963, sets forth development objectives for the Southeast Quadrant; provides various land use and building requirements; identifies specific properties within the Southeast Quadrant "to be acquired" by the URC; and provides for the disposition of properties owned by the URC to designated redevelopers ("Reuse Parcels" via contracts for sale or lease ("land disposition agreements").

The public purpose of the Redevelopment Act as set out in § 8-124, is the eradication and prevention of substandard, insanitary, deteriorating, slum or blighted areas.

The URC, under C.G.S. §§ 8-135, 8-151, 8-154a and 8-163, can receive funding from the United States Government, the State of Connecticut, and the City of Stamford, for the redevelopment of the redevelopment area.

Section II of the Urban Renewal Plan sets the "Land Use Plan," and provides, in pertinent part, in § II. 2.

a) Specifically one of the major purposes of the Urban Renewal Plan is to provide a physical environment which will attract investment of private capital to CT Page 13910 this Central District, so that the social and economic potential of the City may be realized.

b) To that end, it is stated that:

c) All buildings, structures, arrangements of uses, landscaping, etc., erected or constructed or rehabilitated in a project area shall be of a design consistent with the purpose and character of the area set forth in this plan. In order to carry out this objective, the Urban Redevelopment Commission shall require that all plans of building, structures, arrangements of uses, landscaping, signs, paving, etc. must be approved by the Urban Redevelopment Commission before such construction may take place. . . . The Urban Redevelopment Commission . . . shall have the right to review such site and building plans on the basis of: Conformity with the specific controls and requirements herein set forth; architectural or aesthetic compatibility of proposed structure or landscaping design with its environs . . . any other factors which may affect the health and safety of persons or value of property.

C. Description of Subject Properties

The 33 BSA property is located within Block 9 of the Southeast Quadrant. The BSA Property at issue in this case is actually comprised of five separate "parcels" designated as follows:

_ Reuse Parcel 20

_ Reuse Parcel 20A (a/k/a Twenty-One Broad Street)

_ The "Dolan" Parcel

_ Reuse Parcel 19A

_ Reuse Parcel 19C

33 BSA acquired the parcels in the following manner. On or about April 16, 1968, the URC and the City entered into a land disposition agreement ("LDA") with Stamford New Urban Corporation ("SNUC") for the redevelopment of certain Re-Use Parcels in accordance with the Urban CT Page 13911 Renewal Plan. The SNUC LDA provided for the sale of Re-Use Parcels 19A and 20 by the URC to SNUC upon the completion of certain redevelopment conditions. The 1968 SNUC LDA identified SNUC as the "Redeveloper" of the Re-Use Parcels identified in the contract. 33 BSA is a successor and assignee of SNUC rights in the LDA.

The 1968 SNUC LDA identifies each Re-Use Parcel by number, and assigns a purchase price for each parcel. The 1968 SNUC LDA purchase price for the Re-Use Parcels 19A and 20 were: Re-Use Parcel 19A, $309,540.00; and Re-Use Parcel 20, $70,000.00.The 1968 SNUC LDA was amended on August 31, 1976 and again on December 19, 1978. The 1978 SNUC LDA provided that the price for Re-Use Parcel 20 was changed to $84,630.00.The LDA provided that the redeveloper was to develop Re-Use Parcel 20 with a minimum of 6, 000 square feet Commercial development, and 19A with a minimum of 10,000 square feet. As a result of the URC acquisition of Re-Use Parcels 19A and 20, and the SNUC LDA, Re-Use Parcels 19A and 20 were removed from the City of Stamford Tax rolls from as far back as 1968 until at least some time in 1998. Accordingly, taxes were not paid on these properties for thirty years.

BSA's ownership of the 33 BSA Property came about through the purchase of Reuse Parcels 20, 19A and 19C from the URC in 1998 pursuant to the terms of a 1998 Settlement Agreement between a number of parties, including the City, URC, and 33 BSA (the "1998 Settlement Agreement") which settled pending litigation between the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 13908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1055-stamford-v-33-broad-street-no-x05-cv-02-0190216-s-oct-31-2002-connsuperct-2002.