Adams v. Warren Planning Zoning, No. Cv 97 0074240 (Dec. 19, 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 13128
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1997
DocketNo. CV 97 0074240
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 13128 (Adams v. Warren Planning Zoning, No. Cv 97 0074240 (Dec. 19, 1997)) 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
Adams v. Warren Planning Zoning, No. Cv 97 0074240 (Dec. 19, 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 13128 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The defendant Warren Planning and Zoning Commission denied an application to approve a two-lot subdivision for reasons that do not appear in the record. The Commission acting through its chairman in May, 1987, informed the property owner, the plaintiffs' decedent, William Kline, that no subdivision approval was required. Kline resubmitted the subdivision again to the Commission in 1993, and was again told by the Commission that no subdivision application was required because the division of a 15.1 acre parcel into two lots was not a subdivision. Kline then recorded the map in the Warren Land Records, and sold one of the lots, containing 9.857 acres and a house, known as Parcel B to one Larry Kramer.

After the two-lot map was recorded and Parcel B was sold to Kramer, the zoning regulations changed. Under the regulations in effect in 1987, the two rear lots could be served by a common accessway to a public highway. After 1987 but before the Commission's ruling in November, 1993, the subdivision regulations were revised and in June, 1996, the zoning regulations were revised to require interior lots to own fee title to an access strip to the highway, and no longer allowed an easement or right-of-way to provide access to interior lots. The Estate of William Kline applied for and obtained a variance from the Zoning Board of Appeals of the revised access provision in the zoning regulations. The estate then filed the same subdivision application that had previously been filed with the Commission by Kline in 1987 and 1993 because it had been discovered that there had been a prior division of the land shortly after the town adopted subdivision regulations in 1977. The subdivision filed by the estate in 1997 was filed under a reservation of rights that an approval had already occurred as a matter of law in two respects: (1) an actual approval by the Commission in 1987 and 1993, or (2) an inferred approval for failure to act on a subdivision application Kline submitted in 1993. CT Page 13130

The plaintiffs, Thomas T. Adams and Carol B. Woodward are executors of the Estate of William S. Kline. On July 6, 1977, Kline purchased a 15.111 acre parcel of land from John H. Willenbrok and Lucille H. Willenbrok, together with a 50-foot wide right-of-way for access and public utilities running from Bliss Road in Warren to the interior 15.111 acre parcel. (Exhibits 14 and 16) On July 12, 1977 Kline obtained a zoning permit for a residence on the parcel. At that time the zoning regulations did not require lots to have frontage on public highways, and allowed access to rear lots by means of an easement. In 1987 Kline decided to divide the 15 acre parcel into two lots and contacted the Commission to learn its requirements. He submitted an application and a map showing his land and the adjacent Willenbrok property. (Exhibit 1) The Commission, which was a combined planning and zoning commission, also approved Kline's application for construction of a second house on the property. (See Exhibits 1, 2, 9 and 16) Kline made no misrepresentations to Vogel and did not intentionally mislead the Commission. (Exhibit 16; Exhibit 24, pp. 4, 7) Kline was unaware that subdivision approval was actually needed to divide the 15 acres into two parcels, and he accepted the Commission's determination. Kline did not record the map showing division of the parcel into two lots at that time.

Nothing further occurred until 1993, when Kline submitted to the Warren Conservation Commission and to the Planning and Zoning Commission an application for substantially the same two-lot subdivision. The proposed map of the property showed the two lots, the adjacent Willenbrok land and a 50-foot wide accessway. The Conservation Commission approved the two-lot subdivision as the town's inland wetlands agency on November 1, 1993. (Exhibit 16) In November, 1993 Kline then submitted the same two-lot subdivision plan to the defendant Commission together with a letter showing approval by the health district of a septic system for the vacant lot, Parcel A. (Exhibits 2 and 16)

At its meeting of November 9, 1993, the Commission voted to return the two lot subdivision application to Kline because it determined that the prior approval in 1987 was still valid and that the Commission's approval was not required to subdivide the land. (Exhibit 16 and Commission minutes of November 9, 1993.) Kline then recorded the map showing a division of the land into two parcels in the Warren Land Records on November 15, 1993 as Map #611. (Exhibits 14 and 16) The Warren Zoning Enforcement Officer by letter dated November 17, 1993 confirmed that Kline CT Page 13131 could record the map showing the division of the 15 acres into Parcels A and B, and that he could construct a dwelling on vacant Parcel A and sell the two lots as separate parcels. (Exhibit 16 and Letter of martin J. Connor, Warren Zoning Enforcement Officer, dated November 17, 1993 in Exhibit 2)

In December, 1993 Kline conveyed Parcel B containing 9.857 acres to Larry Kramer by deed recorded in Volume 44, page 827 of the Warren Land Records, together with rights in common with others over the 50 foot wide accessway, but reserving for the benefit of Parcel A a right-of-way. (Exhibits 14 and 16) At the time of that conveyance, neither the zoning regulations nor the subdivision regulations required a rear lot to have separate frontage on a town road. Kline and Kramer also entered into a driveway maintenance agreement, also recorded in the Warren land Records, containing the terms and conditions for maintenance of the common driveway over the access strip. Kramer purchased the Kline house on Parcel B with full knowledge that there was a 5 acre lot (Parcel A) that was serviced by the common driveway. He was also given a right of first refusal to buy Parcel A. The deeds and maps show that Kramer was not buying the entire parcel and knew that Kline was creating another building lot where a house would eventually be constructed. (Exhibit 13; Exhibit 16, pp. 28, 29; Exhibit 17)

§ 7.2 of the zoning regulations in November 1993 allowed interior lots which have less than the required minimum frontage on a town road but met all other minimum lot requirements of the zoning regulations to obtain access over a 50 foot wide right-of-way to a town road. § 7.2 also stated that "interior lots may be permitted in a subdivision under these regulations and under the provisions of the Warren subdivision regulations." The access strip on Map #611 was 50 feet in width between the public highway and Parcels A and B. Parcel A contains 5.255 acres and Parcel B contains 9.857 acres.

§ 7.2 of the zoning regulations (and § 5.4.2 of the subdivision regulations, which also concerns interior lots) were amended after the Kline two-lot map was recorded and Parcel B was conveyed to Kramer. § 5.4.2 of the subdivision regulations allows the Commission, when acting on subdivisions, to permit interior lots "according to the provisions of the Warren Zoning Regulations." Both regulations now require a separate access strip for each interior lot, with a minimum separation distance of 150 feet between access strips at their intersection with the CT Page 13132 existing street. Parcels A and B do not and cannot conform to that requirement. As a result, the plaintiffs applied to the Warren Zoning Board of Appeals for a variance of § 7.2 of the zoning regulations. The Zoning Board of Appeals granted the application on February 5, 1997 to allow Parcel A and Parcel B to share the existing 50 foot wide right-of-way for access purposes to Bliss Road. (Exhibits 4, 5 and 16)

After obtaining the variance, the estate filed the same two-lot subdivision application as the 1993 plan with the Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 13128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-warren-planning-zoning-no-cv-97-0074240-dec-19-1997-connsuperct-1997.