Bankers Trust Co. v. Zoning Board of Appeals

345 A.2d 544, 165 Conn. 624, 1974 Conn. LEXIS 1056
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 2, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 345 A.2d 544 (Bankers Trust Co. v. Zoning Board of Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Trust Co. v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 345 A.2d 544, 165 Conn. 624, 1974 Conn. LEXIS 1056 (Colo. 1974).

Opinion

*625 Cotter, J.

This appeal by the defendant is taken from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas sustaining the plaintiffs’ appeal 1 from a decision of the zoning board of appeals of the town of Weston which (1) denied the plaintiffs’ appeal from a prior determination by the planning and zoning commission of Weston on March 18,1966, that it could not grant a zoning permit for the construction of a dwelling on a 1.20-aere parcel of land because, inter alia, it did not consider it to be a separate building lot and (2) denied a request, in the alternative, for a variance. The court concluded that the plaintiffs were aggrieved, that the property which is the subject of this appeal, whether it was .61 or 1.20 acres more or less, was a legal nonconforming lot and that the zoning board of appeals acted, inter alia, illegally and arbitrarily. The conclusion that the board waived its rule that an appeal must be taken within thirty days was not made a part of the court’s limited finding on appeal although it so concluded in its memorandum of decision. Since the parties have briefed and argued the error assigned in that conclusion, we have decided to consider the issue as the parties have treated it. Melody v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 158 Conn. 516, 517, 264 A.2d 572.

From the record filed by the board, and the limited finding made by the court, it appears that the following are the facts pertinent to a decision of the case: On September 22, 1952, the plaintiffs’ decedent, Henrikas Rabinavicius, acquired title to 2.114 *626 acres of land in the town of Weston, subject to a twenty-foot easement (not relevant j;o the issues of this appeal) and an unimproved road or right-of-way, forty feet in width, running generally in a northerly and southerly direction, which divided the tract so that the area to the east of the road, which is the subject of this dispute, contained approximately .65 acres, and that to the west slightly more than an acre. The area of unimproved road, Beaver Brook Drive, was approximately .32 acres. 2

At the time of the plaintiffs’ decedent’s purchase of the entire tract, the zoning regulations of the town of Weston provided for one-acre residential zoning 3 and did not define the meaning of “lot” or “plot.” On April 10, 1953, the regulations were amended to provide for two-acre residential zoning, excluding any area in a road or right-of-way and *627 protected lots existing in separate ownership, which meant that the owner of such lot owned no adjoining property. On September 18, 1953, after the change to two-acre zoning, the plaintiffs’ decedent and others bordering on Beaver Brook Drive quit-claimed the road to the town of Weston, and on October 5, 1953, the town accepted it as a public road pursuant to the then General Statutes § 2118, Rev. 1949, presently General Statutes § 13a-48. On June 24, 1955, the zoning regulations were amended further to provide a definition for “lot” or “plot,” which definition, inter alia, described a “lot” or “plot” as a parcel not divided by a river, public highway or private road or right-of-way serving or intended to serve other lots or plots. 4 Subsequent to this .amendment, on July 27, 1956, the plaintiffs’ decedent transferred to his wife a .93-acre parcel on the west side of Beaver Brook Road, retaining the easterly portion. 5

An agent for the estate in January, 1966, wrote to the planning and zoning commission of Weston seeking approval to use the parcel in question .as a building site, describing it as 1.20 acres. At the *628 time of the appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, the parcel was erroneously assumed to contain 1.028 acres. The building site request was denied on March 18, 1966, the commission stating that the controversial area was not a separate building lot because the decedent originally owned the entire two-acre lot, including the right-of-way. An appeal was not taken at that time from this ruling to the zoning board of appeals within thirty days as required by its regulations. On July 26,1967, an application 6 was filed with the board asking for a variance or a decision that the parcel in question was a separate lot and, therefore, nonconforming, all of which the board denied. An appeal of that action taken to the Court of Common Pleas was later withdrawn upon stipulation by the parties when it became apparent that a member of the board should have disqualified himself. Following a second hearing, the board again unanimously denied the “request . . . for a variance and an appeal,” stating, inter alia, that “decedent’s tract constituted in its entirety a legal building lot” in 1953 and remained so until the transfer in 1956 of the land to the west of Beaver Brook Road to his wife. The board further found that the applicant had failed to establish the exceptional hardship or unnecessary difficulty for a variance and denied the appeal stating that the board did not read the application as an appeal, and if, in *629 the alternative, it should be so construed, it was not timely filed. The Court of Common Pleas sustained the appeal, from which the board filed a petition for certification, which was granted.

The defendant in its assignment of errors pertinent to a disposition of this appeal claims the court erred in its conclusions that the property in dispute was a legal nonconforming lot; that the plaintiffs were entitled to a building permit if their proposed building complied with all other requirements of the zoning authority; that the defendant waived its rule requiring that appeals from administrative decisions must be made within thirty days after the date on which the order or decision appealed from was rendered; and that the application to the defendant was an appeal from the decision of the commission of March 18,1966.

The original request to the commission for permission to obtain a zoning permit for the construction of a dwelling on the “1.20 acre lot,” from which the plaintiffs purported to take an appeal to the board, was denied on March 18,1966, and it was not until July 26, 1967, a period of more than sixteen months, that the plaintiffs’ application was submitted to the defendant zoning board of appeals. The applicant at the rehearing in 1969 before the board, ordered by the Court of Common Pleas in accordance with the stipulation of the parties, first presented the facts and arguments supporting an appeal and thereafter proceeded to submit its claims relative to the question of variance. The board, nevertheless, specifically in its decision stated, inter alia, that if the application “should be so construed” as an appeal in addition to a claim for a variance the appeal would have to be denied on the ground *630 that it was not taken to the board within the thirty days required by its rules.

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Bluebook (online)
345 A.2d 544, 165 Conn. 624, 1974 Conn. LEXIS 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-trust-co-v-zoning-board-of-appeals-conn-1974.