Barbara Realty Co. v. Zoning Board of Review

138 A.2d 818, 87 R.I. 100, 1958 R.I. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 14, 1958
DocketM.P. No. 1212
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 138 A.2d 818 (Barbara Realty Co. v. Zoning Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbara Realty Co. v. Zoning Board of Review, 138 A.2d 818, 87 R.I. 100, 1958 R.I. LEXIS 20 (R.I. 1958).

Opinion

*101 Condon, C. J.

This is a petition for certiorari to review the action of the zoning board of review of the city of Cranston, hereinafter called the board, in granting the application of the Budlong Rose Company, hereinafter referred to as the applicant, for an exception or a variance to permit the erection of a motor lodge on that part of lot .No. 666 on assessor’s plat No. 10 zoned as a dwelling house district. We issued the writ prayed for and in compliance therewith the board has made due return of the record of its proceedings pertaining to such action.

The petitioners are owners of real estate in the general neighborhood in which the applicant’s lot is situated. They and numerous other owners of realty in the vicinity appeared at the hearing on the application before the board and remonstrated against the granting thereof. They also challenged the right of one member of the board to hear the application on the ground that he had prejudged the matter in the applicant’s favor. Before proceeding to hear the application on its merits the board allowed the remonstrants to present evidence in support of their charge of prejudice on the part of such member, and thereafter they decided in executive session, such member not participating therein, that he had not prejudged the case and was qualified to sit.

At the conclusion of the hearing on the merits the board took the case under advisement and thereafter filed a written decision granting the application. In their decision they have stated specifically the reasons or grounds thereof. They also enumerated therein in detail numerous restrictions with which the applicant was required to comply in availing itself of the use applied for and granted. The fol *102 lowing are significant in view of the nature of the remonstrances made at the hearing and of the location of the homes of the remonstrants nearest to the applicant’s lot: “1. There shall be no exit or entrance to the premises on either Dean Parkway or Meshanticut Valley Parkway. 2. The existing growth of trees and shrubs located on that portion of Lot 666 which lies immediately to the west of the premises made the subject of this exception shall be maintained.”

It appears from the return that the applicant’s lot borders on what has been called a high-class residential area which has been recently developed by the building of homes costing $35,000 to $50,000, or more in some instances. Some of the remonstrants in testifying before the board emphasized this fact and urged that it be considered as conclusive proof that the erection of a motel in such a neighborhood would not be in harmony therewith. They further expressed the opinion that the granting of the application would constitute an invasion of the residential zone by an undesirable business use which would be the entering wedge for additional invasions. This, they said, would eventually cause a deterioration of the neighborhood and ultimately result in the depreciation of costly homes which had been built in reliance upon the protection against such invasions given by the zoning ordinance.

However, the board considered certain other facts which presented the matter in a less favorable light to the remonstrants. Those facts are stated at length in their decision granting the application as follows:

“After considering all of the evidence and testimony presented at the hearing, and after viewing the premises and considering the presence of the Howard Johnson’s restaurant on the adjoining lot, the business zone of 150 foot depth on the westerly side of New London Avenue and the much larger Garden City business area on the opposite side of New London Avenue; considering also the coal mine, a non-conforming use *103 diagonally across New London Avenue from the motor lodge site; considering further that the large parcel to the rear of the motor lodge site, namely Lot 302 on Assessors’ Plat 16, is zoned for business and that plans are presently being made for its development as a business site; having in mind that the distance which separates even the nearest residence from the motor lodge and also the character of the property which separates the residences from the motor lodge buildings; considering the topography of the motor lodge site with the relatively high elevation at the rear of Lot 666; considering the limited potential of Lot 666 for residential development; and giving proper consideration to the true nature of the motor lodge (so-called) as planned and outlined and as known; the Board finds that the exception as granted:
1. will not substantially or permanently injure the appropriate use of neighboring property;
2. will be in harmony with the character of the neighborhood and appropriate to the uses or buildings authorized in that district; and
3. is necessary to secure an appropriate development of the lot in question.”

The petitioners allege in their petition seventeen separate grounds of error in the board’s decision some of which are repetitious while others are neither briefed nor argued. In their brief they have discussed only three points as follows: I. The board was without jurisdiction and the provisions of the zoning ordinance which purported to authorize a special exception permitting the board to allow a business building in a district zoned for single-family residences are invalid and void. II. Assuming the board had jurisdiction and that the ordinance is valid, their decision granting the application was arbitrary and constituted an abuse of discretion. III. The hearing before the board was not fair and impartial.

There is no merit in the first point. The board rested its decision on subsections (1), (4), (8) and (9) of sec. 27 B *104 of chapter 31 of the zoning ordinance. These subsections were enacted pursuant to the provisions of the zoning law, general laws 1938, chap. 342, §8, and in our opinion are not repugnant thereto. Manifestly none of those subsections redelegates the power which the legislature delegated to the city council, but on the contrary they represent a vesting in the board, subject to definitely-expressed standards or limitations, of a discretion to grant in specific instances set out in the ordinance exceptions therefrom. In this respect it differs from the provision of the ordinance held invalid in Flynn v. Zoning Board of Review, 77 R. I. 118. In that case, at page 125, we held that the city council provided in the ordinance “no rules or regulations, specific or general, that fix any limitation upon the exercise of the board’s discretion. On the contrary it passed on to the board the complete power which it had received from the legislature under the enabling act.”

In the case at bar it cannot be said that the ordinance makes any such sweeping grant of power. When read as a whole, section 27 B authorizes the board to grant an exception only where it finds that the public convenience and welfare will be substantially served and the appropriate use of neighboring property will not be substantially or permanently injured. We considered the same question in Woodbury v. Zoning Board of Review, 78 R. I.

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Bluebook (online)
138 A.2d 818, 87 R.I. 100, 1958 R.I. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbara-realty-co-v-zoning-board-of-review-ri-1958.