Boulanger v. TOWN OF OLD LYME

16 A.3d 889, 51 Conn. Supp. 636
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 2010
DocketFile CV-07-4007438-S
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 A.3d 889 (Boulanger v. TOWN OF OLD LYME) 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
Boulanger v. TOWN OF OLD LYME, 16 A.3d 889, 51 Conn. Supp. 636 (Colo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COSGROVE, J.

The plaintiffs desire to use their undeveloped lot in the Sound View section of Old Lyme as a parking lot where members of the public could park their cars, for a fee, in the seasonally congested beach *638 area of Old Lyme. The plaintiffs assert that the Old Lyme zoning regulations do not prohibit privately owned public use parking lots, but that such parking lots are regulated by a town ordinance that allows for parking lots so long as they meet certain requirements relating to the number and demarcation of parking spots and signage indicating who owns and operates the parking lot. If those criteria are met, the plaintiffs argue that they are entitled to a permit under the ordinance allowing them to use their land as a parking lot.

The defendants, the town of Old Lyme and the town’s First Selectman, Timothy Griswold, argue that the Old Lyme Zoning Regulations prohibit all privately owned public use parking lots and that the ordinance to which the plaintiffs refer relates only to parking lots that predated the zoning prohibition and exist as nonconforming uses. Because of this prohibition on publically owned parking lots, the defendants argue that the plaintiffs are not entitled to a use permit or to operate a parking lot on their property.

As is clear from this brief precis of the arguments, there is significant disagreement between the parties as to the import of the Zoning Regulations of the Town of Old Lyme and as to the import of an ordinance of the Town of Old Lyme. The Town through its ordinances adopted by the Board of Selectmen and the Regulations adopted by the Zoning Commission have created a somewhat unusual regulatory structure. Ordinarily when one thinks of the regulation of the use of land within a municipality one thinks of a Zoning Commission, a Zoning Board of Appeals and a Zoning Enforcement Officer. Questions of interpretation of the Regulations normally fall to the Zoning Enforcement Officer with an appeal available to the Zoning Board of Appeals. Old Lyme has created by ordinance a different scheme for the regulation of public parking lots. In Old *639 Lyme the First Selectman is authorized by ordinance to issue permits for parking lots.

The court will briefly review the language of the ordinance and regulations in question. Section 161-10 of the Old Lyme town ordinances, as amended in 1999, provides: “(A) No person or organization shall operate a parking area on private property in the Town of Old Lyme without receiving a permit issued by the First Selectman or his designee. Each permit shall terminate on the 31st day of December of each year, unless earlier terminated under § 161-12 of this article, as amended. The permit shall be available for inspection at all times. This article regulates existing parking lots and this §161-10 shall not be construed to authorize the establishment of any new parking area which does not confo'/m to the applicable provisions of the Old Lyme Zoning Regulations.” (Emphasis added.)

The Old Lyme Zoning Regulations appear to have been first adopted on November 12, 1991, and became effective on January 1, 1992. These regulations have been amended multiple times since that date. Section 6.3 of the Zoning Regulations discusses “Prohibited Uses.” Specifically this regulation provides: “6.3 Prohibited uses: It is expressly understood that any use not listed and designated on SCHEDULE A-l or SCHEDULE B-l as a permitted use in a district is prohibited in such district. To assist in the interpretation of permitted uses, the following uses, the list of which is not intended to be exhaustive, are specifically prohibited: 6.3.9 No lot, or portion thereof, shall be used as a Public Parking Lot, except for Public Parking Lots under the management, supervision and control of the Town of Old Lyme. (6/ 1/99).”

The plaintiffs’ property on Portland Avenue is located in an R-10 zone. Public Parking lots, as they are defined *640 in § 9.1 of the Zoning Regulations, are not a permitted use delineated on SCHEDULE A-l of the Regulations.

I

UNDISPUTED FACTS

The plaintiffs, Scott Boulanger, Kathleen Boulanger and Eugene Gallo, own a parcel of land located at 73 Portland Ave., in the Sound View section of Old Lyme, Connecticut. Prior to 2002, the plaintiffs operated the lot as a private parking lot for their own use. In 2002, the plaintiffs filed an application for a Zoning Compliance Permit so that they could operate their lot as a privately owned public parking lot where the general public could park their cars, for a fee, and visit the Sound View area. This permit was denied with the notation that the requested use was “not permitted” per § 6.3.9 of the town zoning regulations. In 2003, the plaintiffs again filed for a Zoning Compliance Permit seeking to use their property as a public parking lot. This permit application was again denied with the notation that the use sought was prohibited by § 6.3.9 of the town zoning regulations. On April 7, 2004, the plaintiffs once more sought a Zoning Compliance Permit for their property; again, it was denied because of the prohibitions found in § 6.3.9 of the town zoning regulations.

On April 7,2004, the plaintiffs also filed an application for a variance with the Old Lyme Zoning Board of Appeals (Zoning Board) seeking permission from the board to use their lot as a public parking lot and claiming that because of the lot’s small size, and the fact that it is surrounded by other parking lots, denying the variance would place an undue hardship on the plaintiffs. On June 8, 2004, the Zoning Board held a regular meeting where it discussed the plaintiffs’ proposed variance. At that hearing, the plaintiffs were given the opportunity to discuss why they should be granted a zoning variance that would allow them to operate their property as a *641 public parking lot. The Zoning Board declined to grant the plaintiffs’ requested variance. The plaintiffs did not appeal the 2004 Zoning Board decision to the Superior Court, as was permissible under General Statutes § 8-8.

On September 25, 2006, the plaintiffs’ attorney sent Timothy Griswold, the First Selectman of Old Lyme, a letter indicating that the town’s repeated refusal to allow the plaintiffs to use their property as a public parking lot violated their constitutional rights. By letter dated November 7, 2006, the plaintiffs, through their attorney, gave notice to the defendant Town of their claim that they had been injured by the denial of their use of their property and that their United States and Connecticut Constitutional Rights had been violated. By letter dated January 25, 2007, the plaintiffs, through their attorney, applied for a parking permit pursuant to § 161-10 of the town ordinances. No permit was issued. On July 26, 2007, the plaintiffs commenced the present action in the New London Superior Court by filing a summons and eight count complaint alleging violations of the plaintiffs’ due process rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, takings clause violations under the United States Constitution, violations of the plaintiffs’ rights under the Connecticut Constitution and violations of the takings clause of the Connecticut Constitution.

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Related

Boulanger v. TOWN OF OLD LYME
16 A.3d 739 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 A.3d 889, 51 Conn. Supp. 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boulanger-v-town-of-old-lyme-connsuperct-2010.