Brunelle v. Town of South Kingstown

700 A.2d 1075, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 251, 1997 WL 541267
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 31, 1997
Docket95-489-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 700 A.2d 1075 (Brunelle v. Town of South Kingstown) 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
Brunelle v. Town of South Kingstown, 700 A.2d 1075, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 251, 1997 WL 541267 (R.I. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

This case comes before us on cross appeals from a final judgment of the Superior Court entered in favor of the plaintiff, Robert L. Brunelle (Brunelle), and against the defendants, the town of South Kingstown, its town council members, its town treasurer, and its building and zoning officer. The final judgment awarded Brunelle compensatory damages as well as attorney’s fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988 for the temporary taking of his land because of the defendant town building inspector’s denial of his request for a building permit in December, 1985 and the defendant town council's later denial of his application for a change of zone on October 11, 1988 on his parcel of land upon which he had intended to construct some 300 mini-storage or self-storage units along with an office budding. The trial justice found the defendant town council’s action to have been “arbitrary and capricious,” and that Brunelle was entitled to temporary “taking” damages from October 11, 1988 to January 30, 1990, as well as attorney’s fees.

The town and its municipal defendants in their appeal contend that no taking resulted from the original 1976 rezoning of the plaintiff’s land or from the building inspector’s denial of his request for a budding permit or from the town councd’s later denial in 1988 of his request for a change of zone on the land. The defendants accordingly assert that the trial justice erred in awarding damages and attorney’s fees to plaintiff.

Brunede, in his appeal, contends that the trial justice, though correct in finding a taking, erred by utilizing an improper method for computation of his “taking” damage award and that in awarding attorney’s fees, she faded not only to compute those fees on the basis of his attorney’s current bdling rate but also to include thereon the addition of prejudgment interest.

For the reasons hereinafter set out, we reverse the judgment entered below and remand this case to the Superior Court with directions to dismiss plaintiff’s action.

*1077 I

Case Facts and Travel

This appeal springs from a townwide land-zoning revision undertaken by the town of South Kingstown in 1976, pursuant to special enabling legislation enacted by the General Assembly. See P.L.1973, ch.101.

In the course of that rezoning, a particular three-and-a-half acre parcel, a part of a larger tract of land owned by the Penn-Central Corporation (Penn-Central) and forming part of its overall West Kingstown railroad station and yard, was inadvertently depicted on the town zoning map accompanying the zoning revision ordinance as having been rezoned from M-l Manufacturing use to R-20 Residential use. Penn-Central at no time, however, questioned or challenged the discrepancy between the lot’s zoning map depiction and the town council’s zoning ordinance.

Some nine years later, plaintiff, Brunelle, an experienced builder and part owner of DeFelice Construction as well as a licensed real estate broker and former member of the zoning board of review in the neighboring town of Richmond, was interested in purchasing land in the vicinity of the University of Rhode Island upon which to construct and operate a so-called mini-storage or self-storage business as well as a professional office building. Brunelle, being friendly with Anna Prager (Prager), the South Kingstown town planner, inquired of her about available land in South Kingstown that would permit his intended construction projects and business. Prager told him that she was uncertain whether mini-storage units were a permitted use under the town zoning ordinance but that his best opportunity to find any land zoned for manufacturing or business use in South Kingstown would be in the area of the West Kingstown railroad station. Accordingly that advice from Prager led Brunelle to Penn-Central. He shortly thereafter entered into negotiations with Penn-Central to purchase a portion of its land holdings. Bru-nelle’s interest centered on a three-and-a-half acre portion of Penn-Central’s land that was shown on the town’s zoning map as zoned R-20 Residential, but which he had been told by Prager, and which he had himself determined was actually zoned M-l Manufacturing. He concluded that the lot’s zone depiction on the town’s zoning map was erroneous. As a result Brunelle negotiated a very reasonable $18,000 purchase price that his counsel concedes “reflected Penn-Central’s desire to sell the land as fast as possible and the fact that also that the property was listed as zoned residential on the town’s official zoning map.”

Brunelle, because of his experience in zoning matters, was aware that the three-and-a-half acre parcel that he and Penn-Central had carved out of Penn-Central’s larger land holdings would for zoning purposes constitute a substandard lot because it lacked sufficient lot street frontage on a public roadway. He attempted, without success, to condition his purchase of the lot upon Penn-Central first obtaining relief from the lot’s street frontage infirmity. Later Brunelle, prior to taking title to the lot, asked Penn-Central to join with him in making application to the town zoning board of review to request relief from the lot’s street frontage deficiency by way of a variance. Penn-Central also refused that request. Undaunted, Brunelle then filed his own individual application for variance relief and on the variance application form listed himself as “buyer under sales agreement,” adding that he wanted to purchase the lot but that it did not have the required and necessary lot street frontage and that “the portion of Lot 15 that he wishes to purchase is serviced only by a private road, Railroad Avenue.” Despite the fact that Brunelle lacked any legal standing to request the variance as a “buyer under sales agreement,” see Parise v. Zoning Board of Cranston, 92 R.I. 338, 168 A.2d 476 (1961); Tripp v. Zoning Board of Pawtucket, 84 R.I. 262, 123 A.2d 144 (1956), the town zoning board nonetheless, in order to accommodate him, granted his request for a residential use street frontage variance on October 23, 1985.

Some six weeks later, on December 11, 1985, Brunelle took title to the three-and-a-half acre lot, and the matter before us was spawned. Abandoning any intention of using his lot for residential purposes as expressed in his earlier variance request, he instead engaged local counsel, Margaret A. Laurence *1078 (Laurence), to have the town correct the alleged discrepancy between its official zoning map and the town zoning ordinance so as to show and place the lot in its true M-l Manufacturing zone as shown on the town’s comprehensive plan map. Laurence and/or Brunelle then began meeting and corresponding with various town officials, including the town solicitor, in order to determine how the lot’s zoning depiction could be changed. Brunelle determined that he should file a request to amend the zoning map and ordinance and, in August 1986, did petition and request the town council to amend the zoning designation for his lot.

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Bluebook (online)
700 A.2d 1075, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 251, 1997 WL 541267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunelle-v-town-of-south-kingstown-ri-1997.