Cameo Park Homes, Inc. v. Planning & Zoning Commission

192 A.2d 886, 150 Conn. 672, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 11, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 192 A.2d 886 (Cameo Park Homes, Inc. v. Planning & Zoning Commission) 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
Cameo Park Homes, Inc. v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 192 A.2d 886, 150 Conn. 672, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 255 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Alcorn, J.

The plaintiff owns about 19.86 acres of vacant land situated in an RS-3 district in Stratford. Under §4.2 of the Stratford zoning regulations, the uses in an RS-3 district are restricted primarily to one-family dwellings on lots having a minimum area of 10,000 square feet. See Stratford Zoning Regs. §§2.1, 4.1.1 (1957). Section *674 5.4.2 of the regulations provides, however, that in such a district garden apartment developments covering not more than twenty acres “may be approved as special cases as provided in Section 20 of these regulations.” A garden apartment development is defined as “a group of two or more residence buildings, each of the buildings of which shall include not less than four . . . and not more than nine . . . separate dwelling units, which shall occupy with their accessory buildings not more than 25% of the tract of land or plot which they occupy.” A dwelling unit as used in the definition means “a suite of rooms . . . arranged, intended, designed for, or used as a place of residence of a single family of not more than five . . . persons or a group of not to exceed five . . . individuals living together cooperatively.” Stratford Zoning Regs. §5.4.1 (1957). The regulations designate the uses defined as “special cases,” of which garden apartments is one, as “permitted uses in the districts under which they are named, subject to approval by the [Town Planning and Zoning] Commission as to each specific use” and state that “[e]ach of these uses is declared to be of such peculiar and unusual nature in its effect on an area that in order to have it comply with the purposes of the zoning regulations it is necessary to consider it as a special case.” § 20.2. The regulations require that applications for approval of all uses named as special cases shall be made to the town planning and zoning commission. § 20.1. The function of the commission in passing on such an application is defined in § 20.2. 1

*675 The plaintiff applied to the commission for approval, as a special case, of the proposed use of its land for the construction of garden apartments, as provided in the regulations. Following a regularly called public hearing, the commission denied the application, and, from that decision, the plaintiff appealed to the Court of Common Pleas. The court sustained the action of the commission and rendered judgment dismissing the appeal, and the plaintiff appeals from that judgment, claiming that the court erred in failing to conclude that the commission had acted illegally, arbitrarily and in abuse of its discretion in denying the application.

We may assume, since it is not in dispute, that the physical plan for the proposed use complied with the detailed requirements fixed by the regulations for garden apartments. Stratford Zoning Begs. § 5.4. The commission, in its decision, set forth its reasons for denying the application and concluded that garden apartments in the area involved would increase the density of population *676 above the prescribed maximum for the zone and would affect the mode of living in the area by creating problems of safety for children; that the limitation of privacy due to the increase of traffic would tend to decrease the value of surrounding homes; that the comprehensive plan contemplates that the major portion of the land in question be preserved as a natural recreation and stream protection area; and that the proposed use is not in harmony with the intent of the commission which wrote the regulations. The appeal questions the validity of the reasons assigned by the commission for its action and asserts, in substance, that, since the proposed use is permitted in an RS-3 zone and complies with the regulations prescribed for garden apartments, the commission was powerless to do more than specify such reasonable restrictions as it considered necessary, as provided in § 20.2. The statement of the proposition carries its own refutation because, if the plaintiff’s claim that a garden apartment which complied with the requirements of the zoning regulation must necessarily be allowed in a zone in which such a use is permitted were correct, then the further provisions in the regulations requiring approval “as to each specific use” and declaring that such a use is “of such peculiar and unusual nature in its effect on an area that in order to have it comply with the purposes of the zoning regulations it is necessary to consider it as a special case” would be meaningless. The regulations charge the commission with the responsibility of approving such a use only “after making special application of . . . [the zoning] regulations in harmony with their general intent.” The commission’s power to stipulate such restrictions as appear to it “to be reasonable and the minimum necessary to protect *677 property values in the district as a whole and the public health, safety and welfare” necessarily implies the power to withhold its approval of the proposed use in its entirety if the commission finds that the circumstances warrant that action.

The problem then becomes simply whether the reasons assigned by the commission for its action find reasonable support in the record before it and whether the reasons are pertinent to the considerations which the commission was required to apply under § 20.2 of the regulations. So long as it appears that an honest judgment has been reasonably and fairly exercised by the commission after full hearing, courts should be cautious about disturbing its decision. Kutcher v. Town Planning Commission, 138 Conn. 705, 710, 88 A.2d 538. Courts cannot substitute their judgment for the wide and liberal discretion vested in the local zoning authority when it is acting within its prescribed legislative powers. Summ v. Zoning Commission, 150 Conn. 79, 89, 186 A.2d 160; DeMeo v. Zoning Commission, 148 Conn. 68, 75, 167 A.2d 454; Tarasovic v. Zoning Commission, 147 Conn. 65, 71, 157 A.2d 103. The courts allow zoning authorities this discretion in determining the public need and the means of meeting it, because the local authority lives close to the circumstances and conditions which create the problem and shape the solution. See Wade v. Town Plan & Zoning Commission, 145 Conn. 592, 595, 145 A.2d 597. It is only where the local zoning authority has acted arbitrarily or illegally and thus abused the discretion vested in it that the courts can grant relief on appeal. Gordon v. Zoning Board, 145 Conn. 597, 604, 145 A.2d 746.

In Summ v. Zoning Commission, supra, we discussed § 8-2 of the General Statutes as amended in *678

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Bluebook (online)
192 A.2d 886, 150 Conn. 672, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameo-park-homes-inc-v-planning-zoning-commission-conn-1963.