Commissioner of Transp. v. Jarvis, No. Cv 98-0067464 (Dec. 16, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15769
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2002
DocketNo. CV 98-0067464
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15769 (Commissioner of Transp. v. Jarvis, No. Cv 98-0067464 (Dec. 16, 2002)) 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
Commissioner of Transp. v. Jarvis, No. Cv 98-0067464 (Dec. 16, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15769 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

CORRECTED
MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The above captioned case involved the taking of 0.52 of an acre of undeveloped land owned by Alice C. Jarvis fronting on Route 83, also known as Talcottville Road in the town of Vernon, under the commissioner's statutory powers, including § 13a-73 (f) of the General Statutes whose stated purpose is the protection of the "safety of the traveling public to and from any state highway or state highway appurtenances when in his judgment such limitation of access is necessary to permit the convenient, safe and expeditious flow of traffic." The defendant in this appeal seeks the reassessment of damages for the taking and asserts that the commissioner's assessment of damages as $165,200 is inadequate.

This memorandum of decision is being filed simultaneously with the court's opinion in a companion case, Commissioner of Transportation v.Jarvis Realty Company, Superior Court, judicial district of Tolland at Rockville, Docket No. 98-0067360, because the cases were tried together and the respective takings involved the same project, namely, the town's decision to relocate a town road, Wilshire Road, because of the safety concerns of town officials about the preexisting multiple access points to and from the state highway and the potential for conflicting traffic movements on the part of motorists. These traffic concerns were generated by the fact that before the takings, vehicular access to, and egress from, a bowling facility just north of the Alice Jarvis property, known as "Vernon Lanes" that was built in 1963 and operated by Jarvis Realty Company continuously since that time, were available to its patrons by means of three separate curb cuts into the highway, but only two such driveways remained as a result of the project, which included the relocation of the former intersection of Route 83 with Wilshire Road a short distance south of the former intersection which was signalized for bowling alley patrons as well as for vehicles traveling on the relocated town road. CT Page 15770

The state's evidence in the Alice Jarvis case included the testimony of Richard Armstrong, the project coordinator for the relocation of Wilshire Road in relation to Route 83, who testified that the town initiated the project in 1994 and that he worked with the town planner and the town's consulting engineers, and "it was their concept to do what has been done." He also stated that the state was responsible for the review of the scope and design of the work as it progressed to ensure that it met the traffic safety concerns of the town as well as those of the department of transportation.

Another state traffic engineer who was involved in the project, Vincent Avino, testified in the Jarvis Realty Company phase of the hearing that it was the department's policy to combine driveways that enter and exit state highways that carry high volumes of traffic, such as Route 83 at its intersection with Hockanum Boulevard from the west. He also said that the relocation of Wilshire Road to that newly signalized intersection eliminated what would have otherwise been two unnecessarily closely spaced traffic lights, and that it was his opinion that the project improved the safety of motorists traveling on Route 83 as well as the town's concerns about the safety of patrons entering or leaving the bowling alley.

In the course of Armstrong's testimony relating to the Alice Jarvis taking, he was asked whether he knew of any zoning issues, particularly as to variances, pertaining to the subject property and his reply was that he knew of only one, namely, the statutorily mandated variance under the provisions of § 48-24 of the General Statutes which requires that where there is a taking of only a part of an owner's land, and if "the remaining portion of such property does not conform to the area requirements of existing zoning regulations [a condemning authority shall] obtain a zoning variance for such remaining portion of property from the local zoning board of appeals before condemning any portion of such property." He then identified plaintiff's Exhibit I, dated August 26, 1997, as a variance granted by the zoning board of appeals of the town of Vernon to the department of transportation pursuant to the statute, that reduced the required lot area of the subject property from 3 acres to 2.56 acres for the purpose of relocating Wilshire Road before the partial condemnation of the Alice Jarvis property, notice of which was given by the condemning authority on July 17, 1998.

The defendant called Gene Bolles, the chief building official and zoning enforcement officer for the town of Vernon, to testify as to the open space requirements of the planned commercial zone as they apply to the Alice Jarvis property. He stated that § 4.21.2 of the regulations CT Page 15771 for the planned commercial zone that impose open space requirements, which have remained unchanged since the taking in 1998, require a minimum lot area of 3 acres and a minimum lot width of 180 feet.

Prior to the taking the lot width of her frontage on Route 83 was 242.3 feet, but after the taking the width was reduced to 69 feet, and Bolles testified that he could not issue a building permit or a zoning permit for the remaining portion of the property because General Statutes §8-3 (f) prohibits him from doing so where such permits are sought for nonconforming buildings, uses or structures, and a site plan showing any such nonconformity would have to be rejected. When he was shown a topographic map of the remaining land he described the elevation and slope of the land as rising "dramatically", and also mentioned the fact that under the town's general zoning regulations, acreage with slopes greater than 15% was not considered to be developable.

When Bolles was asked upon cross-examination to predict the chances for the granting of a variance where, as in this case, the town itself had initiated the project, he declined to do so, but also noted that the requested variances had been granted or denied on a case by case basis depending on whether or not the applicant had satisfied the board that a bona fide hardship existed. He also stated that "based on past history, what the Board looks at very carefully is whether or not it's a self-created condition [but in this case it] was not self-created by the property owner [and there's] no question about that [and if] you convince them that this would be in the best interests of the development of the [town], that it's for the public good [then this] appears to be a good application."

The defendant's appraiser was Peter Marsele, whose inspection of the premises was made on December 23, 1999, and formed the basis for two different appraisals by him of the same property dated, respectively, April 3, 2000 and May 2, 2001, the first of which estimated the damages for the taking at $414,000, and the second of which reassessed damages at $695,000. In his responses to questions put to him by the court about the reasons for the discrepancies in the two reports between his original conclusion concerning the highest and best use of the remaining portion of the Alice Jarvis property, he acknowledged that his opinion in that respect "was erroneous, and not only erroneous, but it was partially omitting things that should have been in there [and that's] why I changed the whole method [and] context of the second report versus the first report."

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Related

Budney v. Ives
239 A.2d 482 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1968)
Clarmar Realty Co. v. Redevelopment Authority
383 N.W.2d 890 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1986)
Greene v. Huntington
46 A. 883 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1900)
Commissioner v. Towpath Associates
767 A.2d 1169 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-transp-v-jarvis-no-cv-98-0067464-dec-16-2002-connsuperct-2002.