Constas v. Plan. Zon. Comm., Greenwich, No. Cv89-103061 (Feb. 14, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 998
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1991
DocketNo. CV89-103061 CV89-104455
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 998 (Constas v. Plan. Zon. Comm., Greenwich, No. Cv89-103061 (Feb. 14, 1991)) 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
Constas v. Plan. Zon. Comm., Greenwich, No. Cv89-103061 (Feb. 14, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 998 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION I. History of the Case:

These two appeals were consolidated by the court, Cioffi, J., on December 18, 1989. Plaintiffs in the first action ["Constas v. PZC"], Harry T. Constas.1 Mary T. Kinahan, Edward C. Bloom and Eleanor S. Bloom, appeal from the decision of the defendant Greenwich Planning and Zoning Commission [the "Commission"] granting the application of defendant Brunswick School, Inc. [Brunswick" or the "Applicant"] for preliminary site plan approval for a project on Brunswick's Maple Avenue property known as the Lower School. Plaintiffs in the second action ["Kinahan v. PZC"], Mary T. Kinahan, Edward C. Bloom and Eleanor S. Bloom, appeal from a subsequent decision of the defendant Commission granting the application of defendant Brunswick for a special permit and final site plan approval for the same project.

By application dated April 25, 1989, Brunswick applied to the Commission for preliminary site plan approval to construct a 10, 663 square foot addition and two (2) faculty apartments on its Maple Street property, referred to as the Lower School, which is located in an R-20, "Single Family Residence 20,000 square feet", zone. (Record I, Item 1, Application; Item 2, Affidavit and Exhibits; Item 44, Building Zone Map.)2 See Greenwich Building Zone Regulations, section 6-2, 6-13 (November 1986, amended to November 30, 1988) (Record I, Item 43; Record II, Item 53) [the "Regulations"]. The application also indicated that the total number of parking spaces on the property would be reduced by three (3) from 57 to 54. (Record I, Item 1.) By letter dated April 27, 1989, Brunswick requested a special permit, a requirement under section 6-101 of the Regulations when new construction will result in a structure(s) in excess of 150,000 cubic feet in volume above established grade in an R-20 zone. (Record I, Item 5, Letter, 4/27/89.) Regulations, section 6-101.

Public hearings on Brunswick's application were held on June 6, 1989 and June 27, 1989. (Record I, Items 10, 15, Legal Notices; Items 14, 21, Transcripts.) At its regular meeting on August 8, 1989, the Commission voted to deny without prejudice Brunswick's application for a special permit but to advise Brunswick to proceed to a final site plan subject to specific modifications to be resolved prior to submission of an application for final site plan approval and a reapplication for a special permit. (Record I, Item 25, Legal Notice; Item 27, Letter of Decision.) Notice of the Commission's denial of the special permit was published on August 16, 1989. (Record I, Item 25.) Plaintiffs in Constas v. PZC challenged the resolution and decision of the Commission granting Brunswick's application for preliminary site plan approval and advising Brunswick to proceed CT Page 1000 to a final site plan.

By letters dated September 13, 1989 and September 14, 1989, and by application dated September 13, 1989, Brunswick reapplied to the Commission for a special permit and applied for final site plan approval to construct the 10,663 square foot addition and two (2) faculty apartments. (Record II, Item 1, Letter, 9/13/89; Item 2, Application; Item 12, Letter, 9/14/89.) This application also showed a reduction in parking spaces from 57 to 54. (Record II, Item 2.)

A public hearing was held on Brunswick's application on October 12, 1989, following the Commission's regular meeting. (Record II, Item 17, Legal Notice; Item 18, Transcript; Item 44, Minutes, 10/12/89.) At the close of the public hearing on October 12, 1989, the Commission's regular meeting was reconvened and the Commission approved the requested special permit and final site plan with specified modifications to be "resolved prior to the issuance of a building permit unless otherwise noted." (Record II, Item 44; Item 43, Letter of Decision.) Notice of the Commission's decision to approve the special permit and final site plan was published on October 19, 1989. (Record II, Item 42, Legal Notices.) Plaintiffs in Kinahan v. PZC appeal the decision approving the special permit and final site plan.3 At the hearing on appeal, June 27 and 29, 1990, the court, Leheny, J., found plaintiffs to be aggrieved.

II. Aggrievement

The Court has subject matter jurisdiction in this appeal. Procedural irregularities caused Harry T. Constas to withdraw as Plaintiff but he remained as counsel of record for the other Plaintiffs. (See Zoarski, et al. v. Branford Planning and Zoning Commission et al., 15 CLT 48.)

III. Issues

Plaintiffs and Brunswick have submitted a total of nine (9) briefs bearing the docket numbers and addressing the merits of Constas v. PZC or Kinahan v. PZC or both. The Commission has adopted Brunswick's briefs dated February 5, 1990 and April 4, 1990. Plaintiffs raise the same issues in both appeals. Floor Area Ratio/Merger

Plaintiffs first argue that Brunswick's proposal violated the floor area ratio ["FAR"] limitation applicable to an R-20 zone. The Regulations define FAR as "the ratio of the floor area . . . of a building to the total lot area on which the building is located." Regulations, section 6-5 (a)(23). The FAR in an R-20 zone is .25. Regulations, section 6-205 (a). A lot is defined as "a parcel of CT Page 1001 land occupied or to be occupied by a building or group of buildings and their accessory uses, including such open spaces as are required by these regulations and such other open spaces as are used in connection with the buildings." Regulations, section 6-5 (a)(33).

Plaintiffs claim that the property referred to as the Lower School and described as extending between Maple and Maher Avenues is made up of four (4) lots, each subject to a 25% FAR limitation, and that Brunswick is attempting to "transfer" the right to build on 25% of each of the smaller lots, now only containing faculty residences and a business office, to the lot on which the school building is located. Plaintiffs argue that no merger of said four (4) lots has occurred and that it may not occur because residential property may not merge with school property. Plaintiffs cite no authority for this proposition.

Defendants respond that the four (4) parcels are one lot, as that term is defined and used in the Regulations, that the boundary lines disappeared for zoning purposes that all buildings thereon are principal educational uses, or, in the alternative, permitted accessory uses, and that each parcel was granted special exception status as a non-profit educational use. Defendants claim that the facts support a finding that merger has occurred, and therefore, Brunswick's proposal satisfied the FAR limitation.

"[C]ontiguous land owned by the same person does not necessarily constitute a single lot." Marino v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 22 Conn. App. 606, 609 (1990) (citing Molic v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 18 Conn. App. 159, 164-65 (1989)); Schultz v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 144 Conn. 332, 338 (1957). Also, the "taxation of multiple parcels of land by the assessor's office as one tract does not compel a finding of merger." Marino, supra at 609. Similarly, "the fact that a deed description references multiple lots from a map filed in the land records does not compel a finding of an absence of merger." Id.

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/constas-v-plan-zon-comm-greenwich-no-cv89-103061-feb-14-1991-connsuperct-1991.