Crossroads Dev. v. North Haven Water, No. Cv92-0331619 (Jun. 15, 1993)

1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 5912
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 15, 1993
DocketNo. CV92-0331619
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 5912 (Crossroads Dev. v. North Haven Water, No. Cv92-0331619 (Jun. 15, 1993)) 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
Crossroads Dev. v. North Haven Water, No. Cv92-0331619 (Jun. 15, 1993), 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 5912 (Colo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The appellant Crossroads Development Associates (Crossroads) has taken an appeal, pursuant to General Statutes 7-250, from a special benefit assessment levied against "two immediately adjacent parcels of land" it owns in North Haven by the Town of North Haven (Town) acting through its agency, the North Haven Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA). The total assessment of such benefits by the North Haven Water Pollution Control Authority in the amount of $53,882.39 was levied against Crossroads under General Statutes 7-249.

Crossroads' complaint is in five counts. In the first count Crossroads alleges its ownership of "two immediately adjacent parcels of land" in North Haven, one of approximately seven and a half acres known as 6 Devine Street (Premises I) and the adjacent parcel of approximately nine and a half acres known as 158 State Street (Premises II),1 that on Premises I there stands a commercial office building structure (Crossroads One) completed in May 1989 containing approximately 120,000 square feet of office space and that Premises II consists of vacant land zoned for similar commercial office uses and purposes. It further alleges that the final notice (Notice) on or about March 27, 1992 by the Town acting through the WPCA of special benefit assessments of $53,882.39 against Premises II was for the purpose of constructing certain sanitary sewer system improvements; that approximately six years prior to the March 27, 1992 Notice, Crossroads had applied to the Town and the WPCA for all zoning planning, site plan, building and other approvals to construct Crossroads One, all of which had been granted and that the Town and the WPCA required Crossroads, as a condition precedent to the land use, building and construction approval that Crossroads One, as its sole expense, construct a sanitary sewer line, approximately 775 feet long, along Devine Street, a town street adjacent to the premises as well as to construct an interconnection with this new Devine Street sewer line and the improvements to be constructed upon Premises I and that this was all done and that thereafter, Crossroads One was constructed, completed and interconnected with the Devine Street sewer line. CT Page 5914 Continuing, Crossroads alleges that, in addition to the above, a "stub line" extending within the premises beyond the sewer junction point with Crossroads One" was permitted and constructed for future connection with additional buildings planned for construction upon Premises II" and that in February 1989 the sewer line constructed along Devine Street was accepted and became operational and owned by the Town in February 1989.

Going on, Crossroads further alleges in its first count that approximately three years before March 27, 1992 Notice, it applied to all Town Commissions and municipal authorities for approval to construct two additional office buildings on Premises II, one consisting of 115,000 square feet of floor area and one consisting of 120,000 square feet of floor area which buildings were known as "Crossroads Two" and "Crossroads Three" and that all approvals for these were granted in January 1989 but that such approvals were conditioned on the interconnection of these two buildings with the "stub line" already referred to. Crossroads also alleges that it was at all times "contemplated as a consequence of land use and building approval "by the Town, the WPCA and Crossroads that all proposed and contemplated Crossroads office buildings would be serviced by sanitary sewers along those lines constructed by [Crossroads] and extending from the buildings in question through the line on [Crossroads] lying alone said Devine Street" and that at no time "prior to the Notice [of March 27, 1992] was it contemplated that [Crossroads] would be allowed or required to utilize any sewer system or facility in connection with the use of either Premises I or Premises II other than the Devine Street line constructed by [Crossroads] which is in place and fully functioning." Moreover, it alleges that "Although all sewer lines including the `stub line' have been constructed and are operative, Crossroads Two and Crossroads Three have not yet been built on Premises II." Finally, referring to the March 27, 1992 assessment of claimed benefits of $53,882.39 to Premises II coming as a consequence of the town's future extension of a sanitary sewer system along State Street, Crossroads alleges that, because of its own Devine Street sewer line construction already described, Premises II "receives no special or other benefit from the proposed construction of a sewer line lying along State Street. Accordingly, it contends the Premises II "are not benefited in any manner by the construction project contemplated by the Notice."

In its second count Crossroads realleges all the Allegations CT Page 5915 of the first count and adds the further allegation that "The special benefit levy of assessment exceeds the special benefit accruing to the plaintiff's Premises II in violation of Section 7.249 of the General Statutes."

The third count realleges all the allegations of the first count and adds one further allegation which is that "the special benefit assessment levied against the property of [Crossroads] is invalid as a matter of law as it exceeds the particular dollar benefit accruing to the property of [Crossroads]."

Crossroads, in its fourth count, again realleges all the allegations of the first count and adds one further allegation which is that "the difference between the market value of Premises II after the construction of the contemplated sewer line shall be the same as the market value of Premises II before the construction of the contemplated sewer line, and as a result there is no monetary value of the special benefit conferred upon Premises II."

Finally, the fifth count again realleges all the allegations of the first count and also adds one further allegation which is that "the special benefit assessment levied against Premises II exceeds the special benefit to Premises II by the entire amount of the assessment."

Crossroads, by way of relief, requests a finding that the assessment levied is unlawful and in violation of General Statutes 7-249 because it exceeds the special benefits to its property, a finding that its property is not "especially benefited by the construction of the sewer line project for which the special benefit assessment has been levied", a "repeal" of the special assessment as being invalid as a matter of law, costs of suit and reasonable attorneys fees.

The answer of the Town and WPCA in effect, denies almost all the substantive allegations of Crossroads' complaint.

In a word, although Crossroads' complaint contains five counts which we have set out in detail above, the legal gravamen of each is the same with the ultimate thrust being that the 158 State Street parcel (Premises II) is not benefited in any manner by the installation of the State Street sewer line because Premises II has access to the Devine Street sewer line by the stub connection on Premises I also known as 6 Devine Street. It CT Page 5916 follows, Crossroads basically asserts that, accordingly, the assessment of $53,882.39 of March 27, 1992 on 158 State Street is greater than the increase in market value occasioned by the construction of the State Street sewer line.

At this point it is appropriate to set out certain background facts; additional facts will be set out as necessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 5912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crossroads-dev-v-north-haven-water-no-cv92-0331619-jun-15-1993-connsuperct-1993.