ECRO CORPORATION v. Sanford

244 A.2d 265, 104 R.I. 337, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 652
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 18, 1968
Docket214-M. P
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 244 A.2d 265 (ECRO CORPORATION v. Sanford) 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
ECRO CORPORATION v. Sanford, 244 A.2d 265, 104 R.I. 337, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 652 (R.I. 1968).

Opinion

*338 Paolino, J.

This is a petition for certiorari to review the action of the town council of the town of Tiverton denying an application for a gasoline storage license which had been sought under the terms of the Tiverton ordinance regulating the storage of petroleum products. The writ was issued and pursuant thereto, and to an order entered in this court granting petitioners’ motion to supplement the record, the pertinent records have been certified to this court.

The petition, which is under oath, contains the following pertinent statements. 1 The petitioner, William Wolfson, is the owner of the land involved in this proceeding. It is located on Main Road between Reed and Randolph Avenues in the town of Tiverton, in a district zoned C-2 (Heavy *339 Commercial), by the local zoning ordinance. The petitioner, Ecro Corporation, 2 has agreed to purchase said land for the purpose of constructing thereon a gasoline filling station, 3 and petitioner, Atlantic Richfield Company, intends to operate the station under a lease with Ecro.

On July 11, 1966, the town council granted to the then owners of the land in question a gasoline storage license under sec. 11-10 through sec. 11-16 of the ordinance relating to storage of petroleum products. The license allowed the storage of 16,000 gallons of petroleum products for the term of one year unless sooner revoked and was granted subject to the granting of a building permit. The storage license has not been revoked. On April 15, 1967, the building inspector issued a building permit for a service station to Sibarco Stations, Inc. 4 Ecro agreed to purchase the land from Wolf'son provided it could be used to construct and operate a gasoline filling station thereon. On April 26, 1967, Ecro obtained a transfer to it of the storage license which had been granted to the previous owners of the land.

Sometime after Ecro agreed to purchase the land from Wolf son, it was learned that the storage license issued to the prior owners on July 11, 1966 was defective because the town council failed to give notice by publication as required by sec. 11-12 of the storage ordinance. Thereupon petitioners, Ecro and Atlantic Richfield, filed a new application, dated May 15, 1967, for the issuance of a license to store on the premises for commercial purposes petroleum products with a capacity of 16,000 gallons. This application was filed under the provisions of the ordinance regualting the storage of petroleum products and notice was *340 given by publication of a public hearing to be held on June 5, 1967.

At that hearing, several objectors appeared and. opposed the issuance of the license on the grounds that another gasoline station on Main Road was not warranted; that it would result in excessive competition; and that it would constitute a traffic hazard. The petitioners, Ecro and Atlantic Richfield, presented evidence that they had and would comply with all of the applicable requirements of the storage ordinance. They also informed the town council that in reliance upon the existence of the “license” issued on July 11, 1966, Ecro entered into a purchase and sales agreement to buy this property.

At the conclusion of the hearing on June 5, 1967, the town council took the matter under advisement. Then, at a special meeting held on July 12, 1967, upon advice of the town solicitor, they denied the application on the grounds that

“* * * there is no provision in the Zoning Ordinance for gasoline filling stations, and also due to the fact that the storage of petroleum and petroleum products is allowed by Special Exception only in an M-2 zone.”

The petitioners contend that the action of the town council is illegal and in excess of its jurisdiction as a licensing body. They base their claim that they are entitled to a storage licnese as a matter of right on their alleged compliance with the requirements of the Tiverton storage ordinance and the fact that there is no restriction imposed by the Tiverton zoning ordinance on the storage of up to 16,-000 gallons of gasoline in connection with the operation of a retail gasoline service station. The respondents, in addition to opposing these contentions, allege that the town council lacked authority to grant such a license since petitioners lacked standing to apply for it.

We first consider the question of standing. The respondents base their contention on the fact that the owner of *341 the land in question did not join in petitioners’ application for the storage license thereby causing petitioners to lack the requisite standing to apply for such a license.

It is undisputed that neither Ecro nor Atlantic had legal title to the land. The respondents contend that neither of them had any interest, separate and apart from ownership, which might possibly confer standing to seek a gasoline storage license under the storage ordinance. They maintain that since the details of the alleged agreement are unknown and since there is no evidence that the agreement, if it exists, is a binding purchase agreement, Ecro and Atlantic have failed to establish any interest in the land giving them standing to apply for the gasoline storage license.

In arguing that neither Ecro nor Atlantic had standing to apply for such permit, respondents rely heavily on our recent decision in Packham v. Zoning Board of Review, 103 R. I. 467, 238 A.2d 387. In that case the Sun Oil Company applied to the zoning board of the city of Cranston for a special exception for permission to erect a gasoline service station on two contiguous parcels of land, only one of which was owned by it. The owner of the other lot did not join in the application. Sun Oil Company claimed standing on the basis of an agreement to purchase the other lot from the owner, contingent upon the granting of the exception. Because the record failed to disclose the precise nature of the agreement between Sun Oil and the owner of the other lot and because we found nothing in the record to support the respondent’s argument in that case that “the agreement was to be binding upon” the grant of the relief sought, we quashed the record without prejudice to the right of the applicant to again apply for an exception in order to establish the character of the agreement. In holding that “* * * the legislature contemplated that standing to obtain an exception would be conferred *342 upon those who have some right, title, or interest in the land,” we expressly pointed out at page 389 that our holding there was based upon the signifiance which we attached “* * * to the purpose for which exceptions are established.” ■

The application in the case at bar is one requesting the town council to issue a license to store petroleum products for commercial purposes. It was brought under secs.

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Bluebook (online)
244 A.2d 265, 104 R.I. 337, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ecro-corporation-v-sanford-ri-1968.