Favrow v. Commissioner of Environmental Prot., No. 364442 (Jul. 26, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6067
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1991
DocketNo. 364442
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6067 (Favrow v. Commissioner of Environmental Prot., No. 364442 (Jul. 26, 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
Favrow v. Commissioner of Environmental Prot., No. 364442 (Jul. 26, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6067 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The defendant, pursuant to General Statutes section 22a-25, and acting by and through the State Comptroller under the authority of General Statutes section 48-12, acquired a permanent easement by eminent domain on and over 10,890 square feet of the premises owned by the plaintiffs, Leroy H. Favrow and Lucy M. Favrow, and known as No. 440 Main Street, Newington, Connecticut, for the construction, maintenance, improvement, repair and/or replacement of a flood control project commonly known as Piper/Mill Brook Flood Control Project, Newington, Connecticut, on April 19, 1989. Damages assessed by the defendant in the amount of $4800 have been deposited with the clerk of the court, where said sum still remains.

The permanent easement acquired by the defendant contains 0.25 of an acre, or approximately 75% of the lot area known as No. 440 Main Street, and is shown as Parcel 10-20 on a map entitled: "Map of Land to be Acquired by the State of Connecticut, Department of Environmental Protection, Piper and Mill Brooks, South Branch of the Park River Watershed Project, Newington, Connecticut, January 1987, Scale 1" = 50', Sheet 8. Strauss Engineering Associates, Inc., Mervyn F. Strauss, L.S., President."

A more particular description is as follows: Commencing at a point on the easterly street line of Main Street at the remaining land of the plaintiffs, thence running N 74 degrees 30' 31" E along the remaining land of the plaintiffs a distance of 189.77 feet to a point at land n/o/f/o Arthur Olesen and Jessie S. Olesen; thence running S 33 degrees 31' 28" W along land of the State of Connecticut a distance of 60.00 feet to a point; thence running, southwesterly along a curve to the right whose radius is 136.88 feet along land of the State of Connecticut a distance of 126.00 feet to a point; thence running S 86 degrees 15' 57" W along land of the State of Connecticut a distance of 45.40 feet to a point at the easterly street line of Main Street; thence running N 00 degrees 51' 57" E along the easterly line of Main Street a distance of 47.26 feet to a point; thence running N 00 degrees 10' 27" E along the easterly line of Main Street a distance of 16.04 feet to the point and place of beginning.

The plaintiffs, pursuant to General Statutes section 8-132, on July 10, 1989, appealed from the defendant's assessment of damages as inadequate under the law. A year later, on July 12, 1990, the plaintiffs sought leave to file an "Amended Appeal and Application for Review of Statement of Compensation and Claims for Other and Further Relief." The defendant objected to this request on the ground that it sought to add new issues to the proceeding to the prejudice of the state. The court (Freed, J.) CT Page 6069 overruled the objection and allowed the amendment. In this pleading the plaintiffs alleged a second count claiming damages for an inverse condemnation and seeking, pursuant to General Statutes Section 48-17b, reasonable costs, disbursements and expenses, including reasonable attorney, appraisal and engineering fees, actually incurred in these proceedings. In addition, the plaintiffs claimed damages in tort to their adjoining property caused by the construction activities of the defendant's servants, agents, employees and contractors.

The following facts are relevant to this proceeding: On June 12, 1985, the plaintiffs acquired by warranty deed two parcels of land situated in Newington and known as Nos. 434 and 440 Main Street. No. 434 Main Street contains their single-family home and has a frontage of 75 feet. It is bounded northerly 225 feet; easterly 74.9 feet; southeasterly 35 feet; southerly by the subject premises, No. 440 Main Street, 183 feet; and westerly by Main Street 75 feet. No. 440 Main Street, being a vacant lot adjoining the home lot on the south, has a frontage of 103.3 feet. It is pie-shaped on the south and east borders, following, the bend in Mill Brook as its water flows from Main Street, first in an easterly direction, then northeasterly onto and across Lot No. 434 Main Street. The subject premises are bounded northerly by No. 434 Main Street, 183 feet; easterly and southerly 231.40 feet; and westerly by Main Street 103.3 feet.

The property to the south and east of the subject premises and to the southeast, in part, of No. 434 Main Street, are portions of a subdivision of eight lots established in 1939 and known as "Mountain View Heights." The parcels of land now known as Nos. 434 and 440 Main Street were then owned by the developer and are shown on the tract survey. This map depicts that Mill Brook, which formerly flowed northerly and easterly through the center of these plots of land, was relocated to its present course so that it would run over the southerly and easterly portions of what is now No. 440 Main Street and the rear or easterly part of what is now No. 434 Main Street. At some points of Nos. 434 and 440 Main Street, and depending on the brooks' water flow, the plaintiffs' dry land extends beyond the brook's banks.

On December 31, 1951, a building permit was issued to Mountain View, Homes, Inc., for the construction of a single-family dwelling, 34 feet by 24.33 feet in size, with a detached garage, 21 feet by 12 feet in size, on lot No. 434 Main Street. A certificate of occupancy was granted on July 29, 1952. This is the home now owned and occupied by the plaintiffs adjacent to the subject property.

On or about January 17, 1952, another building permit was issued to Mountain View Homes, Inc., the developer of the subdivision adjoining the subject premises, for the construction of a similar dwelling and garage on Lot No. 440 Main Street. For reasons not evident, this permit was later withdrawn and construction plans were abandoned. Subsequently, the residence and lot at. "No. 434 Main Street" were acquired by the plaintiffs as the "FIRST PIECE," and the extra lot at "No. 440 Main Street" as the "SECOND PIECE," in their purchase of the premises six years ago. CT Page 6070

By their deed the plaintiffs acquired two separate parcels of land, No. 434 Main Street with a house erected thereon, and an adjacent building lot known as No. 440 Main Street. The second lot "No. 440 Main Street" is so identified in the land records and in the plaintiffs' deed by the house number assigned and reserved on the town records for any future dwelling erected thereon. It was their understanding that the extra lot was available for building upon the obtaining of necessary permits. Even though they had no existing plans for building on the lot at the time of taking, they considered they were the owners of an extra building lot available for that purpose by their deed for which they had paid consideration. Their deed was taken "subject to any and all provisions of any ordinances, municipal regulation or public or private law," confirming that the two pieces of property were subject to the appropriate regulations of the law.

Lot No. 440 Main Street is located in an R-12 Residential Zone, which permits the construction of a one-family detached dwelling with accessory uses and structures. The relevant minimum requirements for this zone are as follows: lot area 12,000 square feet; and lot frontage 80 feet. Before the taking the lot was conforming. Its area was 14,490 square feet and the frontage was 103 feet. The taking of the permanent easement of 10,890 square feet reduced the lot area by 75% to 3600 square feet, and the lot frontage to 40 feet, making the lot grossly nonconforming and a variance for possible residential use unattainable.

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/favrow-v-commissioner-of-environmental-prot-no-364442-jul-26-1991-connsuperct-1991.