Fishman v. City of Stamford

267 A.2d 443, 159 Conn. 116, 1970 Conn. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 3, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 267 A.2d 443 (Fishman v. City of Stamford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fishman v. City of Stamford, 267 A.2d 443, 159 Conn. 116, 1970 Conn. LEXIS 455 (Colo. 1970).

Opinion

King, C. J.

The plaintiff is the owner of a small parking lot which is within the redevelopment area in Stamford covered by the “Southeast Quadrant Bedevelopment Plan Extended”. The plan was adopted on February 20, 1963, by the Urban Bedevelopment Commission of Stamford, hereinafter referred to as U.B.C. There is no claim that proper statutory procedure was not in all respects followed in the adoption of the plan in 1963. A public hearing on the plan was held on January 15,1963, and it was approved by the Board of Bepresentatives of Stamford on March 4,1963. The plan embraces the entire downtown Stamford area, comprising about 130 acres, and of a total of 550 structures on the land involved, 424 will be demolished.

The plaintiff’s land is an interior parcel, contiguous, on the north and west, to property also within the redevelopment area belonging to St. John’s Boman Catholic Church, hereinafter referred to as the church. On the other two sides, the plaintiff’s land is bounded by rights of way. Its area is about 10,000 square feet, or slightly less than one-quarter of an acre. Two old shacks are the only buildings on it.

*118 The original redevelopment plan provided, inter alia, for the building of 100 to 150 units of nonprofit moderate income housing on land which was to be taken from a portion of the church property presently used as a convent but which was to be replaced by other contiguous land so as to avoid materially reducing the area of the church’s holdings. Certain questions arising out of this exchange of land with the church are attacked on grounds which will hereinafter be more fully considered in part II of this opinion.

Although the plaintiff’s property was within the 1963 redevelopment area, U.R.C. had not originally intended to acquire it and had consequently marked it on the plan as “not to be acquired”, the same action it had taken in the case of certain other properties which it felt could suitably remain unchanged although they were located within the redevelopment area. Since the plaintiff’s property was within that area, it was subject to the controls of the plan, as the plaintiff must have known.

On May 25,1965, U.R.C. decided that it was neces-. sary to increase, by more than 100 percent, the units of moderate income housing from the original number shown in the 1963 plan to not less than 350 units. This in turn required modifications in height and density limitations and also more land' from the church. On November 30, 1965, U.R.C. voted to take the plaintiff’s property, and on October 14, 1966, the plan was modified to include the plaintiff’s parking lot as property to be taken for reuse.

I

The plaintiff makes two basic claims of illegality with respect to the modification of the plan to provide for the taking of his property. The first is that *119 U.R.C. did not act in accordance with the statutory requirements when it changed the plan to take the plaintiff’s property, and the second is that, if statutory requirements purported to permit such a taking, they were, at least as to the plaintiff, unconstitutional in that his property was being taken without due process of law in violation of the fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution and of article first, § 10, of the Connecticut constitution of 1965.

(a)

The plaintiff claims that, once the 1963 plan had been properly approved in accordance with § 8-127 of the General Statutes (Rev. to 1966), any change in that plan, and in particular the change in removing the plaintiff’s property from the “not to be acquired” category and actually taking it for reuse, in effect amounted to the adoption of a new plan of redevelopment and required compliance with all of the provisions of § 8-127 applicable to the adoption of an original redevelopment plan.

This claim is without merit. It completely ignores General Statutes (Rev. to 1966) § 8-136, which provides for modification of a redevelopment plan. Under its provisions, if “the proposed modification will substantially change the redevelopment plan as previously approved [under § 8-127] by the legislative body, the modification must similarly be approved by the legislative body”. Whether the taking of the plaintiff’s property “will substantially change” the 1963 redevelopment plan is a matter which need not be determined in the present case since U.R.C., out of abundance of caution, did submit the proposed modification to the legislative body, which in Stamford is the Board of Representatives, *120 and, on December 5, 1966, that body approved the modifications.

It is true that “[s]trict compliance with each of the enumerated steps in the statute [§§ 8-127 and 8-136] is a condition to the validity of the entire proceeding concerning a redevelopment plan. . . . The rule applicable to the corporate authorities of municipal bodies [here, U.R.C.] is that when the mode in which their power is to be exercised is prescribed, that mode must be followed.” Sheehan v. Altschuler, 148 Conn. 517, 523-524, 172 A.2d 897. Here, however, the plaintiff makes no claim that the 1963 plan was not adopted in accordance with all the statutory requirements, including those of § 8-127. The modification of the plan in 1966 was also in strict accordance with the provisions of § 8-136. The plaintiff’s claim that the modification of the original plan so as to take the plaintiff’s parking lot was invalid because of failure to follow the applicable statutory procedure is without semblance of merit.

(b)

The second claim of the plaintiff, and that on which he seems to place great stress, is that, even if the statutory requirements were followed, they were inadequate to conform to the requirements of due process insofar as the taking of the plaintiff’s land under the facts of this case are concerned.

The plaintiff points to the fact that the legend “not to be acquired” on the map covering the 1963 plan led him to believe that his property would not be taken. Prior to the U.R.C.’s decision in 1965 to modify the plan, it is probably true that neither the plaintiff nor the U.R.C. itself anticipated that the parking lot would be taken. It was the increased need and demand for moderate rental housing, aris *121 ing after 1963, which led the U.R.C. to modify the plan and, as incidental thereto, to take the plaintiff’s property. The plaintiff claims that due process requirements made necessary a hearing on the necessity and legality of the taking before the taking actually became final. This claim is contrary to settled Connecticut law since at least as far back as Water Commissioners v. Johnson, 86 Conn. 151, 162, 84 A. 727, decided in 1912. It is also contrary to the general rule elsewhere. 1 Nichols, Eminent Domain (Rev. 3d Ed.) §4.103 [4], p. 504; 26 Am. Jur. 2d 769, Eminent Domain, § 112.

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Bluebook (online)
267 A.2d 443, 159 Conn. 116, 1970 Conn. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fishman-v-city-of-stamford-conn-1970.