Fitzgerald v. ZONING BD. OF NEWPORT

206 A.2d 635, 99 R.I. 221, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 421
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 4, 1965
DocketM. P. No. 1664
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 206 A.2d 635 (Fitzgerald v. ZONING BD. OF NEWPORT) 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
Fitzgerald v. ZONING BD. OF NEWPORT, 206 A.2d 635, 99 R.I. 221, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 421 (R.I. 1965).

Opinion

*222 Joslin, J.

This petition for certiorari was brought to review the -action of the zoning board granting an application for an exception to the zoning ordinance and permitting the applicants to erect sixteen apartment houses containing one hundred and fifty dwelling units on a tract of land presently zoned it-10. The petitioners- are neighboring property owners. Pursuant to the writ the respondent board certified the pertinent records to this court.

It appears that the particular area in question is located at the corner of Bateman and Carroll avenues in a neighborhood where although single-family residences predominate, two-family -dwellings and other limited uses are permitted. The applicants’ tract of land contains 9.155 acres and situated thereon are an old stone residence and a frame-structure once used as a stable. Both buildings are in a -state of disrepair.

After an extensive hearing at which testimony was received from real estate experts, city officials- and various remonstrants, the board granted the application but limited the number of family units to 150 rather than the 194 for which permission had been requested.

*223 At the outset we consider petitioners’ two motions to dismiss the application which were filed at the commencement of the hearing before the board and at the completion of the testimony were denied. They challenge on three separate grounds the jurisdiction of the board to entertain .the application.

The first ground is that a prior submission to the planning board created for the city by P. L. 1940, chap. 847, is required whenever a proposed development contemplates the laying out and construction of private roads. The petitioners point to no provision of chap. 847 which lends any support to that argument nor have we been able to find any. That act is principally concerned with the adoption of a master plan for the city and with procedures for obtaining approval for subdivisions of property “into house lots for sale or occupancy” ... It has no application here.

A second ground is that it would be “spot zoning” to permit the introduction of multi-unit dwellings into a predominantly single-family residential area. This attack is not directed at legislative “spot zoning” as was the case in Hadley v. Harold Realty Co., 97 R. I. 403, 198 A.2d 149, and in D’Angelo v. Knights of Columbus Bldg. Ass’n, 89 R. I. 76, but instead goes to an alleged illegal “spot zoning” by the board. There are instances where such an attack might have merit, but this is not one of them.

In Harrison v. Zoning Board of Review, 74 R. I. 135, this court held that there was wide opportunity for “spot zoning” under an ordinance which authorized a zoning board to grant an exception in circumstances where the requested use was deemed to be in harmony with the character of the neighborhood and appropriate to the district. In that case, however, neither the validity of the questioned portion of the ordinance nor the authority of the board to act thereunder was before the court. Two. years later, however, in Flynn v. Zoning Board of Review, 77 R. I. 118, the jurisdiction of the zoning board to consider an application for *224 an exception under the same ordinance provision was challenged on the ground that the almost unlimited discretion vested in the board constituted a power to “spot zone” and the court held that the provision was invalid.

In the instant case, however, our concern is with ordinance provisions substantially different from those considered in Flynn and Harrison. In those cases, the ordinance vested in the zoning board the same complete power which under the enabling legislation, now G. L. 1956, §45-24-13, had been conferred upon the city council. Here, however, secs-. 78-7 and 78-12(B) (3) (a) and (b) of the ordinance enumerate the uses which may be authorized as special exceptions in an R-10 district, and in sec. 78-12(G) (3) the rules limiting the exercise of the board’s power to grant an exception are detailed. Under this ordinance and on this application the board had no power to “spot zone.”

The final ground upon which the motions are predicated is that the applicants’ lot being in area something less than 200,000 square feet did not meet the minimum area requirements prescribed by sec. 78-9 of the ordinance. It provides that “No- building shall be erected, altered or relocated to accommodate or make provision for more than two families for each 10,000 square feet of lot area in the R 10 District * * The petitioners construe that section as requiring 5,000 square feet of lot area for each of the 194 family units sought in the application as filed or a minimum lot area of 970,000' square feet. We cannot agree with that construction. As we read sec. 78-9 the minimum area restriction applies to- a building rather than to the number of family units, and prohibits -the erection or alteration of the specified kind of building unless the lot size requirement is met. Carey v. Cassidy, 81 R. I. 411, upon which petitioners rely, does not suggest a contrary conclusion. There we held that a structure on a lot having less than the then required area could not be converted to a multi-family dwelling unit. That decision is consistent with the conclusion *225 we reach here. We find nothing in sec. 78-9 which barred consideration of the application.

The petitioners next contend that there is no legally competent evidence upon which the board could have rested its findings that the proposed use “would not tend to depreciate the value of property in the neighborhood or be otherwise detrimental to. the neighborhood or its residents or alter the neighborhood’s essential characteristics.”

• To sustain that position, petitioners are burdened with establishing that there is no competent legal evidence in the record upon which the disputed findings can rest. Dawson v. Zoning Board of Review, 97 R. I. 299, 197 A.2d 284; Laudati v. Zoning Board of Review, 91 R. I. 116. While they point to testimony of witnesses presented by them which would negative these findings, they ignore the positive testimony of a real estate agent and a city official to the contrary. In such circumstances they have failed to sustain their burden and the findings must stand.

We turn now to petitioners’ final contention that the decision should be quashed because the board failed to find that the proposed use will promote the public convenience and welfare.

The rules and standards governing the exercise of a board’s authority to grant exceptions are to be found in the controlling ordinance. The rules and standards which are there set out are conditions precedent to an exercise by the board of its authority to act affirmatively on an application for an exception. Kraemer v. Zoning Board of Review, 98 R. I.

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Bluebook (online)
206 A.2d 635, 99 R.I. 221, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-zoning-bd-of-newport-ri-1965.