Forest Walk, LLC v. Water Pollution Control Authority

968 A.2d 345, 291 Conn. 271, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 21, 2009
DocketSC 18239
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 968 A.2d 345 (Forest Walk, LLC v. Water Pollution Control Authority) 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
Forest Walk, LLC v. Water Pollution Control Authority, 968 A.2d 345, 291 Conn. 271, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 110 (Colo. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

KATZ, J.

The plaintiff, Forest Walk, LLC, appeals from the judgment of the trial court dismissing its appeal from the decision of the defendant, the water pollution control authority of the town of Middlebury, denying the plaintiffs applications for a sewer connection and a sewer extension. 1 On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the trial court reviewed the defendant’s decision under an improperly deferential standard because that court failed to recognize that Public Acts 2003, No. 03-177, § 13 (P.A. 03-177), 2 changed the substantive law governing water pollution control authorities by limiting their discretion in the same manner that the legislature lim *274 ited the discretion of land use boards. The plaintiff also contends that the trial court improperly concluded that the defendant’s denials of its applications were neither contrary to its regulations nor the result of arbitrary, unfair action in abuse of its discretion. We conclude that P.A. 03-177 did not change the substantive law governing water pollution control authorities and that the trial court properly found that the defendant’s denials of the plaintiffs applications for a sewer extension and a sewer connection were not contrary to its regulations, were supported by substantial evidence and were not the result of arbitrary, unfair action in abuse of its discretion. We therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The record reveals the following undisputed facts and procedural history. The plaintiff is the owner of a nineteen acre parcel of land (property) located on the east side of Regan Road in the town of Middlebury (town). Pursuant to General Statutes § 7-246, 3 the town *275 maintains a public sewer system controlled by the defendant that services a portion of the town.

On December 19, 2003, the plaintiff filed two applications with the defendant for sewer service to its property. One application sought a connection to an existing sewer interceptor on Porter Road through neighboring property that abutted the existing sewer contained in Porter Road. The plaintiff had obtained an easement over that property through which it intended for the connection to the sewer interceptor to be made. The other application sought an extension to its property of the existing sewer line on Regan Road, which terminates approximately 500 feet from the plaintiff’s property. The applications specified that the sewer would service a residential development containing 650 bedrooms 4 and requested a sewage capacity of 50,505 gallons per day.

After a series of denials of applications and subsequent appeals, the parties ultimately entered into a settlement agreement under which the applications were accepted by the defendant on November 15, 2005. 5 At *276 that time, the plaintiff indicated that it had submitted applications for both a connection and an extension because it was uncertain how the defendant would classify the service at issue, but that it understood that, once the defendant had determined how service would be provided, only the pertinent application would be relevant to subsequent discussions.

The defendant held further hearings on the applications on January 17 and January 19, 2006, and denied both applications by way of a resolution dated January 19,2006. The defendant noted at the outset of the resolution that it carefully had considered the testimony of its consulting engineer, Michael J. Angieri, who had reviewed the applications. Angieri had informed the defendant that the property is not located in the town’s planned service area and that sewer service to the property would require an extension of the sewer system to service the property pursuant to article III, § 6, of the regulations of the Middlebury water pollution control authority (regulations). 6 Angieri also noted that article *277 III, § 5, of the regulations, 7 which provides for connections to public sewers, was not intended for properties “other than those that are located in or near an area already planned for sewers or to require the [defendant] to connect to and provide unplanned capacity to a property because an owner has the ability by easement(s) to reach a sewer interceptor . . . .” In reliance on Angieri’s testimony, the defendant denied both applications, finding that both applications sought, essentially, an extension of the sewer system to serve the property. It then enumerated several reasons for denying the applications, including: the property was not located in an area designated for sewer service; the sewage capacity requested by the plaintiff was disproportionately large for the size of the parcel; and an extension was contrary to the town’s long-standing policy of sewer avoidance. In reaching these conclusions, the defendant relied on, inter alia, its regulations, its 1967 master plan of sewer development (1967 master plan) and its 1991 sewer plan (1991 plan), the latter of which set forth plans for the next twenty years and which emphasized the avoidance of additional sewers and sewer expan *278 sion except when necessary to avoid health and safety problems.

Pursuant to P.A. 03-177, which authorizes appeals to the Superior Court in accordance with General Statutes § 8-8, 8 the plaintiff appealed from the defendant’s decision to the trial court. The plaintiff claimed that the defendant had acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner and in an abuse of its discretion when it denied the plaintiffs applications. Specifically, it contended that: the reasons given by the defendant in denying its applications were not supported by its regulations; the plain language of the regulations indicates that the property would be, in the plaintiffs view, “encouraged, if not required” to connect to the public sewer; the defendant’s reliance on documents and policies not referenced in the regulations “perpetrated an unfair and unreasonable suiprise on the plaintiff’; and the denial of its applications was discriminatory because other properties located outside of the designated areas for sewer service had been granted permits for extensions to the sewer system. The plaintiff also claimed that P.A. 03-177 had changed the substantive law applicable to water pollution control authorities, thereby limiting their discretion such that, like land use boards also governed by § 8-8, once such an agency enacts regulations, it may not act contrary to their plain meaning.

In a lengthy memorandum of decision, the trial court dismissed the appeal. The court first concluded that P.A. 03-177 had not changed the substantive law applicable to water pollution control authorities. Thus, contrary to the plaintiffs assertions, “water pollution control authorities are not held to the same principles *279

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Bluebook (online)
968 A.2d 345, 291 Conn. 271, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forest-walk-llc-v-water-pollution-control-authority-conn-2009.