Gabrielle v. Zon. Bd., App., T., Darien, No. Cv 98-0168494 S (Jul. 12, 1999)

1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 9474
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1999
DocketNo. CV 98-0168494 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 9474 (Gabrielle v. Zon. Bd., App., T., Darien, No. Cv 98-0168494 S (Jul. 12, 1999)) 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
Gabrielle v. Zon. Bd., App., T., Darien, No. Cv 98-0168494 S (Jul. 12, 1999), 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 9474 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] INTRODUCTION This is an appeal from the decision of the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Town of Darien (Board), dated September 16, 1998. The Board denied the plaintiffs' appeal of a cease and desist order of the Zoning Enforcement Officer dated February 2, 1996. CT Page 9475 The cease and desist order directed the plaintiffs to remove, from the lower level of its restaurant, improvements including floor tile and carpeting, a bar and associated plumbing, imitation marble and other decorative trim on the walls, decorative lamps, a suspended ceiling and paneled glass doors.

FACTS

The plaintiffs, Giovanni Gabriele and Antonio Giordano, are the owners of 1.48 acres of property in Darien, on which sits a building which has been used as a restaurant and a bar since approximately 1876. It has had no other use since then.

Zoning regulations were adopted in 1925. The property is located in the R-1/3 zone and is improved with a substantial commercial restaurant with parking. A commercial restaurant is not permitted in this zone. The status of the restaurant, as a valid nonconforming use, has been recognized by the Board on many prior occasions.

"The property in question is located in a residential one-third acre zone but has been used as a restaurant with some entertainment and banquet facilities for many years prior to the establishment of zoning regulations and constitutes a legal non-conforming use." R.O.R. 27 at p. 1 — Darien Zoning Board of Appeals, Calendar No. 65-1980.

In 1976, the plaintiffs applied for and received a variance to enlarge the building with an addition. Thereafter, the plaintiffs desired to use part of the lower level of the restaurant for a holding area/reception area and a cocktail area for banquet patrons. This area had previously been used for a number of restaurant functions including storage, food preparation, a bake shop, meat cutting, and a part of it was used for a reception area and restrooms. The 1976 variance approval included a specific condition that the plaintiffs not serve more than 330 people at one time for a banquet, nor book more than one banquet at a time where the overall total would exceed the total of 330 persons. No evidence was presented to the Board that the plaintiffs had violated this condition. The plaintiffs agreed to continue to comply with this limit and to use the area as a reception area while the banquet rooms were being prepared, thereby assuring the Board that no additional banquet patrons would be served. The defendant indicated a concern with its CT Page 9476 enforcement problem in that it would be difficult to police the use of the lower level.

The defendant acknowledged that:

The proposed use for the lower level would be a restaurant use. ["C.H."= Court Hearing 4/30/99] (C.H. Tr. 6);

The restaurant has been a legal nonconforming use since 1925; (C.H. Tr. 6, 21);

The restaurant and tavern have been located-on the site since the late 1800s, (C.H. Tr. 21) and the entire building has always been used as a restaurant. (C.H. Tr. 36);

Plaintiffs' current operation of the restaurant remains a legal non-conforming use. (C.H. Tr. 21);

The Board, in 1976, granted a variance to permit an addition to the restaurant. (C.H. Tr. 22)

Since 1976, the building has been used as a restaurant, a catering hall, a discotheque, and a banquet hall. (C.H. Tr. 22);

Darien's regulations define a restaurant as a "business or use whose principal function is the preparation and serving of food for consumption on the premises within the confines of the building normally served at tables, booths or similar sit-down accommodations", and plaintiffs' business is a restaurant use within the meaning of the regulations. (C.H. Tr. 23);

Plaintiffs intend to use the lower level as a customer assembly or a cocktail assembly area for customers attending banquets. (C.H. Tr. 24);

The only condition in the 1976 variance was a limit of 330 banquet patrons, and there was no restriction as to which rooms, or the number of rooms, which could be used. (C.H. Tr. 25-26, 29);

The owner may reconfigure the interior of the restaurant CT Page 9477 if no square footage is added to the "customer-accessible portion" of the "restaurant" (C.H. Tr. 33), though the number of patrons may be increased by adding tables in the dining room. (C.H. Tr. 51);

Nothing in the Darien Zoning Regulations specifies locations for dining areas, reception areas, kitchens, storage, rest rooms, bars, etc. (C.H. Tr. 37).

In 1996, the Zoning Enforcement Officer issued a cease and desist order directing that certain improvements to part of the lower level be removed. These included removal of floor tile, carpeting, a bar and associated plumbing, a suspended ceiling and glass paneled doors. This order also directed the plaintiffs to cease using this space for serving patrons or for food preparation and that the space be used only for storage. Because the Zoning Enforcement Officer had illegally participated in post public hearing deliberations, the Superior Court sustained the plaintiffs' appeal and remanded the matter for reconsideration.

The plaintiffs submitted a renewed application requesting relief from the cease and desist order or, in the alternative, a ruling that § 383 of the Zoning Regulations permitted the use of the lower level, or for a variance to use the lower level.

After a public hearing on July 22, 1998, the Board denied the application, made findings and issued an order similar to its prior order of February 2, 1996. This order required that the plaintiffs:

A. Remove tile and carpeting from the entire lower level reception room.

B. Completely remove the bar area and all associated plumbing and remove all imitation marble and other decorative trim from the wall.

C. Remove the decorative lamps from the walls.

D. Remove the ceiling which conceals the structural support of the 1st floor and conceals the wiring and lighting.

E. Immediately cease using the room for customer space or for working space for employees. The room was to be CT Page 9478 used only for storage. It could not be used for expansion of the kitchen or the customer accessible area.

F. Replace two sets of glass doors.
G. Use the room only for storage. (R. 5)

The plaintiffs appealed this decision of the Board.

AGGRIEVEMENT

As owners of the property at issue, and the applicants to the Defendant Zoning Board of Appeals, the plaintiffs are aggrieved by the denial of their application. Winchester Woods Associatesv. Planning and Zoning Commission, 219 Conn. 303, 308 (1991);Bossert v. City of Norwalk, 157 Conn. 279, 285 (1968). The Court finds that the plaintiffs are aggrieved and have standing to bring this appeal.

SCOPE OF REVIEW

On appeal from a decision of a Zoning Enforcement Officer (hereinafter "ZEO"), the Board is to make an independent de novo decision, and the action of the ZEO that is the subject of the appeal is entitled to no special deference by the Board or by the Superior Court on appeal. Caserta v. Zoning Board of Appeals,226 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 9474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabrielle-v-zon-bd-app-t-darien-no-cv-98-0168494-s-jul-12-connsuperct-1999.