Heffernan v. Zoning Board of Review

144 A. 674, 50 R.I. 26, 1929 R.I. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 13, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 144 A. 674 (Heffernan v. Zoning Board of Review) 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
Heffernan v. Zoning Board of Review, 144 A. 674, 50 R.I. 26, 1929 R.I. LEXIS 7 (R.I. 1929).

Opinion

*28 Sweetland, C. J.

The above entitled cause is a petition for a writ of certiorari to review a certain decision of the respondent board.

The decision was one denying the application of the petitioner that the respondent authorize an exception or variation of the zoning regulations of the city of Cranston which would permit the petitioner to erect a building for business purposes upon land belonging to the petitioner in Cranston, which land under the provisions of the zoning ordinance is included in a residential district.

The application is before us for the second time. In our former opinion (Heffernan v. Zoning Board of Review, 49 R. I. 283) we have set out at length the essential facts in the case. The application of the petitioner is not based upon a claim of right, but is made in reliance upon the provisions of the zoning ordinance, which gives to the respondent discretionary power to authorize the exception or variation which the petitioner seeks. When the application was before the respondent board for the first time, the board was of the opinion that it was without jurisdiction to grant the application. Upon review we held that decision to be erroneous, and remitted the matter to the respondent with direction to grant a hearing to the petitioner, and then to make a decision upon the merits of the application. This the Respondent board ha’s done and has denied the application. The petitioner is again before us seeking a review.

In our former opinion we endeavored to point out to the petitioner the nature of the essential issue presented to us upon his petition for a review of the board’s determination upon this application, which was addressed solely to the respondent’s discretion, and we there tried to indicate the *29 distinction between that issue and one which would arise upon a claim of right on the petitioner’s part. In disregard of our former opinion, the argument before us of counsel for the petitioner was largely based upon the claim of an infringement of the petitioner’s constitutional rights, in the establishment of a zoning regulation which prevented the use of the petitioner’s property for business purposes.

We have held that the enabling act of the general assembly in reliance upon which the zoning ordinances of the various cities and towns have been adopted was not unconstitutional in so far as it authorized the division of a municipality into separate districts for residential, business and industrial uses; and that an ordinance, which reasonably conformed with those permissive provisions of the act, constitutes a proper exercise of the delegated police power of the State. City of Providence v. Stephens, 47 R. I. 387.

The zoning ordinance of Cranston grants discretionary power to the respondent board to authorize in a special case such a variance in the application of the provisions of the ordinance as will not be contrary to the public interest and will prevent unnecessary hardship, “so that the spirit of the ordinance shall be observed and substantial justice done.” In considering an application for such variance the board must treat the provisions of the ordinance as constitutional and reasonable, and should regard the particular provisions under consideration before it as, in general, representing the public interest. The expressions “contrary to the public interest” and “unnecessary hardship” must be given a reasonable interpretation.. As the provisions of the ordinance represent a declaration of public interest, any variance would in some measure be contrary thereto. In this connection the words “contrary to the public interest” should be interpreted to mean what in the judgment of a reasonable man would unduly, and in a marked degree conflict with the ordinance provisions. As to the words “unnecessary hardship,” it may be said that each of the restrictions of the ordinance upon what would otherwise be a lawful use of *30 one’s property might be termed a “hardship” to the owner. We regard the term “hardship”, as used in the ordinance, to have some reference to the degree of the interference with ordinary legal property rights, and to the loss or hardship which would arise therefrom. We think the expression should be interpreted to refer to a “hardship” peculiar to the situation of the applicant, which is of such a degree of severity that its imposition is not necessary to carry out the spirit of the ordinance, and amounts to a substantial and unnecessary injustice to the applicant.

In appealing to the discretion of the board of review for a variance of the provisions of the ordinance the burden was upon the petitioner to satisfy the judgment of the board that such variance would not be unduly in conflict with the public interest as expressed in the ordinance, and also that the literal enforcement of its provisions would result in a peculiar hardship or loss to him of a very serious character, the imposition of which was not required for the purpose of enforcing the general scheme of the ordinance and hence, amounted to the placing of an unnecessary hardship upon him.

*31 *30 After public notice the respondent gave a hearing on the petitioner’s application. According to the record certified to us the petitioner presented nothing to the board beyond the argument of his counsel that the growth of Providence necessitated that Warwick avenue at the point in question will become “more and more a business district,” and also that the application should be granted on the ground that no objection could reasonably be made to the application. The first of these arguments is clearly irrelevant, for Warwick avenue at this point has been made a residential district by the ordinances of the city council of Cranston. The zoning board of review is without power to nullify the ordinance under the guise of “variances.” The board cannot vary the ordinance save in accordance with the provisions giving it such discretionary power. As to the second claim, it appears that a large number of residents in *31 that vicinity came to the hearing, and did vigorously remonstrate against the granting of the application, and insisted that the district is and ought to be allowed to remain a residential district. Such remonstrances of the landowners are by no means conclusive upon the judgment of the board, and can not control its action. Yet the terms of the enabling act and of the zoning ordinance clearly contemplate that the board shall take into consideration the wishes of neighboring landowners in exercising its discretion, although the board in its judgment may entirely disregard such wishes. According to the record, that was all that was presented to the board at the hearing.

At the hearing before us the petitioner urged that the board in forming its judgment could not properly take into consideration matters not presented in évidence at the hearing although within the knowledge of the board. In this he is clearly in error. Such board is warranted in taking a view of the locality, and it may also in the exercise of its discretion consider matters well known to its members which bear upon the local situation.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A. 674, 50 R.I. 26, 1929 R.I. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heffernan-v-zoning-board-of-review-ri-1929.