Irwin v. Planning Zoning Commission, No. Cv 95 0068320 (Jan. 22, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 778
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1996
DocketNo. CV 95 0068320
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 778 (Irwin v. Planning Zoning Commission, No. Cv 95 0068320 (Jan. 22, 1996)) 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
Irwin v. Planning Zoning Commission, No. Cv 95 0068320 (Jan. 22, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 778 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This appeal involves the denial by the Litchfield Planning and Zoning Commission ("Commission") of the special exception and subdivision application of Plaintiff, James B. Irwin, Sr. pertaining to 14.9 more or less acres of land located on Hutchinson Parkway and Butternut Road in Litchfield, Connecticut. The land was recently split off by plaintiff from a larger parcel leaving the 14.9 ares [acres] piece and an 83 acre piece. R-V1, 18. The special exception application requested approval to create two interior lots (#3 and #4) with one common driveway; the subdivision application was for approval of a four-lot residential subdivision including two interior lots. R-1, 2. Three of the lots range in size from 2 to 2.8 acres and the fourth is approximately six acres. The remaining acreage consists of setbacks, open space, wetlands (3.1 acres) and a conservation easement (includes 3 acres of wetlands and 3 acres of upland soils) to protect the Butternut Brook streambelt which borders the property. R-site plan.

The property is located in an R-80 zoning district with a two acre minimum lot size. On Butternut Road, the property has 2,260 feet of frontage based on Plaintiff's own previous application for a swine shelter on the property. R. Vol. A. VIII. The defendant Karen Grimes' property abuts the plaintiff's property. R-site plan.

The Litchfield Subdivision Regulations provide for CT Page 779 a special treatment and expert analysis where an application involves property within flood plains, or where it includes or affects inland wetlands and watercourses, has slopes of 20% or greater, or includes land lying within 300 feet of sub-regional watershed lines. R-XI Section 5.1. To reduce the adverse impact of these features, the Commission may require the "redesign of the subdivision including lot area and location of reserved open space." If less than 20,000 square feet of proposed buildable area affects such land areas, the Commission may waive this requirement.

The record shows that the Irwin property has steep slopes (over 20% grade) a streambelt, ledge outcroppings, and a watercourse through the property making it especially difficult to develop. Without a special exception for an interior lot, it can support a maximum of 3 lots consistent with the existing wetlands approval of the driveway crossing to lots 3 and 4. The neighborhood is rural and is generally characterized by large parcels used for farming and contains important historical farmhouses. R-IX, p. 19.

The numerous deeds, maps and assessors cards show that many neighboring properties have areas utilized for farming and open space. R-VIII 12-28. For example, the Grimes' neighboring property includes 10.2 acres preserved for farming. Plaintiff's neighboring property from which the subject property was cut includes a horse farm. R-V2, p. 25. The assessor's cards show that Mr. Irwin's abutting property has been classified as 20 acres for hay, 42.41 acres for pasture and 19 acres woodland. In 1992 during the wetland and subdivision applications on the property, the plaintiff applied for and received approval for a swine shelter on the property. R-VIII 9. The Scherr-Thoss's properties border the application property to the north and west and have 23.27, 19.0 and 6 acres in hay on three parcels; the Ikards have 18.13 acres in hay; William Sellars has 14.16 acres in pasture and 10.57 acres in hay on one piece and with Patricia Sellars, he has 7.34 acres in hay on another parcel. The Nieds have 5.16 acres in farmland on one piece and 2.8 acres and 3.2 acres respectively on two others. R-VIII, 10, 12. CT Page 780

To obtain a special permit exception for interior lots, the applicant must show consistency with the plan of development and the need for the use or activity. R-X Art VI p. 6. The town's plan of development specifically designates properties along Beach Street as "prime and important farmlands" for preservation and all "private and public options shall be utilized for preservation." R-XIII. The plaintiff's property was located between Beach Street and Hutchinson Parkway before he severed the Hutchinson parcel for this application and therefore the application property is within this designation.

The vision plan amendment to the plan of development emphasizes the maintenance of the town's rural atmosphere and historic resources. R-XII, 36. The area along Hutchinson Parkway from Sellars' farm to Mike Road and including the plaintiff's property is slated for separate, open space preservation. R-XIII. The 1984 plan also sets preservation of open space and historic townscapes as a goal. Furthermore, the open space character of the neighborhood has been determined as relevant to the abutting property owned by Grimes which has been identified in a historical and architectural resources survey. The Connecticut Historical Commission inventory of the Grimes property calls attention to the "splendid view of the surrounding open land" [and] scattered old trees in the vicinity." See letter, David F. Ransom, Architectural Historian, R-V 17.

The record shows that the application land is sensitive. The streambelt of Butternut Brook is identified as a protected streambelt under the plan of development. R-V, 34; XIII. The plan of development provides that the reason for streambelt preservation is to curtail pollution, siltation, sedimentation and erosion; to protect water quality; to reduce the hazard of flood loss; to promote scenic beauty; to link wetland corridors with open space and to enhance the quality of life by providing breathing space and visual balance to urban uses.

Significant areas of the proposed lots are composed of steep slopes, ledge, setbacks and conservation restrictions. The record includes a map evidencing the CT Page 781 problems with the four-lot layout. Although the lots meet the minimum zoning lot size requirements, only a very small amount of land is buildable with house and septic. The record shows that the proposed common driveway to the proposed interior lots is on top of an active spring and would bury it. R-IX 6. Edward Pawlak, a wetland scientist submitted a record which warned that the driveway and septic system on proposed interior Lot #3 will be constructed on slopes ranging from 25 to 27 percent and that the slopes at the northwest corner of the proposed house are twenty percent. R-IX 8. He opined that the potential for erosion of exposed and disturbed soils during construction increase with the slope of the land. The Litchfield County Soil Survey classifies the development potential according to soil type and slope class. R-VII 33. On Lot 4, the common driveway is to be constructed on slopes which range from 18 to 20 percent, while slopes in the vicinity of the house and septic system are 17 percent. R-IX 8. The SCS designated limitations for the two primary upland soils found on the property show severe constraints for a variety of development activities. IX-8, 5. The Irwin application is well within the special review requirements of subdivision regulation 5.1.

The common driveway proposed to serve the two interior lots is located directly next to Grime's property with only a 10 foot buffer separating the two. R-IX 4. A report prepared by Frank O'Neill of Tom Collins Appraisers for Perley and Karen Grimes indicates that the "expected effect" of the common driveway, along the Grimes border "is to open up the view along the Grimes property into the Irwin property and the proposed new homes." Mr. O'Neill opines that because the driveway is near Grimes meadow, it will be quite visible and detract from the present country setting.

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Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-planning-zoning-commission-no-cv-95-0068320-jan-22-1996-connsuperct-1996.