Island Restoration v. New Shoreham Zbr

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 8, 2008
DocketC.A. No. WC 2001-0377
StatusPublished

This text of Island Restoration v. New Shoreham Zbr (Island Restoration v. New Shoreham Zbr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Island Restoration v. New Shoreham Zbr, (R.I. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

DECISION
This matter is before the Court on the appeal of Island Restoration Associates ("Appellant" or "IRA") from a decision of the Town of New Shoreham Zoning Board of Review ("Zoning Board" or "Board"). The Board's decision, filed and posted June 27, 2001, granted the application of IRA for a special use permit for an accessory apartment, provided Appellant compiled with certain conditions but denied Appellant's request for a variance from the applicable residential density limits. Appellant filed this timely appeal with this Court on July 17, 2001.1 Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 45-24-69.2 *Page 2

I
Facts and Travel
Appellant owns real property located at 456-459 Chapel Street in the Town of New Shoreham, State of Rhode Island ("Town"), designated as Tax Assessor's Plat 6, Lot 11. The property contains four buildings, collectively known as Hagopian Marketplace, located within an Old Harbor Commercial Zone. The buildings serve a number of varied uses including residential dwelling, retail, restaurant and moped storage.

As a part of its efforts to reorganize the uses of the buildings located on its property, in 1996 IRA applied to the Zoning Board of Review of the Town of New Shoreham for a variance reducing by three the number of required parking spaces at the property so that a restaurant, which had previously occupied the building known as Fire Number 457, could be moved to Fire Number 456, thereby allowing it to add additional seating capacity. See Island Resources Associates Inc. v. Zoning Boardof Review of the Town of New Shoreham, No. WC 96-0306, May 5, 1999. In its written decision dated June 4, 1996, the Board granted the requested variance subject to, among others, a condition that the building with Fire Number 457, which had been used as a restaurant, be used only for retail space. Id. Appellant brought an appeal of that decision to the Washington County Superior Court. Appellant alleged that the condition *Page 3 requiring that Fire Number 457 be used only as retail space arbitrarily restricted Appellant's use of the space precluding it from future use of the building as a restaurant in violation of the Rhode Island and United States Constitutions and in excess of the Board's powers. Id. In a written opinion dated May 5, 1999, the Superior Court rejected Appellant's claims finding:

The [Board's] decision clearly does not place restrictions on the future use of the property, it simply places conditions on the present grant of a parking variance. The decision will have no effect on Fire # 457's use if Island Restoration ever decides to change it. The applicant would simply be required to apply for another parking variance should the sum of its uses on-site parking requirements not comply with § 502(A). Id.

Subsequently, IRA submitted an application to the Board for a special use permit to use a portion of one of the buildings on the property as an accessory apartment. A hearing was held on July 24, 2000, and in a written decision dated August 2, 2000, the Board denied the special use permit over concerns about the sufficiency of parking on the site. Upon receipt of that decision, Appellant filed an appeal to the Superior Court of Washington County, WC 00-398. A short time thereafter, Appellant acquired the rights to additional lands with which to develop alternative parking configurations and moved to remand the then-pending appeal arguing that the changed circumstances would render that appeal moot. The Superior Court then granted, over the Town's objections, a remand of that appeal to the Board.

Instead of presenting additional evidence on the prior application, on April 30, 2001, the Appellant then filed a second special use permit application seeking relief under the New Shoreham Zoning Ordinance, Article IV, § 406 (2001).3 That second application is the subject *Page 4 of this appeal.4 The application was filed concurrently with an application for a variance seeking relief from the residential density requirements of the Old Harbor Commercial Zone. A public hearing on both applications was held on May 21, 2001.

During the hearing, Appellant presented two alternative site plans containing different parking configurations. Both plans called for the addition of an accessory apartment to be contained in building Fire Number 459 and the conversion of two of the retail units located in that building into apartment use. Mr. Mark Hagopian, IRA's principal owner, testified on behalf of IRA's application. After first confirming that the building was currently occupied by five retail units, Mr. Hagopian testified that the proposals before the Board would modify the occupancies of the building such that it would contain three retail units, two apartments, and one accessory apartment and that the total required parking for the proposed uses was fourteen spaces.

Mr. Hagopian, through the questioning of his counsel, William Landry, explained the breakdown of the existing and proposed parking requirements for each building in the complex. After moving into evidence Applicant's Exhibit 1, a paper chart that showed the existing and proposed parking breakdown, Mr. Hagopian addressed the needs of Fire Number 458 and Fire Number 459: *Page 5

MR. LANDRY: And with respect to building number 458 that's currently used for moped storage, there's no parking required; correct?

Mr. HAGOPIAN: No, because the moped office covers the parking for that building.

MR. LANDRY: Okay. And in Fire Number 459 with the uses proposed, we're proposing three retail units that would require one parking space apiece for a total of three spaces; correct?

Mr. HAGOPIAN: Correct.

MR. LANDRY: The moped office requires one space. The two new apartments that require one space each; correct?

MR. LANDRY: And an accessory apartment which requires one space; correct?

Mr. HAGOPIAN: Correct. (Tr. at 7-8)

Mr. Hagopian then turned his attention to the two buildings housing restaurants:

MR. LANDRY: And Fire Number 457, that was previously occupied last season by a restaurant known as —

MR. HAGOPIAN: Xaymaca, (X-a-y-m-a-c-a).

MR. LANDRY: That will still involve a restaurant but by written lease the number of seats in that restaurant is limited to ten; Correct?

MR. LANDRY: And that would require one parking space?

MR. LANDRY: And there is one dwelling unit in that building that requires one parking space as well; correct?

MR. LANDRY: And finally on the fourth building, the Eli's Restaurant building, Eli's Restaurant would stay but again by limitation in the written lease the number of seats would be limited to forty; correct?

MR. HAGOPIAN: That's correct.

MR. LANDRY: And that means that four parking spaces would be required for that building?

MR. LANDRY: And there is an additional dwelling unit in that building that requires one space; correct?

MR. HAGOPIAN: Correct. (Tr. at 8-9)

After addressing the anticipated parking requirements, Mr. Hagopian began explaining the first of two parking alternatives that he would present to the Board.

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Bluebook (online)
Island Restoration v. New Shoreham Zbr, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/island-restoration-v-new-shoreham-zbr-risuperct-2008.