Island Restoration v. New Shoreham Zbr
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Opinion
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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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. He testified that "the two *Page 6 new spaces were additional spaces that we acquired by way of easement from a neighbor, Offshore Trading Company, Inc., ("Offshore") and they're shown shaded in gray as parking spaces 4 and 5 which are sort of in the shape of a hockey stick." He further explained that neither he nor Offshore had previously used the land of space number five as parking as it had been too small prior to the granting of the parking easement. He added that space number four had been the previous site of Offshore's dumpster. As such, the proposed parking alternative in plan one neither reduced the available parking for Offshore nor placed Offshore in jeopardy of violating any of its own zoning restrictions. Thereafter, a map of parking alternative one was introduced into evidence before the Board as Applicants Exhibit # 2.
Next Mr. Hagopian showed the Board parking alternative two and explained to the Board how it differed from parking alternative one:
The difference is with this alternate we eliminate essentially the hockey stick and reduce the easement . . . to just the sliver of land at the northeast corner of the property. So that comprises space number 4. Space number 13 is presently occupied by two storage areas which we decided we could simply move elsewhere on the property and create indoor parking here that is not occupied by mopeds. . . ." (Tr. at 17)
Mr. Hagopian then made it clear that he did not have a preference for either of the alternates and that either one would be acceptable to him.
After concluding his testimony about the parking alternatives, Mr. Hagopian answered a number of Mr. Landry's questions designed to elicit testimony about the property's eligibility for relief under The Town of New Shoreham Zoning Ordinance § 406. Mr. Hagopian then testified to the fact that Fire Number 459 was in existence on April 18, 1998, that the proposed accessory apartment was to be self-contained with a maximum of two bedrooms with separate cooking and sanitary facilities for the exclusive use of the occupant, and that the property was connected to *Page 7 the public sewer. He further testified that all the structures on the lots were held in common ownership, that all rental agreements would be written, that the building official would be granted access to inspect the apartment upon seventy-two hour notice, that the application would not result in more than four apartments being contained within the building and that the proposed accessory apartment would not account for more than fifty percent of the gross floor area of the building. If granted the special use permit, IRA agreed to record against the deed a restriction to run with the land that the occupancy of the apartment be limited to persons deriving income from employment on the island. Mr. Hagopian also clearly testified that neither the proposed accessory apartment nor the two proposed full apartments were uses that would be in conflict with the surrounding uses or that would be injurious to the surrounding property.
Under questioning from the Board, Mr. Hagopian assured the Board's members that his sewer and water allocations are sufficient to provide for the proposed accessory apartment. Additionally, the Board expressed concerns about the legality of the parking spaces in plan number one. In particular, the Board was concerned that someone seeking to park in space number four would not be able to get in and out of the spot without going through a vehicle parked in space number five. In response, Mr. Hagopian testified that individuals could use a driveway located on the abutter Offshore's property. However, he admitted that the wording of the parking easement secured from Offshore did not actually include the use of the driveway in order to access spot number four.
During the hearing, the Appellant entered into evidence a copy of the lease between IRA and Mayberry, Inc., the owner and operator of the forty seat restaurant. (See Applicant's Ex. 3.) The lease contained a purpose clause which read: "The Demised Premises shall be used solely for the purpose of the preparation and serving of food as a restaurant containing seating for no *Page 8 more than forty customers and not for any unlawful purpose. . . ."Id. at 1. Appellant also introduced a copy of the lease between IRA and Li'l Fred's, Inc., the owner and operator of the ten seat restaurant. (See Applicant's Ex. 4.) The Li'l Fred's lease also contained a purpose clause which read: "The Demised Premises shall be used solely for the purpose of the preparation and serving of food as a restaurant containing seating for no more than ten customers and not for any unlawful purpose. . . ." Id. Additionally, a copy of the parking easement granting IRA the right to use a portion of Offshore's property was presented to the Board. (See Applicant's Ex. 5.)
The Zoning Board issued its written opinion and findings of fact on June 27, 2001. In a lengthy and detailed decision, the Board made a number of findings of fact and conclusions of law. Of particular relevance to this appeal, the Board specifically found that:
[w]hile parking proposal # 1 (exhibit # 2) appears to provide the required number of spaces, space #4 is not accessible to the subject property because the average driver would not recognize that it is available, as it would appear to be blocked by space #5. In addition the applicant did not show that he had legal access over the Plat 6, Lot 115. (Phelan property) (Zoning Board Decision at 2.)
Likewise, with respect to the second parking plan, the Board found that " . . . parking proposal #2 (exhibit #6) also appears to provide the required number of spaces . . . " but "it is also lacking in accessibility due to the busy nature and variety of uses on the property." Id. Additionally, the Board noted that it had previously rejected the idea of interior parking as suitable for the site.Id. Finally, the Board concluded " . . . that the `Exiting parking' (sic) described in Exhibit #1 is inaccurate because a previous zoning decision dated June 4, 1996 specifically prohibited a restaurant use in Fire #457 as a stipulation to receiving a variance for three parking spaces." Id. *Page 9
Ultimately, the Board found that the Appellant had satisfied its burden with respect to all of the Ordinance's criteria for a special use permit but failed to satisfy its burden with respect to the requested variance. Accordingly, the Board denied the application for a variance and approved the application for a special use permit with the condition, among others, that "[b]oth parking proposals (Exhibits # 2 6) shall be combined to create a total of fifteen spaces to alleviate the Board's concerns over the questionable legality and accessibility of some of the purported parking spaces." Id. This timely appeal challenging the Board's imposition of the parking condition followed.
*Page 10(1) In violation of constitutional, statutory, or ordinance provisions;
(2) In excess of the authority granted to the zoning board of review by statute or ordinance;
(3) Made upon unlawful procedure;
(4) Affected by other error of law;
(5) Clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence of the whole record; or
(6) Arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion. Id.
Judicial review of administrative action is "essentially an appellate proceeding." Notre Dame Cemetery v. Rhode Island State Labor RelationsBoard,
Substantial evidence is relevant evidence that a reasonable person would accept as adequate to support the board's conclusion and amounts to "more than a scintilla but less than a preponderance." Caswell v.George Sherman Sand Gravel Co.,
If, before the date set for the hearing in the superior court, an application is made to the court for leave to present additional evidence before the zoning board of review and it is shown to the satisfaction of the court that the additional evidence is material and that there were good reasons for the failure to present it at the hearing before the zoning board of review, the court may order that the additional evidence be taken before the zoning board of review upon conditions determined by the court. The zoning board of review may modify its findings and decision by reason of the additional evidence and file that evidence and any new findings or decisions with the superior court. Section
45-24-69 (b).
Intending to present an alternative parking plan, on September 18, 2000, the Appellant moved to have this Court remand the then-pending appeal to the Board. In support of its motion, Appellant asserted that the "[c]ircumstances have changed since the original application whereby the plaintiff/applicant has obtained additional land to adequately address the Town's parking requirements. Approval of this revised application will render this appeal moot." (Appellant's Motion to Remand, Island Resources Associates Inc. v. Zoning Board of Review ofthe Town of New Shoreham, No. WC 00-398, September 9, 2000)
Making use of the statutory authority granted to it under §
Rhode Island law recognizes the principle of judicial estoppel.See D H Therapy Associates v. Murray,
The Appellant successfully made motion to this Court to remand the 2000 decision so that the Board could hold supplemental hearings on its first application. Rather than press for the remand hearing, Appellant supported the separate notice and public hearing on its new application concerning the same property and concerning the same relief as requested in the 2000 decision. It is the opinion of the Court that Appellant effectively abandoned its appeal in the prior decision. "A zoning board has the power to consider a second application for a special exception involving the same subject matter when the applicant files a subsequent plan which has been substantially changed to address the objections raised by the board in denying the original application." Shippee v.Zoning Board of Appeals,
Article 4, section 401 sets forth the general criteria required for the Board to grant a special use permit. In considering an application for a special use permit, the Zoning Board must ensure all criteria have been satisfied. Id. at § 401(A). If however, a specific criterion is not satisfied, the Board may employ its discretion to award the permit if it "determines that the adverse effect of the proposed use is outweighed by a countervailing public benefit." Id. In specific instances, including application for accessory apartments, the general requirements of § 401 are narrowed to more specifically address a particular type of proposed use. In the case of accessory apartments, applications for special use permits are directly governed by the provisions of § 406 of the Zoning Ordinance. Section 406 exists in order "to provide year-round rental housing for year-round residents, supplemental income for homeowners, and seasonal rental housing for those deriving income from employment on the island." Id. at (A). All accessory apartments applied for on the island must conform to the general requirements of *Page 15 § 406, which requires that "[t]he accessory apartment shall be self-contained with separate cooking and sanitary facilities for the exclusive use of the occupant. There shall be a maximum of two (2) bedrooms in an accessory apartment." Id. at (B)(1). Furthermore, all accessory apartments must be held in undivided ownership. Id. at (B)(2). In addition, for accessory apartments located within the Old Harbor Commercial Zone, no building may contain more than four apartments and the gross floor area of those apartments may not exceed 50% of the gross floor area of the building. Id. at (D)(1). Finally, for those located within the Old Harbor Commercial Zone:
As a condition for the issuance and continued validity of an occupancy permit for accessory apartments, the owner shall execute and record against the deed to said property a restriction, running with the land and in favor of the Town, to the effect that occupancy of the accessory apartment shall be limited to persons domiciled in the Town year-round or deriving income from employment on the Island and that the apartments may not be offered for nor used for seasonal occupancy except for seasonal occupancy by persons deriving income from employment on the Island; and the owner shall file with the Town, prior to issuance of an occupancy permit and within thirty (30) days of any change in ownership of the premises, an affidavit, signed under the penalties of perjury by the owner of the principal structure, attesting to the fact that the accessory apartments are and will be limited to occupancy by persons domiciled in the Town year-round or deriving income from employment on the Island and that the dwellings will not be offered for nor used for seasonal occupancy except for seasonal occupancy by persons deriving income from employment on the Island. The affidavit shall be renewed by the owner of the premises every three (3) years as a condition for retaining an occupancy permit for the accessory apartments." Id. at (D)(2).
In addition to the requirements of Article 4, the performance standards for development on the Island are laid out in Article 5 of the Ordinance. With respect to parking, § 502(A) provides: *Page 16
Off-street parking in conformance with the following minimum requirements shall be provided and maintained for new construction, expansion of existing uses or structures, and changes of use. Where several uses occupy a single structure or lot, the total required parking shall be the sum of requirements of the individual uses. . . .
Appellant applied for a special use permit to build an accessory apartment and for a variance from the residential density restrictions. On June 27, 2001, the Board posted its decision letter on Appellant's application. In its letter, the Board concluded that it would deny the application for a density variance and grant the requested special use permit for an accessory apartment but conditioned that grant on, among others, the requirement that the Appellant combine the two parking proposals presented to the Board resulting in fifteen designated parking spaces at the property. Appellant does not challenge the Zoning Board's grant of a special use permit, nor does it appeal the Board's denial of the requested variance. Instead, Appellant brings a challenge to the conditions placed upon the grant of its permit by the Board.
Appellant first argues that the Zoning Board's findings of fact are unsupported by the record evidence in that they failed to take into account a previously granted variance permitting the property in question a three parking space reduction in required spaces. The previous variance was granted in 1996 and was conditioned upon the use of one of the buildings on the property, Fire Number 457, as retail space. See Island Resources Associates Inc. v. Zoning Board of Review ofthe Town of New Shoreham, No. WC 96-0306, May 5, 1999. Appellant asserts that the current use of the building as a "take out" food establishment qualifies as a retail use under the Town's Zoning Ordinance and that, as such, the previously granted variance remains in full force and effect. Appellant further contends that even if the use of Fire Number 457 has changed, any proposed change in use that does not result in the number of required *Page 17 parking spaces for the aggregate uses on site exceeding the number actually available and authorized by variance does not invalidate a prior issued variance.
Appellant also argues that the conditions imposed on the grant of the special use permit were arbitrary and capricious, and clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence of the whole record. In essence, Appellant argues first that the conditions are not supported by the record and; second, that in attaching the conditions to the grant of the special use permit the Board exceeded its statutory authority by requiring more parking spaces of Appellant than are required by the Zoning Ordinance in contravention of the express will of the Town Council and in excess of its own delegated authority.
In response, Appellees assert that the Board was properly able to consider the current and planned use of Fire Number 457 in the course of its deliberations on the special use permit. The Board was within its rights to conclude that the use of the building as a "take out" restaurant did not qualify as retail as required under the previously granted parking variance. As such, Appellees maintain, the Board was not in violation of ordinance provisions in concluding that the previously granted parking variance could not be relied on in calculating the number of required spaces for the property.
Appellees further contend that the Board relied on substantial evidence in arriving at its findings of fact and in conditioning its grant of the accessory apartment special use permit on the Appellant combining the two proposed parking plans, such that there were fifteen parking spaces designated on the property. Appellees assert that the evidence before the Board reasonably resulted in the Board's questioning the accessibility and legality of some of the proposed parking spaces. Finally, Appellees argue that the Board acted properly in applying the standards for *Page 18 attaching conditions to the grant of a special use permit and acted within the scope of its legally delegated authority from the Town Council.
Thus, the dispositive issues on appeal are: (1) whether the Zoning Board's failure to include in its calculations of the required parking the three space dimensional parking variance that had previously existed on the property resulted in a decision that was arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion; and, (2) whether the Zoning Board possessed the statutory authority to grant the requested special use permit conditioned upon the provision of parking beyond that which is called for under the Zoning Ordinance. The Court shall address these issues seriatim.
Permission to depart from the dimensional requirements of a zoning ordinance, where the applicant for the requested relief has shown, by evidence upon the record, that there is no other reasonable alternative way to enjoy a legally permitted beneficial use of the subject property unless granted the requested relief from the dimensional regulations." Section45-24-31 (61)(ii).
While the rule is not uniform among the states, in Rhode Island variances permitting deviation from off street parking requirements are considered dimensional variances. See Westminster Corp. v. Zoning Boardof Review,
Here, the Appellant had, in 1996, applied for and received a variance permitting it to reduce by three the number of required parking spaces for the proposed combination of uses contained in the 1996 application. Specifically, the Appellant desired to use one of the buildings on its property, which had previously been used as retail, as a restaurant. In order to accommodate that use, the Board granted the variance but conditioned the grant on the use of Fire Number 457 as retail only. However, in the 2001 application for an accessory apartment, IRA presented a plan specifically showing the use of Fire Number 457 as a "take out" restaurant. As such, in deciding on the application for an accessory apartment, the Board excluded from its calculations the three spaces provided for in the previously granted variance. *Page 20
Appellant contends that the 1996 variance established a new "baseline" from which to measure parking requirements on the property. As such, Appellant contends that either of the plans containing fourteen parking spaces satisfies, with three excess spaces, the required amount of parking on the lot and that the Board's failure to consider the existence of the three spots in determining the number of required spaces amounts to reversible error. In challenging the Board's method of calculation, Appellant asserts that the Board, in violation of this Court's previous decision in Island Resources, No. WC 96-0306, relied on the position that any change in uses on the property resulted in a loss of the variance.
A review of the record clearly indicates that the Board's determination not to count the three space variance in its calculations hinged not upon any change in the composition of uses on the property, but solely on the change in use of Fire Number 457 from retail to restaurant. Thus, the Board's finding that the description of the existing parking that the Appellant had submitted was "incorrect because a previous zoning decision dated June 4, 1996 specifically prohibited a restaurant use in Fire # 457 as a stipulation to receiving a variance for three parking spaces," was not affected by error of law nor in violation of its statutory authority. (Board's Decision at 2.)
A review of the written evidence and oral testimony provided to the Board reveals ample evidence for the Board to have found that the use in Fire Number 457 was as a restaurant and that the parking variance should therefore not be included in its calculations. At the hearing, Mr. Hagopian testified not only that the building had been used in the season before the public hearing as "a restaurant" but also that the contemplated use for the following season was to be a restaurant limited to ten seats. (Tr. at 8.) In addition to oral testimony, zoning boards may properly consider information contained in the applications and accompanying documents as evidence. See Gardiner v. Zoning Bd. ofReview,
Even so, Appellant asserts that Fire Number 457 is not a restaurant as defined by the Zoning Ordinance, suggesting that the use of the term "restaurant" in the planning documents and oral testimony is merely an unfortunate coincidence of imprecise language. Appellant seeks to rely on the fact that the business in Fire Number 457 operates as a "take out" facility to argue that the business is a retail trade and not a restaurant under the Ordinance. The Town of New Shoreham Zoning Ordinance Article II, section 202 establishes the definitions to be used in interpreting the Ordinance. Under that section the term "Restaurant" is defined as "[a] facility for the preparation and serving of food and beverages." Id. at (A)(151). Conversely, the term "Retail Trade" is defined as:
Any business engaged primarily in the sale, rental or lease of goods and/or services individually or in small quantities to the ultimate consumer for direct consumption and/or use, and not for resale. The term retail trade shall not include automotive rental or services, drive-up facilities or any type of restaurant. . . . Id. at 153.
Thus, argues Appellant, because the food is not served on premises, the use of the building is as retail trade. In this Court's opinion, Appellant suggests far too limited a reading of "restaurant" as used in the Ordinance. Appellant overlooks the possibility that food need not be served on a platter tableside by a waiter or waitress in order to be considered served. While this Court agrees that a convenience store selling prepackaged food or bottled beverages is not reasonably within the meaning of restaurant as contemplated by the Ordinance, this is unavailing *Page 22
to the Appellant whose lease with its tenant contains a purpose clause reading: "The Demised Premises shall be used solely for the purpose of the preparation and serving of food as a restaurant. . . ." (Emphasis added.) The distinction between retail trade and restaurant lies in the plain words of the text of the Ordinance. See P.J.C. Realty, Inc. v.Barry,
Under Rhode Island law, having determined that there was substantial evidence that Fire Number 457 was used as a restaurant, the Board was entitled to consider that fact, and its legal consequences, in its calculations of the required parking spaces for the property. InWyss,
In order to determine the number of required spaces at the site, the Board was required to examine the uses to be made of the properties as classified under the Zoning Ordinance. Despite Appellant's arguments to the contrary, the record contains ample evidence that the Fire Number 457 was actually used as a restaurant and the Board is neither permitted nor required to ignore that reality. Accordingly, this Court finds that the Board's decision not to include the parking variance in its calculation was not arbitrary or capricious or characterized by an abuse of discretion.
In granting a variance or in making any determination upon which it is required to pass after a public hearing under a zoning ordinance, the zoning board of review or other zoning enforcement agency may apply the special conditions that may, in the opinion of the board or agency, be required to promote the intent and purposes of the comprehensive plan and the zoning ordinance of the city or town. Failure to abide by any special conditions attached to a grant constitutes a zoning violation. Those special conditions shall be based on competent credible evidence on the record, be incorporated into the decision, and may include, but are not limited to, provisions for:(1) Minimizing the adverse impact of the development upon other land, including the type, intensity, design, and performance of activities;
(2) Controlling the sequence of development, including when it must be commenced and completed;
(3) Controlling the duration of use or development and the time within which any temporary structure must be removed;
(4) Assuring satisfactory installation and maintenance of required public improvements;
(5) Designating the exact location and nature of development; and
(6) Establishing detailed records by submission of drawings, maps, plats, or specifications.
The Town of New Shoreham has vested its Zoning Board with the full measure of authority granted by the Rhode Island General Assembly as the language of §
The specific determination of what is reasonable, of course, depends upon the facts of any particular case. Certainly conditions rising to the level of takings are patently unreasonable and void. See Sako v.DelSesto,
The imposed conditions must reasonably relate to the effects of the special use permit ? that is, to the proposed use of the land, and to the protection of the health, morals, safety, or welfare of the public. Conditions relating to attributes other than those proposed uses are unreasonable and give rise to arbitrary decisions. See, e.g.,Olevson,
Here, Appellant challenges the imposition of condition number four, the condition requiring that IRA combine both of its parking proposals in order to create fifteen parking spaces. (Zoning Board Decision at 2.) In its decision, the Board finds that parking in the first proposal is lacking because "space #4 is not accessible to the subject property because the average driver would not recognize that it is available, as it would appear to be blocked by space #5." Id. The Board also finds that "the applicant did not show that he had legal access over the Plat 6, Lot 115.(Phelan property)(sic)" Id. Likewise with respect to the second proposal, the Board concludes that some of the spots are "lacking in accessibility due to the busy nature and variety of uses on the property," noting that "this board has previously rejected interior garage parking as being suitable for this site." Id. Accordingly, the Board established the challenged conditions in order to alleviate its "concerns over the questionable legality and accessibility of some of the purported parking spaces." (Zoning Board Decision at 2.) A review of the record reveals that the Boards conclusions, far from being arbitrary, unnecessary, or oppressive were well founded and reasonable in light of the evidence presented to the Board.
In his testimony, Mr. Hagopian described the parking in the first proposal as "in the shape of a hockey stick" (Tr. at 10) and admitted under questioning that space number four would not be accessible with a vehicle parked in space number five without the use of an abutters' driveway. Yet, when asked whether he had secured an easement to that effect, he *Page 27
answered that he had not. Surely, this admission that IRA did not have legal access to one of its proposed spots amounts to more than a scintilla of evidence that the space was either illegal or inaccessible. Likewise, with respect to the second parking proposal, the Board was justified in relying on its previous determination based on the use patterns of the property, and the needs for parking at various hours throughout the day that interior garage parking was unsuitable for that property. Thus, in light of the deference owed by this Court to the Board, this Court cannot say that the Board's findings of fact were unsupported by the record evidence. Therefore, this Court finds that the parking condition of the Zoning Board Decision is supported by competent, credible record evidence. The underlying special use permit was granted for an accessory apartment. Competent record evidence demonstrates concerns over the accessibility of parking for the myriad uses on the site, and it is well within the discretion of the Zoning Board to require not only that the parking sites be designated in accordance with § 502(A) of the Zoning Ordinance, but also that parking on the site be accessible and reasonably recognizable as well. SeeWoodbury,
As the Board could have denied the special use permit because of the negative impact a lack of adequate parking could have had on the neighboring property, see Ord. Art. § 401(A), this Court finds that the Board acted reasonably when it granted the permit subject to the condition to provide fifteen parking spaces. This condition limits the impact of inadequate or inaccessible parking, thereby reducing safety, traffic, and congestion concerns. Further, it is addressed to legitimate concerns which go to the nature of the proposed use of the property. Such a condition falls within the Board's authority to both "minimize the adverse impacts" of the special use on neighboring properties and to "[a]ssur[e] satisfactory installation and maintenance of required public improvements." See Ord. Art. § 702(H)(1), (4); G.L. §
. . . the power to grant exceptions is broad but its exercise by the board is not without some limitation. That power was intended to be used sparingly in exceptional cases to prevent placing on the property unnecessary burdens which would in effect deprive an owner of the reasonable and beneficial use of his property and to provide a flexibility in exceptional cases that would protect the owner against arbitrary effects that might follow from a literal enforcement of the terms thereof. Id.
Thus, the Court found that the zoning board had exceeded its authority in granting the special use permit. Id. at 53,
In contrast to the dramatic alterations to the neighborhoods and zoning schemes in Staller,
Based on a review of all the competent evidence before the Zoning Board, the Court finds that Appellant introduced substantial evidence showing that its proposal satisfied all of the criteria for granting a special use permit to build an accessory apartment. The Court further finds that the Zoning Board acted upon substantial and reliable evidence contained in the record such that its decision was not arbitrary, capricious, or characterized by an abuse of discretion. As such, this Court concludes that the Board did not err in conditioning the grant of Appellant's special use permit on the maintenance of fifteen parking spots on the subject property. *Page 31
Counsel shall submit an Order consistent with this Decision.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Island Restoration v. New Shoreham Zbr, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/island-restoration-v-new-shoreham-zbr-risuperct-2008.