Kirkham v. Finnemore

16 Conn. Supp. 38, 1948 Conn. Super. LEXIS 86
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 3, 1948
DocketFile No. 79874
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Conn. Supp. 38 (Kirkham v. Finnemore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirkham v. Finnemore, 16 Conn. Supp. 38, 1948 Conn. Super. LEXIS 86 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

INGLIS, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment declaring a purported change of zone in the town of Plainville null and void and for an injunction. The action is brought by certain owners of property located on New Britain Avenue and elsewhere in that town against the town of Plainville, the members of the zoning commission of that town, the building inspector of the town, and William S. Landwehr and Herbert Landwehr, who own property at the corner of Cooke Street and New Britain Avenue .

[39]*39Prior to January, 1947, the area involved in this litigation was zoned as residence A zone. At some time prior to January 17, 1947, the defendnts Landwehr petitioned the zoning commission of Plainville “to amend the Zoning Regulations ... by changing the north side of New Britain Avenue between Cooke Street and Ledge Road, to a depth of two hundred or more feet north of New Britain Avenue, from a residential use district to a business use district.” This application was indorsed by four other owners of property within the iimits of the proposed change. The zoning commision advertised a hearing on this and some other applications for the evening of January 17, 1947.

At the date of the hearing there was filed with the commission a document sufficiently definite in terms to be clearly a pro' test against the proposed change of zone, signed by nine per' sons and with the signature of a tenth, Mrs. L. W. Kirkham, incorporated by reference. Of these signatories, Mrs. Kirkham owned property opposite the area in question on Cooke Street, Mary S. Hart and Emma M. Rowe owned property opposite it on New Britain Avenue, and Charles H. Relay owned an undivided oneffialf interest in other property opposite the area in question on New Britain Avenue. The other oneffialf interest in the Relay property was owned by Ora H. Relay, Charles H. Relay’s wife, who had not signed the protest. Mr. Relay was authorized to act as his wife’s agent but he had not signed the protest as such. The proposed change was to be of something over 200 feet frontage on Cooke Street and about 3200 feet on New Britain Avenue. In order to make up 20 per cent of the frontage opposite that there would have to be included with the property of the other signers of the protest the Relay property. Under the holding in Warren v. Borawski, 130 Conn. 676, the Relay property could not be so in-eluded. That such was the law, however, was not known to the commission.

After the hearing on January 17 the records of the zoning commission disclose: “The request of H. W. Landwehr was thoroughly discussed and the vote was three in favor of the change and two against.” Then, after a similar record relating to an application of Joseph E. Tinty, the record reads: “Because it was considered that over 20 per cent of the neighbors protested the last two changes it was voted to pass these two over to the town counsel for a complete check. This meeting is temporarily postponed awaiting the result of the investiga' tion.”

[40]*40After investigating the matter, the town counsel reported to the commission that in his opinion the protest was effective to require a unanimous vote of the commission to effect the change. Accordingly, to quote from the records, “A special meeting was held on March 12, 1947 to conclude the adjourned meet' ing of January 17, 1947 . . . The attorney’s opinion was read on the Landwehr case and found to concur with the opinion of the board. The board has also checked the assessors’ maps to check their decision. With this information the board voted to sustain their vote of the adjourned meeting of January 17. The Landwehr and Tinty requests are therefore both denied.”

When this result was published in the newspaper, the attorney for the Landwehrs, recognising that the failure of Mrs. Relay to sign the protest had resulted in a lack of signers who were own' ers of 20 per cent of the property located opposite the area in question, and making a claim that the protest was ineffective for that and other reasons, appeared before the commission on Aprili 7, 1947, and asked for a rehearng “to hear arguments to be restricted solely to the acceptance or rejection of a paper signed by persons in objection.” The commission voted four to one in favor of a rehearing. The actual vote for a rehearing did not limit the scope of the rehearing. The hearing was set for April 25 and pursuant to the vote notice thereof was pub' lished in the New Britain Herald. In terms that notice did purport to limit the hearing as the attorney for the Landwehrs had requested.

Prior to the opening of the hearing on April 25, there was filed with the commission a written statement made by Ora H. Relay to the effect that her husband had signed the original protest wth her approval and representing her as well as himself. There was also filed a new protest signed by fifteen people, among whom were owners of much more than 20 per cent of the area of the lots located directly opposite to the area in question.

The hearing was held, but the commission took no action immediately. At the regular meeting of the commission held on May 12, 1947, at which only four of the five members of the commission were present, the Landwehr application was taken up and discussed. The minutes of that meeting make no reference to Mrs. Relay’s statement or to the new protest but disclose that it was voted that the original protest be rejected “because the protest was not definite as to the particular appli' cation and it lacked the required signatures of the required [41]*41number of signers to make the 20 per cent legal requirement as to the opposite owners effective. It was further voted that the premises described in the Landwehr application for a change of zone be changed from residence A zone or use district to business zone or use district, the area so changed, however to cover only the premises included within a distance 200 feet north of New Britain Avenue and that said zone change become effective on June 16, 1947.” As a matter of fact, the vote on these votes was two in favor and two opposed, and the only reason why it was considered by the commission that the votes had been carried was because it was known that the absent member, Mr. Couch, favored the change. Pursuant to the purported votes notice of the change of zone was duly published.

Under the foregoing facts, the following conclusions have been reached: The terms of the original protest were sufficiently definite to be an effective protest against the proposed change of zone under General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1939, § 132e, except for the fact that it had not been signed by the owners of 20 per cent or more of the area of the lots directly opposite thereto. If the latter requirement had been fulfilled, it would, under the statute, have required the unanimous vote of the zoning commission to effect the change. The failure of Mrs. Relay, as one of the tenants in common of the Relay property, to sign the protest left that property completely unrepresented upon the protest. Warren v. Borawski, 130 Conn. 676. For that reason the protest when filed was not effective to require the unanimous vote of the commission.

The vote of January 17, 1947, was not definitive. In the first place it did not definitely fix the bounds of the area which was to be changed to a business zone. It was simply a vote in favor of the Landwehr request, and that request related to an area extending 200 feet or more back from New Britain Avenue. Upon the vote, therefore, there was no limit fixed for the change back from New Britain Avenue.

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Related

Warren v. Borawski
37 A.2d 364 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Conn. Supp. 38, 1948 Conn. Super. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkham-v-finnemore-pactcompl-1948.