Lombardo v. Planning and Zoning Commission

663 A.2d 1128, 43 Conn. Super. Ct. 508, 43 Conn. Supp. 508, 1994 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3403
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1994
DocketFile 515775; 520304; 521163
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 663 A.2d 1128 (Lombardo v. Planning and Zoning Commission) 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
Lombardo v. Planning and Zoning Commission, 663 A.2d 1128, 43 Conn. Super. Ct. 508, 43 Conn. Supp. 508, 1994 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3403 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Hodgson, J.

The plaintiff appeals from the decision of the defendant planning and zoning commission of the town of Manchester (commission) granting the applications of the defendant Paul S. Wright to create a rear lot on his property and to divide the front lot into two lots. The plaintiff also appeals from the recon *509 sideration and repetition of the two approvals by the commission after its first approvals had been made the subject of an appeal. In Docket No. 515775, the plaintiff challenges the validity of the initial decisions. In Docket No. 520304, the plaintiff challenges the validity of the repeated approval of the application to create a rear lot. In Docket No. 521163, the plaintiff challenges the validity of the repeated approval of the division of the front lot. The three appeals have been consolidated.

After counsel had been notified of the date of the hearing for these administrative appeals, the plaintiff filed a motion titled: “Motion to Introduce Evidence and to Add to the Record of the Cases on Appeal.” The motion did not identify the testimony the plaintiff sought to introduce or the topic of such testimony. At oral argument, the plaintiff indicated that testimony would be presented to establish that the chairman of the commission and the town planner were aware of amendments to the subdivision and zoning regulations that had been adopted in 1988. The defendants stipulated to their awareness, and the plaintiff did not thereafter seek to present testimony on that or on any other subject.

The parties also stipulated that the record be supplemented by the addition of certain documents 1 appended to the plaintiffs motion.

The court finds that the plaintiff, who was at all relevant times an owner of the property abutting the tract *510 that was the subject of the commission’s rulings, is aggrieved by the commission’s rulings and has standing to appeal.

The record reveals the following facts. On April 22, 1992, Wright applied to the commission for a special exception to permit the creation of a rear lot for residential development from a property known as 175 New Bolton Road. Simultaneously, Wright filed an application to subdivide land proposing to divide the resulting 1.918 acre front lot into two lots.

On June 15,1992, the commission held a public hearing on the applications, and granted them on August 3, 1992. The plaintiff filed an appeal on August 31,1992, on the grounds, inter alia, that the commission had allowed modifications of the applications after the public hearing without providing abutters an opportunity to be heard on the modified proposals and that the approvals violated state statutes and the provisions of the town’s zoning regulations.

On September 28,1992, less than a month after the plaintiff filed the aforementioned appeal, Wright again filed applications with the commission, asking for the same special approvals that the commission had already granted on August 3,1992. In one of these applications Wright again sought a special exception under article III, § 6, of the zoning regulations of the town of Manchester, to create a rear lot from the premises known as 175 New Bolton Road. In the other application, Wright again sought to subdivide into two lots the front half of the parcel remaining upon creation of a rear lot.

On December 7,1992, after a public hearing, the commission approved the application to create a rear lot. The plaintiff objected to the rehearing of the application on the ground that it was the same application previously approved and as to which an appeal was *511 pending. The commission neither opened the proceeding that had led to its approval of the initial application on August 3,1992, nor vacated that prior approval of the initial application to create a rear lot.

The plaintiff appeals from the commission’s December 7,1992 approval of the application to create a rear lot on the grounds that the commission was without authority to act on an application that had already been granted, and that the approval was contrary to state statutes and to the local zoning regulations in a number of ways.

On the same date that Wright filed the repeated application for a special exception to create a rear lot, he filed a repeated application to divide the resulting front lot on the parcel into two lots. The commission did not hear that application at the same time as the application to create a rear lot, although it was also on the commission’s agenda for December 7, 1992. Instead, the commission heard and granted on January 4, 1993, the application to subdivide the front lot into two lots. The plaintiff objected that the commission was without authority to act on applications it had already granted. The commission at no time opened or vacated its approval of the prior application for the same subdivision. The plaintiff contends that the commission was without authority to act on the subdivision application and that in again granting it the commission violated state statutes and local zoning regulations.

The land to which Wright’s two sets of applications apply is a tract of approximately 7.23 acres located partially in a RR zone and partially in an A A zone. The rear lot approved by the commission on two occasions is approximately 5.3 acres. The resulting front lot, to which both applications for subdivision apply, is a tract of approximately 1.9 acres. The commission twice *512 approved the subdivision of this latter tract into two lots, both with frontage on New Bolton Road, each approximately one acre in size. The plan approved as to the rear lot includes the deeding of a strip of land from the rear lot to New Bolton Road. The actual access route to the rear lot approved by the commission, however, does not run over the deeded access strip but over an easement across the front lot.

Substantively, the plaintiffs complaint is that the commission, by its actions, approved the subdivision of Wright’s land into three lots, including a rear lot, when such rear lots are prohibited in subdivisions. Section 4.06 (f) of the subdivision regulations of the town of Manchester provides that ‘ ‘[a]ll lots [in a subdivision] shall have access directly from a public street.” The rear lot at issue clearly does not have direct access from a public street. Rather, it has access over another lot by operation of an access easement. The commission and Wright argue, in effect, that since the rear lot was created in a separate action from the subdivision approval, § 4.06 (f) of the regulations was inapplicable.

The plaintiff further raises two principal procedural issues: (1) that the commission failed, in its first consideration of the applications, to provide a public hearing as to the actual proposal approved, since it allowed amendments after the public hearing; and (2) that the commission’s second consideration of the applications was invalid because the commission lacked authority to rehear applications while its prior rulings were undisturbed.

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Related

Adams v. Warren Planning Zoning, No. Cv 97 0074240 (Dec. 19, 1997)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 13128 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1997)
Denike v. Planning Zoning Commission, No. 31 81 69 (Apr. 4, 1996)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 3101 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1996)
Gelfman v. Plan. Zon. Comm., No. 31 94 30-31 95 87 (Jan. 12, 1996)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 252 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1996)
A. J. Czyr, Inc. v. Ridgefield P. Z. Comm., No. 31 89 69 (Nov. 7, 1995)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 12725 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1995)
Camp v. Planning Zoning Commission, No. Cv95 0319318s (Oct. 13, 1995)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 11786 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1995)
Lombardo v. Planning & Zoning Commission
663 A.2d 431 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
663 A.2d 1128, 43 Conn. Super. Ct. 508, 43 Conn. Supp. 508, 1994 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lombardo-v-planning-and-zoning-commission-connsuperct-1994.