Makar v. Zoning Board of Appeals

190 A.2d 45, 150 Conn. 391, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 212
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 8, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 190 A.2d 45 (Makar v. Zoning Board of Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Makar v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 190 A.2d 45, 150 Conn. 391, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 212 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

*393 Baldwin, C. J.

The defendant Frank Dardani applied to the defendant zoning hoard of appeals of the town of Fairfield for a variance of the zoning regulations relating to the use of land which he owns on Black Rock Turnpike between Candlewood Road and Whitewood Drive, all public highways in Fairfield. He proposes to erect on this land a one-story brick building, 7720 square feet in floor area, to house professional offices and to provide off-street parking for 43 automobiles. The land for which the variance is sought has a frontage of 300 feet on Black Rock Turnpike, 133 feet on Candle-wood Road and 90 feet on Whitewood Drive. It is presently in a residence A zone, where a single-family residential use only is permitted under the regulations. Fairfield Zoning Regs. § 3, div. 1 (1960). The use for which the variance is asked is permissible in a business zone. Id. § 4.

Dardani claims, as the reason for a variance, that the property is “entirely unsuitable for residential purposes.” The basis for the action of the board in allowing the variance was stated in the minutes of its executive session to be “[hjardship . . . in that the land is unsuitable for residential purposes.” The board is vested with all the powers conferred upon it under the General Statutes. 25 Spec. Laws 719; Fairfield Zoning Regs. § 14 (1960). Among these powers is the power to vary the application of the zoning regulations “where, owing to conditions especially affecting . . . [the land for which the relief is sought] but not affecting generally the district in which it is situated, a literal enforcement of . . . [the] regulations would result in exceptional difficulty or unusual hardship so that substantial justice will be done and the public safety and welfare secured.” General Stat *394 utes §8-6 (3). We have said many times that this power must be exercised sparingly and only in exceptional and unusual instances. Wil-Nor-Corporation v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 146 Conn. 27, 30, 147 A.2d 197; Mabank Corporation v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 143 Conn. 132, 136, 120 A.2d 149.

The record of the board returned to the trial court discloses the following salient facts: Dardani’s property is located on what we will call, in the interests of simplification, the easterly side of Black Rock Turnpike between Candlewood Road and Whitewood Drive. The southerly end of his property is located in the northeasterly corner of the intersection of Black Rock Turnpike and White-wood Drive. Tunxis Hill Cutoff enters this intersection from a southeasterly direction, forming a sharp angle with Black Rock Turnpike which, south of the intersection, is the more westerly of these two highways. These highways are very heavily traveled. Dardani’s land is surrounded on the north and east by land zoned and devoted to residential uses. The land to the west, directly across Black Rock Turnpike, and for a long block northerly along the turnpike is also zoned for residential use. A mile easterly and southerly, down the Tunxis Hill Cutoff, there is a large business district. The land in the angle formed by the junction of Black Rock Turnpike and Tunxis Hill Cutoff as well as the land on the westerly side of Black Rock Turnpike as it approaches the intersection from the south is also zoned for business uses. These latter lands are diagonally across the intersection southwesterly from the Dardani property. On them, there are fourteen commercial establishments, one of which is a gasoline station. The population in the general area is growing rapidly. The traffic *395 on Black Rock Turnpike and Tunxis Hill Cutoff is increasing in volume. The large business district one mile east along Tunxis Hill Cutoff has become the second largest business district in Fairfield. There can be no doubt that the development of the entire area has made the Dardani property less desirable for residential uses than it was formerly.

The crucial question is whether the evidence before the board supports the granting of a variance. The board’s finding that the literal enforcement of the regulations would result in a hardship appears to rest primarily, if not entirely, on the testimony of a real estate dealer produced by Dardani. The dealer testified that it would not be economically feasible to build dwelling houses on Dardani’s land, and that the land is salable but at a price substantially less than Dardani paid for it. Dardani concedes that it is physically possible to erect on this land two single-family dwelling houses which would conform to the presently applicable zoning regulations. Although he purchased the property as long ago as 1954 or 1955, it does not appear that he has ever contemplated developing it for anything but uses which are not in conformity with the regulations. He can either sell it or build dwelling houses on it, but in either event he will be unable to realize the full benefit of his investment in the land. The hardship by reason of the unsuitability of the property for residential purposes is, therefore, a financial hardship.

Ordinarily, mere financial loss does not constitute a hardship warranting the granting of a variance. Forbes v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 146 Conn. 547, 550, 153 A.2d 458; Spalding v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 144 Conn. 719, 721, 137 A.2d 755; Lindy’s Restaurant, Inc. v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 143 *396 Conn. 620, 623, 124 A.2d 918; Libby v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 143 Conn. 46, 51, 118 A.2d 894, and cases collected in the footnote. “Situations will arise, however, where the application of zoning to a particular piece of property practically destroys or greatly decreases its value for any permitted use to which it can reasonably be put, and where the application of the ordinance bears so little relationship to the purposes of zoning that, as to that property, the regulation is, in effect, confiscatory or arbitrary.” Libby v. Board of Zoning Appeals, supra. In that case, a variance was granted to allow a thirteen-room single-family house in a single-family residential zone to be made into a two-family house. The applicant, a physician who had maintained his office and residence in the house before he moved his office to another town, was able to show that his attempts for two years to sell the house as a single-family house had been futile and that the proposed alteration, which would permit a two-family residential occupancy, would be confined to the interior of the house and would have no effect on the neighboring properties. In the Libby

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Bluebook (online)
190 A.2d 45, 150 Conn. 391, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/makar-v-zoning-board-of-appeals-conn-1963.