Marmah, Inc. v. Town of Greenwich

405 A.2d 63, 176 Conn. 116, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 1014
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 12, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 405 A.2d 63 (Marmah, Inc. v. Town of Greenwich) 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
Marmah, Inc. v. Town of Greenwich, 405 A.2d 63, 176 Conn. 116, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 1014 (Colo. 1978).

Opinion

Peters, J.

This case concerns the efforts of the plaintiff, Marmah, Ine., to construct a post office in Old Greenwich. Marmah presented a site plan to the defendant town’s planning and zoning commission which the commission disapproved after a public meeting on December 19, 1972. Marmah timely appealed to the Court of Common Pleas which concluded that the site plan application had been arbitrarily denied. The town thereupon petitioned for certification by this court, and upon the grant of that petition, perfected its appeal, urging reversal of the trial court and dismissal of Marmah’s appeal.

The theory on which this ease was tried was that the commission had denied Marmah’s application not in the exercise of reasonable judgment but rather as the result of predisposition and predetermination. Correlatively, Marmah alleged that it was never afforded a reasonable opportunity to be heard before the commission, and that the commission’s assigned reasons for denying the site plan application were not proper.

Two separate but interrelated sets of factual allegations concerning predisposition and predetermination were proffered by Marmah and accepted by the trial court. Those allegations related on the one hand to the commission’s exercise of its administrative power, to the manner in which it considered the application for the site plan; on the other hand, Marmah asked scrutiny of the commission’s exer *118 cise of its legislative power to amend the building zone regulations while the application for the sité plan was pending.

Review by the trial court of the commissi on’s administrative proceedings produced substantial factual evidence that Marmah’s site plan application was not afforded a fair and reasonable hearing by the commission. The commission’s overt consideration of the site plan was casual and perfunctory. The commission appeared to be favoring opponents of the application throughout the public meeting at which it was discussed. Representatives of the proponent, Marmah, were not permitted to question the representative capacity, or the technical credentials, of those who spoke or wrote in opposition to the application. There was no expert testimony about traffic, architectural design or building design, other than the approvals of Marmah’s application by the defendant town’s traffic department, architectural review board, and building department. Nonetheless, the commission voted to disapprove the site plan on the grounds of increased traffic and unsatisfactory parking layout, as well as the absence of ,a request for new facilities by the postal authorities. The test for review of commission administrative proceedings is “ ‘whether the assigned grounds are reasonably supported by the record and whether they are pertinent to the considerations which the authority was required to apply under the zoning regulations.’ ” Goldberg v. Zoning Commission, 173 Conn. 23, 25-26, 376 A.2d 385 (1977). The trial court reasonably concluded that in this case the commission failed to provide proper reasons for denying the site plan application, and that the reasons that were provided were not substantiated by the evidence before the commission. This con *119 elusion strongly supports Marmah’s general claim of predisposition and predetermination. Pecora v. Zoning Commission, 145 Conn. 435, 444, 144 A.2d 48 (1958); Couch v. Zoning Commission, 141 Conn. 349, 357, 106 A.2d 173 (1954).

Review by the trial court of the commission’s legislative actions led the court to conclude that the deficiencies in the administrative proceedings were not, as the town urged, superseded by the commission’s subsequent amendment of the building zone regulations which, as amended, made a post office an impermissible use. The effect of this change in the zoning is the central issue on this appeal. Before we reach it, we can usefully dispose of the town’s alternate argument that even the building zone regulations as they existed at the time of Marmah’s site plan application did not permit Marmah’s contemplated use.

In November, 1972, when Marmah first formally applied to the commission for site plan approval for the post office, the Greenwich building zone regulations contained the following provision governing the R-12 zone in which Marmah’s property is located: Section 6 (a) (2) permitted use for “[s]treets, parks, playgrounds, public school grounds and other buildings and lands of town, state or federal government, used for public purposes.” The town now urges that the language “buildings and lands of . . . federal government” excludes Marmah because it is Marmah, and not the federal government, that owns and controls the building site. Whatever the intrinsic merits of this reading might be, the argument is not properly before us. Illegality of use was not among the stated reasons advanced by the commission for its site plan dis *120 approval. Nor can illegality of nse fairly be said to be implied in the commission’s third reason for disapproval, “[t]he post office neither directly requested nor was a need demonstrated for the new facilities.” As this court held in DeMaria v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 159 Conn. 534, 541, 271 A.2d 105 (1970), “where a zoning commission has formally stated the reasons for its decision the court should not go behind that official collective statement of the commission. It should not attempt to search out and speculate upon other reasons which might have influenced some or all of the members of the commission to reach the commission’s final collective decision.” The court, therefore, did not err in concluding that Marmah’s site plan represented a proposal for a permitted use within § 6 (a) (2) when Marmah’s application was denied on December 19, 1972.

This ease turns, therefore, on the effect to be given to the amendment by the commission of its building zone regulations. As amended, § 6 (a) (2) prohibits the use of Marmah’s land as a post office. 1 The town argues here, as it did in the trial court, that the change in the zoning regulations makes the appeal moot and deprives the court of jurisdiction to hear it.

Zoning regulations are, as this court stated in Edward Balf Co. v. East Granby, 152 Conn. 319, 323, 207 A.2d 58 (1965), “presumed to be for the welfare of the entire community.” “A landowner does not have a vested right in the existing classification of his land. On the contrary, the enabling acts which authorize the enactment of zoning ordi *121 nances provide for the amendment of such ordinances.

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Bluebook (online)
405 A.2d 63, 176 Conn. 116, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 1014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marmah-inc-v-town-of-greenwich-conn-1978.