Mazzola v. Commissioner of Transportation

402 A.2d 786, 175 Conn. 576, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 1033
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 8, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 402 A.2d 786 (Mazzola v. Commissioner of Transportation) 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
Mazzola v. Commissioner of Transportation, 402 A.2d 786, 175 Conn. 576, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 1033 (Colo. 1978).

Opinion

Parskey, J.

The defendant condemned for highway purposes 2.7 acres of the plaintiffs’ land on the northerly side of route 6 in the town of Windham and took easements to the slope and grade upon portions of the plaintiffs’ remaining land, thereby denying them of any right of access from the land directly onto the relocated route 6. The defendant assessed damages at $225,300 and filed a statement of compensation and a deposit for that amount with the clerk of the Superior Court. Thereafter, the plaintiff applied to the Superior Court for a review of the compensation and the court referred the matter to a state referee, who, acting as the court, heard evidence, viewed the property and found the *578 property to have a fair market value of $248,400. The defendant has appealed to this court from the judgment rendered in the plaintiffs’ favor.

The unchallenged finding supports the following facts: On August 14, 1970, the plaintiffs, hereinafter Mazzola, owned 24.2 acres of land on the northerly side of route 6 in the town of Windham. Mazzola bought this acreage in 1953 and had then begun a mobile home park and mobile home sales business. On August 14, 1970, the defendant condemned for highway purposes 2.7 acres of the Mazzola property. The condemnation also included easements to slope and grade upon portions of the remaining Mazzola land and thereby denied any right of access from the Mazzola property directly onto route 6. At the time of the taking, the Mazzola property, which was being operated as a mobile home park, contained 131 trailer spaces or hook-ups and auxiliary stores and businesses. At that time there were no zoning regulations, as such, in the town of Windham affecting this property. Route 6 is a cross-state highway. The taking deprived the Mazzola property of all the frontage which the land had on the north side of this route. One of the purposes of the taking was to reconstruct route 6, as a result of which the road would be at a grade substantially higher than the present grade. Upon completion of the relocated route 6 access to the Mazzola property could be gained only by means of a narrow, inconvenient and, in the event of fire, hazardous roadway.

From 1953 to the passage of a mobile home ordinance by the town of Windham in 1959 the mobile home park had expanded to sixty hook-ups. After 1959 the park continued to expand. The plaintiffs *579 furnished the town authorities with information as to the number of mobile homes which were located in the park on October 1 of each year. There were over 100 units reported to the town.

In 1959 the town adopted a “mobile home ordinance.” This ordinance prohibited the establishment or maintenance of a mobile home or a mobile home park without first obtaining a permit from the board of selectmen. The ordinance established certain requirements applicable to mobile homes and mobile home parks but provided that, with the exception of sanitary regulations, the board of selectmen was authorized to waive all requirements as may be required by the specific circumstances.

The plaintiffs never applied for a permit to operate their park but customarily permits were mailed to them by the town authorities. The early permits contained no specification as to number; the later ones did — the largest number being eighty.

Peter R. Marsele was employed by the defendant to appraise the premises. After viewing the premises and making an investigation of the mobile home park permit with town officials he rendered an opinion that the Mazzola property had suffered damages in the amount of $225,300. The state referee, after viewing the premises and taking into account the Marsele appraisal together with the effect of relocating and restoring independent plumbing upon the after-take valuation, fixed just compensation at $248,400. He deducted the sum of $225,300 already paid by the defendant and allowed 6 percent interest on the balance.

The defendant filed fifteen discursive claims of law. The referee synthesized these into five claims in his finding. The defendant asserts that in so *580 doing the referee did not comply with Practice Book, 1963, § 619, which requires that the finding state the claims of law substantially as they were made at the trial. Section 619 must be read together with Practice Book, 1963, § 223 which requires that claims of law be stated distinctly. This rule contemplates that such claims are to be stated clearly and concisely so that they may be readily comprehensible both to the litigants and the trial court. In the absence of such precision the trier can hardly be faulted for attempting to distill from the defendant’s wordy conglomerate the essential legal ingredients for the consideration of his claims on appeal. Although the trial referee’s distillation could have been expanded so as to present the defendant’s claims in somewhat more detail we have considered this deficiency in our examination of the substance of the claims. There is, however, one essential claim which has been omitted and which should be included. The defendant claimed that in arriving at his valuation the referee failed to exclude those lots or spaces which did not conform to the requirements of the Windham mobile home ordinance and for which the requirements could not be legally waived. We correct the finding accordingly. Practice Book, 1963, §§ 619, 627.

The defendant assigns error for failure of the referee to include in his finding certain paragraphs of the draft finding which are claimed to be undisputed. These paragraphs relate to the permit issued to Mazzola for 80 spaces, the actual use of 130 spaces by Mazzola at the time of the taking, the fact that Marsele’s appraisal was based on such use, the location of the water meter and the feeling of the state project engineer that this meter would have to be relocated away from the service road. *581 In their brief the plaintiffs concede these paragraphs and we correct the finding accordingly. Practice Book, 1963, §§ 627, 628. An additional paragraph respecting a later change of thinking on the necessity of relocating the meter is neither conceded nor undisputed, and therefore affords no basis for correction of the finding. It is axiomatic that a fact is not undisputed merely because it is uncontradicted. O’Connor v. Dory Corporation, 174 Conn. 65, 70, 381 A.2d 559. The remaining assignments referable to the finding are considered in the opinion. Those which seek to add facts which will not affect the result have not been considered. E & F Realty Co. v. Commissioner of Transportation, 173 Conn. 247, 249, 377 A.2d 302. Those which have not been briefed are considered abandoned. Perley v. Glastonbury Bank & Trust Co., 170 Conn. 691, 694, 368 A.2d 149.

The defendant’s principal assignment is that the referee erroneously included in his valuation portions of the Mazzola property devoted to an unlawful use.

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Bluebook (online)
402 A.2d 786, 175 Conn. 576, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 1033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mazzola-v-commissioner-of-transportation-conn-1978.