Monforte v. Zoning Bd. of Review of East Providence

176 A.2d 726, 93 R.I. 447, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 5, 1962
DocketM. P. No. 1348
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 176 A.2d 726 (Monforte v. Zoning Bd. of Review of East Providence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monforte v. Zoning Bd. of Review of East Providence, 176 A.2d 726, 93 R.I. 447, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 7 (R.I. 1962).

Opinion

*448 Roberts, J.

This petition for a writ of certiorari was brought to review a decision wherein the zoning board of review of the city of East Providence denied the application of the petitioner for an exception authorizing him to erect a gasoline service station on lots 39 and 40 of assessor’s plat 4. These lots are presently zoned for business uses and are located on Waterman avenue in that city. Pursuant to the writ the respondent board has certified to this court the pertinent records in the cause.

It appears from the record that the property consists of two adjoining lots which abut on Waterman avenue and are adjacent to the intersection thereof with Hall street. The petitioner has been the owner of the property since 1920, and at the present time the only structures on the lots are billboards. According to testimony adduced in his behalf, Waterman avenue is “pretty wide and traffic seems to move along right there” and is a “heavily traveled” street. The evidence shows further that the proposed station would have two entrances on Waterman avenue and that it would be open from seven o’clock in the morning until six o’clock in the evening on weekdays.

The board denied the application for the following reasons:

“The Board has concluded that the location of these lots are within a few feet from an intersection of Hall Street and Waterman Avenue, where there is heavy traffic flowing westerly and turning into Hall Street northerly. By reason of the heavy traffic the granting of this petition would create a serious traffic hazard for cars going in or out of the station, and the westerly flow of traffic on Waterman Avenue.
“The Board is cognizant of the fact that west of Hall Street, Waterman Avenue is a one-way street and all *449 westerly 'bound traffic must turn into Hall Street in a northerly direction.”

It then concluded that the “petitioner failed to substantiate by any competent evidence that the welfare and convenience of the public would not be best served by the granting of this petition.” In this conclusion the board, as we understand it, was finding that the applicant had failed to establish that the public welfare and convenience would be substantially served by a grant of the exception herein sought as is required by the provisions of sec. 15B of the ordinance and for that reason denied the application.

In this decision the board clearly implies that it found as a fact that the operation of a gasoline service station on the premises would complicate the flow of traffic at the intersection of Waterman avenue and Hall street with a consequent increase in the congestion of traffic at that point. The petitioner attacks this finding on the ground that there is in the record no competent evidence that such traffic congestion would result and contends that the board acted arbitrarily in denying his application.

Whether there is in the record any legal evidence to warrant such a finding is a question upon which we are not required to pass in the circumstances here for the reason that it is abundantly clear that the board reached its decision and its findings in reliance upon its own knowledge as to the highway pattern existing in the vicinity of petitioner’s property and the volume of traffic using those highways. It is the well-settled law in this state that a zoning board of review is presumed to have knowledge concerning those matters which are related to an effective administration of the zoning ordinance. Where it appears from the record that a decision was reached in reliance upon such knowledge, it is considered by this court to constitute legal evidence sufficient to support such a finding. Woodbury v. Zoning Board of Review, 78 R. I. 319, 323. *450 For this reason we find the first contention of petitioner to be without merit.

The petitioner further argues that the action of the board in denying his application was illegal. The gist of this argument, as we understand it, is that the ordinance, while conferring power upon the board of review to determine whether the public convenience and welfare will be substantially served by the granting of an exception, fails to prescribe any norm or standard within which the board is to confine its exercise of the power thus conferred. From this he reasons that the board was without legal authority to make a finding that the grant of an exception in the instant case would be contrary to the public convenience and welfare and concludes, therefore, that in denying his application on such a ground the board was acting illegally. This argument, in our opinion, either ignores or misconceives the nature and extent of the power to grant an exception that vests in a board of review under a zoning ordinance.

The power of a local legislature to enact a zoning ordinance and to provide therein for special exceptions to its terms that may be made by a zoning board of review is conferred upon such local legislatures by the general assembly. Flynn v. Zoning Board of Review, 77 R. I. 118. The enabling act, now G. L. 1956, chap. 45-24, provides in §45-24-13 that a local legislature, in enacting a zoning ordinance and providing therein for a board of review, may provide also that such board may, “in appropriate cases and subject to appropriate conditions and safeguards, make special exceptions to the terms of the ordinance in harmony with its general purpose and intent and in accordance with general or specific rules therein contained * *

In §45-24-19 the general assembly confers specifically upon boards of review the power to grant such exceptions as the local legislature may prescribe when in paragraph b. thereof it confers upon a board of review the express au *451 thority “To hear and decide special exceptions to the terms of the ordinance, upon which such board is authorized to pass under such ordinance.” In other words, the enabling legislation authorizes local legislatures to prescribe certain exceptions to the term® of the zoning ordinance, which exceptions, subject to appropriate conditions and safeguards, may be granted upon application therefor by the board of review pursuant to such general or specific rules as are set out in the ordinance by the local legislature.

In the instant case the local legislature enacted a zoning ordinance pursuant to the enabling act. In sec. 5A of the ordinance it was provided that “Within the town no building or premises shall be used, and no building shall be erected which is arranged, intended or designated to be used, for any of the following uses, except on special permit as provided in paragraph (1) of sub-section B, section 15 * * *” of that ordinance. Included in the uses that the local legislature declared to be within the scope of the prohibitory language of sec. 5A was a “Gasoline or other motor fuel station.”

In sec. 15B of the ordinance, to which express reference is made in sec. 5A thereof, the local legislature has provided for the making of special exceptions to the terms of the ordinance by the board of review.

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Bluebook (online)
176 A.2d 726, 93 R.I. 447, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monforte-v-zoning-bd-of-review-of-east-providence-ri-1962.