Northeast Pkng. v. planning/zoning Comm., No. Cv93-0527558 S (Oct. 27, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 10215
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1994
DocketNos. CV93-0527558 S, CV93-0527589 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 10215 (Northeast Pkng. v. planning/zoning Comm., No. Cv93-0527558 S (Oct. 27, 1994)) 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
Northeast Pkng. v. planning/zoning Comm., No. Cv93-0527558 S (Oct. 27, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 10215 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON MOTION TO DISMISS The defendant Town of Windsor Locks Planning and Zoning Commission and the intervening defendants Park Plaza, Inc. and Winchester Partnership made these motions to dismiss the appeals of the respective plaintiffs in these actions. The defendants claim that the plaintiffs, in the respective actions, lack standing to bring these appeals in that they are not "aggrieved." The motions are filed pursuant to General Statutes 8-8(J). Standing implicates the court's subject matter jurisdiction and hence must be determined prior to any further action on these appeals. Fuller v. Planing ZoningCT Page 10216Commission of Town of New Hartford, 21 Conn. App. 340 (1990).

When the question of subject matter jurisdiction is brought to the attention of the court, the matter must be passed upon before the court can proceed further. Castro v.Veera, 207 Conn. 420, 429 (1988). "When issues of fact are necessary to the determination of the court's jurisdiction due process requires that a trial-like hearing be held . . ."Standard Tallow Corporation v. Jowdy, 190 Conn. 48, 56 (1983). The court held such hearing on these motions, commencing April 4 through July 25, 1994, on various available dates.

Facts

The plaintiffs conduct the activity known as "Valet Parking" at several locations in the immediate vicinity of Bradley Airport in the Town of Windsor Locks. "Valet Parking" is described by the defendant's witness, Adrian Maught, Chief Executive Officer of the intervening defendant Park Plaza, Incorporated, as a parking activity whereby "the customer's automobile is checked in. Their luggage and their person are transported to the airport. Upon completion of their journey they are picked up at the airport and returned to Park Plaza to reclaim their vehicle."

This description aptly describes the business activity of each of the plaintiffs, and the business activity of the intervening defendant. The only difference between the activity of the intervening defendant, on the one hand, and that of the plaintiffs on the other hand, is that the intervening defendant conducts the activity indoors, whereas the plaintiffs conduct the same activity outdoors. The court further takes notice of the fact that valet parking is an adjunct to almost every major airport in the United States and probably to every major airport throughout the world.

The Zoning Ordinances of the Town of Windsor Locks do not permit "valet parking" in any zone, either as a permitted use or as special use permit. The use by the plaintiffs have existed for many years. Surprising as it may seem that such uses are not permitted, bearing in mind the natural adjunct of such activity, as an essential service to the airport, and their long established use, the failure to allow the uses as specifically permitted uses or as special permit uses has the legal and obviously intended effect of restricting the CT Page 10217 expansion or enlarging of this activity in the vicinity of the airport.

It is elementary that the plaintiffs, operators of the outdoor valet parking facility, which long antedated the present zoning ordinance, are not legally enabled to enlarge or expand their existing uses. It is clear that they cannot demonstrate "exceptional difficulty or unusual hardship" as required for such expansion or enlargement, this being the criterion for the granting of a variance per General Statutes8-6. See Pike v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 31 Conn. App. 270 (1993); Haines v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 26 Conn. App. 187 (1991); Raffaele v. Planning Zoning Board of Appeals,157 Conn. 454, 462 (1969). See, also, Chapter VIII, Zoning Regulation, Town of Windsor Locks.

The absence of valet parking as a specifically permitted use or as a special permit use, has been referred to by the parties as a moratorium on valet parking, which is a proper vernacular description of the effect of the zoning ordinance. Nowhere in the record or in the evidence does it appear that it is the intent of the ordinance to "reduce nonconforming uses to conforming uses with all the speed justice will tolerate." See, Helbig v. Zoning Commission, 185 Conn. 294,306 (1981). It would be naive to assume that the Town of Windsor Locks, by not allowing valet parking as a permitted use or a special permit use, intended to eventually eliminate valet parking for the vicinity of the airport. Hence the court accepts as reality the fact that the non-permitting of valet parking, by the zoning ordinance, intended to accomplish, by a simplistic means, a moratorium on the expansion of the activity valet parking in the vicinity of the airport.

The intervening defendant Park Plaza, Inc. and Winchester Partnership owned a building within the zone in question. The building had been vacant for a period of time, it having been vacated by a manufacturing company. The defendants proposed to the Planning Zoning Commission that it promulgate a new regulation captioned "Adoptive Reuse Regulation," adopted as Regulation Section 407 and 408. In summary, it provides that the Zoning Commission may permit, by Special Permit "any use which it determines is consistent with the criteria set forth above . . . even if such use is not otherwise permitted in Chapter IV of these Regulations . . ." (Emphasis in CT Page 10218 original).

The use, valet parking, is not permitted in any of the zones, including the zones in which the lands of the plaintiffs and the intervening defendant are located. The intervening defendant, pursuant to the "any use" provision of the new ordinance which it proposed, then obtained a special permit to valet park 800 vehicles within the building. The plaintiffs did not appeal the enactment of the ordinance or the original special permit to allow the defendant to valet park 800 vehicles.

On June 4, 1993 the intervening defendant applied to the Planning Zoning Commission for permission to expand its special use permit for its indoor valet parking by an additional 348 parking spaces. The defendant Planning Zoning Commission granted the application on June 14, 1993. The plaintiffs have appealed that decision. The plaintiffs contend that the action of the Commission was illegal and arbitrary and in abuse of its discretion in that, to summarize, the applicant did not then have a vacant area in excess of 150,000 square feet; there was not a vacancy rate of over 50%; failure to show that the expansion would be a substantial benefit to the Town of Windsor Locks; failure to show inability to use the space for zone-permitted uses; failure to post a sign. Additionally the plaintiffs claim that the approval threatened the integrity of the purpose and intent of the moratorium, which the plaintiffs relied upon in making their business decisions and that their property interests, their business and real estate, are adversely affected by the decision of the Commission.

The defendants make this motion to dismiss "because the plaintiffs have not shown themselves to be aggrieved persons" within the meaning of the statute and as required by General Statutes Section 8-8(d).

Discussion

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 10215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northeast-pkng-v-planningzoning-comm-no-cv93-0527558-s-oct-27-connsuperct-1994.