Rodrigues v. Gannon

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 24, 2009
DocketC.A. No. PC 2008-0184
StatusPublished

This text of Rodrigues v. Gannon (Rodrigues v. Gannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Rodrigues v. Gannon, (R.I. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

1 The caption of the original complaint filed with the Court identifies the Appellee as the Zoning Board of Review of the Town of Cumberland. This appears to be a typographical error since the record and all other filings, including the body of the complaint, refer to the Zoning Board of Review of the City of Pawtucket.

DECISION
Osvaldo Rodrigues, ("Rodrigues") Daniel Lopes, and Jose Fonseca, (collectively "Applicants" or "Appellants") bring this appeal from a decision of the Zoning Board of Review of the City of Pawtucket ("Zoning Board," "Board" or "Appellees"). Appellants appeal the denial of their application for a dimensional variance and special use permits to operate a mixed use residential apartment building and house of worship. Section 45-24-69 of the Rhode Island General Laws confers jurisdiction on this Court.

For the reasons set forth below, the Court affirms the decision of the Zoning Board. The applicable Pawtucket Zoning Ordinance ("ordinance") permits an applicant to seek a special use permit to combine a residential use with a commercial use. However, a house of worship is not a commercial use within the meaning of the *Page 2 ordinance. As such, the Applicants are not entitled to obtain a special use permit to allow them to use the property as both a church and a residence.

I
Facts and Travel
The Applicants own property located at 268-272 West Avenue in the City of Pawtucket, designated as Tax Assessor's Plat 55, Lot 287. The property, which is situated in a `RM' Residential Multi-Family Zone, is currently a non-conforming mixed use residential and commercial property.2 Appellants filed an initial application seeking a dimensional variance and special use permit to alter the use of a single first floor unit from a beauty salon to a house of worship. The second unit on the first floor is occupied by a retail store. The second floor consists of four residential apartments. Although both residential apartments and houses of worship are permitted uses within the zone, they are not permitted mixed uses. Applicants sought a special use permit to operate both a church and residential apartment units on the property. On August 27, 2007, the Zoning Board voted to deny Applicants' initial application.3

Thereafter, on September 27, 2007, Applicants filed another application, which is the subject of this appeal. In the amended application, Appellants seek both a dimensional variance under ordinance § 410-76 and also special use permits under § 410-59(E) and (F) and § 410-60(F). They requested the following: a dimensional variance to permit them to provide fewer than the required number of parking spaces on site; special *Page 3 use permits under § 410-59(E) and (F) to allow them to utilize off-site and shared parking spaces; and a special use permit under § 410-60(F) to permit them to use the property as a mixed residential-commercial use of apartments and a house of worship. Whereas in the initial application, they retained the retail space, in the second application, they seek to eliminate both the first floor beauty salon and the retail space to use the entire first floor as a house of worship.

The Zoning Board held a duly advertised public hearing on the application on October 29, 2007. At the hearing, Applicants' attorney advised the Board that his clients would agree to condition their approval on limiting the days and hours of operation for the house of worship to Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings seven to nine at night and one Sunday morning a month from nine to eleven in the morning.

Rodrigues testified on behalf of their application. He indicated that the church had twenty five members, that for over sixteen years, it had been located in another building on the same street as the property in question, and that he purchased the subject property on behalf of the church so the congregants would have their own place to worship. (Tr. 5.) Rodrigues indicated that the proposed limitation on hours was acceptable to him and that neither worship nor group meetings would occur outside those hours. Id. He testified that he had personally spoken to the owners of Tony's Repair and Baris Awning, two neighboring commercial establishments, and that they both agreed to allow members of the church to use their parking spaces. (Tr. 7.) He noted that Applicants submitted copies of letters from Tony's Repair and Baris Awning with the original application, documenting the agreements.Id. Pursuant to a Zoning Board request, dated November 1, 2007, the Applicants supplemented the letters with copies of *Page 4 draft leases ("lease agreements"). He testified that Barris Awning was located directly across the street from the subject property and that congregants would be permitted to use half of its 100 x 100 foot parking lot. He further testified that the lot at Tony's Repair measured 25.9 x 59 feet. (Tr. 13.)

Rodrigues testified that the house of worship would provide seating for fifty congregants. Under the ordinance, a fifty seat church would be required to provide ten parking spaces, but the Applicants planned to lease a total of sixteen spaces, exceeding the number of spaces required by six. (Tr. 12-13.) He testified that the occupants of the residential apartments located on the second floor parked in the eight spots on the property which are located in the back of the building. (Tr. 15-16.)

Counsel for Applicants rejected a suggestion that his clients attempt to obtain easements for access to the parking spaces, but offered that the Board might choose to require the church to maintain the required parking by lease agreements. (Tr. 7-9.)

Joyce Mullen, a local resident, testified in opposition to the application. She expressed concern that members of the church might park in public spaces on a neighboring street. (Tr. 19-20.) She also presented the Zoning Board with photographs, accepted as exhibits, showing that only six spaces were available on the property due to the location of the dumpster. Id. She pointed out that the agreement with Tony's Auto Body Shop provided for spaces only during the week, not during the weekend and that the location of the body shop was almost two blocks away from the house of worship. Id. Mullen testified that there was less available parking on the street because a damaged building that had been vacant had been repaired and occupied. (Tr. 21-22.) *Page 5 Prior to the date of the hearing, pursuant to ordinance § 410-112, 4 the Department of Planning and Redevelopment ("Planning Department") provided the Board with a written advisory opinion pertinent to the application. The Board took administrative notice of this opinion. In its decision letter, dated January 3, 2008, the Zoning Board summarized the testimony of Rodrigues and Mullen and noted the findings of the Planning Department's advisory opinion as follows:

that the four residential units require 8 parking spaces, which are provided on site. The proposed use for the commercial unit on the ground floor — place of worship — will be active at the same time the residents of the apartments will be at home — evenings and weekends.

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Bluebook (online)
Rodrigues v. Gannon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodrigues-v-gannon-risuperct-2009.