Root v. Corso

7 Conn. Super. Ct. 394, 7 Conn. Supp. 394, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 132
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1939
DocketFile 55280
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 394 (Root v. Corso) 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
Root v. Corso, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 394, 7 Conn. Supp. 394, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 132 (Colo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

FOSTER, J.

Campbell Avenue, in the Town of West Haven, runs north and south and is intersected by Leete Street running east and west. The defendant, Kate Corso, owns land on the southwest corner of Campbell Avenue and Leete Street, being 50 feet on Campbell Avenue and more than 50 feet at its westerly boundary and 117 feet on Leete Street. Immediately west of the land of this defendant is located land owned by the plaintiffs. The defendant, Nicholas Corso, is the husband and agent of the defendant, Kate Corso, and is the defendant really interested in this action; so, in speaking of the defendant hereafter, I shall refer to Nicholas Corso. On the land of the defendant is a one-family dwelling house, facing Campbell Avenue, occupied by Louis Esposito, who is in the employ of Nicholas Corso, and whose wife is a sister of Kate Corso. A few feet west of this dwelling house is a building facing Leete Street, having brick walls and frame roof construction, the dimensions of which are 34 feet nine inches from east to west and 50 feet from north to south. The west wall of this building is 15 feet east of the westerly boundary of the land. On the land of the plaintiffs is a two-family dwelling house, the east wall of which is three feet west of the easterly boundary line. The plaintiffs occupy the upper floor of this building and rent the lower floor to a family. The location of these buildings is well portrayed in the photographs Exhibits A and B, which show parts of the plaintiffs’ building and the brick and frame structure, and Exhibit C, which shows parts of the dwelling house owned by the defendant and the brick and frame structure.

This action concerns the erection, maintenance and use by the defendant of the brick and frame structure.

For many years the defendant has been in the business of buying and selling at wholesale bananas. In 1935 he was the owner of other property in West Haven, where he conducted this business and found it necessary to have more space for the storage of bananas and the storage and parking of his numerous trucks. He selected a site and was told by the town authorities that the site he had selected was in such a zone that it would be impossible for him to use such site in his business. We follow the action of the defendant in detail, for thus is shed light on his credibility. We start with the fact that according *396 to the testimony of the defendant himself in 1935 he desired to erect not a garage but a storage place for trucks and bananas. In his business the defendant sends a large truck to New York several times a week — sometimes to Philadelphia or Boston— and brings in a load of green bananas. It requires about five days for these green bananas to ripen and turn yellow, so that they are in proper condition for distribution by him in the smaller trucks to the local trade in Connecticut. During this period of five days, by means of a gas burner at certain times of the year and by means of cool air at other times of the year, the bananas hung in the building are rendered fit for sale and consumption.

Having purchased the land with the dwelling house upon it at the southwest corner of Campbell Avenue and Leete Street, the defeñdant made application to the Building Department of West Haven for permission to build a “three-car brick garage” to be located at 216 Campbell Avenue, the address of the dwelling house on his land. He did not ask for permission to build a building for storage of bananas and trucks. He gave the address as Campbell Avenue, not Leete Street, upon which latter street the building was to have faced. Campbell Avenue and Leete Street for a distance of 100 feet west of Campbell Avenue are in a business zone, while Leete Street west of a point 100 feet west of Campbell Avenue is in a residence “B” zone. On June 10, 1935, such a permit was issued. The building when erected encroached nine feet to ten feet over the line dividing such two zones. According to the generally accepted line of Campbell Avenue, such encroachment was four feet to five feet. On August 12, 1936, the defendant applied to the Building Department of West Haven for permission to erect “three rooms which is used for air-conditioning.” The application was not for permission to erect three rooms for the storage and conditioning of bananas. On August 13, 1936, permission was granted in the words “three rooms may be partitioned off for air-conditioning.” On June 2, 1937, the defendant applied to the Building Department of West Haven for permission to erect a “room inside garage for air-conditioning.” Upon the application appear the words “The above room does not encroach on the residential part.” Such permission was granted. Later a partition was erected forming a fourth room. Two of these rooms are On the south side of the garage, and their dimensions are about fourteen feet by fourteen feet. The third and fourth rooms are on the west side of the garage and about three *397 feet east of the west wall thereof. There appears no permission for the erection or forming of the fourth room, but it was ap' parently made by erecting a partition through the third room so'called. Hooks are screwed into the ceiling of these four rooms; cords are attached to the bunches of bananas; and the latter are thus suspended from the hooks. There is artificial heat in each room that can be used when desired. Outside the rooms in the main body of the garage are three motors respec' tively IY2, IY2 and 1 horse power, each connected with ap' paratus in one of the rooms so that cool air may be introduced into such a room. In the fourth room is a large electric fan, which is operated over cakes of ice for cooling the air in the room. In the main part of the garage is space sufficient for the storage or parking of two trucks.

The plaintiffs claim that two large trucks, one eight and one' half tons and one seven and oneffialf tons, leave the garage at very early hours in the morning; that these two large trucks return at all hours of the night and early in the morning loaded with bananas; that as they are backing into the garage there is much loud shouting and talking by the defendant and his em' ployees; that such loud conversation continues while the bananas are being transferred from the trucks to the storage rooms; that the trucks are sometimes left parked in the street; that the motors used for cooling the rooms make much noise. Plaintiffs also make claims relative to the disposal of banana stalks and the drying of blankets and the dripping of oil on the street, all of which I disregard because such conditions occurred at in' frequent times.

The defendant admits that he is the owner of several trucks that he uses in his business; that in this garage he stores the eight and oneffialf ton van truck and the two ton Reo van truck; that the rooms in the garage have a capacity for 800 to 850 bunches of bananas; that the eight and oneffialf ton truck has a capacity for 500 bunches of bananas; that Esposito drives the large truck to New York two or three times a week, leaving at 5:30 to 7 a.m. and returning at 6 to 10 p.m.

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Related

Fitzgerald v. Merard Holding Co.
138 A. 483 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Conn. Super. Ct. 394, 7 Conn. Supp. 394, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/root-v-corso-connsuperct-1939.