Ryan v. Zoning Bd. of Rev. of the Town of New Shoreham, 89-0539 (1993)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 12, 1993
DocketC.A. No. WC 89-0539
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ryan v. Zoning Bd. of Rev. of the Town of New Shoreham, 89-0539 (1993) (Ryan v. Zoning Bd. of Rev. of the Town of New Shoreham, 89-0539 (1993)) 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
Ryan v. Zoning Bd. of Rev. of the Town of New Shoreham, 89-0539 (1993), (R.I. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
This is an appeal from a decision of the Zoning Board of Review for the town of New Shoreham dated August 14, 1989. This appeal has been pending since then in the Washington County Superior Court. It was transferred to the Providence Superior Court for assignment and disposition by Order of the Presiding Justice dated December 2, 1992.

Jurisdiction in this Superior Court is pursuant to that Order, and § 45-24-20, R.I.G.L., 1956, as amended.

I
CASE TRAVEL — FACTS
In 1981, Vincent Ryan, and a corporation owned by him, The Atlantic Inn, Inc. purchased the real estate which is the subject matter of this zoning appeal. That real estate is located on Corn Neck Road in the town of New Shoreman, more commonly known as Block Island. It is designated as Lot 7-1 on Assessor's Plat #4. Since the advent of zoning in New Shoreham in 1967 that lot has been located in a Residential A Zone.

The property in question consists of land and a large residential structure. Since 1940, it had been owned and occupied by the Anderson family and constituted a single family seasonal dwelling for the Andersons and their family. On occasion, during its use by the Anderson family during the 1970 years, they permitted what has been described as "overflow" guest vacationers from a boarding house known as the "Breakers", which was located across the street from the Anderson home, to rent a few rooms in the upper front portion of the Anderson home. During those same 1970 years, the Andersons also rented rooms to family vacationers coming to Block Island. During one 1970's summer period they also rented some rooms to a tenant who in turn sublet the rooms to summer help employees who worked in some of the island hotels. (6/26/89 tr. 36-45)

In 1981 as noted earlier, Vincent Ryan and the Atlantic Inn, Inc. purchased the Anderson home. They renamed it the "Homestead". (Resp. Exh. A) The purpose of its purchase was to house summer employees and others from Mr. Ryan's Atlantic Inn. Mr. Ryan was apparently told, and led to believe, by the realty agent Jack Gray, that the building was a "rooming house". (6/26/89 tr. p. 55) Mr. Ryan testified at one of the zoning hearings that when he purchased the Anderson home, he was unaware of the extent of its use as a rooming house and that he relied upon what the realty agent told him. (6/26/89 tr. p. 51) Accordingly, shortly after its purchase, Mr. Ryan began to use the building to house summer employees from his Atlantic Inn and also, to use the building to do occasional laundry work for the Atlantic Inn.

Assuming that his new purchase, renamed the "Homestead," enjoyed a nonconforming rooming house use, Mr. Ryan, beginning in 1982, applied for, and was issued rooming house licenses from the town for the years 1982 through 1985, and once again in 1988. (8/14/89 tr. p. 13-15)

On July 30, 1985, the Minimum Housing Inspector for the town of New Shoreham inspected the "Homestead" and found various minimum housing code violations. Mr. Ryan was notified and cited for same and ordered to make the necessary repairs. (6/26/89 tr.Exh. 2) Mr. Ryan responded thereto by filing an application, in October 1985, with the New Shoreham Zoning Board of Review for permission to enlarge the Homestead. In his application, he requested variance relief so as to make renovations to the Homestead; raise a portion of its roof; extend or enlarge the building by twelve (12) feet to the rear and to expand the assumed nonconforming use of his building. He also requested a sideline variance on the south side of the Homestead, in order to accommodate the proposed expansion and enlargement construction. The Zoning Board in January 1986, granted the Ryan variance requests. It immediately thereafter realized that it had failed to give proper notice to an abutting property owner and rescheduled the hearing on the Ryan application. At the rescheduled meeting, on March 24, 1986, it voted to once again grant the Ryan variance requests. On that try, however, one of the Zoning Board hearing members abstained from voting. An appeal by various objectors immediately followed, and was filed in the Washington County Superior Court. Despite being aware of the appeal having been filed, Mr. Ryan nonetheless applied for a building permit. That request was denied and no appeal from that denial was taken. The following year in 1987, Mr. Ryan again applied for a building permit which was once again denied. This time, however, he filed an appeal from the Building Inspector's decision with the Zoning Board of Review and after hearing, that Board, on April 27, 1987 relying upon its earlier decision which had granted Ryan's requested zoning relief, reversed the Building Inspector's denial of the building permit, and ordered the permit to be issued. It was issued. At all times, it should be noted that the appeal from the Zoning Board's earlier decision was still pending. Despite acknowledged awareness of the pending appeal, Mr. Ryan commenced the renovations and expansion construction work on the "Homestead". He testified that he was aware of the appeal, and was aware of the risk involved, and simply elected to take the risk. (6/26/89) tr. p. 20) Mr. Ryan, in electing to take the risk was apparently unaware of the case holdings in Dresser v. A.T.G. Inc., 118 R.I. 66 (1977) andKent v. Zoning Board of Review, 102 R.I. 258 (1967), which ostensibly guaranteed a reversal of the Zoning Board's decision. Mr. Justice Caldarone, on August 15, 1988, citing Dresser andKent, supra, reversed the Zoning Board's March 1986 decision which had granted Mr. Ryan's requested variance, and, remanded the matter back to the Zoning Board. Upon remand, because of a change in the composition of the Board, the Ryan application required a de novo hearing. Coderre v. Zoning Board of Review,103 R.I. 575 (1968); Dresser v. A.T.G. Inc., supra at p. 68.

Shortly after Judge Caldarone's decision became final, no appeal having been taken, the New Shoreham Building Inspector revoked the Ryan building permit which he had previously issued because of the Zoning Board's earlier grant of the requested variance. He also issued a cease and desist order on December 1, 1988 and revoked the Certificate of Use and Occupancy which he had previously issued on the basis of the Zoning Board's earlier decision.

The remand de novo hearing on Mr. Ryan's variance requests, as well as Mr. Ryan's appeal from the Building Inspector's cease and desist order dated December 1, 1988 were both taken up at hearings that began on March 26, 1989 and extended through June 26, 1989 and August 14, 1989. At the conclusion of the August 14, 1989 hearing, the Zoning Board denied the Ryan appeal from the Building Inspector's December 1, 1988 cease and desist order and also denied the Ryan application and request for a variance. This appeal followed.

At the various hearings before the Zoning Board, it should be noted that the burden of proof, that is, the burden of proving that the Building Inspector's decision was improper and unlawful and, that Mr. Ryan was entitled by law and by the evidence to his requested expansion and sideline variance was upon Ryan. O.K.Properties v. Zoning Board of Warwick, 601 A.2d 953, 955 (1992);Souza v. Zoning Board of Warren, 104 R.I. 697, 699 (1968).

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Ryan v. Zoning Bd. of Rev. of the Town of New Shoreham, 89-0539 (1993), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-zoning-bd-of-rev-of-the-town-of-new-shoreham-89-0539-1993-risuperct-1993.