Skelly v. Morgan, No. 30 65 11 (May 12, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5737
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 12, 1994
DocketNo. 30 65 11
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5737 (Skelly v. Morgan, No. 30 65 11 (May 12, 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
Skelly v. Morgan, No. 30 65 11 (May 12, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5737 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]PERMANENT INJUNCTION A claim for permanent injunction having come before the court, these are, therefore, by authority of the State of Connecticut, Jo command and enjoin you, Herbert C. Morgan, and each of your servants, agents and employees, and in your individual capacity, to remove from premises known as 8 Mountainville Road, Danbury, 81 inoperable vehicles or inoperable construction equipment stored upon the premises on or before midnight, July 1, 1994, and to refrain from storing all inoperable vehicles or inoperable construction equipment upon the premises, and from this day forward to refrain from cutting up or storing scrap metals upon said with premises, under penalty of $100.00 per day for each day you shall not comply with this order.

Dated at Danbury, Connecticut, this 12th day of May, 1994.

Joseph P. Flynn, Judge of the Superior Court

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

Thomas Carlyle once said that honest work is the "grand cure CT Page 5738 of all the maladies and miseries that ever beset mankind."

Herbert C. Morgan, the defendant in this case, is a man who has made his living in and about the City of Danbury for over thirty-five (35) years as a carpenter, mason, excavator, and general contractor. From time to time, he has also collected, cut up old construction equipment and sold it as scrap metal. He completed the eighth grade of his education and shortly thereafter left school. He is, despite the popular stereotype of persons who engage in such trades, a quiet and reticent man, painfully shy in demeanor. As a boy, he began to store his construction equipment and materials at 8 Mountainville Road, Danbury.

This case is before the court on the City's application to make a temporary injunction permanent. In 1991, the court (Fuller, J.) issued a temporary injunction against the defendant, Herbert C. Morgan, after he did not appear on a rule to show cause. The injunction was stated in pertinent part as follows:

These are, therefore, by authority of the State of Connecticut, to command and enjoin you, Herbert C. Morgan, to each of your officers, servants, agents and employees and in your individual capacity, to remove from 8 Mountainville Road, all heavy construction equipment and vehicles, along with all other types of unregistered motor vehicles, with the exception of one truck with a weight not exceeding three-quarters (3/4) of a ton, on or before October 21, 1991 and until further Order of the Court.

The matter came before the court on the claim for permanent injunction and was heard, and the court reserved judgment. While that was pending, the defendant filed bankruptcy. The court determined that the trustee was a necessary party since he might claim some interest in the items which were subject to the claim for injunctive relief. The trustee was cited in after an order to do so by the court, but claimed no interest in any of the property. When he did not appear, the court determined on the record that the automatic stay provisions of the U.S. Code did not apply to this proceeding. The trustee was thereafter defaulted.

The court grants the City's claims for permanent injunctive relief only as to inoperable vehicles or inoperable construction equipment located on the defendant's premises, or parts of such CT Page 5739 inoperable vehicles or equipment stored on the premises, and the defendant is ordered to remove from 8 Mountainville Road all such inoperable vehicles and construction equipment or parts thereof on or before July 1, 1994. This order is aimed only at the storage of inoperable vehicles and equipment, junk collecting, cutting up and sale of such junk and scrap on the premises, and the defendant is further enjoined from carrying on of any of these activities. While there is a portion of the defendant's income that has from time to time been derived from the collection and cutting up of scrap metal taken from inoperable machines, the court infers that it is not a significant portion, yet is probably the most unsightly and odious to his neighbors as compared to the other activities complained of. Furthermore, the court is not convinced from his evidence that there was a continuous dedication of the property for the uses which the court has just enjoined. It is appropriate, therefore, to permanently enjoin the storage and cutting up of inoperable vehicles, inoperable equipment and scrap metals on the premises.

The remaining claims for permanent injunctive relief are denied. The court is strongly of the opinion that to enjoin Mr. Morgan's use of the premises permanently, except as to the inoperable vehicles, scrap and junk, would result in an injustice and would be inequitable. Although Mr. Morgan's construction operations may seem unsightly to some of his newer neighbors, they are activities which he has continuously carried on at the Mountainville Road premises from the time he was a boy, without hindrance from the City until 1991.

General Statutes, Sec. 8-2 prohibits a municipality from preventing the continuance of a nonconforming use. A nonconforming use is defined as a use or structure "in existence" on the date regulations are adopted that would make such a use illegal if begun thereafter. Massimo v. Planning Commission,41 Conn. Sup. 196, 203 (1889), citing T. Tondro, Connecticut Land Use Regulation (1979) p. 62. The General Assembly first generally authorized adoption of zoning by towns in 1926. Subsequent special acts authorized zoning in some specific towns as well. Zoning was not established in the part of Danbury wherein the defendant's land lies until 1960. By 1960, Mr. Morgan had already commenced his use of that property for storage of construction vehicles, equipment and supplies, and that use was continuously in existence when the zoning ordinance went into effect and has so remained for over three decades. He has provided the court with pictures and credible testimony from CT Page 5740 himself and other witnesses as to the length, extent, continuous duration and nature of this use, and satisfied this court that no zoning applied to the land when he first commenced these activities.

The court is convinced that, taking into consideration his diffidence, his limitations educationally, his age, and the self-employed career path he has followed, if the defendant is enjoined from all use of his property for operation of his construction business in the way that he has used it since prior to adoption of zoning, it is highly likely the effect of such an order would be to deprive the man of the capacity to make an honest living and support himself and his family.

The City's position is that whatever rights to a nonconforming use Mr. Morgan had, he technically lost when he did not appeal the cease and desist order issued against him by filing an appeal with the Danbury Board of Zoning Appeals.

In the case of Greenwich v. Kristoff, 180 Conn. 575, the court held that since the defendant had neither complied with nor appealed to the Zoning Board of Appeals from the order issued by the plaintiff, Zoning Enforcement Officer, of the plaintiff, Town of Greenwich, to cease and desist from using his property as a rooming house on the ground that use violated the Greenwich Zoning Regulations, the trial court should not have refused to resolve the issues raised by the plaintiffs in their statutory (Sec. 8-12) attempt to enforce that order through an injunction.

In Kristoff

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skelly-v-morgan-no-30-65-11-may-12-1994-connsuperct-1994.