Snyder v. Zoning Board of Town of Westerly

200 A.2d 222, 98 R.I. 139, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 7, 1964
DocketMP No. 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 200 A.2d 222 (Snyder v. Zoning Board of Town of Westerly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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
Snyder v. Zoning Board of Town of Westerly, 200 A.2d 222, 98 R.I. 139, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 138 (R.I. 1964).

Opinion

*140 Joslin, J.

This is a petition for certiorari to review the decision of the zoning board of the town of Westerly disapproving the petitioners’ plan for a proposed subdivision of their land. The writ was issued and in compliance therewith the board has made due return to this court of the pertinent records.

The plan seeks approval for a subdivision into eighteen residential dwelling lots of approximately eleven acres of land located in a highly-valued residential community of the Watch Hill Fire District, hereinafter referred to as Watch Hill. It was submitted to the zoning board pursuant to chap. 22, sec. 20, of the town ordinances. The special enabling legislation pursuant to which that chapter was enacted is P. L. 1922, chap. 2299, as amended by P. L. 1925, chap. 746, which added sec. 9(d) empowering the zoning board “to pass upon applications for the approval of proposed sub-divisions of land into building lots * * In passing upon applications thereunder, however, the board acts as a planning board and not as a zoning board and performs, subject to the cited statutory and ordinance provisions, a function equivalent to that performed by a planning commission under G. L. 1956, chap. 23 of title 45.

■ The tract of land proposed to be subdivided is designated “Brentwood Estates” and is situated in an R-l residential district, the relevant dimensional requirements of which prescribe a minimum lot size and width of 20,000 square feet and 100 feet respectively. The area of the lots range from 20,033 square feet to slightly in excess of 34,500 square feet.

The public hearing required by the ordinance was duly advertised for and held on August 13, 1963. A summary of the proceedings at the board’s meeting held on that day was prepared by its secretary and is incorporated in a copy of the minutes which has been certified to' us in lieu of a transcript. No contention is made, that the synopsis is not sufficiently complete and accurate to meet our requirements. *141 Robinson v. Town Council, 60 R. I. 422. Also certified as a part of the record are copies of minutes of board meetings held on June 12, July 10, and September 18, 1963. The minutes of the meetings held prior to August 13 are not germane because they antedate the public hearing. The board’s decision as well as a purported recapitulation by the secretary of the substance of what transpired at the August meeting are contained in the September minutes. Insofar as that restatement is at variance with the August minutes, the latter controls. What we review, therefore, on this petition is limited to the minutes of the August meeting and the decision.

The summary of the proceedings of the August meeting discloses that real estate experts, representatives of local groups, and numerous persons owning land in Watch Hill either in person or by counsel testified or made statements. In addition, communications from other property owners and a real estate expert as well as a petition signed by approximately seventy taxpayers have been included as exhibits. Those verbal and written expressions, excepting only for those of one of the petitioners and her attorney, were as one in objecting to the application. Their common theme is that the surrounding property in Watch Hill will be degraded and the interests of the owners of large neighboring estates adversely affected if the plan is approved. The consensus is that Watch Hill should be kept in its present state, an objective opined to be impossible of achievement if residential dwellings are allowed to be constructed on lots of less than one acre.

The board denied the application on the following grounds: (1) that four of the lots do not meet the 100-foot minimum width requirement for an R-l zone; (2) that the subdivision is inconsistent with the general topography of the land in the area and that the elevation of the proposed road on the plan would incur steep grades thereby resulting *142 in serious drainage problems; (3) that houses built on the lots would incur serious sewerage disposal problems due to the topography of the land; (4) that petitioners neglected to file a profile thereof showing location, width and grades of a proposed street as required by statute; and (5) that the plan is not in accord with a reasonable development of the area and with the existing character of Watch Hill.

There is nothing in the record supportive of the first ground. An examination of the subdivision plan reveals that each lot has a frontage of less than but a width of more than 100 feet. The board obviously misconceived the meaning of the word “width” which is a dimension measured from side to side at right angles to length, State ex rel. Keane v. Board of County Commissioners, 83 Mont. 540, Webster, Third New International Dictionary, p. 2614, whereas “frontage” is defined as the extent of a lot abutting on a street, Standard Oil Co. v. Kamradt, 319 Ill. 51, Webster, supra, p. 914. It was error to treat them as synonymous.

The second and third grounds can be considered together. No provision of chap. 22 has been called to our attention which authorizes the board to consider sewerage or drainage conditions on an application for approval of a subdivision plan, but even on the assumption that it has such power, its exercise thereof must be based on evidence of probative force. The only record reference to a possible sewerage disposal problem resulting from topography of the land or otherwise comes from an owner of a house located close to Brentwood Estates wlm testified that “he has sewer trouble * * *.” No inference can reasonably be drawn therefrom that houses built on the proposed subdivision lots will be similarly affected nor is there anything in the record upon which the board could properly determine that steepness of the grade of the proposed street would cause drainage difficulties.

*143 As a consequence of the lack of record evidence to support these findings, the board seeks justification therefor on knowledge it acquired when it viewed Brentwood Estates, ■but it does not divulge what it saw on that inspection. The bald statements that there will be drainage and sewerage disposal problems without disclosure of the observed conditions or land characteristics do not constitute the kind of probative evidence capable of sustaining the board’s decision. Dawson v. Zoning Board of Review, 97 R. I. 299, 197 A.2d 284; Kelly v. Zoning Board of Review, 94 R. I. 298, 180 A.2d 319.

It may well be that the grade will cause serious drainage difficulties or that the topography of the land will make it difficult or impossible to' dispose of sewerage, but there is nothing in the decision to indicate whether these conclusions are founded on the isolated statement we have quoted, or on what the board observed on its view. Moreover, both the August minutes and the decision are barren of matter descriptive of either the grade or the topography.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A.2d 222, 98 R.I. 139, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-zoning-board-of-town-of-westerly-ri-1964.