Steven Iadevaia v. Town of Scituate Zoning Board of Review

80 A.3d 864, 2013 WL 6795231, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 23, 2013
Docket2011-338-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 80 A.3d 864 (Steven Iadevaia v. Town of Scituate Zoning Board of Review) 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
Steven Iadevaia v. Town of Scituate Zoning Board of Review, 80 A.3d 864, 2013 WL 6795231, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 167 (R.I. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice SUTTELL,

for the Court.

This Court issued a writ of certiorari to review a judgment of the Superior Court affirming a decision by the Town of Scituate Zoning Board of Review (zoning board). The petitioner, Steven Iadevaia, had applied to the Scituate Building Official for a building permit, which was denied due to, inter alia, a lack of street frontage. The petitioner then appealed the building official’s denial to the zoning board and, alternatively, applied for a dimensional variance. The zoning board denied both the petitioner’s appeal and his request for a dimensional variance, and the Superior Court affirmed. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we vacate the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Procedural History

The petitioner is the owner of a 9.09-acre parcel of land (the parcel), located east of Chopmist Hill Road in the Town of Scituate (town). The parcel was conveyed to him by his parents on February 26, 1982, by a deed describing the parcel as “[a] certain lot or tract of woodland,” and then describing the boundaries of the property by its contiguous landowners. The deed continued:

“However otherwise bounded and described, said lot is comprised of those two certain lots of land on the easterly side of Chopmist Hill Road as are numbered l(one) and 2(two) in the Division of the Estate of Ezekiel Bishop, late of the Town of Scituate, deceased, and recorded in Scituate Land Records in Plat Book 1 at page 19.” 1

This latter reference is to a plat map recorded in 1848 depicting the 9.09-acre parcel as two discrete, landlocked lots. When the town adopted a zoning ordinance on December 30, 1965, it implemented the tax assessor’s map as the zoning ordinance map. Unlike the 1848 plat map which depicted petitioner’s parcel as two separate lots, the tax assessor’s map identified the parcel as Assessor’s Plat No. 35, lot No. 24, a single, 9.09-acre lot of land.

In 1983, petitioner’s neighbors, Serafino and Anna Raponi, requested a dimensional variance from the zoning board in order to sell a fifty-foot strip of land to petitioner. The petitioner appeared before the zoning board and stated that he needed the strip of land to access his adjacent, landlocked parcel, on which he wanted to build a house. 2 On October 25, 1983, the zoning *867 board granted the variance to the Raponis; they then sold the land to petitioner, thereby providing him access to his property from Chopmist Hill Road.

In 2006, petitioner appeared before the Town of Scituate Plan Commission (plan commission) and applied for a subdivision of his 9.09 acres into two separate lots. Notwithstanding the fact that he applied for the subdivision, petitioner contends that he was simply clarifying to the plan commission the existence of two lots, as described in his deed and as depicted in the 1848 plat map. In support of his contention, petitioner referenced a memorandum from the building official, David Provonsil, to the plan commission dated March 16, 2006, stating that he (Provonsil) believed that petitioner’s property has “probably” always contained two lots. 3 Minutes from the 2006 plan commission meeting read, in part:

“[Petitioner] explained that his father purchased this piece and a lot with the school on Chopmist Hill Road. [Building Official] David Provonsil explained that each of the original lots have a description in the deeds. David Provonsil made a motion to send correspondence to the Tax Assessor regarding the reestablishment of Plat 34 Lot 24 to [two] separate lots as the 1848 recorded plat.”

The plan commission granted the application, resulting in the creation of Plat No. 35, lot No. 65 (the unimproved lot), as identified on the 2006 tax assessor’s map. The petitioner’s lot No. 24 (the improved lot), which had previously encompassed the entire 9.09 acres, now consists of roughly five acres and contains petitioner’s house, accessible from Chopmist Hill Road by way of the fifty-foot strip of land purchased from the Raponis in 1983. The newly recognized, approximately four-acre unimproved lot directly adjacent to the improved lot, is landlocked.

On October 21, 2008, petitioner submitted an application to the Scituate Building Official to build a single-family home on the unimproved lot. On October 28, 2008, the building official denied petitioner’s request. The building official cited numerous deficiencies with petitioner’s proposed plans, including a lack of street frontage. The building official found that the unimproved lot “[h]as no street frontage, therefore no width[,] therefore is not eligible for a Building Permit under Article IV-Section 3 of the Zoning Ordinance.” 4

The petitioner then filed an appeal to the Town of Scituate Zoning Board of Review, arguing that the zoning ordinance does not mandate frontage and that the unimproved lot met all the dimensional requirements in its particular zoning district (RR-120). 5 Alternatively, in the *868 event that the zoning board determined that there is a frontage requirement, petitioner applied for a dimensional variance for lot width and height on the unimproved lot. On January 27, 2009, the zoning board held a hearing for the two companion cases. The zoning board unanimously denied both petitioner’s appeal and request for variance, and on February 27, 2009, issued its findings of fact in an eight-page written decision.

In denying petitioner’s appeal, the zoning board determined that the building official was correct in his conclusion that the zoning ordinance contains a frontage requirement. The dimensional regulations for zoning district RR-120 do not explicitly require frontage, but the zoning board extrapolated a frontage requirement from the “lot width” requirement. Article IX(45) of the Town of Scituate Zoning Ordinance defines “lot width” as “[t]he horizontal distance between the side lines of a lot measured at right angles to its depth along a straight line parallel to the front lot line at the minimum front setback line”; “front lot line” is defined as “[t]he lot line separating a lot from a street right of way.” Id. Art. IX(43)(a). Reading these two definitions together, the zoning board concluded that “a lot must possess frontage although there is no minimum dimension.” The zoning board reasoned that because the unimproved lot is landlocked, it has “no lot line that exists along a street right-of-way, thus, [it] has no frontage * * The zoning board therefore upheld the building official’s denial of a building permit.

In addition to denying petitioner’s appeal, the zoning board also denied petitioner’s application for a height and width dimensional variance. 6 The zoning board found that it was petitioner’s application for a subdivision to the plan commission in 2006 that resulted in the landlocked unimproved lot, thereby creating the hardship, ie., the lack of frontage, necessitating the variance.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 A.3d 864, 2013 WL 6795231, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-iadevaia-v-town-of-scituate-zoning-board-of-review-ri-2013.