Tantimonaco v. ZONING BD. OF JOHNSTON

218 A.2d 480, 100 R.I. 615, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 486
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 11, 1966
DocketM. P. No. 1726
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 218 A.2d 480 (Tantimonaco v. ZONING BD. OF JOHNSTON) 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
Tantimonaco v. ZONING BD. OF JOHNSTON, 218 A.2d 480, 100 R.I. 615, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 486 (R.I. 1966).

Opinion

Paolino, J.

This is a petition for certiorari to review the action of the respondent board granting the applicants’ request for approval of a gasoline filling station on certain land owned by them in a business D district. In compliance with the writ the pertinent records have been certified to- this court.

We note at the outset that this case does not involve an application for an exception or a variance, but rather an application for a building permit for a permitted use under *616 sec. VIII of the zoning ordinance of the town of Johnston, as amended, which provides in pertinent part as follows:

“In a Business D District the following regulations shall apply:
“A. Business D District Uses.
“A -building may be erected, altered, or used, and a lot or premises may be used for any of the following purposes -and for no other:
<(# * #
“6. Automobile Salesrooms, Garages or Filling -Stations up-on approval of the location and layout thereof and the plans by the Zoning Board of Review.”

On March 29, 1965, pursuant to the provisions of sec. VIII, A.6, the applicants filed an application for approval of the location and layout and the plans for construction and operation of a gasoline filling station on the land in question. On April 29, 1965 the- board held a hearing thereon and on May 14, 1965 rendered a written decision granting the approval sought, subject to certain safeguards and conditions made part of the board’s decision. Thereafter, on June 8, 1965, petitioners filed the instant petition challenging the validity of the board’s action.

On June 14, 1965, while the instant petition was pending in this court awaiting hearing, the town council amended its zoning ordinance and rezoned the area in which the applicants’ land was located from a business D district to a residence A district in which a gasoline station is not a permitted use.

At the time the application was filed, heard and decided by the zoning board, a gasoline station was a permitted use in a business D district under sec. VIII, A.6, “upon approval of the location and layout thereof and the plans by the Zoning Board of Review.” As we have already stated, this case does not involve a special exception or a variance, but rather a building permit. Under the existing ordinance the *617 applicants were entitled to the proposed use as a matter of right upon approval of the location and layout of the structures on their land and approval of their plans by the board —approval which could not be arbitrarily withheld. See MC. and S. Realty, Inc. v. City Council, 88 R. I. 138.

The posture in which the case reaches us presents for our consideration the effect of the amendment on June 14, 1965. We note here that with the agreement of the parties in open court, we ordered the record to be supplemented by a duly-authenticated copy of the amendment of the ordinance. See Najarían Realty Cory. v. Zoning Board of Review, 99 R. I. 465, 208 A.2d 528.

Only recently we have on two occasions considered “the question of whether an amendment to a zoning ordinance that eliminates in a particular district a use that theretofore had been a permitted use, to which a landowner was entitled as of right, operates to restrict or revoke a permit authorizing the prior use issued when that use was lawful.” See Shalvey v. Zoning Board of Review, 99 R. I. 692, 695, 210 A.2d 589, 591.

In Najarian, supra, which also involved a gasoline station, the application was filed at a time when a gasoline station was a permitted use under the then ordinance in a residence B district with the approval of the board of review. However, before the board rendered its decision denying the application, the city council amended the ordinance eliminating a gasoline station as a permitted use in a residence B district. We held in that case that by the adoption of the amendment “the petitioner’s application was rendered abortive and any decision of the board thereon either granting or denying it would be null and void.” The decision in Najarían, supra, was filed on March 30,. 1965.

On May 25, 1965, Shalvey, supra, was decided by this court. This case differed in some respects from Najarían factually. In Shalvey, supra, the building inspector issued *618 four building permits in October 1962 for multifamily dwellings on certain lots in Warwick which were permitted uses under the ordinance as it then existed. On October 22, 1962 certain remonstrants appealed from the building inspector’s action to the zoning board. The board heard one of the appeals on December 6, 1962, reserved decision thereon, and continued the remaining appeals to January 15, 1963. In the meantime, on December 20, 1962, the city council amended the ordinance by providing that only dwellings to be occupied by one family could be erected on the lots in question. Thereafter, on January 15, 1963 the zoning board rendered a written decision upholding the issuance of the permits in question substantially on the ground that the building inspector had acted within his power under the ordinances in effect at the time of the issuance thereof.

A comparison of the travel in N ajanan and Shalvey, supra, shows that in each case the zoning board acted after the amendment of the pertinent ordinance, but that in the former the board denied the application whereas in Shalvey, supra, the board gave no effect to the amendment and upheld the building inspector. We point out these differences only to indicate the different postures in which these cases arise.

In Shalvey, supra, Mr. Justice Roberts, presently chief justice, writing for a unanimous court, carefully reviewed this problem in depth. After discussing prior decisions of this court where this issue was present but not decided, see Harrison v. Hopkins, 48 R. I. 42, and Elmcrest Realty Co. v. Zoning Board of Review, 78 R. I. 432, the court reasoned that the determination of this problem should depend upon the equities of each case and the good faith of the permittee.

The court said in Shalvey, supra, 210 A.2d at page 592:

“Recognition of this factor, in our opinion, suggests ■this court’s acceptance of the proposition that the holder of a permit authorizing a use lawful when it w;as issued may, by acting in good faith in reliance *619 thereon, acquire an interest in the use authorized which may not foe divested or impaired by a. subsequent amendment to the zoning ordinance making that use unlawful.

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Tantimonaco v. ZONING BD. OF JOHNSTON
232 A.2d 385 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1967)

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218 A.2d 480, 100 R.I. 615, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tantimonaco-v-zoning-bd-of-johnston-ri-1966.