Timber Trails Associates v. Planning & Zoning Commission

916 A.2d 99, 99 Conn. App. 768, 2007 Conn. App. LEXIS 89
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedMarch 6, 2007
DocketAC 26836
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 916 A.2d 99 (Timber Trails Associates v. Planning & Zoning Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timber Trails Associates v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 916 A.2d 99, 99 Conn. App. 768, 2007 Conn. App. LEXIS 89 (Colo. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

HARPER, J.

This appeal involves a challenge to the action of the defendant, the planning and zoning commission of the town of Sherman (commission), in adopting several amendments to the town’s zoning regulations. The plaintiffs, Timber Trails Associates, [770]*770Tessa Pascarella and Timber Trails Community Service Corporation, collectively own 850 acres of land in the area affected by the amendments. On appeal, the plaintiffs challenge the trial court’s conclusions that (1) the commission’s chairman did not violate General Statutes § 8-111 by participating in the early stages of the amendment process, (2) the procedure used to enact the amendments was not fundamentally unfair and (3) the commission’s decision to adopt the amendments was not illegal, arbitrary or an abuse of its discretion. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

For more than thirty years, the parties have been engaged in litigation over the utilization and development of the plaintiffs’ property in Sherman. Notwithstanding this colorful historical backdrop, very few facts are relevant to the present appeal. Timber Trails Associates2 and Pascarella each own land adjacent to a development known as Timber Trails. Timber Trails Community Service Corporation owns and maintains the roads servicing Timber Trails. All of the plaintiffs’ properties are located in an area designated by Sherman’s zoning regulations as residential zone B, where lots are required to be a minimum size of 80,000 square feet.

In 2001, the commission amended the town’s master plan of development (master plan) pursuant to General Statutes § 8-23.3 Among other things, the newly [771]*771amended master plan directed the commission to evaluate the zoning regulations within five years to ensure that all residential lots “reflect the amount and conditions of land necessary to meet residential water supply and septic disposal needs on site, in perpetuity.”

Accordingly, the commission held several “workshops” from approximately April through September, 2003, to determine whether implementation of the master plan required amending the zoning regulations. During that time, the commission accumulated and reviewed information from a variety of sources. One of those sources was Tom McGowan, a land use consultant. Members of the public were not invited to participate in the workshops.

Thomas A. Joyner, the chairman of the commission, was actively involved in the workshops and formulation of early versions of the amendments. In October, 2003, the plaintiffs filed suit against him and the commission, claiming that Joyner was biased and therefore disqualified from participating in the amendment process. As a result, Joyner voluntarily agreed to refrain from participating in any further activities relating to the proposed amendments.

In November, 2003, the workshops culminated in several proposed amendments to Sherman’s zoning regulations. Soon thereafter, the commission published two legal notices in the New Fairfield Citizen News announcing the finalization of the proposed amendments and the convening of a public meeting to discuss them. Besides identifying the sections of the zoning regulations affected by the amendments, the legal notice also stated that “[c]opies of the proposed amendments are on file in the town clerk’s office and the planning and zoning commission’s office.”

As announced in the legal notice, the commission held a public hearing on the amendments on December [772]*7722, 2003. At the beginning of the hearing, Art Von Pla-checki, the first selectman of Sherman, officially noted on the record that Joyner was not in attendance because he “recused himself after some deep soul-searching in what he considers to be the best interests of the town.” Von Plachecki then stated, however, that his absence should “in no way” be taken to “indicate there is any conflict” or an inability on his part “to make a very measured decision.”

The commission then read several exhibits into the record. Immediately prior to the receipt of comments from the public, the vice chairman of the commission, John Paul Voorhees, requested that everyone wanting to speak at the hearing “keep it to three minutes for courtesy.” He then stated that “at the end, we have a list, and we can go back over — I realize [there are] a few [for whom] three minutes are going to be difficult.”

During the hearing, several representatives of the plaintiffs voiced their objections to the substance of the amendments as well as to the procedure used to enact them. Notably, Henry W. Pascarella, the husband of Tessa Pascarella, spoke at the hearing and presented to the commission “detailed written materials, including affidavits, letters, maps, exhibits and statements opposing the amendments.”

Later, in December, 2003, the commission held three additional special meetings to provide an opportunity for further discussion and consideration of the amendments. McGowan did not attend the public hearing or the first special meeting on the amendments. He did, however, attend the last two special meetings, including the December 17, 2003 meeting at which the commission officially voted to adopt a revised version of the proposed amendments. Joyner did not participate in the public hearing, the special meetings or the final vote on the amendments.

[773]*773The amendments modified Sherman zoning regulations §§ 331.3 and 332.3 to exclude certain categories of land from the calculation of the minimum lot area requirement for residential zones A and B. Specifically, as amended, the zoning regulations require that every lot located in residential zones A and B consist of at least 80,000 square feet excluding “(i.) Land reserved for or used as an existing road, right-of-way, accessway, and conseivation and utility easements, (ii.) Inland Wetlands and Watercourses as defined and delineated in accord with Sherman Inland Wetland and Watercourses Regulations and Map. (iii.) Naturally occurring slopes of [25 percent] or more as measured using [two-foot] contour intervals [and] (iv.) 100 year Flood Hazard Areas as shown on maps prepared by [the Federal Emergency Management Agency] which are on file with the office of the Town Clerk.” The amendments also revised Sherman zoning regulation § 321.4 in order to prohibit the placement of any lot’s principal building within any of the four land areas described in §§ 331.3 and 332.3.

In January, 2004, the plaintiffs commenced the present administrative appeal challenging the commission’s adoption of the amendments. In substance, the complaint alleged that the amendments were the result of Joyner’s “extreme hostility” toward Timber Trail Associates rather than a reasoned response to changing circumstances in the town. In addition, the plaintiffs suggested that they had been “[t]argeted” by the commission because their property is the only large tract of undeveloped land in residential zone B, “contains considerable amounts of wetlands, watercourses, and slopes in excess of [25 percent],” and is “unique in that it is the only large holding of undeveloped land in the town of Sherman that has a modem, state-of-the-art, public water system . . . .”

These allegations formed the basis of numerous legal challenges to the amendments, including the plaintiffs’ [774]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
916 A.2d 99, 99 Conn. App. 768, 2007 Conn. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timber-trails-associates-v-planning-zoning-commission-connappct-2007.