Tolland Enter. v. Comm'r of Transp., No. Cv 92 0508172 (Apr. 28, 1993)

1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4166
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 28, 1993
DocketNo. CV 92 0508172
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4166 (Tolland Enter. v. Comm'r of Transp., No. Cv 92 0508172 (Apr. 28, 1993)) 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
Tolland Enter. v. Comm'r of Transp., No. Cv 92 0508172 (Apr. 28, 1993), 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4166 (Colo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION CT Page 4167 In this highway condemnation case, which has been referred to the undersigned pursuant to General Statutes13a-76 for a reassessment of damages, there are two issues to be determined: (1) the damages resulting from the taking of 2.0 acres of the plaintiff's land; and (2) the validity of a repurchase provision in a deed by which the defendant commissioner, acting in behalf of the state, transferred the same land to the plaintiff in 1963, almost 28 years before the date of condemnation, September 4, 1991. Because the second issue, which the court ultimately resolves in favor of the state, is a novel one, with no clearly determinative precedent, the court has found the facts concerning the damages resulting from the condemnation apart from the repurchase clause in order to avoid the necessity of an additional trial in the event that the clause is held to be invalid on appeal.

I
The land taken by the defendant consists of three rectangular strips 60 feet in width along the south side of Cottage Grove Road in Bloomfield, Route 218, which are separated by two streets extending southerly from Cottage Grove Road. The three strips are designated as parcels 1, 2 and 3, in the notice of condemnation and are more particularly described in the complaint. In total they comprise 2.0 acres, parcel 1 being 0.64 acres, parcel 2 being 1.01 acres and parcel 3 being 0.35 acres. This land has been acquired by the state in order to widen Cottage Grove Road.

For the purpose of determining the damages resulting from this condemnation, the plaintiff's appraiser, Peter Marsele, has made separate analyses of the effects of the taking on the office building property, which originally included parcel 1, and on the apartment complex, of which parcels 2 and 3 had been part. The court will adopt this format.

A. Office Building Property

The office building property consisted of 5.0 CT Page 4168 acres before the taking, 2.6 acres of which were occupied by a rental office building. Marsele conceded that the taking of parcel 1, comprising 0.64 acres, would have no impact on the value of the building, which he valued at $316,000, both before and after that event. He concluded, however, that the land value had been reduced from $560,000 before the taking to $380,000, resulting in damages of $180,000. This reduction in land value has two components: (1) a reduction in value per square foot from $2.57 to $2.00, and (2) the loss of 0.64 acres or 27,878 square feet constituting parcel 1.

The only basis for Marsele's belief that the unit value of the 4.36 acres remaining after the taking has been reduced by $.57 per square foot is that the reduction in acreage causes the property to become nonconforming, a minimum of 5.0 acres being required by the Bloomfield Zoning Ordinance for office building use in an RB-20 zone. Although the plaintiff owns contiguous land, from which the 0.64 deficit in required zoning area possibly could be cured, the commissioner does not claim that such land, which is presently part of the apartment complex, is available for addition to the office building property. The commissioner in this instance, however, has not attempted to exercise his authority pursuant to General Statutes 48-24 to seek prior to the condemnation, a variance for the office building property. The plaintiff, on the other hand, has not insisted that this property be acquired by the state for its current value, as that statute also provides.

The testimony of the planning director of the town of Bloomfield, Thomas Hooper, indicates that an application for a variance to excuse the acreage nonconformity would probably be successful. He testified that variances had been granted for 6 out of 7 properties under similar circumstances in which the taking of land for widening Cottage Grove Road or Route 218 had resulted in nonconformity of the remaining land of the owners. In these instances, the applicant had been the department of transportation, presumably acting under General Statutes48-24. There is no significant evidence of the reason for the commissioner's failure to apply for a variance with respect to the office building property. CT Page 4169

As Marsele concluded, the violation of the zoning ordinance acreage requirement would have no effect on the value of the existing office building, because "(zoning) regulations shall not prohibit the continuance of any non-conforming use, building or structure. . . ." General Statutes 8-2. Nonconformity, however, would affect the value of the land, because it normally precludes expansion of the existing use and reconstruction after a casualty destroying the building. The Bloomfield Board of Zoning appeals has authority pursuant to General Statutes 8-6 to grant a variance from the acreage requirement in cases of "exceptional difficulty or unusual hardship." Where a nonconformity has resulted from a partial taking of land by eminent domain, a strong case of "exceptional difficulty or unusual hardship" is presented. "Surely there is a clear case of uncommon hardship beyond the control of a property owner when the state seeks to condemn a portion of his or her land and thereby renders it nonconforming to a minimum lot area restriction." Smith v. Zoning Board of Appeals,174 Conn. 323, 328 (1978).

The court has concluded that the probability of a variance to cure the adverse consequences of the nonconformity resulting from the taking of parcel 1 is so great that a prospective purchaser would diminish the price offered for the office building property only by his estimate of the expenses to be incurred in obtaining the variance. These costs would be for legal and engineering services. Although no evidence was presented on these items, the court is sufficiently familiar with the work involved to conclude that a reasonable allowance for those expenses, primarily for the legal services, would be $10,000. It is appropriate that the state should bear these expenses in view of the failure of the commissioner to follow the mandate of General Statutes48-24 by obtaining a variance before condemnation.

B.
In addition, an allowance must be made for the value of the 0.64 acres comprising parcel 1 that the state has acquired. As indicated previously, Marsele valued all of the office property land before the taking at $2.57 per square foot, which would result in a value CT Page 4170 of $71,646 for the 27,878 square feet constituting parcel 1. The defendant's appraiser, John Manfreda, testified that the unit value of the office building land was $140,000 per acre, equivalent to $3.21 per square foot. This appraisal is somewhat flawed, however, by the failure to adjust the three comparative sales utilized for the decline in market value that occurred after 1988-89, when those sales transpired, to September 4, 1991, the condemnation date. The Marsele appraisal made adjustments ranging from 15 to 20 percent on the three comparative sales he relied upon, which also took place in the 1988-89 period.

The Marsele appraisal, however, made no allowance for the fact that the three comparable sales used ranged from 1.25 to 1.82 acres, while the office building land comprised 5.0 acres. While this difference in size is not so great as to make the wholesale-retail analogy fully applicable, some allowance for this factor is appropriate.

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Bluebook (online)
1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolland-enter-v-commr-of-transp-no-cv-92-0508172-apr-28-1993-connsuperct-1993.