Toole v. May-Day Realty Corp.

223 A.2d 545, 101 R.I. 379, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 10, 1966
DocketEquity No. 3298
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 223 A.2d 545 (Toole v. May-Day Realty Corp.) 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
Toole v. May-Day Realty Corp., 223 A.2d 545, 101 R.I. 379, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 402 (R.I. 1966).

Opinion

*380 Paolino, J.

This is a bill in equity to declare null and void .a certain .amendment 1 to the zoning ordinance of the city of Pawtucket and to enjoin the respondents1 from acting under and enforcing the provisions thereof. A restraining order was issued and the cause was then heard on bill, answer and .proof. The trial justice denied the respondents’ motion to dismiss at the conclusion of the complainants'’ case and, after the hearing, rendered a decision and entered a decree based thereon granting relief substantially in accordance with the prayers of the bill. The cause is before us on the respondents’ appeal from such decree.

The narrow issue .presented by this record is whether the change effected by the amendment in question is in conformity with the comprehensive plan for zoning in effect in the city.

This case arose as a result of the enactment of an amendment to the zoning ordinance rezoning two lots owned by respondent, The May-Day Realty Corporation, hereinafter ■referred to as May-Day. The mayor and the building inspector are joined as parties respondents'. The complainants are taxpayers and owners of residential properties located within 1,000 feet of May-Day’s lots.

*381 In 1939, May-Day purchased the lote in question which were laid out and designated as lots numbered 852 and 857 on assessor’s plat 66 and are located in a residence A zone in the Oak Hill section of the city of Pawtucket. Since the enactment of the original ordinance in 1928, all of plat 66 has been zoned residence A except a small area on East avenue. Property across East avenue on the westerly side is zoned residence B.

Lot 852 is an unimproved lot extending from Alfred Stone Road to Ridge street, a distance of approximately 465 feet. It has an area of approximately 58,000 square feet. Along Ridge street it is about 120 feet wide and along Alfred Stone Road it is 130 feet wide. Lot 857 abuts lot 852 and contains about 28,000 square feet. Located on part of lot 857 are a greenhouse and florist shop, non-conforming uses which existed prior to the 1928 ordinance. Also located on the lot is a large house which was converted in stages: In 1928 there were three families living in the building and in 1939 it was converted into a five-unit dwelling under a special exception granted to May-Day.

It appears from the record that the area in which the lote are situated is predominantly a community of one-family homes with only a few two- and three-family houses and the one five-family dwelling on lot 857. A grocery store and beauty parlor are located a block away. With the exception of the five-family house and a small duplex house under construction, all other multi-family dwellings on the plat, as well as the stores, were built before 1928. Except for the duplex house just mentioned, all new construction on plat 66 has been single-family homes.

In June 1964, May-Day petitioned the city council to amend the zoning ordinance by changing the zoning of lots 852 and 857 from a residence A district to a residence B district. The proposed amendment did not change the classification of any other land in the area.

*382 The .permitted uses in a residence A district include one-family homes and certain other uses but not multiple dwelling units or apartment houses. Revised Ordinances of Pawtucket 1953, sec. 26.5. Multi-family homes, including apartment houses, are permitted uses in a residence B district. Section 26.6.

Pursuant to sec. 2-308 of the city charter the city council ■referred the proposed change to the city planning commission for its advice and the commission recommended that the petition be denied.

Thereafter the city council held a public hearing in accordance with the requirements of G. L. 1956, §45-24-4. May-Day stated at this hearing that if the amendment were adopted it proposed to apply for a permit to construct on lot 852 two apartment buildings, each containing 12-family units, with parking facilities on both lots. After the hearing the council adopted the amendment rezoning lots 852 and 857 and the mayor approved the same. The complainants then brought the instant bill in equity.

At the hearing in the superior court the parties presented in evidence numerous exhibits and the testimony of various witnesses, including real estate experts and experts in city planning. After the hearing the trial justice rendered a decision upon which he based the decree which is the subject of this appeal. In his decision he referred generally to the evidence, but concluded, and we believe correctly so, that the only issue for him to determine was whether the amendment in question had been enacted in compliance with the “comprehensive plan” requirement of §§45-24-3 and 45-24-5, which has recently been interpreted by this court in several cases. D’Angelo v. Knights of Columbus Bldg. Ass’n, 89 R. I. 76, 86; Cianciarulo v. Tarro, 92 R. I. 352, 360; Town & Country Mobile Homes, Inc. v. Inspector of Buildings, 93 R. I. 383, 387; Hadley v. Harold Realty Co., 97 R. I. 403, 198 A.2d 149.

*383 Although the trial justice was satisfied that the question of comprehensiveness was the only issue, out of an abundance of caution and in order to avoid further litigation if, as he said, “I am wrong in limiting the only issue upon which I say I have jurisdiction to pass,” he made findings with respect to the directory provision of §45-24-3 referred to by this court in Cianciarulo, supra, at page 359. However, in our judgment, as we have already indicated, the trial justice correctly decided that the only issue before him was the question of comprehensiveness. Since he stated that he was not basing his decision on “any of the factors involved in these directory provisions” his findings with respect to those provisions require no discussion by us.

Our only concern here is with the evidence and findings' on the issue of whether the change effected by the amendment is in conformity with the comprehensive zoning plan in effect in the city of Pawtucket. The trial justice found that lots 852 and 857 have been located in a residence A area since the enactment of the original ordinance in 1928. He also found that about 80 per cent of the dwellings are one-family houses and that there have been no real changes in the type of construction of homes in the area since the ordinance was adopted in 1928.

He concluded on the basis of the evidence before him that a comprehensive plan had been in effect since 1928.

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Bluebook (online)
223 A.2d 545, 101 R.I. 379, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toole-v-may-day-realty-corp-ri-1966.