Trafford v. Penno

800 F. Supp. 1052, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14453, 1992 WL 233651
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 14, 1992
DocketCiv. A. 90-465B
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 800 F. Supp. 1052 (Trafford v. Penno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trafford v. Penno, 800 F. Supp. 1052, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14453, 1992 WL 233651 (D.R.I. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

FRANCIS J. BOYLE, Chief Judge.

This case presents the tale of a disgruntled developer, seeking an unknown quantity in damages for a short delay in preapplication approval of a subdivision plan by the Coventry Planning Commission (“Commission”). Plaintiff, John T. Trafford, claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 a denial of his rights under the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment, resulting from an alleged conspiracy to deny Plaintiff a fair hearing before the Commission between Defendant Benjamin Penno, the Chairman of the Commission, and Defendants John Assalone, Jr. and Robert Forcier, both developers in the town of Coventry.

Trafford is a resident and real estate developer in the town of Coventry. Trafford initially filed an application for preapplication approval of subdivision plans for the property in question, Reservoir Estates, in 1986. The 1986 site plan contained a 1,100 foot dead-end road named “Catalpa Way.” At that time, the Commission refused to consider the application officially until Trafford conducted a water service study to determine if the project would adversely affect existing water service. Plaintiff failed to conduct the requisite water study.

Instead, Plaintiff divided off and installed water lines on four frontage lots on Reservoir Road. After subdividing these frontage lots, Plaintiff filed a new preapplication submission for the remainder of the property on December 13, 1989. The proposed subdivision contained the same 1,100 foot road that was present in the 1986 site plan.

The Commission scheduled a hearing on the pre-application submission for Reservoir Estates on December 27, 1989. The Secretary for the Commission and the town planner, with no input from the members of the Commission, placed Reservoir Estates last on the agenda for the December 27, 1989 hearing because the submission was deemed “new business,” which is always placed at the end of an agenda. Contrary to the customary practice of hearing petitions until 11 P.M., the Commission adjourned the December 27, 1989 meeting at 10:57 P.M., before it had an opportunity to hear Plaintiff’s application. The Commission rescheduled Plaintiff’s hearing for January 31, 1990.

To Plaintiff’s misfortune, on January 8, 1990, the Town Council of the Town of Coventry declared a building moratorium, which in part ordered the Commission not to accept any new proposals for subdivi *1055 sions, but to proceed with proposals that had already received pre-application approval. The moratorium was to expire on November 1, 1990.

On January 10, 1990, the Commission informed Plaintiff that his pre-application submission would not be processed because of the moratorium and returned Plaintiffs $400 filing fee. Plaintiffs attorney thereafter appeared before a February 12, 1990 meeting of the Town Council to persuade the Council that the moratorium should not apply to pending petitions which had been docketed, but not yet heard, for pre-application approval. The Town Council agreed and at its February 27, 1990 meeting, it passed a motion to prepare and send a letter to the Commission directing the Commission to give Plaintiff an opportunity to be heard, even though the subdivision had not yet received pre-application approval.

At a March 28, 1990 meeting, the Commission heard Plaintiffs pre-application for the first time. During this meeting, the 1,100 foot length of Catalpa Way was discussed. The Commission noted that the proposed 1,100 foot dead-end road would violate a subdivision regulation prohibiting dead-end streets over 600 feet in length. Because of the length of Catalpa Way, two means of ingress and egress would be necessary. Plaintiffs engineer suggested that the ingress/egress problem could be avoided if Catalpa Way tied in with roads in Wood Estates North, an abutting property that was being developed by Defendants Forcier and Assalone. After the meeting, Plaintiffs attorney contacted Defendant Forcier to suggest that they consider joining roads in the two developments. After speaking with his partners, Forcier informed Plaintiffs attorney that the portion of Wood Estates North that actually abutted Reservoir Estates would not be developed for years and that Wood Estates North did not want to be tied in with any requirements that were being placed on Reservoir Estates as that might throw off the time schedule for Wood Estates North.

Since connection with Wood Estates North was no longer an immediate option, Plaintiff began considering new solutions to the ingress/egress problem. At an April 11, 1990 work session attended by Plaintiff, his engineer, the Town Planner, the Planning Commission Secretary, and various members of the Planning Commission, Plaintiff presented a revised map, dated April 11,1990, showing a temporary culde-sac. The revised map was merely a duplication of the original plan with lines drawn over the original map to show the temporary cul-de-sac. At the work session, Plaintiff proposed to develop Reservoir Estates in two phases: the first phase would contain seven lots and a temporary cul-desac; and the second phase would contain seven more lots, which would be left undeveloped until Wood Estates North was available for a road connection with Catalpa Way.

Plaintiff contends that the town representatives told him that they would take this plan under advisement and vote on it at the next Planning Commission meeting, but that nobody told Plaintiff that the revised plan containing a temporary cul-desac would require a new pre-application submission and a new filing fee. At trial, however, both the Secretary of the Commission and Town Planner testified that a new pre-application submission is always required for a major modification such as a change in road length. Moreover, the Secretary testified that Plaintiff never left copies of the revised plan with Commission members or staff after the work session.

At the next full meeting of the Planning Commission on May 16, 1990, Plaintiffs pre-application was heard once again. During the course of this meeting, Plaintiff’s attorney described his unsuccessful efforts to persuade Defendant Forcier to alter the time schedule of Wood Estates North so that Wood Estates North would be available for a road connection with Catalpa Way. Plaintiff’s attorney then presented the revised map showing the temporary cul-de-sac. The Commission Secretary informed the Commission that Plaintiff had never formally submitted the revised plan. A Planning Commission member thereafter moved to deny Plaintiff’s application because it did not contain a second means of ingress and egress. In order to break a *1056 three-to-three tied vote, Chairman Penno voted to deny Plaintiffs application.

Plaintiff appealed this decision to the Coventry Zoning Board of Review. Because the Zoning Board of Review was confused as to whether the Commission denied the original plan containing a 1,100 foot dead-end road or the revised plan containing a temporary cul-de-sac, it remanded Plaintiff’s appeal to the Commission for clarification as to which plan had been denied.

On July 25, 1990, the Commission heard the remand and determined that it had denied the original plan containing a 1,100 foot dead-end road. Plaintiff did not appeal this decision to the Zoning Board of Review.

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Bluebook (online)
800 F. Supp. 1052, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14453, 1992 WL 233651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trafford-v-penno-rid-1992.