Upjohn Co. v. N. Haven Zoning Bd. of App., No. 91-0308554s (May 23, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 3776
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 23, 1991
DocketNo. 91-0308554S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 3776 (Upjohn Co. v. N. Haven Zoning Bd. of App., No. 91-0308554s (May 23, 1991)) 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
Upjohn Co. v. N. Haven Zoning Bd. of App., No. 91-0308554s (May 23, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 3776 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff, The Upjohn Company ("Upjohn") appeals from the decision of the defendant North Haven Board of Zoning Appeals ("Board") refusing to consider its appeal from actions of the North Haven Planning and Zoning Commission ("Commission") and denying its application for a zoning variance.

I. Appeal of Denial of Permits and Site Approvals

The plaintiff has established aggrievement. Upjohn alleges that it sought review by the Board of the Commission's denial of its applications for approval of a site improvement plan, of a coastal site plan, and of its applications for issuance of a fill permit and an excavation permit related to its plan to install a permanent cap on an existing pile of chemical sludge on its property at 410 Sackett Road in North Haven.

The Board ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to entertain an appeal from the Commission's actions as to the applications.

The applications are the same four applications that were the subject of a direct appeal by Upjohn to this Court in The Upjohn Company v. The Planning Zoning Commission of the Town of North Haven, Docket No. 305776, J.D. of New Haven at New Haven. A memorandum of decision was issued in that administrative appeal on March 28, 1991 upholding the actions of the Commission with regard to all four applications. The Commission denied all of the applications on the ground that they constituted a project designed to make permanent a use of the site which was not authorized by the zoning regulations.

Upjohn now claims that its right of review was not the direct appeal from the Commission's action that it in fact took to this Court and pursued to conclusion, but rather an appeal to the Board, which it claims erroneously refused to adjudicate the appeal on the ground that it lacked CT Page 3777 jurisdiction to do so.

Section 8-8 (b) C.G.S. provides that except in certain circumstances not applicable here, "any person aggrieved by any decision of a board may take an appeal to the superior court for the judicial district in which the municipality is located." "Board" is defined at section 8-8 (2) as including a municipal zoning commission, planning commission, and combined planning and zoning commission.

Despite having already recognized the applicability of section 8-8 (b) to appeals from a Commission's denial of application for site plan approval by in fact taking an appeal pursuant to that statute, Upjohn now contends that the Zoning Board of Appeals had jurisdiction to consider the appeal from the Commission's denial of the same applications. Upjohn cites section 11.6 of the North Haven Zoning Regulations, which provides that "[t]he Zoning Board of Appeals shall have the following powers and duties:

To hear and decide appeals where it is alleged that there is an error in any order, requirement or decision made by the agent of the Commission or any other official charged with the enforcement of these Regulations."

On its face, the above regulation plainly provides for an appeal to the Board from the actions of the zoning enforcement officer. The reference to "any official charged with the enforcement of these Regulations" cannot reasonably be interpreted to include the individual Commissioners, since the Commission enforces the regulations only when it acts collectively as a Commission, not through actions of individual members. See section 3.27.1 of the regulations. The regulation, on its face, does not provide for an appeal to the Board from actions of the Commission as a whole.

Upjohn argues that Conto v. Zoning Commission, 186 Conn. 106 (1987) applies to the situation at issue. Its argument overlooks the fact that the zoning regulations under discussion in Conto specifically provided that the Washington, Connecticut, zoning board of appeals was empowered "[t]o hear and decide appeals where it is alleged that there is an error in any order or decision made by the Zoning Commission or its Enforcement Officer." Conto, at 113. (Emphasis added). The court in Conto construed section8-6 C.G.S. as authorizing a town to allow direct enforcement of zoning regulations by its commission as well as by an enforcement officer and found that Washington could permissibly provide for administrative review by the Board of CT Page 3778 the Commission's enforcement actions. It therefore found, at page 114, that "[s]ince the Washington zoning board of appeals affords the plaintiff an avenue for relief, she must, according to well-established principles of zoning law, exhaust that remedy before appealing to a court of law." After indicating, at page 117, that Washington was free to provide a right of appeal from the Commission to the Board in certain circumstances, the court in Conto certainly did not rule that section 8-8, section 8-9 or any other statute required a zoning board of appeals to provide for an intermediate appeal before a party could appeal to the Superior Court from a commission's ruling, nor that any statutes would be construed to require such an intermediate appeal, nor that the administrative actions of a commission that can be characterized as "enforcement actions" give rise to an appeal to the zoning board of appeals even if the local regulations do not provide for such an appeal.

Some trial judges have interpreted Conto to mean that a party aggrieved by an action of a zoning commission that can be characterized as an administrative action must appeal to the town's zoning board of appeals whether or not the town's regulations provide for such an appeal. See Ogalin v. Planning and Zoning Commission of Oxford, CV89 028310S (Judicial District of Milford, June 6, 1990); Castellan v. Board of Zoning Appeals of Branford, CV 291342 (New Haven Judicial District, June 7, 1990). However, in Flaim Enterprises, Inc. v. Town Plan and Zoning Commission of the Town of Orange, CV 205860 (New Haven Judicial District, February 27, 1991), construing regulations very similar to those of North Haven, the court found that Conto did not require an appeal to the zoning board after a zoning commission had reviewed the plaintiff's site plan application.

The best available indication of the intended scope of Conto is provided by the Supreme Court's own analysis of that holding in Weinstein v. Zoning Board, 214 Conn. 400 (1990). Construing the charter of the City of Stamford, which provides for an appeal to the Stamford Board of Representatives from the zoning board's classification of property under the municipal zoning designations, the Supreme Court stated that such a provision was superseded by the "uniform right of appeal" to Superior Court provided by section 8-10 C.G.S. The Supreme Court distinguished the outcome from Conto by stating that the holding in that case was that section 8-10 "did not conflict with town zoning regulations providing for an appeal from its zoning commission, which had acted in an administrative capacity by granting a permit to use a building as a restaurant." CT Page 3779 Weinstein, supra, at 406. The Court characterized its own holding in Conto as follows:

We held that section 8-10

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 3776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upjohn-co-v-n-haven-zoning-bd-of-app-no-91-0308554s-may-23-1991-connsuperct-1991.