Vine v. Zoning Board of Appeals

916 A.2d 5, 281 Conn. 553, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 6, 2007
Docket17619, 17620
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 916 A.2d 5 (Vine v. Zoning Board of Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vine v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 916 A.2d 5, 281 Conn. 553, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 79 (Colo. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

These certified appeals arise from the decision of the named defendant, the zoning board of appeals of the town of North Branford (board), granting the variance application of the defendant M & E Construction, Inc. (M & E). 1 The plaintiff, Wanda Vine, appealed from the board’s decision to the trial court and the trial court dismissed the appeal. The plaintiff then appealed to the Appellate Court, which reversed the judgment of the trial court in a divided opinion. See Vine v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 93 Conn. App. 1, 887 A.2d 442 (2006). We granted the defendants’ separate petitions for certification to appeal limited to the following issue: “Did the Appellate Court properly conclude that the variance granted by the [board] was improper because the hardship was merely financial?” Vine v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 277 Conn. 918, 895 A.2d 794 (2006). We answer the certified question in the negative and reverse the judgment of the Appellate Court.

The record reveals the following facts and procedural histoiy. M & E owns property consisting of three contiguous lots at 66, 72 and 76 Notch Hill Road in North Branford (town). The lots, which are located in an R-40 residential zone, originally were part of a four lot subdivision that was approved by the town’s planning and zoning commission in 1968. 2 In 1981, the Connecti *556 cut Light and Power Company (utility) acquired an easement by condemnation for purposes of installing electrical transmission lines. The easement was eighty feet wide and crossed the two lots located at 66 and 72 Notch Hill Road. The town’s zoning regulations require a minimum 150 foot square of land on each building lot located in an R-40 zone; see North Branford Zoning Regs., § 24.2; 3 and provide that land subject to an easement for above ground utility transmission lines cannot be included in determining compliance with minimum lot area and shape requirements. See North Branford Zoning Regs., § 6.25. 4

In 2001, M & E prepared a site plan proposal in which it sought to convert the three lots into two lots — lot A and lot B. Lot A consisted of the lot at 66 Notch Hill Road plus a portion of the lot at 72 Notch Hill Road and lot B consisted of the remainder of the lot at 72 Notch Hill Road plus the lot at 76 Notch Hill Road. Because the utility easement precluded compliance with the 150 foot square requirement on lot A, M & E submitted to the board an application for a variance. The board denied that application. M & E then submitted a second application for a variance requesting essentially the same relief. In the portion of the application in which M & E was required to “[d] escribe the ground of this appeal, stating the hardship,” M & E stated that “[t]he existing [lot located at 66 Notch Hill Road] and a portion of [the lot located at 72 Notch Hill Road] are *557 encumbered by an [eighty foot] wide above ground [utility] easement. The utility easement impairs [the] 150 [foot] square . . . requirement and there is no ability to place an unencumbered 150 [foot] square anywhere on the proposed Lot A without being compromised by the location of the utility easement. . . . The current property owner cannot utilize the proposed Lot A as an approved building lot unless a variance of the 150 [foot] square . . . requirement is granted.”

The board conducted a public hearing on the application at its regular meeting on April 14,2003. The plaintiff, who owns land abutting M & E’s property, previously had submitted a letter to the board in which she objected to the construction of a house on the lot located at 66 Notch Hill Road. 5 The letter was read into the record at the hearing. After discussing the merits of the application, the board voted to grant it. Explaining his favorable vote, one of the board members, Thomas Katon, stated that “the variance is so nominal and the impact so minimal on the neighbors and the lot in general, that it is . . . form over substance to insist upon this [150 foot] square [requirement] of the regulations. . . . [I]n terms of intensity of development, it appears that [before the taking of the utility easement] they envisioned three houses jammed in there.” He reasoned that any concerns that granting the variance would contravene settled expectations about the density of the area were baseless because “it could have been three houses but for the fortuitous circumstance of the easement . . . .” Board member Steven DeFrank also explained his favorable *558 vote by stating that, “but for the easements, you would have a more crowded area.”

Thereafter, the plaintiff appealed from the board’s decision to the trial court. After a hearing, the trial court dismissed the appeal. In its memorandum of decision, the court took note of the plaintiffs argument that “M & E can still build one house on proposed lot B and that a hardship does not arise simply because the owner of the land cannot use the land to its maximum financial potential.” It concluded, however, that the easement “rendered the property nonconforming because the configuration of the easement across the property prevents a 150 foot square from being placed anywhere on proposed lot A” and, therefore, had produced “an unusual hardship for M & E in the use of its property” that justified the granting of the variance. The court relied on this court’s decision in Smith v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 174 Conn. 323, 328, 387 A.2d 542 (1978) (“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 render it nonconforming to a minimum lot area restriction”). The court further concluded that the variance would not substantially affect the town’s comprehensive zoning plan because, under the subdivision as approved in 1968, M & E could have built houses on each of the three lots.

The plaintiff appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate Court. She claimed on appeal that “the [trial] court improperly determined that (1) the hardship claimed by M & E was not self-created, (2) the claimed hardship was not merely financial, (3) the ‘purchaser with knowledge’ rule did not apply, and (4) material differences existed between the application for the variance at issue in this appeal and the application M & E filed in 2001 that was denied, which permitted the board to reverse its 2001 decision.” Vine v. *559 Zoning Board of Appeals, supra, 93 Conn. App. 2-3.

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Bluebook (online)
916 A.2d 5, 281 Conn. 553, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vine-v-zoning-board-of-appeals-conn-2007.