Wawrzynowicz v. City of Norwich, No. Knd &8212 Cv94-010-54-31 (Jan. 26, 1995)

1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 400
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1995
DocketNo. KND — CV94-010-54-31
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 400 (Wawrzynowicz v. City of Norwich, No. Knd &8212 Cv94-010-54-31 (Jan. 26, 1995)) 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
Wawrzynowicz v. City of Norwich, No. Knd &8212 Cv94-010-54-31 (Jan. 26, 1995), 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 400 (Colo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION On April 4, 1994, the City Council of the defendant City of Norwich ("Norwich") voted to acquire by eminent domain certain property of the plaintiff Timothy Wawrzynowicz ("owner") for the construction of a new fire department headquarters. The property so taken by Norwich, a municipal corporation, consisted of two parcels which abutted each other and were designated on the Norwich tax list as #8-14 Aqueduct Street and #15 Fairmont Street in Norwich.1 Each of the parcels contained .21 of an acre, more or less. Norwich filed its Statement of Compensation on April 28, 1994 and it set out that, as condemnor, it had determined that the amount of compensation to be paid to the persons entitled thereto for the property taken was $22,900.00. It deposited that sum with the Clerk of the Superior Court in accordance with General Statutes § 8-130. See City of Norwich v. Timothy Wawrzynowicz, Docket #KND-CV94-010-53-53. On May 24, 1994, the Court (Teller, J.) granted the motion of Timothy Wawrzynowicz, as the owner, for the payment of the $22,900.00 deposit.

On May 11, 1994, Wawrzynowicz, as the owner of the condemned property, alleging that he was aggrieved, filed his appeal and application for review of the foregoing Statement of Compensation, pursuant to General Statutes § 8-132. Norwich denies that he is CT Page 401 aggrieved. The matter was referred to the undersigned state trial referee for all further proceedings including hearing, decision and judgment. Written appraisals were exchanged between the parties and a hearing was held at which evidence, including expert testimony, was taken. William Henry and James Blair testified as the real estate experts for the plaintiff and defendant respectively. Thereafter, this Court viewed the subject property with counsel.

Other background circumstances may be appropriately set out at this point. Timothy Wawrzynowicz has operated a used furniture, antiques and appliances business in the Taftville section of Norwich since July 1974. His Taftville location was "quite a ways" from the center of Norwich; it was "on the outskirts of town." In the interest of relocating his business to a better business location in June 1989 he purchased two abutting parcels of land in Norwich, one at #8-14 Aqueduct Street and the other at #15 Fairmont Street. He purchased this property "to relocate [his] business in the best area of town that [he] saw fit for [his] business because there's a lot of traffic." Henry also appraised the subject property when Wawrzynowicz bought it in 1989. As indicated, the property involved is located on Aqueduct and Fairmont Streets. Each of these two parcels lie generally southerly of West Main Street also known as Route #82 which is the main highway from Route #395 into downtown Norwich. West Main Street, for our purposes, runs in a generally easterly-westerly direction. Neither of the condemned parcels abuts any part of West Main Street. As one travels easterly on West Main Street toward downtown Norwich, one comes to its intersection, from the traveler's left, with West Thames Street formerly known as Forest Street. At least one hundred and fifty feet from the intersection of West Main Street and West Thames Street as one proceeds left on West Thames Street is the corner of Aqueduct Street and West Thames Street. Aqueduct Street forms a T-intersection with West Thames Street. Aqueduct Street is itself a dead-end street. If one turned left from West Thames Street into Aqueduct Street and went a short distance on Aqueduct Street he would come upon this owner's #8-14 Aqueduct Street parcel of .21 acres, more or less. Other land, not belonging to Wawrzynowicz, however, abuts his Aqueduct Street parcel. That other land is the corner of Aqueduct Street and West Main Street. At least a portion of the abutting land just referred to belonged to one Ziff when Wawrzynowicz purchased the subject property in 1989. Fairmont Street is the next street westerly and generally parallel with West Thames Street. Wawrzynowicz' other parcel known as #15 Fairmont Street has a severe downward slope CT Page 402 from Fairmont Street as it approaches his Aqueduct Street parcel. The characterization of the nature of this slope by the plaintiff's expert William Henry as "gradual" at one point in his testimony and "moderate" at another point is rejected. His written appraisal report is not quite the fact when it says "access from Fairmont Street would be rather difficult because the subject parcel drops off from the street level." Even more close to the fact is his trial testimony that the height of Fairmont Street, vis a vis the Wawrzynowicz property, made access from Fairmont Street "very difficult". Henry's cross-examination disclosed that there was a "wall", some eight feet in height, along Wawrzynowicz' Fairmont Street boundary, the top of which is about level with the street level of Fairmont Street itself. This, however, can hardly be considered the whole slope eastward and downward toward his Aqueduct Street parcel. This may be partially visualized from photographic exhibits but a view of the subject property confirms the severity of the slope. Wawrzynowicz himself admitted that one "absolutely" cannot drive into the subject property from Fairmont Street.

Wawrzynowicz does not and never did own any frontage on West Main Street. The entire frontage on West Main Street is and was at all relevant times owned by the State of Connecticut. Just how far back from West Main Street the State of Connecticut owns is not disclosed by any credible evidence. This is due to the lack in the evidence of any map survey, or site plan or even a sketch purported to be to scale. There was evidence from Wawrzynowicz that the State owned "a large strip all the way down to the end [and] they [the State] also owned a piece that comes up with a wall over to here like this." On this branch of the matter, however, one thing is clear and that is that Wawrzynowicz has never owned any frontage on West Main Street. Moreover, Wawrzynowicz' two parcels were not the only property condemned with reference to this new fire department headquarters. He testified that when he purchased the two parcels he "intended to buy a piece of property next door", the so-called Ziff property. At that time Ziff, he said, was already ninety years old and so Wawrzynowicz decided to "wait him out". In the meantime, however, the defendant City of Norwich took the Ziff property. Thereafter, Norwich took the Wawrzynowicz parcels. The State of Connecticut still owns the West Main Street frontage.

When he purchased the property in 1989 there were three multi-family structures on it. There was a five-family structure and two other structures, each with two-family units — a total of nine units. They were not fully occupied but had gas, water, sewer CT Page 403 and electricity. All three structures were in "dilapidated condition" and, as Wawrzynowicz testified, "they were just shacks." Shortly after he purchased, he got letters from the health and fire departments stating that the condition of the buildings made them uninhabitable for human use. After the tenants left he boarded them up. Thereafter, he demolished all three buildings in April 1992.

When Norwich condemned his property on April 18, 1994, it was all vacant land. All three buildings he demolished were in the MF-5 zone, i.e. Multiple Family Residential, as was the Ziff and State of Connecticut property. The zoning maps in evidence disclose that the property encompassed by West Main Street, West Thames Street, Aqueduct Street and Fairmont Street were zoned MF-5 at the date of taking.

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Bluebook (online)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wawrzynowicz-v-city-of-norwich-no-knd-8212-cv94-010-54-31-jan-26-connsuperct-1995.