Wilson Point Property Owners Assn. v. Connecticut Light & Power Co.

140 A.2d 874, 145 Conn. 243, 1958 Conn. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 15, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 140 A.2d 874 (Wilson Point Property Owners Assn. v. Connecticut Light & Power Co.) 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
Wilson Point Property Owners Assn. v. Connecticut Light & Power Co., 140 A.2d 874, 145 Conn. 243, 1958 Conn. LEXIS 175 (Colo. 1958).

Opinion

Baldwin-, J.

The plaintiffs Wilson Point Property Owners Association and The Harbor View Company are associations of property owners in Nor-walk. They own, and have members who individually own, residential property adjacent to or near Manresa Island in Norwalk. The two individual plaintiffs are property owners similarly situated. On November 24, 1952, the defendant The Connecticut Light and Power Company, hereinafter called the defendant, a corporation chartered by the General Assembly and authorized to generate and sell electric power in this state (11 Spec. Laws 111; 17 id. 833; 18 id. 106), filed with the zoning commission of Norwalk an application pursuant to General Statutes § 5646 requesting approval for the erection of *247 a steam electric generating plant on Manresa Island. In October, 1952, the defendant had purchased substantial areas of land in the southern part of Nor-walk bordering upon Long Island Sound at the entrance to Norwalk harbor. Manresa Island, the southernmost portion of this land, is a peninsula about twenty-five acres in extent, almost completely surrounded by water, extending into the Sound. It is connected with the mainland area owned by the defendant by land flooded in part during high water. Most of the defendant’s land, including Manresa Island, is zoned residence B. It is bordered on the north and east by an area zoned residence B and C, and on the west by property zoned for industrial uses. Manresa Island is separated from these two areas, one known as Harbor View and the other as Village Creek, by low marsh land owned by the defendant. Wilson Point, where the properties of the Wilson Point Property Owners Association and its members are located, lies west of Manresa Island and approximately half a mile distant across the waters of Long Island Sound. Harbor View, wherein the properties of The Harbor View Company and its members are located, partly in a residence B and partly in a residence C zone, is north of the defendant’s property and is adjacent to that portion which comprises the mainland north of Manresa Island. The southerly portion of the Village Creek area is slightly less than a quarter of a mile from Manresa Island.

The defendant’s requirements for power in southwestern Connecticut are presently supplied primarily from a steam generating plant in Devon. The defendant claims that the increased demand for electric power in southwestern Connecticut makes the construction of additional generating facilities *248 at Manresa Island essential as a matter of public convenience and necessity. The zoning commission of Norwalk, after a hearing, issued an order, effective January 19, 1953, permitting the location of a generating plant on Manresa Island. Certain property owner associations and individual property owners joined with the town of Norwalk in seeking a declaratory judgment in the Superior Court. There the matter was reserved, upon stipulation, to this court, and questions relative to the power and action of the zoning commission were answered. Jennings v. Connecticut Light & Power Co., 140 Conn. 650, 103 A.2d 535. Prior to the determination of that case, the plaintiff The Harbor View Company and Charles D. Steurer, Jr., acting pursuant to § 5646, appealed to the public utilities commission. Thereafter, the plaintiffs the Wilson Point Property Owners Association, Neva S. Nathan and William G. Luttge were permitted to intervene. The public utilities commission held a series of hearings de novo, and the members of the commission personally viewed the proposed location by land and water. On October 3, 1956, the commission made its finding and order affirming the order of the Norwalk zoning commission. The plaintiffs appealed from the action of the public utilities commission to the Superior Court. The instant appeal is from the judgment of the court dismissing their appeal.

In Jennings v. Connecticut Light & Power Co., supra, 664, the legislative history of General Statutes § 5646 was reviewed, its phraseology examined in detail and its legislative intendment determined. We held (p. 666), in substance, that §5646 expressed a legislative intent to treat the authority exercised by a local zoning commission over the location of a public utility facility within any city or town as a mat *249 ter of public utility regulation rather than zoning and that (p. 669) the zoning commission was to function as a special agency of the state and (p. 670) in that capacity, guided by a combination of the standards of public convenience and necessity and the standards of public health, safety and welfare and the stabilization of property values, was required to weigh considerations of public convenience and necessity which argued for approval of a location for a public utility facility against considerations which called for the enforcement of the zoning regulations. In other words, a zoning commission might find in a given case that the greater public good would be served by locating a public utility structure in a certain place even though it might contravene local zoning regulations. Id., 670; see Connecticut Co. v. New Haven, 103 Conn. 197, 210, 130 A. 169; In re Application of Hackensack Water Co., 41 N.J. Super. 408, 422, 125 A.2d 281. Upon appeal to the public utilities commission, the same standards apply. This does not mean, as claimed by the plaintiffs, that the circumstances must demonstrate that the site selected and approved is the only available one, or that no other site can be found after an exploration of every possibility, or that the facility can be located nowhere else but on the site in controversy. Suitable alternate sites offer a cogent argument, but the ultimate decision approving one and rejecting others must rest upon a finding that the one approved, tested by the standards heretofore stated, possesses to a reasonable degree advantages over the others under consideration and better satisfies the requirements of public convenience and necessity. Wenham v. Department of Public Utilities, 333 Mass. 15, 17, 127 N.E.2d 791; In re Application of Hackensack Water Co., supra, 423; see De Palma v. *250 Town Plan Commission, 123 Conn. 257, 265, 193 A. 868.

We turn now to the function of the Superior Court upon an appeal allowed under § 5646 and pursued, as it must be, under § 5427. Section 5399 requires that the public utilities commission state the reasons for its decision. The plaintiffs claim that this means, in effect, that the commission shall make a finding of facts. Section 5646 provides, relating to the appeal allowed thereby: “Bach . . . order [of the local body] shall be subject to the right of appeal within thirty days from the giving of . . .

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Bluebook (online)
140 A.2d 874, 145 Conn. 243, 1958 Conn. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-point-property-owners-assn-v-connecticut-light-power-co-conn-1958.