JAG Capital Drive, LLC v. East Lyme Zoning Commission , 168 Conn. App. 655 ( 2016 )


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    JAG CAPITAL DRIVE, LLC v. EAST
    LYME ZONING COMMISSION
    (AC 37924)
    Sheldon, Mullins and Harper, Js.
    Argued May 19—officially released October 4, 2016
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Hartford, Land Use Litigation Docket, Cohn, J.)
    Edward B. O’Connell, with whom, on the brief, was
    Mark S. Zamarka, for the appellant (defendant).
    Timothy S. Hollister, with whom was Andrea L.
    Gomes, for the appellee (plaintiff).
    Opinion
    SHELDON, J. The defendant, the East Lyme Zoning
    Commission (commission), appeals from the judgment
    of the Superior Court sustaining the administrative
    appeal of the plaintiff, JAG Capital Drive, LLC, from
    the commission’s denial of the plaintiff’s application
    for approval of a proposed affordable housing develop-
    ment. The commission claims that the trial court erred
    in concluding that it failed to meet its burden of proof
    in denying the plaintiff’s application on the ground of
    the industrial zone exemption—that the proposed
    affordable housing development would be located in
    an area which is zoned for industrial use and does not
    permit residential uses—pursuant to General Statutes
    § 8-30g (g) (2) (A). More specifically, the commission
    claims that the trial court erred in determining that the
    area in which the proposed affordable housing project
    would be located permits residential uses.1 We disagree
    with the commission, and thus affirm the judgment of
    the trial court sustaining the plaintiff’s appeal from the
    commission’s denial of its affordable housing appli-
    cation.
    In its December 23, 2014 memorandum of decision,
    sustaining the plaintiff’s administrative appeal, the trial
    court set forth the following relevant factual and proce-
    dural history. ‘‘The plaintiff’s land is located in East
    Lyme. It consists of 24 acres, zoned LI, Light Industrial,
    adjacent on the north side to a small commercial/light
    industrial area served by a street called Capital Drive,
    ending in a cul-de-sac north of [the plaintiff’s] 24 acres.
    West of the plaintiff’s property are wetlands, a stream,
    and the East Lyme/Old Lyme border. To the east are a
    single-family residential neighborhood and Camp Nian-
    tic, a seasonal campground. To the south is State Route
    156, which in that location is called West Main Street.
    The plaintiff’s property has frontage on Route 156/West
    Main. . . .
    ‘‘The plaintiff filed its initial application for site plan
    approval with the commission on August 7, 2012, con-
    sisting of 69 units, a proportion of which were to be
    affordable housing units under § 8-30g. . . . The units
    were to form a residential development to be known
    as ‘Rocky Neck Village,’ proposed as rental units with
    possible future conversion to common interest owner-
    ship. They were to be two bedroom townhome style
    units. . . . The town’s wetlands commission had given
    its approval to the development in March 2011. . . .
    ‘‘The commission held a public hearing on this appli-
    cation on February 7, 2013. The plaintiff’s attorney and
    his designees explained the proposed site plan demon-
    strating that it would not cause any health or safety
    concerns, submitted a traffic report that had no safety
    concerns, entered favorable reports on stormwater and
    other environmental topics, and explained the inappli-
    cability of coastal management zoning. The attorney
    also explained the difficulties that the plaintiff faced in
    marketing the property for light industrial use. . . .
    ‘‘The commission staff gave a presentation and the
    public spoke out, some favoring and others objecting
    to the site plan. There was also testimony from three
    business owners located in the LI zone of the applica-
    tion. Norman Birk, president of Birk Manufacturing,
    informed the commission that his company uses corro-
    sive acids, liquid stainless steel and metal finishing tech-
    niques in the manufacture of circuit boards. . . . It
    has an approval from the Department of Energy and
    Environmental Protection to treat wastewater on site.
    . . . In 2011, Birk Manufacturing experienced an indus-
    trial accident when bari-chloride and muriatic acid were
    mixed, creating dangerous chlorine gas. Federal, state
    and local agencies, including a hazardous materials
    team were called to the scene, a large portion of the
    industrial park was evacuated and two Birk employees
    were hospitalized. . . .
    ‘‘Two other company executives also spoke at the
    public hearing. The first was Susan Spellman, owner
    of Salon Associates, also located on Capital Drive. Her
    company receives, stores and ships chemicals used in
    the salon industry, including bleach, aerosols and ace-
    tones. In 2011 she was visited by an FBI agent to explain
    that the type of chemicals at her site might make her
    business a terrorist target, and to suggest means of safe
    storage. . . . Richard Beck, owner of Embalmer’s Sup-
    ply Company on Capital Drive, informed the commis-
    sion that he stores embalming fluid and formaldehyde,
    a carcinogen on site. Evidence was taken of industrial
    sized truck traffic in the industrial park at all hours. . . .
    ‘‘The plaintiff’s attorney in reply stated to the commis-
    sion that the project would be built in stages starting
    from Route 156. The only contact with Capital Drive
    would be the opening of an access road for water and
    other utilities. He also pointed out that the Birk Manu-
    facturing incident had occurred inside the building, the
    longstanding proximity of the three businesses to the
    single-family residential neighborhood to the southeast,
    and during five to six months of each year, to Camp
    Niantic, a residential campground to the east and south
    of the plaintiff’s parcel. He also noted the fact that the
    commission had approved the 38 Hope Street residen-
    tial development in the LI zone in 2006, with an adjacent
    lumber yard with truck traffic and an active rail line.
    . . .
    ‘‘On February 21, 2013, the commission met after
    the close of the public hearing. It concluded that the
    application should be denied on the ground that it was
    proposed in a Light Industrial District, under § 11 of its
    zoning regulations.2 It was to be located in an area
    zoned for industrial use and in which residential uses
    were not permitted. The commission’s resolution stated
    that it acted under the provisions of the affordable
    housing statutes that had an exemption for an ‘industrial
    zone.’ [General Statutes} § 8-30g (g) (2) (A). . . .
    ‘‘Notice of the denial of the plaintiff’s application was
    published on March 14, 2013. . . . On March 28, 2013,
    the plaintiff filed a resubmission pursuant to § 8-30g
    (h). . . . The revised site plan (1) eliminated nine units
    closest to the existing uses in the LI zone as well as
    one building, (2) increased landscaped buffer between
    the industrial uses and the proposed homes to meet
    the East Lyme multifamily/affordable housing regula-
    tions, (3) reduced site coverage, (4) improved traffic
    access, (5) increased open space, and (6) decreased
    stormwater runoff. . . .
    ‘‘At a public hearing on May 16, 2013, a professional
    engineer, retained by the commission, suggested minor
    plan revisions that were accepted by the plaintiff. . . .
    The plaintiff provided documentation that the LI zone
    allowed for types of residential uses. . . . These docu-
    ments included the commission’s 1990 resolution
    approving Bride Brook [Nursing and Rehabilitation
    Center (Bride Brook)] as a place where people would
    ‘reside’ within the LI zone, along with its approvals
    of Sea Spray [Condominiums, an affordable housing
    development] and 38 Hope Street as multifamily resi-
    dential uses on parcels zoned LI.
    ‘‘The plaintiff noted that Salon Enterprises, an opera-
    tion discussed at the original public hearing, was a
    wholesale business, not a manufacturing facility; it con-
    ducts on-site classes for beauty parlor employees. As
    to Birk Manufacturing, the plaintiff showed that in the
    revised plan, Birk’s building at its closest point is 360
    feet from the corner of the nearest residential unit. The
    attorney for the plaintiff concluded that Birk did not
    expect future accidents. This was also confirmed by
    Mr. Birk. . . . Birk and Spellman from Salon did
    express concern that the approval of the plaintiff’s
    application could cause them to have to consider mov-
    ing out of East Lyme to another location. . . .
    ‘‘The commission voted at its June 6, 2013 meeting
    to deny the plaintiff’s amended application. The com-
    mission adopted a resolution that states in part as fol-
    lows: ‘Whereas, for the purposes of this Resolution, the
    Commission will address the Amended Application in
    two separate parts: (1) As an affordable housing appli-
    cation that would locate affordable housing in an area
    which is zoned for industrial use . . . and (2) As an
    application for approval of an affordable housing devel-
    opment pursuant to General Statutes § 8-30g (g) (1).’
    ‘‘With regard to the ‘industrial use’ exception, the
    commission found that the proposed development
    ‘would be located entirely in an area that is presently
    zoned Light Industrial (LI) according to the East Lyme
    Zoning Map.’ It further found that the LI zone provided
    for industrial and commercial uses and did not permit
    residential uses in the zone. The commission had heard
    testimony from business owners in the zone on the
    industrial uses in the area, ‘including, but not limited
    to, manufacturing processes, heavy truck travel and
    chemical manufacturing, storage and transportation.’
    ‘‘It was resolved that the commission denied the
    amended application ‘to be located on Capital Drive at
    or near its intersection with Route 156 in East Lyme,
    for the reason that the development is located entirely
    in an area which is zoned for industrial use and which
    does not permit residential uses, and that the Applica-
    tion does not seek approval for assisted housing as
    defined in § 8-30g (a) of the General Statutes.’ . . .
    ‘‘With regard to the general approval of an affordable
    housing development, [the commission found that]
    there was both sufficient evidence and evidence of the
    need to protect the public health and safety to support
    the commission’s denial. The development was incon-
    sistent with the town’s plan of conservation and devel-
    opment. It was to be located in an LI zone with industrial
    uses, as stated above. There was an industrial accident
    of concern in the last year requiring evacuation of the
    area, drawing responses from hazardous materials
    teams, the Department of Energy and Environmental
    Protection and the federal [Environmental Protection
    Agency]. There was a ‘quantifiable probability’ of spe-
    cific harm raising interests in public health and safety.
    ‘There is a necessity to protect the public that cannot
    be remedied by changes to the application and the risk
    of such harm to the public interest outweighs the need
    for affordable housing.’ . . .
    ‘‘This appeal [from the commission’s denial of the
    plaintiff’s application] was subsequently filed. On July
    15, 2014, the attorneys for the parties and the court
    conducted a view of the site. The group met at the cul-
    de-sac end of Capital Drive. Birk Manufacturing was to
    the left, as well as a parking lot and a small garden.
    Outside of Birk were two burning pots of some type.
    Salon Enterprises was to the right. There were a few
    other buildings in the cul-de-sac. There was no heavy
    truck traffic at the time of the viewing in midday. The
    court and the parties walked down a path into a wooded
    area. To the left along this path is Camp Niantic and
    to the right is an open space conservation area with
    the Four Mile River. The entryway to the proposed
    project is about 400 feet from the cul-de-sac in the midst
    of the woods. At this point, the plaintiff proposes to
    place a gate and additional plantings. The court viewed
    the general area where the development is to be built.
    There were people making use of the trail into the
    woods for recreational activities. This trail is to serve
    as an emergency entrance and exit to the development.
    The parties returned to the cul-de-sac and drove out of
    Capital Drive to Route 156. The court observed the
    premises along Route 156, commercial in nature, the
    main entrance to the proposed development, and also
    [Bride Brook]. Sea Spray was also viewable nearby.
    ‘‘Along with the view that the court conducted, the
    court ordered that the commission hold a further factual
    hearing on the ‘day-to-day operation’ of Bride Brook.
    This order was based on exhibit M, which dated from
    1989/1990, where a Bride Brook officer indicated that
    the center was functioning partly as a ‘rest home.’ The
    commission conducted a further hearing on September
    18, 2014, at which an affidavit of Dianne Caristo-Gaynor,
    the administrator of Bride Brook, was introduced.
    ‘‘The affidavit, dated August 9, 2014, declared in para-
    graph 9 that the ‘second and third floors are home
    to 87 Long Term Care Residents.’ These residents are
    ‘expected to live at Bride Brook for the remainder of
    their lives. Some have lived here more than 15 years.’
    In paragraph 10, the administrator stated the following
    indicia of the residents’ residing in their ‘home.’ They
    have no other home; they are to live at Bride Brook
    indefinitely; they are registered to vote at Bride Brook;
    they receive mail at this address; they are considered
    in a residential community; they participate in the plan-
    ning of their medical treatment; they are allowed to
    manage their personal financial affairs; they participate
    in social, religious, and community activities of choice;
    they have visits from family, friends and acquaintances;
    and they are treated with dignity and individuality,
    including privacy.
    ‘‘During the hearing, the zoning officer obtained testi-
    mony from the administrator of Bride Brook that the
    residents were closely supervised by nursing staff and
    a doctor on call. . . . There were no kitchens in the
    individual units. . . . The residents may leave the
    premises at will, but usually leave with relatives or in
    a Bride Brook van. . . . The residents must be admit-
    ted to Bride Brook on medical orders, not just on their
    own application.’’ (Citations omitted; footnotes
    altered.)
    With that as background, the court undertook a ple-
    nary review of the record to consider whether the com-
    mission had satisfied its burden under the industrial
    zone exception3 pursuant to § 8-30g (g) (2) (A)—of prov-
    ing that the proposed affordable housing development
    would be located in an area which is zoned for industrial
    use and does not permit residential uses.4 The court
    explained: ‘‘The issue in this case is only whether the
    zoned area permits usages consistent with a residential
    use. That is why the court was particularly interested
    in the hearing conducted on remand concerning the
    Bride Brook facility. Bride Brook was approved in 1990
    in the LI zone under a special permit for convalescent
    homes, as allowed by [§ 11.2.7 of the East Lyme Zon-
    ing Regulations].’’
    The court found: ‘‘Here . . . there is a factual record
    showing that there are 87 people who live, have individ-
    ual and community activities and vote at Bride Brook.
    They consider it to be their legal residence. These are
    permanent residents in the zone in question, living a
    short distance from the proposed 60 unit residential
    development plan of the plaintiff.’’ The court analogized
    the circumstances presented in this case to those in
    Glastonbury Affordable Housing Development, Inc. v.
    Town Council, Superior Court, judicial district of Hart-
    ford-New Britain, Docket No. CV XX-XXXXXXX (Septem-
    ber 4, 1996), in which the court directed the defendant
    to approve an affordable housing development where
    the zoning regulations permitted a ‘‘range of population-
    intensive uses,’’ including ‘‘a convalescent, nursing or
    rest home.’’ The court in the present case found: ‘‘This
    is also the situation here, based on the situation of the
    Bride Brook residents.’’
    The court therefore concluded that the industrial
    zone exception did not apply here, and thus that the
    commission’s denial of the affordable housing applica-
    tion could not be sustained on that basis. The court
    remanded the matter to the commission with direction
    to approve the plaintiff’s application, subject to reason-
    able conditions not inconsistent with approval. The
    commission thereafter filed a petition for certification
    to appeal pursuant to General Statutes § 8-8 (o). We
    granted the commission’s petition and this appeal
    followed.
    The parameters of our review of an affordable hous-
    ing appeal are circumscribed by § 8-30g (g), which pro-
    vides: ‘‘Upon an appeal taken under subsection (f) of
    this section, the burden shall be on the commission to
    prove, based upon the evidence in the record compiled
    before such commission, that the decision from which
    such appeal is taken and the reasons cited for such
    decision are supported by sufficient evidence in the
    record. The commission shall also have the burden to
    prove, based upon the evidence in the record compiled
    before such commission, that (1) (A) the decision is
    necessary to protect substantial public interests in
    health, safety or other matters which the commission
    may legally consider; (B) such public interests clearly
    outweigh the need for affordable housing; and (C) such
    public interests cannot be protected by reasonable
    changes to the affordable housing development, or (2)
    (A) the application which was the subject of the deci-
    sion from which such appeal was taken would locate
    affordable housing in an area which is zoned for indus-
    trial use and which does not permit residential uses;
    and (B) the development is not assisted housing, as
    defined in subsection (a) of this section. If the commis-
    sion does not satisfy its burden of proof under this
    subsection, the court shall wholly or partly revise, mod-
    ify, remand or reverse the decision from which the
    appeal was taken in a manner consistent with the evi-
    dence in the record before it.’’
    The standard of review embodied in § 8-30g (g) is
    twofold in nature. ‘‘Under [the first sentence of § 8-
    30g (g)], the court must determine . . . whether the
    commission has shown that its decision is supported by
    sufficient evidence in the record. Under subparagraphs
    [(1) (A), (B) and (C)] of the statute, however, the court
    must review the commission’s decision independently,
    based upon its own scrupulous examination of the
    record. Therefore, the proper scope of review regarding
    whether the commission has sustained its burden of
    proof, namely that: its decision is based upon the protec-
    tion of some substantial public interest; the public inter-
    est clearly outweighs the need for affordable housing;
    and there are no modifications that reasonably can be
    made to the application that would permit the applica-
    tion to be granted—requires the court, not to ascertain
    whether the commission’s decision is supported by suf-
    ficient evidence, but to conduct a plenary review of the
    record in order to make an independent determination
    on this issue.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) River
    Bend Associates, Inc. v. Zoning Commission, 
    271 Conn. 1
    , 22, 
    856 A.2d 973
    (2004). ‘‘[Although the] com-
    mission remains the finder of fact and any facts found
    are subject to the ‘sufficient evidence’ standard of judi-
    cial review . . . th[e] application of the legal standards
    set forth in § 8-30g (g) (1) (A), (B) and (C) to those
    facts is a mixed question of law and fact subject to
    plenary review.’’ (Citation omitted.) 
    Id., 24–25. ‘‘Because
    the plaintiff[s’] appeal to the trial court is
    based solely on the record, the scope of the trial court’s
    review of the [commission’s] decision and the scope of
    our review of that decision are the same.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 26–27 n.15.
    Because we
    find no principled reason for distinguishing between
    subdivisions (1) and (2) of § 8-30g (g) with regard to
    the commission’s obligation; see JPI Partners, LLC v.
    Planning & Zoning Board, 
    259 Conn. 675
    , 691, 
    791 A.2d 552
    (2002); the issue of whether it met its statutory
    burden to prove that the industrial use exemption
    applies presents a mixed question of law and fact over
    which our review is plenary.
    It is undisputed that the affordable housing develop-
    ment for which the plaintiff sought approval in this case
    represents a residential use. The only issue before us is
    whether the proposed affordable housing development
    would be located in an area that is zoned for industrial
    use and does not permit residential uses.
    Resolution of this issue requires us to review the
    statutory language of § 8-30g (g) and the town of East
    Lyme’s municipal zoning regulations, the interpretation
    of which presents a question of law over which our
    review is plenary. Alvord Investment, LLC v. Zoning
    Board of Appeals, 
    282 Conn. 393
    , 416, 
    920 A.2d 1000
    (2007). The following principles regarding the interplay
    between the affordable housing statute and municipal
    zoning regulations are instructive. Our Supreme Court
    has ‘‘outlined the differences that [it] had identified
    previously between an affordable housing land use
    appeal brought pursuant to § 8-30g and a traditional
    zoning appeal. First, an appeal under § 8-30g [f] may
    be filed only by an applicant for an affordable housing
    development whose application was denied or [was]
    approved with restrictions which have a substantial
    adverse impact on the viability of the affordable housing
    development or the degree of affordability of the
    affordable dwelling units . . . .
    ‘‘Second, the scope of judicial review under § 8-30g
    [g] requires the town, not the applicant, to marshal the
    evidence supporting its decision and to persuade the
    court that there is sufficient evidence in the record to
    support the town’s decision and the reasons given for
    that decision. By contrast, in a traditional zoning appeal,
    the scope of review requires the appealing aggrieved
    party to marshal the evidence in the record, and to
    establish that the decision was not reasonably sup-
    ported by the record. . . .
    ‘‘Third, if a town denies an affordable housing land
    use application, it must state its reasons on the record,
    and that statement must take the form of a formal,
    official, collective statement of reasons for its actions.
    . . . By contrast, in a traditional zoning appeal, if a
    zoning agency has failed to give such reasons, the court
    is obligated to search the entire record to find a basis
    for the [agency’s] decision. . . .
    ‘‘We reach this conclusion based on the text and the
    purpose of the statute. The text requires that the town
    establish that sufficient record evidence supports the
    decision from which such appeal is taken and the rea-
    sons cited for such decision . . . . Thus, textually the
    statute contemplates reasons that are cited by the town.
    This strongly suggests that such reasons be cited by
    the zoning agency at the time it took its formal vote on
    the application, rather than reasons that later might be
    culled from the record, which would include, as in a
    traditional zoning appeal, the record of the entire span
    of hearings that preceded the vote. . . . Furthermore,
    the key purpose of § 8-30g is to encourage and facilitate
    the much needed development of affordable housing
    throughout the state. . . . Requiring the town to state
    its reasons on the record when it denies an affordable
    housing land use application will further that purpose
    because it will help guard against possibly pretextual
    denials of such applications. We therefore read the stat-
    ute, consistent with its text and purpose, to require the
    town to do so.’’ (Citations omitted; emphasis omitted;
    internal quotation marks omitted.) JPI Partners, LLC
    v. Planning & Zoning 
    Board, supra
    , 
    259 Conn. 688
    –90.
    ‘‘The legislative history indicates that the legislature
    intended to accomplish th[e] goal [of encouraging and
    facilitating affordable housing throughout the state] by
    creating specific legislation that affects only affordable
    housing applications, not the overall zoning scheme.
    Therefore, applications that do not fit into the definition
    of an affordable housing application are not affected
    by § 8-30g. If an application does satisfy the definition
    of an affordable housing application, however, then the
    commission must satisfy the increased burden of proof
    in order to deny the application effectively. Under these
    circumstances, nonconformity of zoning is not, per se,
    a reason to deny the application. The legislature did
    not intend zoning nonconformity to block an affordable
    housing subdivision application. . . .
    ‘‘Section 8-30g is not part of the traditional land use
    statutory scheme. Traditional land use policies did not
    solve Connecticut’s affordable housing problem, and
    the legislature passed § 8-30g to effect a change. . . .
    ‘‘Section 8-30g does not allow a commission to use
    its traditional zoning regulations to justify a denial of
    an affordable housing application, but rather forces the
    commission to satisfy the statutory burden of proof. The
    factors that the commission considers when reviewing
    affordable housing subdivision applications are the
    same as those considered when it passes subdivision
    regulations. Instead of simply questioning whether the
    application complies with those regulations, however,
    under § 8-30g, the commission considers the rationale
    behind the regulations to determine whether the regula-
    tions are necessary to protect substantial public inter-
    ests in health, safety or other matters. . . .
    ‘‘Conformity [in decisions] is provided by § 8-30g
    because each decision must be justified in terms of
    the factors enumerated in the statute.’’ (Emphasis in
    original; footnote omitted.) Wisniowski v. Planning
    Commission, 
    37 Conn. App. 303
    , 316–18, 
    655 A.2d 1146
    ,
    cert. denied, 
    233 Conn. 909
    , 
    658 A.2d 981
    (1995).
    In sum, ‘‘zoning compliance is not mandatory prior
    to approval of an affordable housing subdivision appli-
    cation. . . . The burden of proof in § 8-30g [g] takes
    away some of the discretion that local commissions
    have under traditional land use law and allows the
    reviewing trial court to effect a zone change if the local
    commission cannot satisfy the statutory requirements
    for its denial of an application. Section 8-30g [g] pro-
    vides that if the commission fails to satisfy its burden
    of proof, the trial court, ‘shall wholly or partly, revise,
    modify, remand or reverse the decision from which
    the appeal was taken in a manner consistent with the
    evidence in the record before it.’ ’’ (Citation omitted;
    emphasis omitted.) 
    Id., 319–20. With
    the foregoing prin-
    ciples in mind, we turn to the commission’s claim on
    appeal.
    Here, neither party disputes that the proposed devel-
    opment would be located in an area which is zoned for
    industrial use. The only issue in dispute is whether that
    area does not permit residential uses. The commission
    claims that the trial court ‘‘drew conclusions of law
    unsupported by the record when it determined that
    Bride Brook Nursing and Rehabilitation Center is a
    residential use and the LI zone permits residential
    uses,’’ and that the ‘‘trial court’s conclusion that Bride
    Brook is a residential use is clearly erroneous and is
    contrary to the sufficient evidence in the record show-
    ing otherwise.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) The
    commission’s arguments, however, demonstrate a mis-
    understanding of its burden in affordable housing
    appeals. As noted herein, the commission bears the
    burden of proving that the proposed affordable housing
    development would be located in an area which is zoned
    for industrial use and does not permit residential uses.
    We conclude that the commission failed to satisfy
    that burden.
    As to the industrial use exemption, the commission
    declared, in response to both the plaintiff’s initial appli-
    cation and its modified application for approval of the
    affordable housing development, that the area did not
    permit residential uses. More specifically, the commis-
    sion stated, on both occasions, that ‘‘residential uses
    are not permitted in the LI zoning district.’’ Those decla-
    rations, particularly in the absence of any reference to
    any evidence in the record, appear to be based solely
    upon the municipal regulatory definition of the zone in
    which the proposed development would be located.
    The commission looked no further than its own zoning
    regulations in determining the applicability of the indus-
    trial use exemption. As noted herein, zoning designa-
    tions may not be the sole basis for the denial of an
    affordable housing regulation.
    Although the commission did not point to any evi-
    dence in the record that the area in question did not
    permit residential uses, the court, in making its plenary
    determination as to whether the industrial exemption
    applies in this case, focused on the existing uses in LI
    zones in East Lyme, particularly the use of Bride Brook,
    which had been granted a special permit as a convales-
    cent home in 1990. On September 18, 2014, the commis-
    sion held a public hearing pursuant to the court’s
    remand order to develop additional information con-
    cerning the day-to-day activities of Bride Brook. Follow-
    ing the presentation of evidence and public
    commenting, the public hearing was closed and the
    commission transitioned to a regular meeting, during
    which it briefly discussed the issue presented during
    the earlier public hearing, and then summarily con-
    cluded that ‘‘Bride Book Nursing Home and Rehabilita-
    tion Center is not a residential use pursuant to § 8-
    30g (2) (A) of the General Statutes, based on evidence
    presented pursuant to the court’s remand order dated
    June 26, 2014.’’5 As noted herein, the court disagreed
    with the commission and determined that Bride Brook
    is a residential use and thus that the commission
    improperly relied upon the industrial use exemption as
    a basis to deny the plaintiff’s application.
    The East Lyme Zoning Regulations allow, by special
    permit, convalescent homes. Those regulations define
    a convalescent home as a facility that provides for those
    with chronic health issues,6 which necessarily contem-
    plates more than a transient use.7 Indeed, as the trial
    court noted, the 1990 resolution of the commission
    described Bride Brook as a place where people would
    ‘‘reside’’ within the LI zone. Specifically, in a document
    that was submitted in connection with the application
    for the development of Bride Brook in 1990, as part of
    the ‘‘Description of Daily Activities,’’ it was noted that:
    ‘‘There will be an average of 118 persons residing at
    Bride Brook at any one time.’’ Thus, not only has Bride
    Brook functioned in fact as a residential use, as its
    administrator testified, that use was specifically con-
    templated ab initio and approved by the commission.
    We thus reject the commission’s claims that the trial
    court improperly determined that Bride Brook is a resi-
    dential use.
    Although nonconformity with zoning designations
    may not, in itself, be sufficient grounds for the denial
    of an affordable housing application, conformity with
    those designations undoubtedly mandates the granting
    of such an application. Because the East Lyme Zoning
    Regulations permit convalescent homes in an LI zone,
    and convalescent homes, by their nature and borne out
    by the example of Bride Brook, potentially involve at
    least some degree of residential use, we conclude that
    the East Lyme Zoning Regulations cannot be construed
    ‘‘not [to] permit’’ residential uses in an area that has
    been zoned LI. We thus conclude that the trial court
    properly determined that the commission improperly
    denied the plaintiff’s affordable housing application
    without proving that the proposed development would
    be located in an area that is zoned for industrial uses
    and does not permit residential uses.8
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    The commission also claims that the trial court erred in deviating from
    the law of the case doctrine and in basing its rejection of the industrial
    use exemption on a determination that the area in which the proposed
    development would be located permitted uses ‘‘consistent with a residential
    use’’ rather than the precise statutory language ‘‘residential use.’’ We reject
    both of those claims and conclude that neither of them deserves detailed
    analysis.
    2
    Section 11 of the East Lyme Zoning Regulations provides in relevant part:
    ‘‘LI LIGHT INDUSTRIAL DISTRICTS
    ‘‘GENERAL DESCRIPTION AND PURPOSE—A district suitable for heavy
    commercial and light manufacturing, oriented essentially to major transpor-
    tation facilities. The purpose of this district is to provide areas for industrial
    and commercial uses in an open setting that will not have objectionable
    influences on adjacent residential and commercial districts.
    ‘‘11.1 PERMITTED USES—The following uses of buildings and/or land
    and no others are permitted subject to site plan approval in accordance
    with Section 24.
    ‘‘11.1.1 Light industrial or manufacturing uses which are not dangerous
    by reason of fire or explosion, nor injurious or detrimental to the neighbor-
    hood by reason of dust, odor, fumes, wastes, smoke, glare, noise, vibration
    or other noxious or objectionable feature as measured at the nearest prop-
    erty line.
    ‘‘11.1.2 Trucking Terminal.
    ‘‘11.1.3 Printing or publishing.
    ‘‘11.1.4 Warehouse and wholesale storage; self-storage warehouses.
    ‘‘11.1.5 Commercial nurseries, greenhouses and garden centers.
    ‘‘11.1.6 Office complex.
    ‘‘11.1.7 All related accessory uses customarily incidental to the above
    permitted uses . . .
    ‘‘11.2 SPECIAL PERMIT USES—The following uses may be permitted
    when granted a Special Permit by the Zoning Commission subject to the
    Special Permit Requirements of Section 25.
    ‘‘11.2.1 Deli, coffee shop or cafeteria.
    ‘‘11.2.2 Private training facilities, trade and technical schools and facilities
    of higher learning.
    ‘‘11.2.3 Research, design and development facilities.
    ‘‘11.2.4 Health spas and gymnasiums, sports facilities and other commer-
    cial indoor recreations.
    ‘‘11.2.5 Hotels.
    ‘‘11.2.6 Contractor or trade services.
    ‘‘11.2.7 Convalescent homes.
    ‘‘11.2.8 Motor Vehicle and heavy equipment Repairers Station.
    ‘‘11.2.9 Office and retail sales of industrial services . . .
    ‘‘11.2.10 Adult Use Establishments . . . .’’
    3
    The court ‘‘assum[ed] that the commission satisfied the [threshold] ‘suffi-
    ciency test’ ’’ set forth in § 8-30g (g) and conducted its own independent
    review as to whether the commission met its burden of proof under § 8-
    30g (g) (1). The plaintiff has not challenged the court’s determination that
    the commission met the sufficiency of the evidence standard and we thus
    need not address it.
    The court also found that the commission failed either to show that its
    decision was necessary to protect substantial public interest in health, safety
    or other matters pursuant to § 8-30g (g) (1), or that the subject of the decision
    from which this appeal is taken would locate affordable housing in an area
    zoned for industrial use and which does not permit residential use pursuant
    to § 8-30g (g) (2). Because the commission has not challenged the trial
    court’s determination that it failed to meet its burden under subdivision (1),
    that determination stands, and, therefore, the commission may only prevail
    on appeal if it can show that the trial court erred in concluding that the
    commission failed to meet its burden under subdivision (2).
    4
    It is undisputed that the proposed development was not assisted housing.
    5
    Although the individual members posited various reasons for determining
    whether Bride Brook was a residential use, those opinions are not those of
    the commission and thus may not form the basis for the denial of an applica-
    tion. See Verrillo v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 
    155 Conn. App. 657
    , 673–74,
    
    111 A.3d 473
    (2015) (individual reasons given by certain members of zoning
    agency do not amount to formal, collective, official statement of agency,
    are not available to show reasons for, or grounds of, zoning agency’s decision
    and it is not appropriate for reviewing court to attempt to glean such formal,
    collective statement from minutes of discussion by members prior to zoning
    agency’s vote).
    6
    Section 1.50 of the December, 2012 revision of the East Lyme Zoning
    Regulations defines a convalescent home, which is interchangeable with a
    rest home, as: ‘‘An establishment which provides full convalescent or chronic
    care or both for three or more individuals who are not related by blood or
    marriage to the operator and who, by reason of chronic illness or infirmity,
    are unable to care for themselves. A hospital or sanitarium shall not be
    construed to be included in this definition.’’
    7
    For example, § 1.24 of the December, 2012 revision of the East Lyme
    Zoning Regulations defines a hotel as providing ‘‘service for the use of
    transient guests.’’
    8
    This conclusion is further supported by the commission’s previous
    approval of affordable housing applications in areas zoned for light indus-
    trial use.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC37942

Citation Numbers: 147 A.3d 177, 168 Conn. App. 655, 2016 Conn. App. LEXIS 376

Judges: Sheldon

Filed Date: 10/4/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024