Judges: Inglis, Baldwin, Wynne, Daly
Filed Date: 4/18/1956
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Comm on Pleas from the action of the named defendant, hereinafter called the board, in granting an application for a variance of the zoning ordinance of the city of New Haven. This appeal is taken by the plaintiffs from the judgment of the court affirming the action of the board and dismissing the plaintiffs’ appeal.
The applicant, New Haven Post No. 47, American Legion, Inc., owns premises known as 423 Orange Street and situated at the northeast corner of Orange and Trumbull Streets in New Haven. A building thereon is used as the post’s headquarters. The property is in a residence B zone. It is in the center of a group of eighty-six medical and dental offices. In a residence B zone, only the uses of property specified in § 1013 of the zoning ordinance are permitted.
The board concluded that the proposed use of the space would not only tend to relieve the bottleneck at the corner of Trumbull and Orange Streets which prevents the free flow of traffic but also would afford greatly needed parking facilities for neighboring physicians and dentists; that a denial of permission to use the space for private parking would make the effect of the application of the ordinance arbitrary; that the appearance and value of neighboring property would not be affected except possibly from an esthetic standpoint; that the safety and general welfare of neighbors would be secured by avoidance of a traffic hazard; and that the granting of the variance was warranted under the provisions of subdivision (7) of § 1033 of the zoning ordinance.
In one of their assignments of error the plaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in excluding testimony offered by them. In offering the testimony, they stated that the purpose was to prove that there had been a material change in the availability of parking space in the area in question since the date of the hearing before the board. “[A]n appeal from-an administrative tribunal should ordinarily be determined on the record made before that tribunal,
Subdivision (7) of § 1033 of the ordinance authorizes the board in a specific case to vary any provision of it in harmony with its general purpose and intent so that the public health, safety and general welfare may be secured and substantial justice done “[wjhere there are practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships” or “where the effect of the application of the Ordinance is arbitrary.” The power and function of the board can be called into operation if one or the other of two conditions is found to exist, that is, if the strict application of the ordinance is arbitrary or if practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships result. McMahon v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 140 Conn. 433, 440, 101 A.2d 284. The question for our determination is whether the board was justified in granting the variance, as it did, upon the ground that the effect of the application of the ordinance is arbitrary.
“We have frequently asserted, as a fundamental proposition, that the decisions of zoning authorities are to be overruled only when it is found that they have not acted fairly, with proper motives, and upon valid reasons. Mallory v. West Hartford, 138 Conn. 497, 505, 86 A.2d 668; First National Bank & Trust Co. v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 126 Conn.
The claim of the plaintiffs that the board exceeded its authority in considering the extent and urgency of the need for additional parking space is without merit. Subdivision (7) of § 1033 of the ordinance empowers the board to grant a variance in a specific case in harmony with the general purpose and intent of the ordinance “so that the public health, safety and general welfare may be secured.”
Upon the record, we cannot say that the effect of the application of the ordinance in precluding the use of part of the applicant’s property for a private
There is no error.
In this opinion Baldwin and Wynne, Js., concurred.
“See. 1013. In a Residence £B’ District a building may be erected, altered, arranged, designed or used, and a lot or premises may be used, for any of the following purposes and for no other: 1. Any building or use permitted in Residence £AA’ District. 2. Two-family detached dwelling. 3. Boarding house. 4. One or two-family attached dwelling where there is an alley in the rear. 5. Hotel having thirty or more sleeping rooms.”