DocketNumber: No. CV 98-0580072S
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 15575, 23 Conn. L. Rptr. 19
Judges: TELLER, J.
Filed Date: 12/23/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Zacchera applied to the defendant Inland Wetland and Watercourses Agency of the town of Canton (wetlands agency) for permission to conduct a regulated activity2, for the purpose of installing a parking and storage area for his construction equipment and portable toilet rental business. The construction basically involved cutting trees, grading a portion of the property, surfacing it with gravel, and paving a small portion.
Zacchera also simultaneously applied to the defendant Canton Zoning Commission (zoning commission) for approval of an amended site plan.
The subject property is located within a light industrial zone, and is in close proximity to several other business operations, including automobile, truck, and heavy equipment repair shops. The approvals sought were granted by the respective commissions3 and a notice of each approval was duly published in the Valley News, a local weekly newspaper, within the time required by law.
The plaintiffs, whose properties are in a residential zone, did not appeal either approval. They claim that they did not receive the written notice required by the wetlands regulations. They also claim that the notices of the commissions' approvals published in the Valley News is inadequate, as it is not a CT Page 15577 newspaper of general circulation in the town of Canton as required by General Statutes § 8-3 (g)4 and § 11.35 of the wetlands regulations, thereby depriving the defendant commissions of subject matter jurisdiction. They also claim that the sign posting by Zacchera was not in accord with the zoning regulations. The plaintiffs therefore assert that for any one, or all of these procedural deficiencies, the actions of the defendant commissions were of no effect and void.
The plaintiffs further claim that Zacchera's actions would unreasonably pollute, impair or destroy the air, water and other natural resources of the state, and they seek relief under General Statutes § 22a-16, and finally claim that Zacchera's cutting of trees, brush and undergrowth, grading, graveling, and the storage of equipment and portable toilets on the property cause unreasonable noise and create a nuisance.
At a hearing on the plaintiffs' request for a temporary injunction, the parties entered into an agreement involving discovery and the closing of pleadings, so that a single hearing could be held on all of the plaintiffs' claims, including their claim for permanent relief. Also, notice of the plaintiffs' declaratory judgment claim was ordered pursuant to Practice Book § 17-55(4) to the Valley News and the five adjoining towns who customarily place legal notices therein. The parties further agreed that Zacchera could grade and gravel a portion of the property and store equipment and toilets thereon in the interim.
The defendants filed an answer denying the material allegations of the plaintiffs' complaint, and the court held a hearing in which testimony and numerous documents were introduced. The parties also filed posttrial briefs.
A number of Superior Court cases have described various newspapers as being of or having a "general circulation" at least in particular towns. See Dow v. New Haven Independent,
In the absence of applicable Connecticut law, the court looks to the law of other jurisdictions. Confronting the issue for the first time, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin stated," [t]he precise question of exactly what is meant by ``general circulation' has not yet been resolved in this state. Decisions in other jurisdictions indicate, however, that whether or not general circulation exists hinges not upon the number of people who receive the newspaper, but rather upon whether the news coverage is directed to the interests of a particular class of people. A paper containing general news which is available to the public at large is ordinarily considered to be one of general circulation." (emphasis in original) Joint School District Number 1 v. JointCounty School Commission,
The Valley News and its predecessors have, for more than ten years, published a weekly newspaper in the six towns7 in the Farmington Valley, whose land use regulation boards have used it for legal notices during that time. Two issues published January 22 and 29, 1998 were introduced into evidence. The paper contains local news, sports, records of real estate transactions and arrests, educational news, birth, death and wedding announcements, movie and theater reviews, local and state politics, budget news, local public interest stories, food and restaurant stories, letters to the editor, editorial opinions and commentary on matters of statewide concern, descriptions and calendars of social events, meeting schedules of local boards, agencies and committees too numerous to mention, and information about a myriad of items of local interest.
During the relevant time periods the Valley News had a total of 147 sales and subscriptions in Canton out of a total weekly circulation in the six towns of 2,856, in the aggregate. Canton has 3,444 households with a population of 8,4538, and there CT Page 15580 are approximately 3 readers per copy in circulation. It is clear that the Valley News' circulation, while not substantial, is not de minimus.
I conclude that, after consideration of these factors, measured by the standards in the cases cited, despite the plaintiffs' claim to the contrary, the Valley News is a newspaper of general circulation in the town of Canton. Therefore, publication of the commissions' decisions in the Valley News complied with General Statutes § 8-3(g) and § 11.4 of the wetlands regulations. This claim of the plaintiffs therefore fails.
Zacchera caused a sign to be posted on the property, at Colonial Road, a private street, not accepted by the town of Canton. The sign was furnished to him by the town and was the size customarily used by the town for notice of public hearings on land use applications. Zacchera's attorney filed an affidavit certifying that the sign was posted in accord with the provisions of § 72.10 of the zoning regulations
"The posting of a sign on the premises required by [the local regulations] is complementary to, and not in derogation of, the statutory notice. Such regulations are generally adopted by a municipality as a practical and necessary means of giving effective notice of the pending zoning application to as many affected, aggrieved, and potentially aggrieved persons as possible. When such notice is required by a municipal ordinance CT Page 15581 duly adopted, compliance with that ordinance is required." Wrightv. Zoning Board of Appeals,
Defects in public notice do not necessarily deprive zoning boards of jurisdiction if the notice comports with the purposes of public notices. "Although the notice may not be misleading, it need not be exact . . ." Botticello v. Planning ZoningCommission, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford-New Britain at Hartford, Docket No. 510897 (March 31, 1995) (Handy,J.). The court must consider the purposes of public notice in determining whether the notice was sufficient in a particular case. The "fundamental reason for the requirement of notice is to advise all affected parties of their opportunity to be heard and to be apprised of the relief sought." Slagle v. Zoning Board ofAppeals,
In another case the court determined whether the purposes of public notice were met when the particular requirements of the relevant regulation had not been met. Connecticut ResourcesRecovery Authority v. Planning Zoning Commission, Superior Court, judicial district of Litchfield, Docket No. 068880 (August 23, 1996) (Walsh, J.), appeal dismissed,
The rationale of the above decision is in accordance with the doctrine of substantial compliance. "Substantial compliance with CT Page 15582 a statute or regulation is such compliance with the essential requirements of the statute or regulation as is sufficient to assure its objectives. What constitutes substantial compliance is a matter depending on the facts of each particular case."Deangelis v. Waterbury Inlands Wetlands and WatercoursesCommission, Superior Court, judicial district of Waterbury, Docket No. 132755 (May 16, 1997) (Pellegrino, J.). In Connecticut, the doctrine of substantial compliance has been generally applied. See H S Torrington Associates v. Lutz Engineering Co.,
The applicable zoning regulation requires that a sign be placed on the affected property, in a conspicuous location and that it be visible from the public street. Canton zoning regs., § 72.10. The court must determine the objectives of the regulation to determine whether the compliance "is sufficient to assure its objectives." Deangelis v. Waterbury Inlands Wetlandsand Watercourses commission, supra. , Superior Court, Docket No. 132755. It is clear that the purpose of the zoning regulation through its three requirements, is to notify the public of an application and to identify the affected property to the public. If the affected property itself is not visible from a public street the literal mandate of the zoning regulation cannot be satisfied. In such a case, a landowner who complies, insofar as possible, with the regulation has satisfied the regulation. SeeConnecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Planning and ZoningCommission, supra , Superior Court, Docket No. 068880. In this case Zacchera substantially complied with the requirements of § 72.10 of the zoning regulations. The property does not abut a public road. Colonial Road intersects with Route 44, a public street. Colonial Road is paved, has street signs similar to official town street signs, is as wide as typical neighborhood streets, is open to the public, and, for all intents and purposes is the functional equivalent of a public street.
Although the road from which it was visible was an access road to an industrial park open to the public and not technically a "public street," the conspicuous placement of the sign on the affected property was sufficient to assure the regulation's objectives in this case, and was in substantial compliance with the zoning regulations. Accordingly, I conclude that the plaintiffs' claim that the sign was not posted in compliance with CT Page 15583 § 72.10 of the regulations fails.
"Personal notice provisions can only be raised by persons entitled to receive notice, and if notice is not given the action taken is voidable and does not affect subject matter jurisdiction." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Gourlay v.Georgetown Trust, Superior Court, judicial district of Stamford-Norwalk at Stamford, Docket No. 0150535, 17 CONN. L. RPTR. 149 (June 19, 1996) (Dean, J.). See also Koskoff v.Planning Zoning Commission,
The defendants' claim that the regulation requiring notice by mail to abutters can be waived by the wetlands agency, and that it can be waived implicitly, is not supported by a reasoned construction of the wetlands regulations. Section 7.8 of the wetlands regulations provides, in relevant part, "[a] portion or all of the requirements of Sections 7.5, 7.6 and/or 7.7 may be waived on application to the Agency at a pre-application meeting or after application to the Agency, if the Agency finds that the information is not necessary in order to decide upon the application. Upon application for such waiver, the Agency shallspecify which of the requirements need not be complied with." (emphasis added). Waiver by implication does not make sense in the context of a regulation that requires the agency to "specify which of the requirements need not be complied with." Wetlands regulations § 7.8. No application was made to the wetlands agency for such a waiver, either in writing or orally, despite the fact that a specific form for such a waiver request is contained in the wetland regulations. CT Page 15584
Further, the construction of the regulation urged by the defendants does not stand up to a broader view of the relevant regulations. See State v. Desimone,
I conclude that the wetlands agency had no power under its regulations to dispense with the required personal notice to abutters of an application to conduct a regulated activity within a regulated area.
The defendants specifically argue that the work to be performed was not in a wetlands or watercourse, and that it was the custom of the wetlands agency to dispense with or waive a host of information typically required of applicants for a permit, when the wetland agency determines at a regular meeting that the proposed activity would not be a "significant activity."9 This is borne out, the defendants assert, by the fact that the wetlands agency did not require a public hearing on Zacchera's application, as allowed by § 9.1 of its regulations, and by the testimony of its vice-chairman Philip OStapko.
The trouble with the defendants' argument is that the wetlands agency never stated in the record that it found that CT Page 15585 Zacchera's proposed activities would not have a significant impact on the regulated area; nor did it even discuss their significance or insignificance. While the wetland agency's findings of no significant activity may be implied from its granting of the permit without first holding a public hearing, an equally implicit waiver of the required written notice to abutters does not logically follow. The wetlands agency did not specifically grant the waiver of personal notice the defendants assert it granted, or even discuss it on the record.
The court recognizes that local administrative agencies are generally comprised of lay persons, and act informally. "Although proceedings before administrative agencies such as zoning and planning boards and commissions are informal and are conducted without regard to the strict rules of evidence, the hearings must be conducted so as not to violate the fundamental rules of natural justice." Pizzola v. Planning Zoning Commission,
Relaxation of procedural safeguards however, cannot mean totally doing away with them. In this case, the plaintiffs received no notice at all. It is impossible to tell from the record of the wetlands agency's meeting that the members were even aware that there was no written notice to the abutters. Further, there is not a hint in the record that the agency consciously considered or decided whether to grant a waiver of such notice.
Informality typically conferred on local land use agencies cannot be stretched this far, and runs afoul of "[t]he rule applicable to the corporate authorities of municipal bodies . . . that when the mode in which their power is to be exercised is prescribed . . . that mode is to be followed." Jack v. Tarrant,
The defendants also argue that personal notice to the plaintiffs was unnecessary under Grimes v. ConservationCommission, supra,
Grimes is inapposite to this case, and the defendants' reliance on it is misplaced. First, Canton's wetlands regulations specifically require personal notice to abutters of applications to conduct regulated activities. Second, the regular meeting at which the Zacchera application was considered, was conducted as a hearing. The wetlands agency heard from Zacchera's attorney, and he quoted the town planner. Third, it was an integral part of the process, as the wetlands agency was required to determine whether the proposed activity would have a significant impact on the regulated area, and if so, to schedule a public hearing. Therefore, this claim of the defendants is unpersuasive.
In the context of an appeal from a decision of a municipal inland wetland commission to the Superior Court, a plaintiff "must establish that substantial evidence does not exist in the record as a whole to support the agency's decision." Samperi v.Inland Wetlands Agency,
The court has done so in the present case, and finds that although there was substantial evidence in the record to justify an unexpressed finding of no significant activity, there is nothing in the record that demonstrates an adequate basis for a waiver of the personal notice required by § 7.6(g).
In the present case, § 7.6(g) of the wetlands regulations expressly required the applicant, Zacchera, to notify the plaintiffs, as abutting landowners, by certified mail of his CT Page 15587 application for permission to conduct a regulated activity. This failure to do so, and the wetlands agency's failure to order it, provided the plaintiffs with no notice at all of its actions. As the right to fundamental fairness in administrative proceedings encompasses a variety of procedural protections, including the right to adequate notice, see Grimes v. Conservation Commission,
supra,
Accordingly, I conclude that the wetlands permit granted to Zacchera is invalid.
The plaintiffs argue that the invalidation of the wetlands permit automatically undercuts and voids the site plan approval granted by the commission. I disagree. See Arway v. Bloom,
Apart from the claimed invalidity of the permits, the plaintiffs' claim of nuisance rests wholly upon the noise created by Zacchera's activities. I find from the evidence, however, that most of the noise arose out of the site construction work, such as the grading and graveling, and not from his ongoing business operations. As the site construction work is finite in time, and not of a continuing nature, the plaintiffs have clearly not met the second element of the test.
Moreover, the frequency and intensity of the noise levels as testified to by the plaintiffs were not sufficient to show that they were so annoying and intrusive or unreasonable, as to constitute a nuisance to an objectively reasonable person. Finally, there was no expert evidence introduced by the plaintiffs to show that the noise emanating from Zacchera's activities sufficiently exceeded the ambient noise standard from all of the other activities in the light industrial zone bordering the plaintiff's properties, so as to affect the health, safety or welfare of persons in the position of the plaintiffs. See General Statutes § 22a-67, et seq. Therefore, the plaintiffs have not met the first element of the test. Finally, as Zacchera was performing the site work under presumably valid permits and pursuant to the "stand still" agreement reached by the parties and approved by this court, his activities cannot be held to have been unlawful.
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiff's nuisance claim has no merit.
Accordingly, judgment may enter for the plaintiffs on the second count of the amended complaint declaring the defendant Zacchera's inland wetlands permit invalid. Judgment may enter for the defendants on all of the plaintiffs' other counts and claims.
The court has considered the equities involved, and the balancing of harms to the plaintiffs and the defendant, Zacchera, including the relative hardships and benefits to each, and declines, in the exercise of its discretion, to issue a mandatory injunction to restore the property to its original condition. The court, also in the exercise of its discretion, declines to issue a prohibitory injunction to the defendant Zacchera from continuing his activities on the property, as unnecessary, as any such activity would be controlled and limited by his lack of a valid wetlands permit. The court may presume that Zacchera will obey the law.
Because the rationale of land use planning procedures is strengthened by the disposition of such cases on their merits, Zacchera's application is hereby remanded to the defendant wetlands agency to be considered by it at a regularly scheduled meeting after notice is duly given to abutting landowners as required by its regulations. See Koepke v. Zoning Board ofAppeals,
No costs are taxed to any party.
Teller, J.
Smith v. F. W. Woolworth Co. , 142 Conn. 88 ( 1955 )
Jack v. Torrant , 136 Conn. 414 ( 1950 )
Dow v. New Haven Independent, Inc. , 41 Conn. Super. Ct. 31 ( 1987 )
Burak v. Ditson , 209 Iowa 926 ( 1930 )
Wright v. Zoning Board of Appeals , 174 Conn. 488 ( 1978 )
H & S TORRINGTON ASSOCIATES v. Lutz Engineering Co. , 185 Conn. 549 ( 1981 )
Pizzola v. Planning & Zoning Commission , 167 Conn. 202 ( 1974 )