DocketNumber: No. 128499
Citation Numbers: 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4031-L, 17 Conn. L. Rptr. 108
Judges: FLYNN, J.
Filed Date: 5/2/1996
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
a. The information supplied by applicant to the defendant was sufficient to enable the Commission to determine that the proposed new use is not a prohibited use (fast food, predominantly take out restaurants), particularly in view of the previous approval of similar uses in the same zoning district.
In a Motion To Supplement The Record, now before the court, the plaintiff urges that it be permitted to offer additional evidence not now part of the record. This would consist of the approved plan of the shopping center in which the subject retail premises is located, records of five other similar businesses, and testimony from the proprietors of those other businesses about the nature of the businesses.
The defendant town objects on the basis that (1) the scope of review is limited to the record; (2) the plaintiff has the burden of creating an adequate record below; (3) there are no extraordinary circumstances to justify supplementing the record.
Despite this objection, the court grants the motion because (1) while the garden variety administrative appeal to Superior Court would not warrant admission of additional evidence to supplement the record, Section
The Town of Woodbury has a zoning ordinance that prohibits certain forms of establishments, specifically, fast food, primarily take-out restaurants." The ordinance contains no definitions for the phrase: "primarily take-out." This has been argued to be vague, ambiguous, and thus open to a form of implicit arbitrary interpretation.
The Connecticut Supreme Court stated the common dictionary definition for the term ``take-out' in Spero v. Zoning Board ofAppeals of the Town of Guilford,
``Primarily,' according to the dictionary, has two possible meanings: (1) first of all, and (2) in the first place. Webster'sThird Int'l. Dictionary (unabridged). The synonyms listed for first of all are "principally," and "fundamentally, " while the synonym for in the first place is "originally." Id.
Assuming that the Town of Woodbury intended to fit its ordinance to the first definition, i.e., principally, and fundamentally, undeniably there is a certain lack of clarity in the zoning regulation. While at first blush the meaning of the term seems clear, a closer look reveals the term primarily is open to more than one form of calculation and definition. Is the determination of primary purpose to be made on a per capita basis where a bare majority of customers eating in would take a use out of the prohibited category of primarily take-out restaurants? Are gross sales of eat-in as opposed to take-out customers the measure of what is or is not "primarily take-out" under the Woodbury ordinance? The ordinance is silent as to the definition of what constitutes "primarily."
A special permit procedure under a zoning ordinance involves a determination whether an application for a use already permitted under certain conditions specified in the ordinance actually meets those conditions. See: WATR, Inc. v. Zoning Boardof Appeals of Bethany,
The practical construction placed over the years upon ambiguous language in legislation by those charged with its administration becomes weighty evidence of what the law is. Clarkv. Town Council,
As a practical matter unless the record has been lost and needs reconstruction, e.g. Chucta v. Planning Zoning Commissionof Town of Seymour,
Here the equitable considerations dictate that the plaintiff be permitted to supplement the record with the evidence it seeks to introduce as to the interpretation the Zoning Board used in prior similar applications. The common rationale of the other exceptions is present in this situation. Originally the applicant could not know that the Board would depart from what the applicant argues was its prior working definition of its ordinance until the Zoning Commission allegedly did so in its decision which brought about this appeal.
The Motion To Supplement The Record is granted. CT Page 4034