DocketNumber: No. X01 CV 99 0160337S
Citation Numbers: 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 11584, 28 Conn. L. Rptr. 252
Judges: HODGSON, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 9/22/2000
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The administrative action that is the subject of this appeal is the approval by the Commission of an application for a certificate pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Standard of review of motion to dismiss administrative appeal
The standard for review of a motion to dismiss on grounds of lack jurisdiction is well established. The motion must be granted if, even when viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the allegations of the complaint fail to state a claim within the court's subject matter jurisdiction. Lawrence Brunoli, Inc. v. Town of Branford,
"In ruling on a motion to dismiss a court must take the facts to be those alleged in the complaint, including those facts necessarily implied CT Page 11586 from the allegations, construing them in a manner most favorable to the pleader." (Citations omitted.) Villager Pond, Inc. v. Town of Darien,
It is also well established that there is no right of appeal from a decision of an administrative agency except as created by statute: "It is fundamental that appellate jurisdiction in administrative appeals is created only by statute and can be acquired and exercised only in the manner prescribed by statute." Munhall v. Inland Wetlands Commission,
At this stage, only the adequacy of pleading of aggrievement, not the adequacy of proof of aggrievement, is at issue. "A party, however, need not prove the merits of his case merely to have standing. Standing is an examination of the parties, not the merits of the action." ManchesterEnvironmental Coalition v. Stockton,
Allegations of interest
Connecticut Post alleges in its appeal that it owns the Connecticut Post Mall, a shopping center located in Milford, approximately eight miles from the mall site that was the subject of the Commission's review. (Appeal, p. 6, para. 19). It alleges that its trade area extends east of New Haven and that its patrons and stores' employees include residents of New Haven, East Haven, Branford, Guilford and Madison, and that its patrons and employees use Interstate 95 as the primary route to Connecticut Post Mall, such that congestion caused by mall-generated traffic in New Haven "will frustrate access by automobile to the Connecticut Post Mall for significant periods of time each day," obstructing access by patrons and employees and thereby injuring the business of Connecticut Post. (Appeal, p. 6, paras. 20, 22).
Connecticut Post also alleges that it "annually pays taxes to the State of Connecticut." (Appeal, p. 7, para. 23).
With regard to its claim of standing under the EPA, Connecticut Post alleges that on September 17, 1999, it submitted a petition to intervene in the Commission proceeding concerning Long Wharf's application, "on the grounds that mall-generated traffic, in combination with existing traffic, will unreasonably pollute, impair or destroy the air, water or CT Page 11587 other natural resources of the state." (Appeal, p. 7, para. 25). Connecticut Post further alleges that the Commission denied its petition to intervene and refused to allow the testimony of an expert on air quality that Connecticut Post had retained (Appeal, p. 8, para. 32); and that "without any further discussion of the . . . issues raised by Connecticut Post . . . the [Commission] voted to issue a certificate of operation to the Developer" on September 27, 1999. (Paragraph 35).
Connecticut Post claims its allegations are sufficient to allege standing I) as a classically aggrieved party; 2) as an entity that pays taxes to the state, and/or 3) as an entity entitled to assert pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Standing Based on Classical Aggrievement
Connecticut General Statutes §
The test for determining aggrievement encompasses a well-settled twofold determination: first the party claiming aggrievement must successfully demonstrate a specific and legal interest in the subject matter of the decision, as distinguished from a general interest, such as is the concern of all members of the community as a whole. Second, the party claiming aggrievement must successfully establish that this specific personal and legal interest has been specially and injuriously affected by the decision. MedTrans of Connecticut, Inc. v. Dept. of Public Health Addiction Services,
In addition, with respect to the second part of the test, a party must make allegations of a colorable claim of injury to an interest which is arguably protected or regulated by the statute on which the party bases the claim or appeal. MedTrans of Connecticut, Inc. v. Dept. of PublicCT Page 11588Health Addiction Services, supra,
In those few cases in which the alleged injury was the inconvenience or other consequences of traffic congestion, the courts have based their finding that the plaintiff had standing on the fact that the plaintiff owned a residence or operated a business in the immediate vicinity of the challenged development. In Bright v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
To conclude that all those who use a roadway are aggrieved by administrative actions concerning increased land development along that roadway that increases traffic would give little effect to the requirement that an appellant allege and prove a "specific personal and legal interest [that] has been specially and injuriously affected by the decision." (Emphasis supplied.) United Cable Television Services Corp.v. Department of Public Utility Control, supra,
A party may not appeal on the basis of harm done to the rights of others. Third Taxing District of City of Norwalk v. Lyons,
Status as a competitor of the entity whose development plan has in some respect been furthered by the approval of an administrative agency does not establish standing except where a statute specifically grants standing to appeal to competitors, or where the proposed competition is unfair or illegal. United Cable Television Services Corp. v. Departmentof Public Utility Control, supra,
Standing Based on Taxpayer Status
Connecticut Post claims that it has standing as a payer of taxes to the State of Connecticut to challenge the Commission's granting a certificate for operation to Long Wharf.
A party's status as a taxpayer does not automatically confer standing to challenge alleged improprieties in governmental conduct. Sadloski v.Manchester, supra,
The allegation that Connecticut Post makes in its appeal with regard to standing as a taxpayer is as follows:
30. Connecticut Post annually pays taxes to the State CT Page 11590 of Connecticut. Upon information and belief freeway and road improvements not paid for by the Developer must be paid for by the State from funds appropriated from the State's general fund. Such use of state tax revenues is illegal and will aggrieve Connecticut Post as a State taxpayer.
(Appeal, p. 17, para. 30.)
Connecticut Post alleges that
If the [Commission] determines that roadway modifications or traffic control measures are required to handle traffic safely and efficiently, one hundred percent of the cost of such modifications and measures shall be borne by the developer. Conn. Gen. Stat. §
14-311 (d). The [Connecticut Department of Transportation] Report approved by the [Commission] does not require the Developer to pay for all roadway modifications and measures required to handle mall-generated traffic safely and efficiently and for any costs necessitated by the construction thereof. The failure to condition approval on payment for all such modifications violates Conn. Gen. Stat. §14-311 (d).
(Emphasis supplied.) (Appeal, p. 16, para. 36.)
These allegations do not, in fact, allege that the Commission will not require the developer to pay the costs of road modifications and signals as required by §
In order to have standing as a taxpayer, a party must plead and prove CT Page 11591 aggrievement. Mystic Marinelife Aquarium, Inc. v. Gill,
Though allegations in a pleading are to be favorably construed, favorable construction does not go so far as to supply necessary allegations that are nowhere stated. Alleging the absence of a requirement in the text of a document is not the same thing as alleging that an agency has actually ruled that the requirement be excused. A party should not be able to pursue a claim without actually pleading the allegations that support its standing to do so.
The allegations of the appeal are insufficient to allege the elements of standing as an injured taxpayer.
Standing Based on the Environmental Protection Act
Connecticut Post raises as another basis for standing the statutory provision permitting any legal entity to intervene "in any administrative . . . proceeding, and in any judicial review thereof made available by law . . . on the filing of a verified pleading asserting that the proceeding or action for judicial review involves conduct which has, or which is reasonably likely to have, the effect of unreasonably polluting, impairing or destroying the public trust in the air, water or other natural resources of the state." Conn. Gen. Stat §
On its face, §
In Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc. v. Stamford, supra,
In Middletown v. Hartford Electric Light Co.,
We have recently concluded . . . that invocation of the EPA is not an open sesame for standing to raise environmental claims with regard to any and all environmental legislation. In Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc. v. Stamford, [supra,]
192 Conn. 247 . . ., we held that §22a-19 of the EPA, which permits any person, on the filing of a verified pleading, to intervene in any administrative proceeding and to raise therein environmental issues "must be read in connection with the legislation which defines the authority of the particular administrative agency. Section22a-19 is not intended to expand the jurisdictional authority of an administrative body whenever an intervenor raises environmental issues. Thus, an inland wetland agency is limited to considering only environmental matters which impact on inland wetlands. Other environmental impacts must be raised before other appropriate administrative bodies, "any, or in their absence by the institution of an independent action pursuant to §22a-16 ."
(Emphasis supplied.)
Contrary to the position of the Commission in the instant case, the Supreme Court did not rule that §
The Supreme Court explained the scope of its ruling in Connecticut Fundfor the Environment in Connecticut Water Co. v. Beausoleil, supra,
In Middletown v. Hartford Electric Light Co., [supra,] 192 Conn. . . . 596 . . . and Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc. v. Stamford, [supra] 192 Conn. . . . 250 . . ., we recognized that General Statutes §
22a-19 does not expand the jurisdictional authority of an administrative body acting pursuant to a separate act of title 22a to hear any and all environmental matters, but rather, limits an intervenor to the raising of those environmental matters which impact on the particular subject of the act pursuant to which the commissioner is acting. Middletown v. Hartford Electric Light Co., supra, [192 Conn.] 597; Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc. v. Stamford, supra, [192 Conn.] 250-51.4
(Emphasis in original; footnote added.)
The Appellate Court has suggested a more limiting construction, stating that intervention is authorized by §
Similarly, in Connecticut Post Ltd. Partnership v. South CentralConnecticut Regional Council of Governments, supra,
If the Appellate Court meant that only an agency with environmental jurisdiction could consider environmental issues raised pursuant to §
The agency in the case now before this court, the Commission, asserts that Connecticut Post lacked standing to intervene in its review of Long Wharf's application because the environmental issues that Connecticut Post sought to raise relate to subject matter that is not within its jurisdiction. It asserts that it is in the same position as the agency inConnecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc. v. Stamford, supra,
The statute under which the Commission reviewed Long Wharf's submission is Conn. Gen. Stat.
No person, firm, corporation, state agency, or municipal agency or combination thereof shall build, expand, establish or operate any . . . shopping center or other development generating large volumes of traffic, having an exit or entrance on, or abutting or adjoining, any state highway or substantially affecting state highway traffic within this state until such person or agency has procured from the State Traffic Commission a certificate that the operation thereof will not imperil the safety of the public.
Conn. Gen Stat. §
[I]n determining the advisability of such certification, the State Traffic Commission shall include, in its consideration, highway safety, the width and character of the highways affected, the density of traffic thereon, the character of such traffic and the opinion and findings of the traffic authority of the municipality wherein the development is located. If the State Traffic Commission determines that traffic signals, pavement markings, channelization, pavement widening or other changes or traffic control devices are required to handle traffic safely and efficiently, one hundred percent of the cost thereof shall be borne by the person building, establishing or operating such . . . shopping center or other development generating large volumes of traffic . . .
These provisions do not entrust to the Commission authority to determine where a mall or other development that generates large volumes of traffic should be located or whether it can be located near particular roads. They do not confer authority upon the Commission to act as a land use or zoning authority. Instead, the authority conferred by these provisions is limited to the review of plans for organizing the traffic generated by the use, so that the builder of such a use will not route the traffic onto the public roadways in a way that imperils the safety of the public.
Pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Connecticut Post alleges in its appeal that it sought to present to the Commission evidence that the proposed traffic-generator, Long Wharf's mall, would have an impact on air quality. In its verified petition to intervene, which the Commission has appended to its brief in support of its motion to dismiss, Connecticut Post asked the Commission to consider two discrete environmental issues: 1) the impact of the presence of a large shopping center on air pollution; and 2) the impact of Long Wharf's roadway design and traffic management on air pollution. In paragraph 6 of the petition it submitted to the Commission, Connecticut Post challenges the "operation" of the proposed mall. At paragraph 9 it asserts that the Commission cannot approve the application concerning the roadway plan because other agencies had not completed environmental reviews of the project as a whole with regard to generation of traffic and environmental impact.
The Commission does not dispute in its motion that clean air is a natural resource, and it does not dispute that it was engaged in reviewing the development plan for regulating traffic on the site of the proposed development. It points out, however, that the topic before it was not whether a mall should be developed at the site, but whether the proposals for routing and otherwise regulating traffic to and from the mall would result in a pattern that would not "imperil the safety of the public," the standard imposed by Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Contrary to Connecticut Post's contention, the Commission is not an agency charged with determining what uses may be made of particular sites, and it has no authority to decide whether a mall should exist on the site chosen by Long Wharf. Its jurisdiction extends only to review of the plan for operating the entrance and exit roadways of the facility and regulating the traffic entering and leaving the site in a manner that would not imperil the public.
The cause of the claimed aggrievement CT Page 11597
The test for aggrievement in the context of an appeal from the decision of an administrative agency includes not only the nature of the appellant's interest and the nature of the harm claimed, but also the nexus between the harm and the agency's action. The appellant's personal and legal interest must be "specially and adversely affected by thedecision." (Emphasis supplied.) United Cable Television Services Corp.v. Dept. of Public Utility Control,
Similarly, in the case before this court, the action of the State Traffic Commission in reviewing Long Wharf's plan for traffic management is not the action that causes the harm of which the plaintiffs complain. They are complaining about the siting of the mall and the authorization for the particular location to be used as a mall. Nothing in the statutory authority of the commission empowered it to make that determination.
The plaintiffs apparently reason that because a denial of a traffic certificate would have stopped development of the mall, granting of a certificate caused their harm. The test for aggrievement in the context of an administrative appeal is not, however, a mere matter of causation in fact, rather the administrative agency must have made the decision that harms the plaintiff's interest. In this case, the decision that the plaintiffs challenge is the land use decision to permit the siting of the mall in the particular location at issue. Nothing in Conn. Gen. Stat. §§
Connecticut Post has standing to assert that the traffic plan for the mall submitted to the Commission is a design that should not have been CT Page 11598 approved because that plan is reasonably likely to impair the public trust in natural resources. Connecticut Post does not have standing to require the Commission to consider whether Long Wharf should be permitted to develop a mall on the site on the basis of asserted harm to the public trust in natural resources from creation of traffic caused by the siting of the mall.
Conclusion
The motion to dismiss the administrative appeal is denied. Though Connecticut Post Limited Partnership does not have standing in all respects that it has alleged, it has standing pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Beverly J. Hodgson Judge of the Superior Court
Mystic Marinelife Aquarium, Inc. v. Gill , 175 Conn. 483 ( 1978 )
Farricielli v. Connecticut Personnel Appeal Board , 186 Conn. 198 ( 1982 )
McDermott v. Zoning Board of Appeals , 150 Conn. 510 ( 1963 )
Bright v. Zoning Board of Appeals , 149 Conn. 698 ( 1962 )
Maloney v. Pac , 183 Conn. 313 ( 1981 )
Bassett v. Desmond , 140 Conn. 426 ( 1953 )
Tucker v. Zoning Board of Appeals , 151 Conn. 510 ( 1964 )
Alarm Applications Co. v. Simsbury Volunteer Fire Co. , 179 Conn. 541 ( 1980 )