DocketNumber: C.A. No. NC-2007-0284
Judges: CLIFTON, J.
Filed Date: 5/6/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
From 1958 until 1974, Mrs. Burchard utilized the Barn as a theater called the "Carriage *Page 2 House Theater" ("the Company"). (Tr. at 12.) During the years of 1958 until 1974, the Barn also served as a residence for approximately fifteen to twenty actors and actresses performing at the Company. (Tr. at 17.) The Company entered into a contract with the actors and actresses living in the Barn that stipulated the rules and regulations associated with their residency. (Tr. at 21.) Although no monetary rent was required, housing in the Barn served as the actors' and actresses' job compensation. The residential portion of the Barn was comprised of sleeping quarters located on the second floor, one kitchen located on the first floor, and three bathrooms with one on the first floor and two on the second floor. (Tr. at 19.)
In 1974, the Company ceased operation, and Mrs. Burchard converted the Barn's living space into three apartments without obtaining a building permit, special permit, or variance. (Tr. at 27.) After renovations, the Barn contained a total of four bedrooms, three kitchens, and additional bathrooms. (Tr. at 42.) These apartments were rented continuously until November 18, 2005. Id,
On August 4, 1992, the then building official for the Town of Little Compton ("the Town"), George Flanagan ("Flanagan"), wrote a letter ("the Letter") to Mrs. Burchard after the property was inspected following the addition of a sun deck and new room. (Tr. at 37.) This letter informed Mrs. Burchard that during the inspection, Flanagan discovered that the Barn was being used as "three separate apartments with seven total bedrooms rather than one apartment with four bedrooms as listed in the tax assessor's records." (Letter attached to Zoning Board's Decision.) Further, the letter also stated that the use of the Barn as a three-unit apartment complex in a single-family residential zone necessitated a variance. Id, The Letter stated in pertinent part, "[t]o change the approved, four-bedroom, single-family, Carriage House to a three unit apartment complex with a total of seven bedrooms would have required a variance from the *Page 3 Town." Id. The Letter went on to explain that because no variance was ever applied for or obtained, Mrs. Burchard was required to either discontinue her use of the Barn as apartments or obtain the necessary variance. Id. Mrs. Burchard failed to comply with the letter's requirements, and the Town of Little Compton never took enforcement action. Additionally, the Barn has always been listed as a single-family residence by the Tax Assessor's Office. (Tr. at 37-8.)
On November 18, 2005, a fire "badly damaged" the Barn and virtually "totaled" the structure's interior. (Tr. at 6.) Appellant subsequently applied for a Building Permit to repair the damage caused to the Barn by the 2005 fire. Upon reconstruction, Appellant planned to continue the Barn's prior use as a three-unit apartment complex. On March 26, 2007, the Little Compton Building Official, Michael Mello ("Mello"), denied Appellant's application for a Building Permit to "repair [the] fire damaged three-family house." Thus, on March 30, 2007, Appellant submitted an application to the Zoning Board for relief from Section 14-9.3(a) of the Zoning Ordinance. Appellant sought reversal of the Building Official's denial of Appellant's request for a Building Permit.
On May 16, 2007, the matter was heard at an advertised hearing ("the Hearing") before the Zoning Board. The Notice of Public Hearing (the "Notice") appeared in the Sakonnet Times on April 19, 2007 and stated:
*Page 4Notice of a Public Hearing is hereby given upon the petition of [Appellant], who is Appealing the decision of Little Compton Building Official, Michael Mello to deny him a Building Permit dated March 26, 2007 to "Repair fire damaged 3 family house" at 64 Meetinghouse Lane, Tax Assessors Plat 19, Lot 273. Hearing is set for 7:00 P.M. on May 16, 2007 at the Town Hall, 40 Commons, Little Compton, Rhode Island. Any person having a legal interest may appear and be heard, per order of the Little Compton Zoning Board of Review. See Notice; see also Tr. at 3-4.
Separate notice was sent by first class mail to all property owners within two hundred feet of the Property. (Tr. at 4.)
At the Hearing, Appellant testified that from the time the Company began in 1958 until the 2005 fire, the Barn was used as a multi-family dwelling. Appellant asserted that the Barn had served as a residence for multiple unrelated people since 1958, despite not being divided into three separate apartments until 1974. (Tr. at 19.) Appellant went on to testify that prior to 1974, the Company required Barn residents to sign leases, evidencing their status as lessees. (Tr. at 21.) Appellant's attorney stated that the use of the Barn as a three-unit apartment complex was, "a natural evolution of a legal nonconforming use that predated the enactment of zoning, which was May of 1968." (Tr. at 43.)
Myron Simmons, a general contractor in the Town of Little Compton for forty-three years, also testified at the Hearing. (Tr. at 5-10). Mr. Simmons explained that he worked on the Barn for Mrs. Burchard and her late husband, John Burchard, Senior in the spring of either 1967, 1968, or 1969. (Tr. at 8.) Mr. Simmons described the work he performed on the first and second floors of the Barn. (Tr. at 9.) Mr. Simmons also testified that while he remembered that actors lived upstairs at the time, he could not remember how many beds or cots were located on the second floor. Id. Additionally, Michael Mello, the Little Compton Building Official, also testified at the Hearing. (Tr. at 36). Mr. Mello passed around the Flanagan Letter stating that the Barn was "always listed as a single-family residence in the Tax Assessor's file." (Tr. at 37.) When questioned by Zoning Board member, Graeme Bell about this statement's authenticity, Appellant confirmed that he had recent knowledge of the Barn's single-family tax status. (Tr. at 38.) *Page 5
Based on the testimony and evidence before it, the Zoning Board unanimously voted to deny Appellant's request for an appeal from the Building Official's denial of Appellant's request for a building permit. A written decision was filed on May 25, 2007. The instant appeal followed.
Before this Court, Appellant argues (1) that the decision of the Zoning Board is null and void because the public Notice of the Hearing was defective; (2) that the Zoning Board erred in relying on the 1992 Letter from the Town's Building Official due to the defenses of Laches and Estoppel; and (3) that the Barn's use never changed from a multi-person residential to single-family residential use, and therefore, a variance is not necessary.
*Page 6The court shall not substitute its judgment for that of the zoning board of review as to the weight of the evidence on questions of fact. The court may affirm the decision of the zoning board of review or remand the case for further proceedings, or may reverse or modify the decision if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because of findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions which are:
(1) In violation of constitutional, statutory, or ordinance provisions;
(2) In excess of the authority granted to the zoning board of review by statute or ordinance;
(3) Made upon unlawful procedure;
(4) Affected by other error of law;
(5) Clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence of the whole record; or
(6) Arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.
Questions of law are reviewed de novo by this Court. Narragansett WireCo. v. Norberg,
Appellant asserts that the Zoning Board provided defective Notice of the Board's Hearing regarding Appellant's appeal of the denial of his request for a Building Permit. Appellant specifically asserts that the Notice violated §
With respect to notice in zoning matters, there is a jurisdictional requirement for effective notice. Carroll v. Zoning Board ofReview,
As referenced by §
Rhode Island has yet to define a "party in interest" in the context of notice sufficiency. Massachusetts defines the term "party in interest" as including "the petitioner, abutters, owners of land directly opposite on any public or private street or way, and abutters to the abutters, within three hundred feet of the property line of the petitioner as they appear on the most recent applicable tax list. . . ." Mass. Gen. Laws ch.
In the instant action, however, Appellant does not claim that any interested parties were deprived of either mailed notice or the opportunity to appear and be heard at the Hearing. Instead, Appellant asserts that the public notice published in the Sakonnet Times was insufficient because it did not invite the general public to be heard at the Hearing. The Notice specifically stated that "[n]otice of a Public Hearing is hereby given" and "any person having a legal interest may appear and be heard." (emphasis added). The Court acknowledges that §
Further, assuming arguendo that the Notice did not sufficiently place the public on actual notice of the hearing, our Supreme Court has held that public notice is sufficient in a constructive form. Mello v. Boardof Review,
In the instant matter, the Notice was published in the SakonnetTimes. The public was thereby placed on constructive notice of the Hearing at the very moment that the Notice was published and circulated throughout Little Compton. See Tuite,
Conversely, the Zoning Board argues that the defense of Laches does not apply to this case because the Town was unaware of the unlawful use of the Barn until the Building Official's final inspection of the premises in 1992. The Letter explicitly stated that Mrs. Burchard must either (1) discontinue use of two of the three apartments and remove the electric service, or (2) obtain a variance from the Zoning Board for the three apartments and file such a variance application within thirty days of receiving the Letter. Additionally, Mrs. Burchard failed to notify the Town of the Barn's unlawful use prior to 1992. Thus, the Zoning Board contends that the Appellant cannot demonstrate that the Town neglected its rights or that the Town induced Appellant to act, or not act, in reliance thereon.
Generally, the trial justice has the discretion to apply the Doctrine of Estoppel by Laches. O'Reilly v. Town of Glocester,
In the instant matter, Flanagan sent the Letter to Mrs. Burchard on August 4, 1992. This letter expressly informed Mrs. Burchard that the use of the Barn as a three-unit apartment complex in a single-family residential zone necessitated a variance. Appellant failed to provide further evidence proving that the Town somehow induced Mrs. Burchard and Appellant to continue the Barn's illegally nonconforming use. Moreover, Appellant has not evinced any disadvantage or detrimental reliance on the Board's delay in enforcing the Zoning Ordinance. Instead, Appellant has arguably profited from having a three-unit rental on his property instead of the permissible single-family dwelling. Therefore, Appellant may not rely on the equitable defense of Laches when arguing that the Barn may continue to be used as a multi-family dwelling.
Appellant further argues that the Town should be estopped from enforcing the Barn's single-family residential zoning designation because Mrs. Burchard and Appellant reasonably relied on the Town's alleged acquiescence to the Barn's multi-family use. Appellant maintains that Estoppel may be invoked against a governmental agency when appropriate circumstances, justice, and right, so require. Therefore, Appellant claims that the Town's inaction and silence serve as a sufficient basis to estop the Town from enforcing its applicable zoning regulations.
Our Supreme Court has applied the Doctrine of Equitable Estoppel against administrative and municipal authorities under circumstances where justice would so require. Greenwich Bay Yacht Basin Assoc.'s v.Brown,
Further, when asserting the doctrine of Estoppel against a government agency acting in a public capacity, there must be proof that the government agency engaged in some positive act that induced the action of the adverse party. Ferrelli,
Here, after inspecting the property in 1992, Flanagan expressly informed Mrs. Burchard that the Barn's multi-family use violated the Town's zoning ordinance and that Mrs. Burchard was required to obtain a zoning relief from the Town. Between 1992 and 2005, however, the Town admittedly took no action to enforce the requirements set forth in the Letter. Nonetheless, Appellant has offered no evidence to prove that either he or Mrs. Burchard undertook substantial obligations in reliance on the Town's failure to enforce its Zoning Ordinance. See GreenwichBay,
Moreover, the Town did not waive its right to demand compliance with the Zoning Ordinance by allowing the Barn's multi-family use to go unquestioned during those years. See Pezza,
The Little Compton Zoning Ordinance defines a "nonconformance" as "a building, structure . . . or use thereof, which was lawfully established at the time of the adoption or amendment of this Zoning Chapter, and not in conformity with the provisions of such ordinance or amendment."See Little Compton Zoning Ordinance, Section 14-2.1(a). Our Supreme Court has also affirmed that for a land use or structure thereon to be protected as a nonconforming use, it must have existed at the time the use became nonconforming. Town of Scituate v. O'Rourke,
The Zoning Board considered the Barn's seasonal use in conjunction with the general increase in the Town's population during the summer months. The Zoning Board determined that the existence of a large number of people temporarily living in the Barn, during the summer season — sharing one kitchen and three bathrooms — was insufficient to convince the Zoning Board that the Barn was a multi-family dwelling. Further, while "leases" existed between Mrs. Burchard and the various actor and actresses that seasonally resided in the Barn, no consideration was ever exchanged; instead, the actors and actresses received lodging in exchange for acting work.
The Zoning Board had before it evidence that the Barn was always listed as a single-family residence in the Tax Assessor's files. Specifically, Flanagan's Letter illustrated that the Barn was listed as one apartment with four bedrooms in the Tax Assessor's records. Appellant also admitted that the Barn was listed and assessed as a single-family residence in the Tax Assessor's file. After considering all evidence presented to it, the Zoning Board unanimously found that the Barn did not serve as a multi-family dwelling prior to its conversion into a three-unit apartment complex in 1974. This Court agrees that based on the evidence of record, the Barn was a single-family dwelling when the Little Compton Zoning Ordinance was adopted in 1968. *Page 17
For purposes of discussion, however, if the Barn was a multi-family dwelling at the time the Little Compton Zoning Ordinance was enacted, then it would now be protected as a nonconforming use. Nonetheless, ``"the right to continue a nonconforming use does not . . . include the right to expand or intensify that use' . . . even if the owners had plans to do so." Id. at 934 (quoting Town of West Greenwich v. A. CardiRealty Ass.'n,
Appellant argues that the Barn did not undergo a "change of use," but instead, naturally evolved from the housing quarters for the Company's actors and actresses during the summer months into a three-unit apartment complex. In the context of a business expansion, some courts recognize that an increase in the volume of trade or business conducted as a nonconforming use or other intensification of the use is generally permissible so long as the basic nature and character of the use is unchanged from that which existed at the time the use or structure became nonconforming. Chartiers Tp. v. William H. Martin. Inc.,
Rhode Island, however, has never recognized the Pennsylvania doctrine of "natural expansion." Our Supreme Court refers to this doctrine as the "natural business growth" exception, and has expressly rejected it as an exception to the requirement of obtaining a special-use permit for a proposed expansion of a nonconforming business use. WawaloamReservation,
In the instant matter, Appellant is essentially arguing that the "natural expansion" doctrine permitted Mrs. Burchard, as a matter of right, to expand the Barn's legal nonconforming use as a dwelling for multiple actors and actresses into a three-unit apartment complex. Even if the Barn's use as a multi-family dwelling constituted a "business" for purposes of the doctrine Appellant's argument must fail because Rhode Island does not recognize the "natural business *Page 19 growth" exception. Thus, had the Zoning Board found that the Barn was a multi-family dwelling at the time that the Little Compton Zoning Ordinance was enacted, Mrs. Burchard was nonetheless required to obtain a special use permit from the Town before expanding and intensifying the Barn's multi-family use. The Zoning Board's conclusion that the Barn's use underwent a substantial change when it was converted into three apartments in 1974 was not clearly erroneous or in violation of ordinance provisions. This conversion necessitated zoning relief from the Town, and thus, the Barn was unlawfully used as an apartment complex from the time it was converted in 1974 until the 2005 fire.
Therefore, the record does not support a conclusion that the Board's decision was clearly erroneous, arbitrary or capricious, affected by other error of law, or in violation of ordinance provisions. Accordingly, the Court must sustain the Board's decision.
Town of Scituate v. O'ROURKE ( 1968 )
Township of Chartiers v. William H. Martin, Inc. ( 1988 )
Souza v. Zoning Board of Review of Town of Warren ( 1968 )
Radick v. Zoning Bd. of Review of the Town of East ... ( 1955 )
Perrier v. Board of Appeals of City of Pawtucket ( 1957 )
Bertrand v. ZONING BD. OF BURRILLVILLE ( 1965 )
Town of Charlestown v. Beattie ( 1980 )
Shalvey v. Zoning Board of Warwick ( 1965 )
Loiselle v. City of East Providence ( 1976 )
Ferrelli v. Department of Employment Security ( 1970 )
Schiavulli v. SCHOOL COMMITTEE OF TOWN OF NO. PROVIDENCE ( 1975 )
Mello v. Board of Review of Newport ( 1962 )
Town of Richmond v. Wawaloam Reservation, Inc. ( 2004 )
Greenwich Bay Yacht Basin Associates v. Brown ( 1988 )
Narragansett Wire Co. v. Norberg ( 1977 )
Munroe v. Town of East Greenwich ( 1999 )
Town of Glocester v. Olivo's Mobile Home Court, Inc. ( 1973 )
Tuite v. Zoning Board of Review of Woonsocket ( 1962 )