B. I. B. Associates v. Zoning Board of Appeals

163 Conn. 615 | Conn. | 1972

Per Curiam.

The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas for Fair-field County which dismissed its appeal from the action of the defendant zoning hoard of appeals in granting to the Housing Site Development Agency of the city of Stamford and Better Housing, Inc., hereinafter referred to as the applicants, a variance from the operation of the Stamford zoning regulations. The applicants proposed to erect multiple-family dwelling units on their property on Grlenhrook Road in Stamford and requested the variance to permit them to erect the units with provision for only thirty-five off-street parking spaces instead of the fifty-two spaces required by the zoning regulations.

*616The record discloses that the applicants did not acquire title to the Glenbrook Eoad property until eight months after the effective per unit parking regulation was adopted. The defendant board granted the variance on the ground that “[sjtriet application of the regulations would produce unique and undue hardship and would not change the character of the neighborhood because: The premises were originally contracted for before the parking amendment was made and it will be impossible to build the proposed housing without such variance.”

As recently as in Garibaldi v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 163 Conn. 235, 238, 303 A.2d 743, we reiterated that “[i]t is clear that for a hardship to justify the granting of a variance, the hardship must be different in kind from that affecting generally properties in the same zoning district,” citing Belknap v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 155 Conn. 380, 383, 232 A.2d 922, and Ward v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 153 Conn. 141, 143, 215 A.2d 104. We also there noted that “a variance is not a personal exemption from the enforcement of zoning regulations. It is a legal status granted to a certain parcel of realty without regard to ownership. It is for this reason that the rule is well established that the financial loss or the potential of financial advantage to the applicant is not the proper basis for a variance. Carlson v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 158 Conn. 86, 89, 255 A.2d 841, and cases cited. . . . Personal hardships, regardless of how compelling or how far beyond the control of the individual applicant, do not provide sufficient grounds for the granting of a variance.”

The record clearly discloses that the applicants acquired the subject property long after the parking-space zoning regulation had become effective and *617when they knew or should have known of the regulation. It further appears that the regulation is one of general application affecting all properties in the same zoning district and that the claimed hardship is not one unique to the property of the applicants. In these circumstances we must conclude that the defendant board acted illegally and in abuse of its discretion in granting the variance.

The defendants have briefed a claim that the court erred in concluding that the plaintiff was a party aggrieved by the decision of the defendant board and therefore entitled to appeal. Although the record as it stands would indicate that there is no merit to the contention both on the facts and because the plaintiff is an abutting owner (see General Statutes §8-8), the defendants did not file a cross appeal. See Akin v. Norwalk, 163 Conn. 68, 70, 301 A.2d 258.

There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to sustain the appeal.

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