Opinion
This certified zoning appeal concerns whether the plaintiff landowner, Totney Benson, must remove the addition to her home built in 1997 because it sits 3.7 feet over the side setback line. The dispositive issue in this case is what is meant by “the institution of an action to enforce” zoning regulations in General Statutes § 8-13a (a). We conclude that § 8-13a (a) requires the institution of a civil action for an injunction within a three year limitations period and that neither a variance appeal by an abutting landowner nor the issuance of a cease and desist order by a town zoning enforcement officer will suffice. We reverse the judgments of the trial court.
The plaintiff appeals from the judgments of the trial court rejecting her appeals from the cease and desist orders issued by the zoning enforcement officer of the town of Westport requiring that she remove the addition. The plaintiff claims that the defendant, the zoning board of appeals of the town of Westport (board), and the trial court on appeal improperly concluded that the zoning enforcement officer’s June, 2001 order was timely. Section 8-13a (a) requires “the institution of an action to enforce” certain zoning regulations within three years “[w]hen a building is so situated on a lot that it violates” those regulations.
This is the third appeal in this matter and the second to reach this court. See
Daw
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
Rather than seek from this court certification to appeal, however, the plaintiff in September, 1997, filed with the board a second application for variances to build the same proposed addition and, furthermore, to complete repairs of previously undiscovered structural damage and the construction of two decks. The board again granted the application and that time gave several reasons for its determination of undue hardship. The
Daws appealed once again to the Superior Court. Despite her knowledge that another appeal was pending, the plaintiff resumed construction, and the addition was completed in December, 1997. Certificates of zoning compliance and of occupancy were issued. On September 30,1999, however, the trial court again sustained the Daws’ appeal from the variance to construct the addition. We affirmed the judgment of the trial court in a May 1, 2001 opinion on the grounds of res judicata and collateral estoppel.
Daw
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
supra,
The board maintained the position throughout the appeals challenging the variances that they had been properly granted. Following the Supreme Court’s order denying certification to appeal from our 2001 decision, however;
Daw
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
The plaintiff’s only claim on appeal is that the court improperly rejected her timeliness defense to the zoning enforcement officer’s orders. She argues that under § 8-13a (a), the failure of the board or the Daws to file an action for an injunction to enforce the zoning regulations within three years after completion of construction in December, 1997, rendered the addition a valid, nonconforming structure. As such, she argues that the addition cannot now be ordered removed and is not subject to further enforcement action.
Although we employ a deferential standard of review to the actions of zoning boards of appeals; see, e.g.,
We begin by quoting the relevant statutory text. “When a building is so situated on a lot that it violates a zoning regulation of a municipality which prescribes the location of such a building in relation to the boundaries of the lot . . . and when such building has been so situated for three years without the institution of an action to enforce such regulation, such building shall be deemed a nonconforming building in relation to such boundaries . . . .” General Statutes § 8-13a (a). Section 8-13a (a) “amounts to a statute of limitations for [certain] non-conforming buildings.” R. Fuller, 9 Connecticut Practice Series: Land Use Law and Practice (2d Ed. 1999) § 4.35, p. 110. The only issue we must decide 4 is whether the Daws or the zoning enforcement officer tolled the statutory period by instituting an action to enforce. We conclude that they did not.
The three sides in this litigation each offer a different interpretation of what constitutes “the institution of an action to enforce” under § 8-13a (a). The plaintiff argues that a civil action for an injunction was required, either by the zoning enforcement officer under § 8-12 or by the Daws. See
Miskimen
v.
Biber,
As the first step in statutory analysis, we examine the relevant language of § 8-13a (a) to determine whether it is, as
Because we conclude that there is ambiguity, we must consider “the legislative history of the statute and the circumstances surrounding its enactment, the legislative policy it was designed to implement, the statute’s relationship to existing legislation and common-law
principles governing the same general subject matter.”
Teresa T.
v.
Ragaglia,
supra,
Most importantly, our review of our statutes and appellate case law reveals that “the institution of an action” has never been held to mean anything other than the filing of a civil action in court. See generally General Statutes § 47-258 (b) (employing phrase “institution of an action to enforce” in context of condominium association hen, which requires civil action to enforce); General Statutes § 47a-14h (a) (employing phrase “institution of an action” in context of landlord-tenant law and requiring civil action in Superior Court);
Blumenthal
v.
Kimber Mfg., Inc.,
The legislative history reveals little about the intended construction of the phrase. The only discussion of that which is meant by the “institution of an action to enforce” occurred during the debate of a 1991 amendment that is not relevant to this case. The term is original to the statute, which was enacted in 1967.
During the debate of the 1991 amendment, the following exchange occurred on the floor of the House of Representatives: “[Representative Dale W. Radcliffe:]
What is involved in initiation of an action? Does that mean a legal suit? Does that mean a complaint to the building official? Does that mean the issuance of a cease and desist order? What has to be done to prevent this use from becoming basically a [non] conforming use in perpetuity? [Representative Douglas C. Mintz:] Through you, Mr. Speaker, I believe an institution of an action is clear on its face that it’s an action in the Superior Court to enforce the regulation.” 34 H.R. Proc., Pt. 15, 1991 Sess., pp. 5604 — 5605. Representative Mintz almost immediately disavowed his statement, however, noting that whatever
We next address the Daws’ argument that their variance appeals constituted the institution of an action to enforce the zoning regulations and the board’s argument that a cease and desist order is an action to enforce. The overall statutory scheme by which variances are granted and zoning violations are enforced, as well as decisions of the Supreme Court and this court, demonstrate that neither argument is persuasive. First, as to the Daws’ argument that variance appeals are actions to enforce, it is clear that they are not. The statutes distinguish variance appeals and enforcement. General Statutes § 8-6 empowers zoning boards of appeal to decide, among other things, the propriety of granting variances. Section 8-12 vests the power to enforce the board’s decisions concerning variances elsewhere, particularly with a zoning enforcement officer.
In
Planning & Zoning Commission
v.
Campanelli,
With respect to the board’s argument that a cease and desist order is an action to enforce, we again are not persuaded. Although the enforcement provision, § 8-12, authorizes zoning enforcement officers to issue cease and desist orders, such orders are preliminary in nature. In fact, a municipality will often institute a civil action to enforce a cease and desist order. See, e.g.,
Rocque
v.
Farricielli,
The defendants argue vigorously that § 8-13a (a) was not enacted in order to protect the owners of structures such as the addition at issue here. Their arguments are unavailing. The intended policies for which the statute was enacted were (1) to protect landowners and the public interest by requiring municipalities to act reasonably quickly on certain zoning violations, and (2) to protect innocent landowners from being unable to provide marketable title when a land survey uncovers an existing setback violation. 6 It is true that the plaintiff knowingly built the addition over the setback line during the pendency of a zoning appeal. To that extent, the second enumerated policy is not served by this result. The first policy is served in that the defendants, although they took action, did not take the appropriate action in a timely fashion. Limitations on the time to initiate an action often protect and, indeed, are intended to protect, wrongdoers, although we would not go so fax as to label the plaintiff a wrongdoer for electing to build an addition during the pendency of a variance appeal. See footnote 2.
In conclusion, the steps that the defendants took to oppose the construction and maintenance of the plaintiffs home addition, although considerable, did not satisfy the requirement of § 8-13a (a) of the institution of an action to enforce the zoning regulations within three years. The plaintiffs addition became, therefore, a valid, nonconforming structure prior to the initiation of an appropriate enforcement action in April, 2004.
The judgments are reversed and the case is remanded with direction to render judgments sustaining the plaintiffs appeals.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The height of the addition is no longer an issue in this case because of subsequent amendments to the Westport zoning regulations and some grading work completed by the plaintiff.
The plaintiffs attorney acknowledged before the board in 1997 that the plaintiff recognized the risk inherent in building the addition during the pendency of an appeal “because if you lose your case you may have to tear it down.” Indeed, we have previously called such conduct by a landowner reckless.
Fromer
v.
Two Hundred Post Associates,
Repairs to the existing structure and the construction of the proposed decks were allowed because they were not raised in the plaintiffs first application for variances and, therefore, were not barred by collateral estoppel and res judicata. See
Daw
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
supra,
The parties dispute whether the three year period began in December, 1997, when the addition was completed or on September 30, 1999, when the court sustained the Daws’ appeal of the variance to build the addition and, thus, the structure was in violation of the regulations. Given our decision and the dates involved, however, we need not address the issue of when the statutory period began. Because the zoning enforcement officer did not initiate an action to enforce the regulations until April, 2004, the action taken was untimely or inadequate regardless of when the period began.
The board further argues that it enjoyed an implied tolling period while it remained allied with the plaintiff in the variance litigation that culminated in June, 2001. Because, as we will discuss, our statutes separate and distinguish variance appeals from zoning enforcement actions, we are not persuaded that a variance appeal can toll a limitation to an enforcement action.
General Statutes § 8-13a (a) was initially enacted in 1967 in response to the then relatively new practice of mortgage lending institutions requiring surveys, which often uncovered previously undiscovered setback violations.
