This controversy concerns a 20.6-acre parcel of land belonging to the plaintiff and abutting the East River in the town of Guilford. In 1971, 17.5 acres of that land were designated as
On appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, the plaintiff alleged that the defendant’s denial of his application was improper and arbitrary; that it was not supported by the evidence presented at the hearing; that it was an unreasonable exercise of the police power; and that it amounted to an unconstitutional taking of the plaintiff’s land without compensation. While that appeal was pending the plaintiff moved to submit evidence on the issue of whether there had been a taking of his land without compensation. The trial court denied that motion
The plaintiff has assigned error in the denial of his motion to introduce evidence on the issue of a taking; in the failure of the trial court to set aside the defendant’s order or to proceed to award damages pursuant to § 22a-34 of the General Statutes;
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in the overruling of his claims of law; and in the denial of his motion to open and modify the judgment. The only assignments of error briefed by the plaintiff concern the issue of whether the defendant’s denial of the application to fill 5.3 acres of wetland constituted a taldng without compensation. All other claims are considered abandoned.
Schwartz
v.
Hamden,
This case is the first to come before us concerning Public Acts 1969, No. 695, entitled “An Act Concerning the Preservation of Wetlands and Tidal Marsh and Estuarine Systems,” now §§ 22a-28 to
Against that laudable state policy must be balanced the interests of the private landowner who wishes to make productive use of his wetland. Article first § 11 of the Connecticut constitution prohibits the taking of private property for public use without just compensation. That same prohibition is found in the fifth amendment to the constitution of the United States. However, “ ‘[gjovernment hardly could go on if to some extent values incident to property could not be diminished without paying for every such change in the general law. As long recognized, some values are enjoyed under an implied limitation and must yield to the police power.’
Pennsylvania Coal Co.
v.
Mahon,
It is true that we have adopted the rule that an ordinance which permanently restricts the use of property for any reasonable purpose goes beyond permissible regulation and amounts to a taking.
Horwitz
v.
Waterford,
The plaintiff relies on
Bartlett
v.
Zoning Commission,
supra, and
Dooley
v.
Town Plan & Zoning Commission,
supra, to support his claim that the denial of the application for a permit to fill 5.3 acres of wetland resulted in a taking of his land for which compensation must be made. There can be no question that the plaintiff’s wetland would have greater value to him if it were filled. It must be presumed, however, that the defendant’s denial of the application was based on the standards set forth in § 22a-33 of the General Statutes, which requires the hearing officer to “consider the effect of the proposed work with reference to the public health and welfare, marine fisheries, shell-fisheries, wildlife, the protection of life and property from flood, hurricane and other natural disasters, and the public policy set forth in sections 22a-28 to 22a-35, inclusive.”
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See
Foran
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
The record before us discloses only that a specific application for a permit to fill 5.3 acres of wetland was denied by the defendant. The denial of that application merely prohibited one specific use which presumptively was not reasonable when balanced against the public harm it would create. The plaintiff may still be permitted on subsequent application to fill a lesser portion of his wetland to be used in conjunction with the 3.1 acres of the parcel not classified as wetland; he may make application for a permit or permits to conduct other regulated activities on the wetland; and he may make any reasonable unregulated use of his land consistent with
Thus Bartlett v. Zoning Commission, supra, and Dooley v. Town Plan & Zoning Commission, supra, are not controlling under the facts of this case. There has been no “practical confiscation” of the plaintiff’s land. Since the trial court could properly conclude on the basis of the record before it that the denial of the plaintiff’s application was a proper exercise of the police power, not amounting to an unconstitutional taking without just compensation, there was no error in its denial of the plaintiff’s motions to present evidence on the issue of a taking and to open and modify the judgment.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“[W]etland” is defined in § 22a-29 (2) of the General Statutes as “those areas which border on or lie beneath tidal waters, such as, but not limited to banks, bogs, salt marsh, swamps, meadows, flats, or other low lands subject to tidal action, including those areas now or formerly connected to tidal waters, and whose surface is at or below an elevation of one foot above loeal extreme high water; and upon which may grow or bo capable of growing some, but not necessarily all, of the following: . . . [numerous forms of grasses, ferns and other vegetation].”
“[Rjegulated activity” is defined in § 22a-29 (3) of the General Statutes as “any of the following: Draining, dredging, excavation, or removal of soil, mud, sand, gravel, aggregate of any kind or rubbish from any wetland or the dumping, filling or depositing thereon of any soil, stones, sand, gravel, mud, aggregate of any kind, rubbish or similar material, either directly or otherwise, and the erection of structures, driving of pilings, or placing of obstructions, whether or not changing the tidal ebb and flow.”
Section 22a-34 of the General Statutes provides, in part, as follows: “(a) ... If the court finds that the action appealed from is an unreasonable exercise of the police power, it may set aside the order. If the court so finds that the action appealed from constitutes the equivalent of a taking without compensation, and the land so regulated otherwise meets the interests and objectives of sections 22a-28 to 22a-35, inclusive, it may at the election of the commissioner (1) set aside the order or (2) proceed under the provisions of sections 48-12 to 48-14, inclusive, to award damages. . . .”
We note that the trial court had the complete record before it of the March 28, 1972 public hearing, including the findings and recommendations of the hearing examiner and the transcript of the hearing. The plaintiff has not chosen to print those findings or any of that evidence in an appendix to his brief. See Practice Book § 645.
