The plaintiff owns slightly less than a quarter of an acre of land which is on the periphery of a 130-aere redevelopment area in the center of Stamford. Situated on the plaintiff’s land is an old frame barn and an unsightly former residence over seventy-five years old which has been converted to commercial uses. The buildings are substandard, and the most effective, highest and best use is not now being made of the property.
The plaintiff brought this action against the city of Stamford, the members of the Stamford redevelopment commission, hereinafter called the commission, and the clerk of the Superior Court at Stamford, seeking temporary and permanent injunctions and damages. The injunctions prayed for are to restrain the city and its redevelopment commission from condemning the plaintiff’s property; to restrain them from filing further “condemnation papers” and to order them to release and withdraw those already filed; and to restrain the clerk of the Superior Court from issuing a certificate of taking. Judgment that the city and the “members” of the redevelopment commission have no interest in the plaintiff’s property is sought.
The complaint, as amended, contains five counts. The first count, in substance, alleges that the city and its redevelopment commission acted capriciously and arbitrarily in taking the plaintiff’s property for a private rather than a public use in order to attract sponsors for the redevelopment. The second count alleges that the city and its redevelopment commission had unnecessarily planned to take
The original complaint, containing the first four counts, was filed on August 23, 1966. Following a hearing in September, 1966, temporary injunctions were denied by the court. The fifth count was added to the complaint in April, 1967, and thereafter trial was had on the issue of a permanent injunction. The record and briefs disclose that the claim for damages was abandoned. The court found for the defendants on the remaining issues, and the plaintiff has appealed.
We turn our attention first to the plaintiff’s attack on the procedure for the taking under General Statutes § 8-129. The pertinent part of the statute provides that the redevelopment agency shall file with the clerk of the Superior Court a statement setting forth a description of the property to be taken, the names of all persons having a record interest in it and the amount of compensation determined to be paid for it, with a deposit and bond;
The plaintiff claims, first, that the certificate of taking was not issued by the clerk of the Superior Court nor recorded in the town clerk’s office in Stamford within the time required by the statute and, second, that the statute operates unconstitutionally in this case because the city was permitted to obtain title to the plaintiff’s property by the issuance of a certificate of taking before the determination of the present action, which was brought to test the legality of the taking. In other words, the plaintiff makes the double-barreled claim that the certificate of taking was filed too late and too soon.
The finding of the court, which is not subject to correction, is that the commission filed a notice of taking and statement of compensation on July 14, 1966. On August 23, 1966, the complaint in the present action was filed. On December 20, 1966, the trial court, after hearing, denied the plaintiff’s application for temporary injunctions, and on Peb
The plaintiff concedes that, as this court has held in
Bahr Corporation
v.
O’Brion,
With that action pending the defendants properly refrained from taking any further steps under § 8-129 until the court had acted on the claim for temporary relief. In the event that the court should decide to grant the requested relief, the defendants, in all probability, would be enjoined, until the case should be finally determined, from doing those things which the statute required them to do.
Denting
v.
Bradstreet,
The plaintiff’s application for a temporary injunction was fully heard by the court and was denied on December 20,1966. The maximum period of ninety days within which § 8-129 required the filing of the return upon the basis of which the clerk was directed to issue the certificate of taking had then long since expired. The action of the court had,
The denial of the temporary injunction nevertheless left the plaintiff free to obtain a full and final determination of the issues it had raised and, if successful, to obtain the relief sought regardless of what, if any, action the defendants might see fit to take in the interim.
Industrial Bank of Washington
v.
Tobriner,
Under those circumstances, the defendants continued with the procedures required by General Statutes § 8-129 and, without unreasonable delay, on February 1,1967, the certificate of taking was issued
The most satisfactory test of whether a statute is mandatory or merely directory “is whether the prescribed mode of action is of the essence of the thing to be accomplished, or in other words whether it relates to matter of substance or to matter of convenience.”
International Brotherhoood of Teamsters
v.
Shapiro,
The obvious purpose of the ninety-days requirement in 1 8-129 is to guard against the harm which
The plaintiff would have us hold that, by deferring action under § 8-129 pending the decision of the court on the temporary injunction until too late for strict compliance with the mandate of the statute, the municipality has lost any right to acquire the property. Such a construction of the statute would permit any objecting condemnee to defeat a taking under § 8-129 by the simple expedient of an application for injunctive relief sufficiently prolonged unless the condemnor, at its peril, chose to act in the face of the threat of a restraining order. Under the plaintiff’s theory, once the time limit fixed in the statute had passed, and even though the ease had not been reached for hearing even on an application for a temporary injunction, the condemnee would have attained his ultimate objective without the necessity of a final hearing on the main
The numerous other claims of the plaintiff all concentrate basically on the proposition that, for various reasons, the action of the redevelopment commission in taking the plaintiff’s property as part of the redevelopment plan was unreasonable, taken in bad faith and amounted to an abuse of the power conferred upon it. In support of these claims it is argued that the plaintiff’s property was, in reality, taken for a private purpose through the unjustified reliance, by the commission, on an unenforceable and sham contract utilized to permit preselected redevelopers to control decisions which the commission should have made; and that the commission illegally designated certain properties, including the plaintiff’s, within the redevelopment area for condemnation while permitting others to be developed to conservation standards by the existing owners.
The commission is invested with broad powers to carry out urban renewal projects including the acquisition of property and reconstruction of streets; General Statutes § 8-141; and plans for carrying out the demolition or the voluntary rehabilitation of buildings. § 8-143;
Graham,
v. Houlihan,
The plaintiff makes no claim that the commission had not determined, legally and in good faith, the total area of redevelopment. Nor does it contend that its own property was not a fit subject for development. On the contrary, the court has found that, for over twenty years, the plaintiff had recognized the need for improving its property but had done nothing about it. The basic assertion is that the plaintiff should be permitted to improve its property to acceptable standards itself, as some other owners in the redevelopment area are permitted to do, rather than to have it taken by the commission and transferred to others for redevelopment. No facts appear which would indicate that the commission had acted unreasonably or in a discriminatory manner in deciding to acquire the plaintiff’s property. Looming large in the plaintiff’s contention, however, is the claim that the commission has purported to contract with redevelopers for the property but that the purported contract is nothing more than an illusory and void instrument designed to favor the private interests of the redevelopers.
It is well settled that the determination of what property is necessary to be taken in order to effectuate the public purpose of the redevelopment rested with the commission subject to proper review by the court.
Gohld Realty Go.
v.
Hartford,
It is unnecessary to elaborate upon the details of the contract between the commission and the re-developer which the plaintiff claims is illusory and void. It is .sufficient to say that a lengthy instrument had been executed between the commission and Seon Pierre Bonan and the F. D. Bich Company, Inc., as redevelopers, which the commission asserts to be a valid and binding contract looking to the performance, by the redevelopers, of various preliminary obligations and the ultimate purchase, for redevelopment, of properties acquired by the commission. The plaintiff attempts to show that it was denied the right to improve its property, instead of having it taken, only because the commission conditioned the plaintiff’s exercise of that right solely on the consent of the redeveloper to which the commission considered itself bound by the allegedly void contract.
The short answer to that contention is that, regardless of whether the contract was or was not binding, the plaintiff has failed to show that the commission has acted as the plaintiff claims. Any action by the commission required a majority vote of its members. General Statutes § 8-126. From the evidence before it, the court has found that the president of the plaintiff corporation met with the chairman of the commission, the plaintiff’s attorney
There is nothing in the foregoing which can be tortured into a finding that the commission itself did anything in this episode, either in reliance on any contract or otherwise. The most which can be gleaned from it is that the plaintiff was extended a courtesy which its situation did not demand. The court concluded that, in taking the plaintiff’s property, and in all other aspects of the redevelopment procedures attacked by the plaintiff, the commission did not act unreasonably, in bad faith or by abusing the powers conferred on it. The subordinate facts found, which are not subject to correction, support those conclusions.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
