LOUIS BRUSTEIN ET AL. v. ZONING COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF BRIDGEPORT ET AL.
Supreme Court of Connecticut
Argued May 7-decided July 31, 1963
151 Conn. 101
KING, MURPHY, SHEA, ALCORN and PARMELEE, JS.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to dismiss the appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Norwick R. G. Goodspeed, for the appellees (defendants Inter-Church Residences, Inc., et al.); with him was John J. McGuinness, assistant city attorney, for the appellee (named defendant).
SHEA, J. The zoning commission of Bridgeport changed the zone of property of the defendant Patsy Musone from residence A to residence apartment. The plaintiffs, owners of property in close proximity to the land in question, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, which affirmed the decision of the commission. The plaintiffs have appealed to this court.
The property covered by the change of zone consists of 10.35 acres at the southeast corner of Park Avenue and Westfield Avenue and has a frontage of about 526 feet on Park Avenue. Park Avenue in Bridgeport is a main traffic artery extending from beyond the Merritt Parkway on the north to Long Island Sound on the south. It connects the parkway with the downtown section of the city and the Connecticut Turnpike. Brooklawn Avenue intersects Park Avenue from the southwest on an angle at a point nearly opposite the southern boundary line of the Musone property. The application was filed by Inter-Church Residences, Inc., a nonprofit Connecticut corporation organized under the auspices of the Council of Churches of Greater Bridgeport, Inc. The applicant plans to erect a ten-story residence apartment building to provide housing and care for persons sixty-two years of age
One of the claims of the plaintiffs is that the ac
The action of the zoning commission clearly contemplated the widening of both Park Avenue and Westfield Avenue. The completion of this improvement requires the approval of another agency of the city government and the expenditure by it of public funds. Over these matters the zoning commission has no authority or control. Gordon v. Zoning Board, 145 Conn. 597, 603, 145 A.2d 746. Whether either one or both of these requirements could or would be satisfied does not appear. Unless the completion of these improvements is assured, the underlying problem of the traffic congestion which was the cause of the imposition of the condition remains. See Luery v. Zoning Board, 150 Conn. 136, 141, 187 A.2d 247. The mere execution of the instrument granting the easement to the city did not, and could not, solve the traffic problem. So long as traffic congestion remains a major problem, the change of zone should not be granted. Whalen v. Town Plan & Zoning Commission, 146 Conn. 321, 327, 150 A.2d 312.
It is unnecessary to discuss the other assignments of error.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the
In this opinion KING, ALCORN and PARMELEE, JS., concurred.
MURPHY, J. (concurring in the result). The opinion does not emphasize, as I think it should, the lack of any evidence before the commission, by any official authorized to speak for the town of Fairfield, to the effect that Fairfield will widen Park Avenue on the Fairfield side of the boundary line so as to double the present width of the avenue from Brooklawn Avenue north to Toilsome Hill Road and make a uniform four-lane highway. The mere statement by the attorney for Inter-Church Residences, Inc., that Fairfield is aware of the situation and is prepared to do the job when it feels it is needed falls far short of a definite plan by Fairfield to do the work which the Bridgeport planning commission in its report indicated is needed at this time, regardless of the change of zone. See the record of a somewhat comparable situation in Gordon v. Zoning Board, 145 Conn. 597, 145 A.2d 746, and its resolution in Luery v. Zoning Board, 150 Conn. 136, 187 A.2d 247, after evidence was presented to the zoning board of actual contracts for the road construction deemed necessary in the light of the opinion in Gordon. Furthermore, in the present case, one of the residents on the Fairfield side of Park Avenue testified that for twelve years he had been unable to get any definite information of the layout of that avenue in this area from the town engineer, that is, from the same source as was given for the statement of the attorney for Inter-Church Residences, Inc. Hearsay statements cannot be accepted as proof of the facts asserted.
