The plaintiff owns about 19.86 acres of vacant land situated in an RS-3 district in Stratford. Under §4.2 of the Stratford zoning regulations, the uses in an RS-3 district are restricted primarily to one-family dwellings on lots having a minimum area of 10,000 square feet. See Stratford Zoning Regs. §§2.1, 4.1.1 (1957). Section
We may assume, since it is not in dispute, that the physical plan for the proposed use complied with the detailed requirements fixed by the regulations for garden apartments. Stratford Zoning Begs. § 5.4. The commission, in its decision, set forth its reasons for denying the application and concluded that garden apartments in the area involved would increase the density of population
The problem then becomes simply whether the reasons assigned by the commission for its action find reasonable support in the record before it and whether the reasons are pertinent to the considerations which the commission was required to apply under § 20.2 of the regulations. So long as it appears that an honest judgment has been reasonably and fairly exercised by the commission after full hearing, courts should be cautious about disturbing its decision.
Kutcher
v.
Town Planning Commission,
In
Summ
v.
Zoning Commission,
supra, we discussed § 8-2 of the General Statutes as amended in
No testimony was offered at the hearing before the commission. The issue was presented only through statements made by counsel for the plaintiff, by counsel for 361 opponents of the plaintiff’s plan, by counsel for an individual opponent and by several individual opponents. From these state
The commission found that the presence of a garden apartment project such as the plaintiff proposed would, in this particular area, have an adverse effect on the values of the surrounding properties, the only claim to the contrary being the opinion expressed by the plaintiff’s attorney at the hearing. The commission was entitled to take into account its own knowledge of the local conditions, and the burden rested on the plaintiff to show that
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“[Stratford Zoning Eegs. § 20.2] . . . Tke Commission may, after public notice and bearing in tbe same manner required by law for zoning amendments, and by tbe affirmative vote of four or
