14 Conn. L. Rptr. 407 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1995
The present proceeding arose when the plaintiff, proceeding without an attorney, applied to the board to remove the restriction so that she could install a sit-down bar. The plaintiff did not designate the particular nature of her application, although she did claim a hardship. After a public hearing the board's votes were split two to two. Accordingly, the application was not approved.Merlo v. Planning Zoning Commission,
The plaintiff appealed to this court. Since she is the lessee of the premises as well as the permittee on the liquor permit, the court finds that she is aggrieved and has standing to appeal. Primerica v.Planning Zoning,
The parties dispute the nature of the plaintiff's application. The board claims that the application sought a variance and that the plaintiff, therefore, was required to satisfy the requirements for a variance. The plaintiff asserts that she sought a change in the conditions imposed on the variance. Determining the legal nature of the application is critical because that determines what the plaintiff was required to prove and whether the reasons for the board's decision are legally pertinent.
"[A] variance is authority extended to the owner to use his property in a manner forbidden by the zoning enactment." MitchellLand Co. v. Planning Zoning Board,
There is no question that the plaintiff was not and is not seeking a variance. The substance of the plaintiff's application was that the condition of the 1991 variance be removed.1 There is no zoning regulation prohibiting a sit-down bar. There is a regulation prohibiting the sale of liquor within 1500 feet of another establishment which sells liquor, but that regulation has been varied for the plaintiff and is not at issue in this case. Since the plaintiff did not seek authority to use her property in a manner proscribed by the zoning regulations, she was not obliged to prove that adherence to the strict letter of the zoning ordinance causes unusual hardship unnecessary to the carrying out of the general purpose of the zoning plan. Grillo v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
supra,
"A zoning board of appeals may without express authorization attach reasonable conditions to the grant of a variance. . . . Were it not for the conditions imposed by a board of appeals, variances might not be supportable as being in harmony with the general purpose and intent of the zoning ordinance. . . ." (Citations omitted.)Burlington v. Jencik, supra,
A zoning board of appeals may reverse its prior decision when there is a material change in circumstances. Grillo v. Zoning Boardof Appeals, supra,
"Local zoning boards are vested with a liberal discretion.Pleasant View Farms Development, Inc. v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
The board members voting against the plaintiff provided two reasons for denying the application: (1) "The petitioner failed to present an exceptional difficulty or unusual hardship owning to conditions directly affecting this parcel of land" and (2) "The establishment of a sit-down consumer bar area within this existing restaurant liquor licensed facility would adversely effect this conduct of the restaurant use for which it was originally approved."
The first reason for denying the application is irrelevant because, as discussed supra, hardship is not an element that the plaintiff has to demonstrate to qualify for a change in condition attached to a variance.
The second reason, however, is fairly referable to the issue of whether a material change in circumstance has made the condition unreasonable. In that reason, the board indicated that the variance to sell liquor had been intended to be ancillary to and supportive of the restaurant use. In effect, the board here stated that nothing had changed which would obviate the adverse effect that a "sit-down" bar would visit on that use. Otherwise stated, the board implicitly found that while the operation of a restaurant with a full liquor permit would not affect substantially the comprehensive zoning plan, a bar would dwarf the restaurant use and that circumstances had not so changed that such a bar would not affect substantially the comprehensive zoning plan. As stated supra, a variance must be shown not to affect substantially the comprehensive zoning plan. Grillo v. Zoning Board of Appeals, supra,
"The court's review is based on the record, which includes the knowledge of the board members gained through personal observation of the site . . . or through their personal knowledge of the area involved. Burnham v. Planning Zoning Commission,
BY THE COURT Bruce L. Levin Judge of the Superior Court