The defendant Virginio DeVellis, owner and operator of a restaurant with a beer permit at 193 North Avenue in Bridgeport, made application to the defendant board for a waiver of a zoning restriction to allow him to operate on these premises under an unlimited package store permit. The restaurant is in a business zone and is within 1500 feet of three establishments having all-liquor restaurant permits and of two others having restaurant beer permits. There is no package store within a radius of 1500 feet. The defendant board granted- a waiver of the applicable 1500-foot restriction, and the plaintiff, a resident of Bridgeport, ap-; pealed to the Court of Common Pleas, which rendered judgment sustaining the appeal. The defendant DeVellis, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, has appealed to this court.
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The trial court heard no testimony. The exhibits offered by the defendant, which included a copy of the city’s zoning regulations and a zoning map, the return of the defendant board relating to the application, and photographs of the locus and adjoining premises, constituted the only evidence presented.
Goldblatt
v.
Ferrigno,
The foregoing discussion is made necessary because of the form of the record presented to us. See Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 22. Since it is apparent, however, that this appeal was tried in the Court of Common Pleas on the proceedings before the board of appeals, no finding was necessary.
Biz
v.
Liquor Control Commission,
The pertinent sections of the zoning regulations in the case at bar are three in all. In so far as applicable, these provide in substance as follows: No premises shall be used “for the sale of alcoholic liquor under any tavern, restaurant or all-alcoholic liquor package store permit” within 1500 feet of any other premises “used for the sale of alcoholic liquor under any tavern, restaurant, druggist or all-alcoholic liquor package store permit.” Bridgeport Zoning Regs. '(Rev. 1949) c. 14, § 2. No premises within such 1500-foot area “used for the sale of alcoholic liquor under any tavern permit or under any limited restaurant or package store permit. . . shall be used for the sale of alcoholic liquor under any restaurant or package store permit which authorizes the sale of additional kinds of alcoholic liquor.” Id., c. 14, § 3. The zoning board of appeals, after notice and hearing as specified, shall have the powers and duties, to “be exercised in harmony with the general purposes of these regulations . . . and with their general intent and subject to such conditions” as it determines the public interest requires, to “determine and vary the application of these regu *455 lations with due consideration for conserving the public health, safety, convenience, welfare and property values solely with respect to a parcel of land where owing to conditions especially affecting such parcel but not affecting generally the district in which it is situated a literal enforcement of these regulations would result in exceptional difficulty or unusual hardship so that substantial justice will be done and the public safety and welfare secured.” Id., c. 18, § 2 (m).
The court’s conclusions are comprehended in two principal propositions. The first of itself, if sustained, warrants the court’s judgment. This conclusion was that, in granting the waiver, the board acted arbitrarily, illegally and in abuse of its discretion, since there was nothing before the board to show that a literal enforcement of the regulations would result in exceptional difficulty or unusual hardship. As we have repeatedly held, the granting of a variance under the zoning law involves “an exceptional power which should be sparingly exercised and ean be validly used only when a situation falls fully within the specified conditions.
Thayer
v.
Board of Appeals,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
