In November, 1958, the plaintiff instituted an action in the Court of Common Pleas against Roger M. Grover, building inspector of Old Lyme, and the zoning commission of Old Lyme. He sought a declaratory judgment respecting the application and validity of certain zoning regulations as they affected lots in the Miami Beach section of Old Lyme and his right to a building permit to erect a cottage on a lot at 38 Washington Avenue in that development. He also sought a permanent
Ordinarily, an appeal from a zoning authority is determined upon the record of that authority, but when, as in this case, there has been no stenographic report or mechanical recording, the trial court may receive evidence in order to determine what facts and considerations were, presumptively, in the minds of the commission. General Statutes §§ 8-8— 8-10;
Schultz
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
The facts found by the trial court can be stated in summary as follows: Between 1943 and 1947, the plaintiff purchased four contiguous tracts of land on the shore front in Old Lyme. In 1949, the legislature chartered the Miami Beach Association; its territory was these four tracts. 25 Spec. Laws 1130.
Zoning regulations were first adopted in Old Lyme in .1940, pursuant to what is now General Statutes § 8-1. On January 2, 1957, the zoning commission made an extensive revision of the regulations, effective January 21, 1957. Since that time, Miami Beach has been located in what is designated as an R-10 residence district, which requires a minimum lot area of 10,000 square feet. Old Lyme Zoning Regs. §§ 2.1, 4.2 (Jan. 21, 1957). All of the lots in Miami Beach have less than the minimum area. The 1957 regulations allowed the construction of a permitted building, or the establishment of a permitted use, on any lot “which at the time of the adoption of these regulations and continuously thereafter was owned separately from any adjoining lot as evidenced by deed” of record. Id. § 3.10.
The court found that the character and use of the land in R-10 zones, particularly where the plaintiff’s land is located, had not changed subsequent to the adoption of the regulations on January 21, 1957. Between January 2, 1957, and March 7, 1959, the zoning of resort areas in Old Lyme was discussed at meetings of the Old Lyme zoning authorities. Pursuant to an ordinance of the town adopted on April 20, 1957, a new zoning commission was elected on October 7, 1957. It employed an expert on sewage disposal systems who made percolation tests in nine areas of Old Lyme, including Miami Beach. He advised that a minimum area of 10,000 square feet should be required for lots where neither a central water system nor sewers existed. Miami Beach, the commission was told, was only a few feet above sea level and was partly filled land, there were several water supply systems, and, at some places, the ground water level was within a few inches of the surface. A professional planner who had previously been employed had reported that unless the development of the beach areas was controlled, their rapid growth would give rise to serious problems of sanitation, schooling and traffic. The cottages at Miami Beach were so constructed that they could be occupied in the winter. Ten were already so occupied. Their water supply came from their own wells or neighbors’ wells. It could be expected that there would be a gradual increase in year-round occupancy. When the amendment of § 3.10 became effec
The defendant zoning commission has assigned error in the finding. Practice Book § 393. It asks that the following facts be found: On January 14, 1957, Antoinette Corsino, the plaintiff’s daughter, acting under a power of attorney, quitclaimed to Carmelina Corsino, the plaintiff’s wife, 115 lots at Miami Beach. This conveyance prevented the consolidation of any adjoining lots by a single owner because the conveyance divided the unsold lots between the plaintiff and his wife in such a way that neither of them owned an adjoining lot. Each lot had an area of about 4000 square feet. The deed was recorded January 15,1957. It was subsequently confirmed by one executed by the plaintiff, dated May 24, 1957. This conveyance made it impossible for the plaintiff, without the consent of his wife, or for her, without the consent of the plaintiff, to combine individual lots or any parts of them in such a way as to make a lot having an area of more than 4000 square feet.
Corrections in a finding can be made if the trial court has refused to find a material fact which was an admitted or undisputed fact. Practice Book §§ 396, 397; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 158. It
The trial court’s reason for rendering judgment for the defendants in the action for a declaratory judgment and an injunction was the failure of the plaintiff to exhaust his administrative remedies before resort to the courts.
Florentine
v.
Darien,
The plaintiff’s claims of invalidity, made in both actions, are directed primarily toward the amendments to the earlier zoning regulations. The plain
General Statutes § 8-3 requires, the plaintiff asserts, that a zoning commission, whenever it makes a change in a zoning regulation or zone boundary, state upon its records its reasons for the change. This provision is directory only, and failure to comply with it does not make the action of the commission void.
Woodford
v.
Zoning Commission,
The plaintiff claims that the amended regula
The plaintiff argues, further, that the regulations do not allow the most appropriate use of the land in Miami Beach. The appropriate use of land is always an important consideration in zoning.
Suffield Heights Corporation
v.
Town Planning Commission,
The plaintiff charges that the changes in the regulations did not accord with any comprehensive plan of zoning in the town. It does not appear that any comprehensive plan had been formally adopted in Old Lyme. The plan, therefore, must be found in the scheme of the zoning regulations themselves.
Couch
v.
Zoning Commission,
The plaintiff claims that the regulations, particularly § 1.17 as it was amended effective March 12, 1959, are invalid since they prohibit the continuance of a nonconforming use. The matter of nonconforming uses is discussed heretofore in this opinion in connection with the denial of the building permit. Public Acts 1959, No. 661, amended General Statutes § 8-2 by adding a provision to the effect that zoning regulations shall not prohibit the continuance of any existing nonconforming use. It is true that the plaintiff had been developing Miami Beach as a seaside cottage area. Effective January 21, 1957, however, the zoning commission
There is no error in either ease.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
