45 A.2d 828 | Conn. | 1946
Vito Migliaro, on September 19, 1944, purchased a one-family dwelling house at 423 Orange Street in New Haven for the purpose of conducting a restaurant business in it. The property was in a Residence B zone as defined in the zoning ordinance of the city, and in that zone such a use of property was forbidden, as Migliaro knew. He applied to the building inspector for a permit to alter the first floor to adapt it for the restaurant, but this permit was refused because of the prohibition in the ordinance. Migliaro appealed to the zoning board of appeals from that ruling. The board held a hearing, at which property owners living in the vicinity appeared in opposition to granting the permit. It voted, however, to grant the application, with a provision that the permission should be limited to such a use of the property by Migliaro and that no signs should be displayed. Interested property owners took an appeal to the Court of Common Pleas and it revoked the permit. From that decision Migliaro has appealed.
The justification for zoning in any municipality is that it serves to promote the public health, safety, welfare and prosperity of the community. State v. Hillman,
The zoning ordinance before us contained these provisions: "The Board of Zoning Appeals may in appropriate cases, after public notice and hearing and subject to appropriate conditions and safeguards, determine and vary the application of the regulations herein established in harmony with their general purpose and intent as follows: . . . Where there are practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships in the way of carrying out the strict letter of any provision of this Ordinance, or where the effect of the application of the Ordinance is arbitrary, the Board of Zoning Appeals shall have power in a specific case to vary any such provision in harmony with its general purpose and intent so that the public health, safety and general welfare may be secured and substantial justice done." While the words "practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships" are found in many zoning regulations, no court, so far as we have been able to find, has ever regarded the words "practical difficulties" as having any significance in themselves; indeed, they are too, lacking in precision of meaning to afford a standard sufficient to sustain the delegation of power to the board; and the phrase is construed as a whole. In applying such a provision, the requirement that any change shall be in harmony with the general purpose and intent of the ordinance is highly important. St. John's R. C. Church v. Board of Adjustment or Appeals,
Our discussion of the ordinance before us in Thayer v. Board of Appeals, supra, 22, is applicable here: "Disadvantage in property value or income, or both, to a single owner of property, resulting from application of zoning restrictions, does not, ordinarily, warrant relaxation in his favor on the ground of practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship. `Financial considerations alone . . . cannot govern the action of the board. They are bound to take a broader view than the apparent monetary distress of the owner. Otherwise, there would be no occasion for any zoning law.'" See also Grady v. Katz, supra, 529; First National Bank Trust Co. v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
For the decision of this case we need go no further than the statement as to the reasons for granting the permit entered upon the records of the board of zoning appeals. These were that Migliaro had purchased the property and spent some money in renovating it, that his reputation was such as to insure the operation of a respectable establishment, that use for a restaurant would not increase parking difficulties or traffic, that *544
there were a club and many rooming and boarding houses now in the vicinity and the use of the property as a restaurant would not greatly differ, that little change in the property need be made to adapt it to that use, and that Migliaro and his family would occupy the upper floor as a dwelling place, a consideration to which the board gave weight because the continued use of the building as a one-family house or its alteration into a two-family house would be impractical. The action of the board was not based upon any conclusion that Migliaro would suffer "practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships" if the permission was refused or that the application of the ordinance would be arbitrary. It could hardly make such findings in view of the fact that Migliaro purchased the property with full knowledge that it was located in a zone wherein the use of property for a restaurant was specifically forbidden. See Greenwich Gas Co. v. Tuthill,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.