2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 8415 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 2000
The plaintiff is the owner of a farm operation located at 5051 Durham Road in the Town of Guilford. The plaintiff operates a stand on Durham CT Page 8416 Road for the purpose of selling farm produce. Because of traffic problems the plaintiff has proposed to move the farm stand and to create a parking area off of Durham Road. He also has proposed creating an access road from an existing upland farming area to the relocated stand to move the produce directly to the farm stand.
The plaintiff's property is approximately 10.83 acres. The farm stand has been at its present location for 38 years. The proposed area for the relocated stand and the access road are located in wetlands, with a watercourse passing through the wetlands. The watercourse begins in the upper locations and travels to a culvert under Durham Road, and it then flows into the Coginchaug River.
The plaintiff in the first application estimated that the proposed work might result in the alteration of a half acre of wetlands, and the existing watercourses. He had proposed to relocate the watercourse, and to fill-in some wetlands in the crop land field, and an area behind the existing house. The Commission denied the first application for the following reasons.
5. There are alternatives to the proposed action that have less impact on the wetlands.
a. There is a farm road north of the house that gives access to the same area that would be served by the proposed new road through the wetlands.
b. The farm stand and parking could be located as to require less filling of the wetlands.
2. The proposed activity would completely fill in and eliminate approximately one-half acre of wetland area. This area serves important wetland functions.
The second application filed by the plaintiff on or about June 14, 1999 requested an agricultural exemption under the Inland Wetland Act for essentially the same activities. At the hearing on this application on August 11, 1999 the Commission considered the aspects of the agricultural exemption. At subsequent meetings the Commission considered both written and oral testimony regarding the impact on wetlands in the area of the proposed work. The Commission then voted to deny the plaintiff's claim that he could fill wetlands and the watercourses as of right, and it voted as follows:
1. The area which the applicant proposes to fill for CT Page 8417 road construction consists primarily of wetlands as defined in Connecticut General Statute §
22a-29 (2). The applicant claims that as a matter of right he is entitled to fill the area in question as there is no evidence that the wetland has a continual flow of water. The Commission interprets the relevant authority to mean that it does not matter if a wetland has a continual flow of water or not. Because the proposed activity involves filling or reclamation of the wetland, a permit is required even if the road construction is related to a farming activity.2. The applicant proposes to fill a watercourse as defined in §
22a-38 (16) of the Connecticut General Statutes. This watercourse is located within the wetland described above. The applicant claims this activity as a matter of right related to a farming operation. It is incumbent upon the applicant to show by sufficient evidence that he is entitled to the exemption. It is the unanimous opinion of the Commission that the applicant has not presented sufficient evidence to show that the watercourse under consideration is not in fact a watercourse with continual flow. The proposed activity is therefore not a permitted operation or use as defined in Connecticut General Statutes §22a-40 (1).
After the second application was filed, but before a decision was rendered by the Commission the plaintiff had deposited fill and gravel in the wetland area in front of his property. On or about August 25, 1999 a Cease and Desist Order was issued to require a removal of the fill. The plaintiff appealed to the Inland Wetland Commission. After a hearing on September 2, 1999 the Commission voted to uphold the Cease and Desist Order which required the area to be restored to its original condition.
The plaintiff contends the Guilford Inland Wetland Commission failed to interpret C.G.S. §
The defendant Guilford Inland Wetlands Commission contends the proposed farm stand would be located in a wetlands system which has a watercourse passing through the wetlands. The Commission also claims the proposed fill for road construction consists primarily of wetland as defined by C.G.S. §
The defendant Commissioner of Environmental Protection was served with this appeal pursuant to C.G.S. §
It is the Commissioner's opinion that the plaintiff's application for the proposed work was not permitted "As of Right" pursuant to C.G.S. §
The disputed issues between the parties relate to the interpretation or application of Connecticut General Statutes §
(a) The following operations and uses shall be permitted in wetlands and watercourses, as of right:
(1) Grazing, farming, nurseries, gardening and harvesting of crops and farm ponds of three acres or less essential to the farming operation, and activities conducted by, or under the authority of, the Department of Environmental Protection for the purposes of wetland CT Page 8419 or watercourse restoration or enhancement or mosquito control. The provisions of this subdivision shall not be construed to include
road construction or the erection of buildings not directly related to the farming operation,
relocation of watercourses with continual flow,
filling or reclamation of wetlands or watercourses with continual flow,
clear cutting of timber except for the expansion of agricultural crop land,
the mining of top soil, peat, sand, gravel or similar material from wetlands or watercourses for the purposes of sale.
In reviewing a decision by a wetland agency, if the record supports any one of the reasons given, then the decision must be sustained. Samperiv. Inland Wetlands Agency,
A regulated activity conducted upon any inland wetland or watercourse requires a permit C.G.S. §
C.G.S. §
The definition of wetlands as land designated by soil types is in accord with the purpose of the 1987 amendment which sets forth the legislative policy that wetlands are not allowed "as of right" to be filled or reclaimed. It appears the agricultural exemption was never intended to permit the filling of wetlands "as of right" regardless of whether it does or does not have a "continual flow." The phrase "with continual flow" can only refer to watercourses, and not to wetlands. Therefore this court concludes the filling of the wetlands would be a "regulated activity" which would require a permit, and it would not be exempt under the provisions of C.G.S. §
The second reason given by the Commission for denying the application related to the plaintiff's proposal to fill a watercourse located within the wetlands area. The plaintiff claims the Commission was wrong in concluding the applicant failed to prove the watercourse did not have a continual flow. The plaintiff also contends his expert David Lord, in a letter, concluded there was no continual flow of the watercourse within the wetlands, and therefore, pursuant to C.G.S. §
C.G.S. §
The decision of the Commission on the second application filed on or about June 14, 1999 must be sustained because the record discloses evidence that support the reasons given. This conclusion would therefore sustain the actions of the Commission in its action on the first application filed on or about February 4, 1999, as well as its decision in upholding the cease and desist order.
For the foregoing reasons the appeals filed by the plaintiff are dismissed, and judgment shall enter in favor of the defendants on each appeal.
Howard F. Zoarski Judge Trial Referee