The plaintiffs, owners of a house and lot located within the Norwich historic district, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas from a decision of the defendant commission denying their application for a certificate of appropriateness which would permit them to demolish the house. The court rendered judgment dismissing the appeal and the plaintiffs, upon the granting of certification, have appealed to this court.
The undisputed facts of the case are as follows: The Norwich historic district, established by the city of Norwich in 1967, pursuant to §§ 7-147a through 7-147m of the General Statutes, consists of the Norwichtown green, which dates back to colonial days, and about one hundred buildings and lots surrounding, or in close proximity to, the green. The plaintiffs’ property, which they purchased in 1963,
The plaintiffs maintain that the costs of the repairs necessary for the building are prohibitive. The building inspector has ordered the plaintiffs to repair the foundation and replace a door sill and hall floor, and the health department has ordered the plaintiffs to tie in to a newly accessible public sewer. At the hearing before the commission, the plaintiffs offered the testimony of a local contractor to the еffect that the cost of these repairs, together with the cost of reroofing the building, would amount to between $15,000 and $18,000. The plaintiffs offered no evidence of the value of the house without repairs, its value if repaired, or the value of the lot if the building were razed. Nor did the
The commission also received numerous opinions from the plaintiffs’ neighbors and frоm the Connecticut historical commission, the southeastern Connecticut regional planning agency, and the Connecticut society of architects, as to the historic value of the premises. The consensus of these opinions was that although the building itself is of little historic value or interest, it does, by virtue of its location, perform an important screening function, separating the green from an encroaching commercial district, and its preservation is important in maintaining the character of the historic district.
1
The commission stated its reasons for denying the application as follows: “The Commission is of the opinion that the building in question significantly contributes to the importance of the Norwichtown Creen as an historic landmark, and the Commission would have violated its responsibilities as
Procedure upon an appeal from any decision of a historic district commission is the same as that for appeals from zoning boards. General Statutes § 7-147Í. The controlling question which the trial court had to decide was whether the historic district commission had acted, as alleged in the appeal, illegally, arbitrarily and in abuse of the discretion vested in it.
Bogue
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
In their appeal, the plaintiffs allege that they will be forced to undergo economic hardship and loss as a result of not being permitted to demolish their building, and that the historic district commission, in denying their application for a certificate of appropriateness, acted illegally, arbitrarily and in abuse of its discretion. Several claims of law which were overruled by the trial court are assigned as error.
We first consider two claims of error concerning the procedure followed by the historic district commission in denying the plaintiffs’ application. The plaintiffs contend that the commission did not comply with the notice requirements of the right-to-know law; General Statutes § 1-21; nor did it meet the time limitations set forth in the town ordinances pertaining to the processing of applications for certificates of appropriateness, 14-24 and 14-25 of the Norwich code of ordinances. Section 1-21 requires, in pertinent part, that notice be given twenty-four hours before a special meeting is held by a commission such as the defendant, but the same section also provides that an emergency meeting may be held without notice, so long as the minutes of the meeting are quickly made available for public inspection. Section 14-24 of the town ordinances requires the historic district commission to hold a public hearing within forty-five days of receiving an application for a certificate of aрpropriateness, and § 14-25 provides that the failure of the commission to act upon an application within sixty days shall constitute approval.
Although the commission did not give the twenty-four-hour notice mandated by § 1-21 for special meetings of a municipal commission, the record clеarly indicates, as noted by the trial court, that the commission did comply with the requirements of § 1-21 pertaining to emergency meetings. The record also clearly indicates that the plaintiffs’ counsel received actual notice of the commission’s decision within sixty days of the filing of the application. And though the hearing was not held within forty-five days of the filing of the application with the building inspector, § 14-24 sets a time limit which commences with the receipt of the аpplication by
The plaintiffs also claim that the Norwich ordinance does not vest the commission with the power to regulate the demolition of structures within the historic district. In support of this contention, the plaintiffs point out that § 14-20 of the ordinance provides that the commission “shall administer the provisions of . . . [the enabling act]
as implemented by this article”
(emphasis added), and that the ordinance itself does not mention “demolition.” In the absence of any specific reference in the ordinance to the power to control the demolition of structures, the plaintiffs argue, no such power has been granted the commission. Section 14-17 of the ordinance, however, provides that the commission “shall be empowered to exercise all the powers and duties and functions enumerated in such sections 7-147a to 7-147k, inclusive, as amended, of the general statutes.” This language incorporates by reference § 7-147d (a) of the General Statutes which declares that “ [n] o building or structure shall be . . . demolished within an historic district until after an application for a certificate of appropriateness . . . has been . . . approved by said commission.” Furthermore, § 14-24 of the ordinances provides that “ [n] o work on any type of building or structure which would change the appearance of any building or structure within the historic district when viewed
The plaintiffs’ principal claim is that the Norwich historic district ordinance, implementing the state enabling act, is unconstitutional as applied to them, and that the dеnial of their application for a certificate of appropriateness to demolish their building amounts to a taking of their property for public use without compensation. More specifically, they contend that the ordinance is “vague aesthetic legislation,” incapable of application in accordance with mandates of due process, and that because of the denial of their application they will be forced to expend large sums in the maintenance of their property without being able to put it to any practical use.
Neither the constitution of the United States, amendments five and fourteen, nor the constitution of Connecticut, article first, § 11, deny the state the power to regulate the uses to which an owner may devote his property.
“All property is held subject to the right of government to regulate its use in the exercise of the police power, so that it shall not be injurious to the rights of the community, or so that it may promote its health, morals, safety and welfare. The power of regulation by government is not unlimited;
“To be constitutionally valid, a regulation made under the police power must have a reasonable relation to the public health, safety, morality and wеlfare.”
State
v.
Gordon,
The plaintiffs argue that the Norwich ordinance constitutes “vague aesthetic legislation,” and point to our statement in
DeMaria
v.
Planning & Zoning Commission,
Having determined that the ordinance creating the Norwich historic district constitutes a valid exercise of the state’s police power, we are left with the question of whether the application of that ordinance to the plaintiffs’ property amounts to an uncоnstitutional deprivation of their property without compensation. In this context, it has often been noted that the police power, which regulates for the public good the uses to which private property may be put and requires no compensation, must be distinguished from the power of eminent domain, which takes private property for a public use and requires compensation to the owner. See, e.g.,
DeMello
v.
Plainville,
Whether the denial of the plaintiffs’ application for a certificate of appropriateness to demolish their building has rendered the Norwich ordinance, as applied to them, confiscatory, must be determined in the light of their particular circumstances as they have been shown to exist.
Bartlett
v.
Zoning Commission,
The рlaintiffs had the burden of proving that the historic district commission acted illegally, arbitrarily, in a confiscatory manner or in abuse of discretion.
Byington
v.
Zoning Commission,
The Norwich historic district commission, after a full hearing, lawfully, reasonably and honestly exercised its judgment. The trial court was correct in not substituting its own judgment for that of the commission.
Bora
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
A communication from the state historical commission stated, in part: “Competent authority has placed the date of construction in or about 1760 and identified the owner at that period as keeping an inn where lawyers at the nearby Court of Norwich were accommodated. On the exterior at least, the structure has undergone considerable alteration over the years but still retains its essential form and proportions, wholly in keeping with the scale and appearance of numerous other old buildings that border the Green area. Aside from the house proper, its site is of historic interest as occupying the original home lot of the Eeverend James Fitch, religiоus leader of the first settlers. It often happens that buildings forming a recognizable grouping, as around a green, may not individually be especially notable for architecture or historical association. But together as a unified whole they constitute a significant entity, no part of which can be removed without a definite and usually adverse effect upon the character and appearance of the entire area. This is the condition thаt obtains in Norwichtown.
“The commercially zoned district south and southeast of the site under consideration exhibits the unattractive characteristics of so
“[General Statutes] See. 7-147a. historic districts authorized. . . . to promote the educational, cultural, economic and general welfare of the public through the preservation and protection of buildings, places and districts of historic interest by the maintenance of such as landmarks in the history of architecture, of the municipality, of the state or of the nation, and through the development of appropriate settings for such buildings, places and districts. . . .”
“[General Statutes] Sec. 7-147f. considerations in determining appropriateness. If the commission determines that the proposed erection, construction, restoration, alteration, razing or parking will be appropriate, it shall issue a certificate of appropriateness. In passing upon appropriateness as to exterior architectural features the commission shall consider, in addition to any other pertinent factors, the historical and architectural value and significance, architectural style, general design, arrangement, texture and material of the architectural features involved and the relationship thereof to the exterior architectural style and pertinent features of other structures in the immediate neighborhood. In passing upon appropriateness as to parking, the commission shall take into consideration the size of such parking area, the visibility of cars parked therein, the closeness of such area to adjacent buildings and other similar factors. A certificate of appropriateness may be refused for any building or structure, the erection, reconstruction, restoration, alteration or razing of which, or any parking which, in the opinion of the commission, would be detrimental to the interest of the historic district.”
