This zoning appeal appears to have arisen out of the plaintiff’s status as the contract purchaser of a building lot in a tract of land which the Rosenstiel Foundation, an Ohio corporation authorized to do business in Connecticut, planned to subdivide into moderate priced homesites for a prospective association of homeowners of which the plaintiff was the president.
The plaintiff owns a home on East Elm Street in Greenwich which is in an R-7 zone. On March 10, 1965, the Rosenstiel Foundation, hereinafter called the Foundation, owned an eighty-three-acre tract of land in Greenwich in an RA-4 zone about eight miles distant from the plaintiff’s home. The RA-4 zone allowed separate dwelling units on lots of four acres or more, and the R-7 zone required an area of 7000 square feet.
On March 10, 1965, the Foundation contracted to sell to the plaintiff a lot designated as number 101 within the eighty-three-acre tract for the price of
On June 8,1965, the plaintiff applied to the Greenwich planning and zoning commission for an amendment to the zoning regulations which would create two new zone categories in the Greenwich zoning regulations to be designated R-20W and RA-1W permitting respective minimum lot sizes of 20,000 square feet and one acre provided a water supply was furnished by other means than individual wells on each lot, or, in the alternative, for any amendment which would permit selective rezoning of lower density areas if water was supplied from an outside source. The application did not seek the zone change for the eighty-three-acre tract and was made on the basis of the plaintiff’s ownership of his East Elm Street property as permitted by the zoning regulations.
On July 8, 1965, another application, which was signed by the plaintiff along with 120 other indi
On February 25, 1966, the Foundation deeded the eighty-three-acre tract to the plaintiff, as trustee, and the deed was recorded in the Greenwich land records. On February 28, 1966, the plaintiff, as trustee, and the Foundation entered into a contract concerning the land so conveyed which provided that the plaintiff, as trustee, accepted the title subject to outstanding contracts of sale; that all incidents of ownership other than legal title were to remain in the Foundation, which would retain the obligation for all expenses of upkeep, municipal charges and taxes; that the trustee could contract for the sale of lots within the tract to purchasers approved by the Foundation; that the terms of the contract of sale previously made with the plaintiff on March 10, 1965, were incorporated by reference; and that, if the eighty-three acres were not rezoned in accordance with the plaintiff’s application, the plaintiff would quitclaim the land to the Foundation. The contract which the plaintiff, as trustee, was empowered to make with purchasers was identical in terms with his own March 10, 1965, contract.
On the same date, February 28, 1966, the two rezoning applications which had been made on June 8, 1965, and July 8,1965, came on for public hearing before the Greenwich planning and zoning eommis
On July 12,1966, the plaintiff, as trustee, executed a quitclaim deed reconveying the eighty-three-acre tract to the Foundation. This deed was neither delivered nor recorded.
The plaintiff alone appealed from the decision of the commission to the Court of Common Pleas, which concluded that the plaintiff was aggrieved and that the failure of three members of the commission to disqualify themselves invalidated the decision of the commission, so that the appeal should be sustained. Judgment was rendered accordingly. The Greenwich planning and zoning commission has appealed from that judgment, and individual intervening parties have also appealed. The appeals challenge the court’s conclusions that the plaintiff was aggrieved and that the commission’s decision was invalidated by the disqualification of three members who participated in it.
A person does not become aggrieved until the zoning authority has acted, and the question of aggrievement is a jurisdictional one for the court.
I. R. Stich Associates, Inc.
v.
Town Council,
The plaintiff’s appeal was couched in two counts attacking the denial of his individual application of June 8, 1965, and the application of July 8, 1965, in which he was joined by other applicants. The court reached a general conclusion that the plaintiff was aggrieved by the action of the commission in denying both appeals. With respect to the application of June 8, 1965, the court concluded that, under the zoning regulations, the plaintiff had the right, as a property owner, to apply to the commission for a change of zone and that, as a property owner entitled to make such an application, he was aggrieved by the denial of the application. It is clear from what we have just said that the mere denial of an application does not establish aggrievement. The court’s conclusion to the contrary was erroneous, and consequently the plaintiff’s appeal, so far as it relates to the June 8, 1965, application, should have been dismissed on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to establish aggrievement. Krejpcio v. Zoning Board of Appeals, supra.
The court also concluded, however, that the plaintiff was aggrieved by the denial of the July 8, 1965, application in that, as the record owner, as trustee, of the eighty-three-acre tract and a contract purchaser of a lot within the tract whose right to purchase was conditioned on a change of zone, he had a specific, personal and legal interest in the subject
The plaintiff’s status as a person aggrieved by the decision appealed from was a question of fact for the court to determine.
Josephson
v.
Planning Board,
Since the plaintiff had standing to appeal from the commission’s denial of the July application we must consider the defendant’s claim that the court erred in concluding that the decision of the com
When the hearing began on February 28, the attorney for the plaintiff “invited” the members of the commission “to reflect upon” § 8-11 of the General Statutes and “invited” any member who felt that he should disqualify himself to do so.
1
The
The plaintiff was represented by counsel throughout the hearing. Although he and his counsel were fully aware of the facts which form the basis for the claim made in the trial court and reasserted here that the three members of the commission were disqualified, no direct challenge to the qualification of any member was made at the hearing before the commission. On the contrary, the plaintiff’s counsel stated to the commission that he did not intend to challenge the qualifications of any of its members but wished merely to “raise” the question. Finally, when asked by the chairman of the commission whether he wished to continue with the hearing or to request a new hearing and after a recess to con
Following the decision of this court in
Low
v.
Madison,
Having found that there was no evidence of any conflict of interest and no evidence of any personal
Without departing in any measure from the principles established in the numerous decisions referred to, we have, in the present case, a situation in which counsel, in full possession of the facts, declined, after raising the issue, either to challenge any member of the board directly or, when that opportunity was volunteered to him by the commission itself, to request a new hearing. We have said that modern procedural concepts “regard with disfavor the failure, whether because of a mistake of
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to dismiss the appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“Sec. 8-11. DISQUALIFICATION OF MEMBERS OF ZONING AUTHORITIES. No member of any zoning commission or board and no member of any zoning board of appeals or of any municipal ageney exercising the powers of any zoning commission or board of appeals, whether existing under the general statutes or under any special act, shall appear for or represent any person, firm, corporation or other entity in any matter pending before the planning or zoning commission or board or said board of appeals or any agency exercising the powers of any such commission or board in the same municipality, whether or not he is a member of the board or commission hearing such matter. No member of any zoning commission or board and no member of any zoning board of appeals shall participate in the hearing or decision of the board or commission of which he is a member upon any matter in which he is directly or indirectly interested in a personal or financial sense. In the event of such disqualification,- such fact shall be entered on the records of the commission or board and the remaining members of the commission or board, unless otherwise provided by special act, shall choose an elector to act as a member of such commission or board in the hearing and determination of the particular matter or matters in which the disqualification -arose; except that, in the event of sueh disqualification of a member or alternate member of a zoning board of appeals, replacement shall first be -made from alternate members pursuant to the provisions of section 8-5a.”
