Dr. Chаrles S. Bailey-Gates, a dentist, desired to erect a building in West Hartford. He intended to use the first floor for dental offices, at least in part for his own practice, and the second floor as a four- or five-room residence aрartment which he did not intend personally to occupy. A two-family dwelling house, presently on the property, is a nonconforming use in a residence B zone 1 and is to be demolished, and the new building is to be *72 erected in its place. The plaintiffs own property one lot awаy. Dr. Bailey-Gates applied to the zoning board of appeals for a special exception to permit the erection of the proposed structure. The board granted the application “in accоrdance with plot plans, floor plan of proposed dental offices, and front elevation of building on file,” stating in its decision: “After viewing these premises, the Board feels that granting this exception will be in the interest of public convenience and welfare, and will not substantially injure the surrounding property.” The plaintiffs appealed from the action of the board in granting the special exception.
At the outset it must be borne in mind that this case involves, not a vаriance, but an exception. “[T]he conditions permitting an exception must be found in the [zoning] regulations themselves, and these conditions, if any, may not be altered.”
Service Realty Corporation
v.
Planning & Zoning Board of Appeals,
The zoning ordinance, including, of course, § 18 (A) thereof, providing for special exceptions, is a local legislative enactment, and in its interpretation the question is the intention of the legislative body as found from the words employed to make its intention manifest. The actual intention, as a state of mind, of the members of a legislative body is immaterial, even if it were ascertainable.
Park Regional Corporation
v.
Town Plan & Zoning Com
mission,
The plaintiffs claim that §4 of the ordinance, relating to permitted uses in a residence zone, controls § 18 (A), relating to the granting of special exceptions. In the first place, there would be no *74 occasion to apply for an exception if a use was in conformity with the general regulations governing permitted uses in the zone in question. Secondly, subsection (B) of § 4, by its express terms, applies only to residence zones other than “AAA,” “AA,” “A” and “B,” and since the property in this case is locаted in a residence B zone, subsection (B) can have no application to this case. Even if that subsection is susceptible of an interpretation which in certain factual situations might lead to a result inconsistent with that reaсhed under subdivision (3) of § 18 (A), we would not be warranted in adopting a construction which would distort the clear meaning of § 18 (A). The remedy, if any is needed, is in a clarification of the language of the ordinance.
The plaintiffs’ main claim seems to bе that if subdivision (3) of § 18 (A) is construed as authorizing the granting of an exception to permit an office building in any zone, then any exception which could be authorized under subdivision (5) could also be authorized under subdivision (3), so that subdivision (5) would serve no purpose whatsoever. This claim involves a patent non sequitur and is unsound. Section (5) applies only to a building of which the main, principal and dominant use is residential but which has an accessory use as an office of a professional person who resides in the building. The subject matter of subdivision (5) is not professional uses of an office building but professional accessory uses of a residence building.
The basic issue before the court below was whether the plaintiffs proved that the action of the board of appeals was illegal.
Guerriero
v.
Galasso,
We find nothing to indicate that the board of appeals acted improperly, arbitrarily or illegаlly in deciding that the proposed building was an office building as that term is used in subdivision (3) of *77 § 18 (A) of the ordinance. This being so, the board, in granting any special exception, would necessarily be acting under subdivision (3) and would have no concern with subdivision (5).
The plaintiffs also claim that § 18 (A) was unauthorized by the special act from which the town derived its zoning powers and in any event did not confer on the board of appeals original jurisdiction to grant a special exception. Sеction 18 (A) clearly gives that jurisdiction to the board. Section 1 of the special act authorizes the town council to “regulate . . . the use of buildings, structures and land for trade, industry, residence or other purposes.” 19 Spec. Laws 934. Seсtion 4 states in part: “Said town council shall provide for the manner in which such regulations . . . shall be respectively enforced and established and amended or changed.” 22 id. 473. Section 8 provides that the board of appeals shаll “hear and decide all matters referred to it or upon which it shall be required to pass” under a zoning ordinance. 19 id. 936. These provisions, taken together, authorized the enactment of the sections of the ordinance, dealing with special exceptions, here involved. See
Bishop
v.
Board of Zoning Appeals,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“[West Hartford Zoning Begs. (1951)] Section. 4. residence DISTRICT. PERMITTED USES.
“A. Within an 'AAA’, 'AA’, 'A’ and ‘B’ area district no building or premises shall be used and no building shall be ereсted or structurally altered which is arranged, intended or designed to be used for other than a single family residence together with such other buildings as are ordinarily appurtenant thereto.
“B. In any other residence district, no building or premises shаll be used, and no building shall be erected or structurally altered which is arranged, intended or designed to be used, for other than one or more of the following uses: . . . (7) Within a D area district only, the office of a physician, dentist or surgeon whethеr or not said office is an accessory use in the dwelling or apartment used by such physician, dentist or surgeon as his private residence, provided said office shall be confined to the first floor of any building and provided further that no more than two such designated professional men shall engage in praetiee in any one building.”
“Section 18. review by board oe appeals. A. Special Exceptions. ... (3) The location in any use district of a state or municipal building, church, school, college building, railway, farming, nursery, greenhouse, truck gardening, private club, philanthropic or eleemosynary institution, boat house, office building, public utility, ice storage, aviation field, publie park or playground, public recreation building, stadium or athletic field, golf course, polo field, cemetery, penal institution, sanitarium for the insane or feebleminded, water supply, sewage disposal or treatment plant, garbage disposal plаnt, refuse dump, stone quarry, gravel pit or sand pit; ... (5) In a residence district, except a D area district, the location of the office of a physician, dentist or surgeon as an accessory use in the dwelling or apartment used by such physician, dentist or surgeon as his private residence, and in any residence district the location of the office of any other professional person as an accessory use in the dwelling or apartment used by said professional person as his private residence.”
