228 Conn. 476 | Conn. | 1994
The question presented in this appeal is whether, in the circumstances of this case, a subdivision should properly have been assessed for purposes of municipal taxation as individual subdivision lots
The facts are undisputed. The plaintiff owns real property in the town of Killingworth. On March 7, 1989, the Killingworth planning and zoning commission (commission) approved the plaintiffs application for the subdivision of the property, subject, however, to the condition that the plaintiff and the selectmen of the town of Killingworth sign an agreement stating the terms and specifications for the improvement of Reservoir Road. No appeals were taken from the commission’s decision.
Pursuant to General Statutes § 12-119,
The plaintiff contends that the trial court incorrectly focused on §§ 8-25 (a) and 8-26c, and that the decisive authority is § 3.3.3 of the Killingworth planning and zoning regulations (1988). This regulation, adopted pursuant to § 8-25,
In reaching this decision, we confine ourselves to the facts of this case. We do not decide the date upon which a property becomes taxable as a subdivision if the approval has been appealed, or if conditions imposed upon an approval have not been fully satisfied before the assessment date. Furthermore, we do not reach the question of the defendant’s valuation of the plaintiff’s property. See footnote 9.
In reviewing a statute, our objective is to discern and effectuate the legislature’s apparent intent. State v. Blasko, 202 Conn. 541, 553, 522 A.2d 753 (1987). We look first to the language of the statute; Rhodes v. Hartford, 201 Conn. 89, 93, 513 A.2d 124 (1986); which must be read in the context of the underlying statutory scheme. Danbury v. International Assn. of Firefighters, Local 801, 221 Conn. 244, 250, 603 A.2d 393 (1992).
In this case, the language of § 8-25 (a), the primary statute regulating the subdivision of land, repeatedly refers to the date of approval rather than the date of recordation. The statute begins with the simple mandate that “[n]o subdivision of land shall be made until a plan for such subdivision has been approved by the commission.” To underscore this condition, the statute then provides penalties for subdividing land without the approval of the commission. Moreover, the filing requirement only arises “upon approval.” Thus, the filing requirement is more of a mechanism for registering the approval than an independent, substantive provision.
Our conclusion in this regard is reinforced by Stratford Arms Co. v. Stratford, 7 Conn. App. 496, 508 A.2d 842 (1986). Although Stratford Arms Co. appears on its face to suggest that the plaintiffs property could not have been assessed as a subdivision until after filing, an analysis of the case’s statutory setting leads to the opposite conclusion. In Stratford Arms Co., the local tax assessor had assessed a property as a condominium rather than an apartment building as of the uniform assessment date of October 1,1981, in anticipation of the property’s impending conversion from an apartment building into a condominium. The property owner filed the declaration of condominium on January 7, 1982. The property owner then appealed from the assessment pursuant to § 12-119. The trial court dismissed the property owner’s appeal, and the Appellate Court reversed. The Appellate Court reasoned that the true and actual value of the property as of October 1, 1981, was as an apartment building and thus it was improper to assess the property as a condominium.
The property in Stratford Arms Co., however, was a condominium not a subdivision, and thus it was regulated by the Condominium Act.
The subdivision statute, to the contrary, states that “any plan not . . . filed or recorded within the prescribed time shall become null and void . . . .” General Statutes § 8-25 (a). This provision signifies a different kind of statutory scheme, because in order for a subdivision plan to become null and void, it must previously have existed. Thus, the condominium assessment in Stratford Arms Co. is unlike the subdivision assessment in the current case. Had the legislature intended the subdivision approval not to take effect until filing, it could have phrased the subdivision statute as it phrased the condominium statute. As the trial court correctly concluded, timely filing of the subdivision map was not a condition precedent to approval, but a condition subsequent which, if it had not been satisfied, would have nullified the previously existing approval.
The trial court’s conclusion also makes economic sense. By the assessment date of October 1,1989, the plaintiff’s property had increased in value. By that time, the commission had granted its approval and the fifteen day deadline for appealing the approval had passed. See
Indeed, the plaintiffs proposed construction of the applicable statutes would permit a property owner to delay the filing of an approved plan until after October 1, solely in order to avoid an increased tax assessment for the following year. We decline to interpret the statutes in a manner that would permit a property owner to circumvent the legislative intent of both the recordation requirement of § 8-25 and the uniform assessment date of General Statutes § 12-62a.
Moreover, contrary to the suggestion of the plaintiff, the fact that a property owner may elect to discontinue the subdivision project within the ninety day filing period does not affect this result. Under § 8-25 (a), failure to file an approved plan for a subdivision within ninety days of approval causes the plan to become null and void—that is, the approval ceases to have any legal effect whatsoever. See Caldwell v. Meskill, 164 Conn. 299, 316, 320 A.2d 788 (1973). Had the plaintiff in this case, after having had the property assessed as a subdivision, encountered difficulties that prevented timely filing, the approval would have been nullified. Nullification would have created the same situation that would have existed had the subdivision never been approved, and would have thereby prevented the defendant from properly assessing the property as a subdivision as of October 1, 1989. In this case, however, the plaintiff avoided nullification by having filed the approved plan within ninety days.
Even if we were to look to the municipal regulation for guidance, the plaintiff’s argument proves too much. Under that argument, many events in the development of a subdivision could plausibly establish it as complete for purposes of taxation. The plaintiff contends that, because § 3.3.3 permitted no work to commence on the property until the plan was filed, but other Killingworth regulations prevented the property from being marketed as a subdivision until certain work had been completed, the property could not have been assessed as a subdivision until after filing. The plaintiff also contends that in addition to the filing requirement of § 8-25, the Killingworth regulations pertaining to sub
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
The plaintiff appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate Court, and we transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to Practice Book § 4023 and General Statutes § 51-199 (c).
In addition to the named defendant, the town of Killingworth and Ruth Patrick, tax collector for the town of Killingworth, are also defendants.
General Statutes (Rev. to 1991) § 8-25 provides in pertinent part: “subdivision of land, (a) No subdivision of land shall be made until a plan for such subdivision has been approved by the commission. Any person, firm or corporation making any subdivision of land without the approval of the commission shall be fined not more than five hundred dollars for each lot sold or offered for sale or so subdivided. Any plan for subdivision shall, upon approval, or when taken as approved by reason of the failure of the commission to act, be filed or recorded by the applicant in the office of the town clerk within ninety days of the date such plan is delivered to the applicant, but, if it is a plan for subdivision wholly or partially within a district, it shall be filed in the offices of both the district clerk and the town clerk, and any plan not so filed or recorded within the prescribed time shall become null and void, except that the commission may extend the time for such filing for two additional periods of ninety days and the plan shall remain valid until the expiration of such extended time. All such plans shall be delivered to the applicant for filing or recording promptly after the time for taking an appeal from the action of the commission has elapsed, and in the event of an appeal, promptly upon the termination of such appeal by dismissal, withdrawal or judgment in favor of the applicant. No such plan shall be recorded or filed by the town clerk or district clerk or other officer authorized to record or file plans until its approval has been endorsed thereon by the chairman or secretary of the commission, and the filing or recording of a subdivision plan without such approval shall be void. . . .”
This statute has since been amended. Rather than filing the plan within ninety days of delivery, the applicant must now file the plan within ninety days of the “expiration of the appeal period under section 8-8, or in the case of an appeal, within ninety days of the termination of such appeal by dismissal, withdrawal or judgment in favor of the applicant.” Public Acts 1993, No. 93-29. This amendment, however, does not affect the current appeal.
General Statutes (Rev. to 1991) § 8-26c provides in pertinent part: “subdivision TO BE COMPLETED WITHIN FIVE YEARS OF APPROVAL OF PLAN.
This statute has also been amended in ways that do not affect the current appeal. See Public Acts 1993, No. 93-19, § 2.
The plaintiff’s property was approved as a resubdivision rather than as a subdivision, apparently because the plaintiff’s application sought to effect a change in an existing subdivision known as Blueberry Hills Subdivision. The trial court and the parties, however, have treated the case as involving the approval of a subdivision, and we, therefore, refer to the property as a subdivision.
The defendant raises, as an alternative ground of affirmance, the question of whether the tax assessor should have the discretion to determine facts, such as the existence of a subdivision, provided that the determination is consistent with local ordinances and state statutes. Because we affirm the judgment of the trial court, we do not reach this issue.
General Statutes § 8-8 (b) provides in pertinent part: “[A]ny person aggrieved by any decision of a board may take an appeal to the superior court . . . within fifteen days from the date that notice of the decision was published . . . .”
General Statutes § 12-62a provides in pertinent part: “uniform assessment date and rate. ... (a) Each municipality . . . shall establish a uniform assessment date of October first, commencing not later than October 1, 1978, for the assessment of all property other than motor vehicles if
General Statutes § 12-119 provides in pertinent part: “remedy when property WRONGFULLY assessed. When it is claimed that ... a tax laid on property was computed on an assessment which, under all the circumstances, was manifestly excessive and could not have been arrived at except by disregarding the provisions of the statutes for determining the valuation of such property, the owner thereof . . . may, in addition to the other remedies provided by law, make application for relief to the superior court for the judicial district in which such town or city is situated.”
The plaintiffs appeal originally included two issues: (1) whether the subdivision was complete for purposes of municipal taxation before the assessment date of October 1, 1989; and (2) whether the assessed value of the property was manifestly excessive. The parties agreed to bifurcate the issues for the appeal to the superior court. The trial court ruled against the plaintiff on the first issue and the plaintiff did not press the issue of valuation. Thus, the trial court was not required to decide whether the defendant’s valuation of the property was correct. By not pressing the second issue, the plaintiff waived the right to challenge the defendant’s valuation.
General Statutes § 8-25 provides in pertinent part: “subdivision of land, (a) . . . . Before exercising the powers granted in this section, the commission shall adopt regulations covering the subdivision of land. ...”
In this regulation, “work” has the same meaning it has in General Statutes § 8-26c (b). Killingworth Subdivision Regs. (1988 Amend.) § 2. Section 8-26c (b) provides in pertinent part: “ ‘Work’ for purposes of this section means all physical improvements required by the approved plan, other than the staking out of lots, and includes but is not limited to the construction of roads, storm drainage facilities and water and sewer lines, the setting aside of open space and recreation areas, installation of telephone and electric services, planting of trees or other landscaping, and installation of retaining walls or other structures.”
Section 3.3.2 of the Killingworth subdivision regulations (1988) provides: “occupancy of lots or parts. No building upon any lot or part of a tract or parcel of land constituting the area of an approved subdivision plan shall be occupied, and no Certificate of Occupancy shall be issued therefor, unless such lot or part has frontage of at least one hundred fifty (150) feet upon, or, in the case of interior lots, an owned way or easement of access at least twenty five (25) feet in width to, either: (a) a public road or (b) a subdivision road for which all work has been performed, completed and given preliminary approval pursuant to Section 8 of these Regulations.”
Section 3.3.4 of the Killingworth subdivision regulations (1988) provides: “open space dedication. No lot or part of a tract or parcel of land constituting the area of an approved subdivision shall be sold, or offered for sale, or used, or offered for use, for building development until all proposed or required areas therein for open space purposes have been fully dedicated by a method prescribed in Section 7.7 of these Regulations.”
Section 7.7 of the Killingworth subdivision regulations (1988) provides that any subdivision exceeding twenty acres shall dedicate no less than 15 percent of the subdivision area to open space. The subdivision in this case exceeds twenty acres.
By amending General Statutes § 8-25 (a) in 1993; see footnote 3; the legislature intended to link the date of filing more closely to the date of approval. In the hearings on the proposed amendment, John Pagini, director of planning and community development for the town of Enfield, stated: “A flaw in the current statutes results in no definitive linkage between the subdivision approval date and the filing of subdivision plans. Consequently, the filing of maps might occur at any time during an indefinite
Chapter 825 of the General Statutes, §§ 47-68a through 47-90c, entitled the “Condominium Act,” governs condominiums created prior to January 1, 1984. See General Statutes §§ 47-214 and 47-90c.