1 Conn. App. 285 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1983
This is an appeal1 from a judgment of the trial court dismissing the plaintiff's appeal from an action of the defendant, the zoning board of appeals of the Noank fire district (board). We find no error.
The plaintiff's property, On which he operates a boat storage business, is located in a village residential district as defined in the fire district zoning ordinance. Boat storage is not a permitted use in that district. On April 22, 1981, the zoning enforcement officer of the board issued, pursuant to General Statutes
On June 22, 1974, the zoning ordinance was amended to rezone the area in which the plaintiff's property is located from industrial to village residential. On September 9, 1974, the plaintiff's predecessor in title, William Leary, received from the board a certificate of nonconformance permitting the continuance of his use of the property in relation to a building to be constructed and designated as a service and storage building for a boat rental business. That certificate referred to a site plan filed by Leary showing the building together with lined spaces On the ground carrying no designation as to their intended use. Under the zoning ordinance the building was required to be constructed within two years of the certificate. That time limitation passed and, in a predecessor case involving Leary and this very property, the Supreme Court held that the board was without power to grant Leary an extension of time. See Farrington v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
The trial court concluded that the record supported the board's action. Specifically, the court concluded that the record supported a finding by the board that the property had not been used for outside boat storage *288
when the zoning ordinance was amended, and that the record supported a finding by the board that if there had been such use it had been abandoned. The court also concluded that Helbig v. Zoning Commission,
In Helbig v. Zoning Commission, supra, the Supreme Court held 13.7 of the Noank fire district zoning ordinance unconstitutional because it failed to satisfy the constitutional requirement of ascertainable standards. Id., 315. That section provided the only mechanism in the ordinance for the determination of whether a particular use of property was a valid nonconforming use. It required owners of nonconforming uses existing as of the date of the enactment of the zoning ordinance to submit to the zoning commission a plan of their property, and it authorizes the commission to determine, On the basis of that plan "along with sufficient proof as the Zoning Commission may require to prove the existence of a nonconforming use . . ." whether a valid nonconforming use existed. The Supreme Court held that the quoted language was constitutionally imprecise and, thus, the court "remove[d] from the Noank fire district zoning regulations the only procedure under those regulations for `determining' what constituted a valid nonconforming use." Id., 319. Helbig was decided On August 18, 1981, the day before the hearing in this case On the plaintiff's appeal to the board, and less than thirty days before the board's decision denying the plaintiff's appeal. *289
We agree with the plaintiff that, if the record demonstrated that the board acted here solely on the basis of the unconstitutional procedure under 13.7 of the zoning ordinance, Helbig would require that the action of the board be reversed. Here, however, the trial court concluded from the record before it that the board, in addition to finding that the plaintiff's business was not a valid nonconforming use, found that the plaintiff had abandoned any such nonconforming use.2 Helbig did not involve the issue of abandonment. Id., 311 n. 19. Moreover, our examination of the zoning ordinance indicates that the constitutionally defective procedure of 13.7 does not, and did not in this case, come into play in the board's determination of whether a nonconforming use has been abandoned.
Section 13.6.1 of the ordinance provides that any non-conforming use which has been abandoned shall not be reestablished. Section 13.6.2 defines abandonment as "the voluntary discontinuance of a use, when accompanied by an intent not to re-establish such use." This definition is consistent with the definition of abandonment by the Supreme Court requiring "an intention on the part of the owner to relinquish permanently the nonconforming use." Blum v. Lisbon Leasing Corporation,
Where it appears from the record that the action of a zoning authority rested on more than one ground, the authority's action must be sustained so long as the record supports at least one of the grounds. See Burnham v. Planning Zoning Commission,
This conclusion also renders it unnecessary for us to address the plaintiff's remaining ground of appeal, namely, that the record required the board to find a valid nonconforming use.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.