19 Conn. App. 357 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1989
The plaintiffs appeal from the judgment of the trial court dismissing their zoning appeal for lack of aggrievement. The dispositive issue involves the application of the recent Supreme Court case of Caltabiano v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 211 Conn. 662, 560 A.2d 975 (1989), to the facts of this case. We conclude that Caltabiano controls this case, and we find error.
The facts are undisputed. The defendant Woodland Associates, Inc. (Woodland), secured from the named defendant, the zoning commission of the town of Washington (commission), a special permit to construct a condominium complex on Woodland’s forty-nine acre parcel located on the south side of Route 202. The south shoulder of Route 202 consists of a strip of grassy, unpaved land approximately forty-five feet wide. Woodland owns the fee to approximately twenty-seven feet of that shoulder.
The plaintiffs appealed to the trial court from the commission’s action granting a special permit to Woodland. The trial court concluded that the plaintiffs were not statutorily aggrieved as persons “owning land which ... is within a radius of one hundred feet of any portion of the land involved in” the decision of the commission, within the meaning of General Statutes § 8-8 (a),
The plaintiffs claim that the court erred because it misconstrued General Statutes § 8-8 (a). We agree.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded for further proceedings according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The state owns the fee to the paved portion of Route 202, and has a highway easement over the entire shoulder, including Woodland’s twenty-seven feet.
General Statutes § 8-8 (a) provides in pertinent part: “(a) Any person or persons severally or jointly aggrieved by any decision of said [zoning] board [of appeals], or any person owning land which abuts or is within a radius of one hundred feet of any portion of the land involved in any decision of said board . . . may . . . take an appeal to the superior court . . . . ” General Statutes § 8-10 makes this section applicable to appeals from zoning commissions, as in this case.
The plaintiffs do not claim to be abutting owners, because they do not dispute that the state owns the fee to the paved portion of the highway. They also concede that they were not classically aggrieved.
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider the plaintiffs’ alternative claim of error, namely, that as a factual matter the south shoulder of Route 202 was a part of Woodland’s application and site plan, and that the commission’s decision did extend to that area.