150 Conn. 696 | Conn. | 1962
The zoning ordinance of the city of Meriden authorizes the zoning board of appeals to grant special exceptions permitting professional offices in single-family residential districts when certain requirements are satisfied. Meriden Zoning Ordinance, arts. 3 (B), (C), 11 (A) (7) (1959). The board granted a special exception to the defendant Stephen L. Lirot to permit him to establish his office for the practice of medicine in his residence at 8 Lydale Place, in a single-family R-2 district. The plaintiffs, four resident property owners in the neighborhood, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, which dismissed the appeal because the plaintiffs failed to sustain their burden of proving that one of them, at least, was aggrieved by the action of the board. The plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment rendered for the defendants.
The named plaintiff resides in a house directly across the street from Dr. Lirot’s property. She neither appeared in court to testify nor presented any evidence that she was specially and injuriously affected in her property or other legal rights by the action of the board. See London v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 149 Conn. 282, 284, 179 A.2d 614; Tyler v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 145 Conn. 655, 662, 145 A.2d 832. The one plaintiff who actually
There is no error.