On June 1, 1959, the court of common council of Meriden, acting as the zoning commission, voted to change properties of the defendants Betsey C. Mills and Ruby J. Warren, hereinafter called the defendants, from a multifamily R-III district to a commercial I district. See Meriden Zoning Ordinance, art. 2 (1959). The plaintiffs, nearby property owners, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, which set aside the action of the council. The defendants have appealed.
The area covered by the change of zone is at the intersection of East Main Street and Parker Avenue North. East Main Street, which is route 6A, runs, generally, in an easterly and westerly direction. It is the principal artery of traffic between Meriden and Middletown and is heavily traveled. It is intersected by Parker Avenue North and, to the south, by Parker Avenue. At this intersection, East Main Street is forty-two feet wide, Parker Avenue North is thirty feet wide, and Parker Avenue is sixty-seven feet wide and slightly offset to the east from Parker Avenue North. One block to the west, East Main Street intersects Broad Street, a main highway which runs northerly and southerly. The intersection of Broad Street and East Main Street was, at one time, considered tо be the center of Meriden. It is an old center of commercial activity. A number of business establishments are located on both *99 sides of East Main Street between Broad Street and Parker Avеnue. Property on the west side of Parker Avenue is also used for business purposes.
The Mills property, consisting of about five acres of land, is located at the northeast corner of Eаst Main Street and Parker Avenue North. It has a frontage of about 323 feet on East Main Street, a frontage of about 310 feet on Parker Avenue North, and a depth which varies to a maximum of aрproximately 734 feet. It has a frontage, too, of 50.78 feet near the middle of the block on Liberty Street, which runs parallel to, and one block north of, East Main Street. A one-family dwelling house is situated on the property. The Warren property has a frontage of 125 feet on Parker Avenue North and a depth of 133.82 feet. It is bounded southerly and easterly by the Mills land.
Zoning originally became effective in Meriden in 1927.
Leveille
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
The Mills property was the subject of an earlier appeal to this court in
Slagle
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
In April, 1959, within four months after the adoption of the new zoning ordinance, the defendants filed a petition for a change of zone to commercial I. This change would permit the construction of a commercial building, to be used for retail stores and offices. There would be space for off-street parking. In their petition, among other reasons for the change the defendants gave the following: “The exceptional shape and size and topography of said property render said property unusable for residential purposes. This makes the property unique in this area аnd due to this uniqueness unnecessary hardship would result to the petitioners if said Zoning Ordinance is not changed.” The petition was referred to a committee of the council. After holding a public *101 hearing, the committee voted to recommend favorable action on the petition. The council voted to amend the zoning ordinance as requested by the defendants, giving the following reason for its action. “This change of zone is a natural expansion, a firm step in the direction of progress, it is not spot zoning, as we cannot consider the street, Parker Avenue North as а natural barrier. The property is practically abutting on large commercial ventures, a supermarket, gas stations with a new commercial building in the progress of construction near by, thе north end of Parker Avenue (South) on the west side is commercial with a gas station and a large automobile Sales and Service station located there.” The plaintiffs, aggrieved proрerty owners in the area, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, claiming that the council acted illegally, arbitrarily and in abuse of its discretion. In the trial court, the case was dеcided on the record before the council, supplemented by a stipulation as to certain facts agreed on by the parties. The court concluded that the change cоnstituted spot zoning and was invalid.
One of the essential purposes of zoning regulation is to stabilize property uses.
Strain
v.
Mims,
Spot zoning has been defined as
“a
provision in a zoning plan or a modification in such a plan, which affects only the use of a particular piece of property or a small group of adjoining prоperties and is not related to the general plan for the community as a whole.” Maltbie, “The Legal Background of Zoning,” 22 Conn. B.J., pp. 2, 5. Zoning authorities can exercise only such power as has been validly conferred upon them by the General Assembly. When a zoning commission makes a change of zone, the commission must conform to the provisions of § 8-2 of the General Statutes.
Woodford
v.
Zoning Commission,
*103
In this case, the action of the council constituted .spot zoning. It affected only two pieces of property, and they adjoined each other. It did not promote or carry out the purposes of the comprehensive plan.
Guerriero
v.
Galasso,
While the change in zone might inure to the profit or advantage of the individual applicants, there was nothing to show that the interests of thе community as a whole or the purposes of the comprehensive plan were advanced by the action of the council. These considerations are paramount.
Levinsky
v.
Zoning Commission,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
