This appeal arises from an application to the zoning board of appeals of Hartford for a variance to allow the relocation and expansion of an existing gasoline service station and facilities. The defendant applicant Humble Oil and Refining Company, hereinafter referred to as Humble, is the owner of property at the apex of the intersection of Fairfield and Maple Avenues on which property the station is presently located. The defendant applicants Philip J. and Eleanor McLean own the property which lies between these two avenues adjacent to and immediately north of the Humble station. A nine-room, single-family dwelling house is on their property. The plaintiffs are the owners of the property adjacent to and immediately north of the McLean property and on their lot is a two-family house.
All three properties are in a B residence zone, the *659 service station having become a nonconforming use when zoning was adopted in Hartford. Subsequently, in 1936, pursuant to a variance granted by the board of appeals, new pumps were installed and the old pumps were relocated entirely on the Humble property.
The joint application of Humble and the McLeans to the board of appeals sought a variance of the provisions of the Hartford zoning ordinance to permit a new service station building to be erected on the adjoining McLean property with a relocation of the gasoline pumps on the present Humble property so that the proposed new service station and facilities would, under the requested variance, utilize both properties, with a planted buffer strip between the rear of the relocated service station and the plaintiffs’ property.
After a public hearing, the board, by a three to one vote, granted the application for a variance subject to certain conditions, including the provision for a buffer strip, the erection of a fence, the elimination of an existing entrance and exit and a restriction on the installation of lighting. From the board’s decision the plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, which rendered judgment sustaining the appeal and reversing the board’s decision. The present appeal is from that judgment.
Although the defendants, in their assignments of error, claimed that a substantial number of errors had been committed in the proceedings in the trial court, most of them have not been pursued in their brief and are therefore considered as abandoned.
Dupuis
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
To be entitled to appeal from a decision of the Hartford zoning board of appeals, appellants must prove that they were aggrieved by the decision. Hartford Charter, c. 19, § 12 (1960 as amended); 25 Spec. Laws 87, § 12 (as amended 28 Spec. Laws 843, § 6) (incorporating by reference General Statutes §8-8). They are required to establish that they were aggrieved by showing that they had a specific, personal and legal interest in the subject matter of the decision as distinguished from a general interest such as is the concern of all members of the community and that they were specially and injuriously affected in their property or other legal rights.
Tucker
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
The plaintiffs are the owners and occupants of a well-maintained private residence in a residential zone. If the proposed variance is permitted, the adjoining lot will be occupied not by another resi
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dence as is now the situation but by a large gasoline service station with the noise, traffic, fumes and lights concomitant with such a business. Their premises are directly affected by the requested variance, and they are aggrieved persons as that term is used in General Statutes § 8-8 and the Hartford charter.
Heady
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
As this court had occasion to note in
Nielsen
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
Section 38-27 (3) of the zoning ordinance, which also authorizes the board to grant variances, limits: the authority of the board to situations “where, by reasons of exceptional shape, exceptional topography or other exceptional situations or conditions, unusual difficulty or unreasonable hardship would result to the owners of such property, provided that relief can be granted without impairment to the integrity of this chapter and without substantial detriment to the public welfare.”
This court has many times held that the power to grant variances must be exercised sparingly and
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only in exceptional and unusual instances.
Makar
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
“Upon appeal, the trial court reviews the record before the board to determine whether it has acted fairly or with proper motives or upon valid reasons. . . . We, in turn, review the action of the trial court.”
Willard
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
In this circumstance, the remaining assignments of error do not require discussion.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
