129 A.2d 628 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1956
This is an action for a permanent injunction to restrain the defendant town and zoning commission from enforcing an ordinance and a request for a declaratory judgment determining its legal effect.
The plaintiff corporation owns thirty-nine acres of land located on route 5, known as the Berlin Turnpike, at the intersection of Deming Road in the town of Berlin. It is located in a business zone in which a theater is permitted. On April 11, 1956, at a special town meeting the following ordinance was adopted: "Section 1. No out-door or drive-in theater shall be constructed, maintained or operated within the territorial limits of the Town of Berlin. Section 2. This ordinance shall become effective in conformity with the requirements of the General *190 Statutes." It became effective May 15, 1956. The claim is that this ordinance is illegal because it is a zoning ordinance and as such can be adopted only by the zoning commission and furthermore that it is unconstitutional.
The evidence shows that the property upon which the plaintiff intended to construct and maintain an outdoor or drive-in theater consisted of most undesirable land which is of very poor quality. Its water table is high and it adjoins the Mattabassett River which is extremely polluted. Approximately 50 per cent of the town of Berlin is undeveloped farm land. The property in question was used for the manufacture of brick some thirty years ago and is undesirable as residential property. The testimony was clear that the use to which the plaintiff intended to put the land would be an improvement and would be beneficial to the surrounding property. There is business and industrial property in the vicinity of the plaintiff's land, extending a considerable distance in all directions. It is the claim of the defendant that the passage of the ordinance is a proper exercise of the police power.
The police power is a necessary prerogative and attribute of government. All property is held subject to the police power. Meriden v. West MeridenCemetery Assn.,
A municipality may impose reasonable restraint upon property under its exercise of the police power. Such a municipal regulation must be reasonable and have a rational relation to the health, safety, welfare and prosperity of the community. Strain
v. Mims,
The town or municipality does not have the absolute power to restrict a lawful business from its boundaries. It must avoid an arbitrary, unreasonable and discretionary exercise of such power. Miller
v. Town Planning Commission,
In this case, where much of the general area is vacant, is swamp land and unimproved, devoted in large measure to industrial and business uses and available for business and industrial uses, and where there is ample property in the town for residences, to prohibit such a use is unreasonable and arbitrary. People ex rel. Trust Co. v. Skokie,
supra; DeMars v. Zoning Commission,
One of the few reasons advanced to sustain the validity of the ordinance — that the roads in the rear leading into the back of the acreage were narrow and unsuitable for vehicular traffic — does not seem to be a substantial basis upon which to favor this ordinance. The determination of such an issue is one which has been reposed in the state traffic commission by statute. Cum. Sup. 1955, § 1408d. This provides in part as follows: "No person shall build, establish or operate any open air theater having an exit or entrance on, or abutting or adjoining, any trunk line or state aid highway within this state unless the person building, establishing or operating such open air theater shall have procured from the state traffic commission a certificate that the operation of such open air theater will not imperil the safety of the public. In determining the advisability of such certification, the state traffic commission *193 shall include, in its consideration, highway safety, the width and character of the highways affected, the density of traffic thereon and the character of such traffic." The plaintiff, as required by statute, had applied and received permits from the state traffic commission, the state police department and the state water commission prior to April 11, 1956.
The court concludes that the adoption of this ordinance by the town of Berlin was unreasonable, arbitrary and had no firm basis in, or relation to, the public health, morals, safety or public welfare. The issues are found for the plaintiff. A permanent injunction may issue restraining the defendant town and the zoning commission from enforcing the ordinance.