7 A.2d 222 | Conn. | 1939
The facts in this case were agreed upon. On February 11, 1937, the plaintiffs purchased certain premises on Pearl Street in New Britain. From February, 1925, to May, 1937, the property was in a district zoned for industrial uses, among which junk yards are listed, and the surrounding property was generally used for industrial purposes. Before purchasing, the plaintiffs were informed by the building inspector of the city that a junk yard on the premises was allowed under the zoning ordinances of the city. On February 23, 1937, the plaintiffs were granted a permit by the building inspector to erect a fence and on February 27th began the erection of a fence, completing it on March 6th. Before the permit was granted, the plaintiffs had discussed with the inspector the type to be erected and the fence was approved as suitable and satisfactory by the inspector. At a meeting held on the evening of February 23d, the common council of the city of New Britain passed an ordinance appended in the footnote.1 On March 1st, the building inspector *480 notified the plaintiffs that by the terms of the ordinance they were prohibited from using the premises as a junk yard. Thereafter on March 6th, the plaintiffs deposited old metals on the premises and continued to carry on the business of dealing in old metals and other junk. On March 23d the plaintiffs applied to the inspector for a certificate of occupancy to use the yard for the storage of junk; and, on the day following, the inspector refused to grant the certificate, on the ground that the ordinance of February 23d prohibited the use of the property as a junk yard. On May 17th the plaintiffs appealed to the board of adjustment of the city from the refusal of the inspector to grant the certificate of occupancy. On May 19, 1937, the common council amended the zoning ordinances of the city by changing from an industrial zone to a business "B" zone a territory in the city including the plaintiffs' premises. In a business "B" zone a junk yard is not permitted. The parties have stipulated that the plaintiffs would have been entitled to the certificate of occupancy applied for except for the ordinance of February 23d. On July 12, 1937, the board of adjustment dismissed the plaintiffs' appeal from the action of the building inspector in refusing to grant a certificate of occupancy. The plaintiffs then appealed to the Superior Court, and *481 from a judgment in favor of the defendant have appealed to this court.
The charter of the city of New Britain (Special Laws, 1905, No. 411, 46, as amended by Special Laws, 1913, No. 345, 3) provides: "The common council shall have power, under the restrictions otherwise provided in this act, to make proper rules regarding the transaction of the business of the council and its meetings, and shall have power to make such orders and ordinances as it shall see fit in relation to the following subjects within the limits of said city, to wit: Concerning the general welfare of said city and its inhabitants and the property therein; concerning nuisances of all kinds in said city and their summary abatement by any person by it appointed therefor. . . ." The ordinance of February 23d was adopted pursuant to this provision. The plaintiffs make no complaint as to the procedure under which it was adopted. Their claim, in substance, is that the ordinance was not a valid exercise of the police power. The common council was vested with very broad powers. A junk yard, while not a nuisance per se, may become such under certain circumstances and in certain locations. "Even though a business is not a nuisance per se, it is within the police power of the State to declare that `in particular circumstances and in particular localities' a business which is not a nuisance per se `shall be deemed . . . in fact and in law' a nuisance." State v. Hillman,
The provisions of the ordinance are uniform in their application except that existing junk yards were exempt from the requirements concerning distance from street property lines and dwelling houses that junk might be stored. The exemption of existing businesses from a provision of the ordinance in these respects does not render the ordinance invalid as an unreasonable discrimination. The power to adopt zoning regulations like the power to regulate nuisances finds its justification in the police power. Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co.,
In Sammarco v. Boysa,
It does not appear that the plaintiffs ever applied for a license to conduct a junk yard on these premises. It may be that this is because their land, as appears from the deed, was only 89.1 feet in width and 240.5 feet in depth and junk could not have been stored upon such a small property and conform to the requirements of the ordinance. No contention is made that the provisions of the ordinance, requiring the *485
construction of a fence five feet in height and prohibiting the storage of junk within one hundred feet of a street line, fifty feet of adjoining property, and one hundred and fifty feet of a dwelling house, are unreasonable. The obvious purpose of this provision was to require the storage of junk at such distance from adjoining proprietors and the street line, and further to require erection of a fence and limit the height to which the junk could be stored, in order that the business might be carried on without annoyance to adjoining proprietors or the public passing in the street. The effect, of course, was to prohibit the establishment of further junk yards except by those whose property was large enough to conform to the terms of the ordinance. The city might have prohibited the establishment of further junk yards altogether. Instead it prohibited their establishment unless their operations could be carried on so far from the street and adjoining proprietors that the conduct of the business would be innocuous. The plaintiffs have no legal ground of complaint because the dimensions of their land are insufficient to permit them to conform to the requirements. "Every holder of property, however absolute and unqualified may be his title, holds it under the implied liability that his use of it may be so regulated, that it shall not be injurious to the equal enjoyment of others having an equal right to the enjoyment of their property, nor injurious to the rights of the community." Windsor v. Whitney,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.