The plaintiff Bernard McDermott owns and operates a gasoline station at 9 Kimberly Avenue in West Haven. Kimberly Avenue is a heavily traveled main thoroughfare between West Haven and New Haven. McDermott also owns and resides in a house in the general neighborhood. The defendant zoning hoard of appeals, acting under General Statutes § 14-322, granted a certificate of approval to the defendant Mark Granato for the location of a gasoline station at 36-42 Kimberly Avenue, which is across the avenue and about 150 feet from McDermott’s station. The Court of Common Pleas dismissed the plaintiffs’ appeal from the action of the board, and McDermott has appealed from that judgment.
The hoard was acting pursuant to General Statutes §§ 14-321 and 14-322. In determining the suitability of the proposed location for a gasoline station, the board was performing a special statutory
To show that he was aggrieved and therefore entitled to appeal under General Statutes § 14-324, it was not essential for McDermott to prove that his property would be depreciated in value. General Statutes § 14-322 is primarily concerned with factors pertaining to public safety rather than property values.
Esso Standard Oil Co.
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
In addition to the evidence concerning depreciation in the value of his property, McDermott offered evidence that the proposed station would be located on a curve approximately across the avenue from his gasoline station, that the traffic on the avenue is extremely heavy now and that another gasoline station would increase the already existing congestion and create more cross traffic. The court, in determining the issue of aggrievement, should have considered this evidence from the viewpoint not alone of property values but of whether McDermott’s interests would be substantially and materially affected by the board’s finding that the proposed location was suitable and that its use for a gasoline station would not imperil the safety of the public. There is no rule of thumb applicable to every case. Whether a person is aggrieved by the action of an administrative authority must depend, in large part, on the circumstances of the particular case.
Although an appellant may not prove that he is aggrieved solely by reason of the fact that a proposed gasoline station would, in view of competí
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
