228 A.2d 809 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1966
This litigation involves an appeal in two counts from the action of the defendant board of selectmen of the town of Woodstock in granting the defendant Charles Bertrand a certificate of approval of location for a motor vehicle junk yard *32
under § 21-16 of the General Statutes and in granting him, under §
The plaintiffs, aggrieved by the doings of the defendant board, contend that the action of the defendant board was illegal, arbitrary and in abuse of the board's discretion in the following particulars: (a) Neither application specified the locality of the defendant Bertrand's contemplated business; (b) the wife of the defendant Bertrand, an owner of a one-half interest in the so-called Bertrand property in Woodstock, did not join in the application; (c) the statutory time elements with reference to the newspaper notice of the hearing and with reference to the time interval required from the time of the application and the hearing were not adhered to; (d) the board granted the certificate of location without evidence justifying its action.
For reasons which will appear below, the court's attention will be first directed toward the granting of the certificate of location. The question involved is whether the board acted illegally, arbitrarily or in abuse of its discretion in granting the defendant Bertrand the certificate of approval of location.Miller v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
At the beginning of the hearing, a full statement prepared by the defendant Bertrand's attorney was read to the board, taking up systematically each element of the statute, and amplification of this statement was also made by the defendant Bertrand's attorney. This procedure was obviously designed to show that the conditions of the statute had been met in order to satisfy the board that the application should be granted. "Statements of counsel made in open, public hearing, where they are subject to question and contradiction from the opposition, are entitled to such weight and credence as the board deems them worthy to receive." McMahon v.Board of Zoning Appeals,
Opponents of the application throughout the hearing introduced several factors which, while germane to a zoning application, were not pertinent to the board's inquiry under this application. The town counsel, with commendable candor, apprised those present of this. Petrillo v. Board of ZoningAppeals,
Again with reference to the certificate of approval of location, there is nothing in the statute or in law that required the coowner wife to join in the application. Hayden v. Zoning Board ofAppeals, 26 Conn. Sup. 169. Nor is there any requirement in § 21-17 necessitating a description of the location of the property in the application. It might be stated parenthetically, however, that the application gave reasonable notice of the locality, i.e. Rocky Hill Road and Shields Road in Woodstock, *35 and there is no claim that the plaintiffs were unaware of the site involved.
The applicable statute, § 21-17, requires a hearing not less than two nor more than four weeks from the date of the receipt of the application. Newspaper notice of the hearing is required not less than seven days before the date of the hearing. The plaintiffs concede that on June 7, 1966, the defendant Bertrand made his application. It is undisputed that on June 20 a notice of the hearing was published in the Norwich Bulletin and that a hearing was held on June 28, 1966. The plaintiffs, however, contend that by the action of counsel for Bertrand in forwarding to the selectmen a so-called supplemental application on June 23, 1966, the defendant board must have acted at the hearing on this application and not on the original application of June 7. Therefore, they argue the statutory requirements were not met. In the first place, counsel for the town in opening the hearing read the notice that appeared in the Bulletin over the name of the first selectman of the town. The notice refers to the application of Charles Bertrand. Obviously, this notice, published on June 20, 1966, referring to an application by Bertrand, indicates quite clearly that the hearing was to be held with reference to an application of the defendant Bertrand filed previously. The fact that the defendant Bertrand's application of June 7, made by him when he was not represented by an attorney, was later amplified by his attorney did not ipso facto preclude the board from proceeding on the original application and holding a hearing thereon. The so-called amplified application was read into the record and, as stated above, could be considered by the board with the other statements of counsel and given such weight as the board chose to give it. It would be ludicrous to maintain that in publishing a notice of a hearing *36 on June 20, 1966, wherein reference was made to an application of Charles Bertrand, the board called for the hearing on the so-called supplemental application submitted to the board on June 23, 1966.
With reference to the appeal under §
The appeal is dismissed.