This is аn appeal from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas dismissing the plaintiff’s appeal from a decision of the defendant commission changing the zonal classification of the plaintiff’s property, which consists of nine-tenths of an acre on the southeast corner of Samp Mortar Drive and Brooksidе Drive in Fairfield, from industrial to residence A. The property was the only industrial lot in a large residential section of Fairfield and is the residual piece remaining to the plaintiff after it had subdivided and developed all the surrounding area, where it built approximately 500 one-family houses.
The property is irregularly shaped and is situated in part on the side of a rather steep slope. It is subject to a forty-foot easement which transverses the property lengthwise, рarallel with Samp Mortar Drive, on which the property faces. The easement is owned by the Bridgeport Hydraulic Company, and through it, at a depth of аpproximately three and one-half feet, passes a large water main. The property was at one time the site of a pumping station for the Hydraulic Company and apparently for that reason was classified in the *312 industrial zone when Fairfield adopted zoning regulations in 1925. At the time of the hearing on the application to rezone, a large brick industrial building on the property was used by the plaintiff as a truck and storage terminal for its vehicles and еquipment and, in part, as a teenage center.
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the change of zone from industrial to residence A would causе such a drastic reduction in the value of the premises as to render the action of the commission invalid because it would constitute the taking of the рroperty without just compensation in violation of the applicable provisions of the federal and state constitutions. The plaintiff relies on the rule of such cases as
Suffield Heights Corporation
v.
Town Planning Commission,
In granting the application for the change of zone, the commission listed seven reasons for its action: (1) The change is in accordance with the adopted comprehensive plan of the town of Fairfield. (2) The change will promote the health and general welfare of the community and the neighborhoоd. (3) The change provides for the most appropriate use of the property which will be in accordance with the residential charactеr of the neighborhood and the general area. (4) The residential classification will lessen the traffic confusion in the street. *313 (5) The conditions pertaining tо the original industrial zone classification have substantially changed, and these changes consist of increased residential growth in the area, increаsed traffic movement along the road and the road extension, all of which require that traffic confusion be lessened by the elimination of the industrial clаssification. (6) The residential zone classification will provide for the proper development of the land and maintain property and residential values and prevent the development of the land for industrial purposes, which would seriously reduce the property and residential values of the nеighborhood. (7) The character of the land is peculiarly suitable for residential use.
The reasons given by the commission for the change of zone arе valid, are fully supported by the record;
Andrew C. Petersen, Inc.
v.
Town Plan & Zoning Commission,
The claims of the plaintiff were ably and fully presented at the hearing before the commission. There was testimony which, if believed in its entirety, would indicate that the change of zone would result in a substantial reduction in the value of the property. An expert witness testified for /' the plaintiff that in his opinion the present market value of the land and building was $45,000, the cost оf demolishing the building would amount to $15,000 and the value of the two resulting residence building lots would be $8000; all of this, in his opinion, would result in a loss of market value of the property of $52,000. The president of the plaintiff company testified that if the property were confined to a residence A building use, it would cost $11,500 per lot as raw land and that in such circumstances it would not be economically feasible to build two houses thereon which would have to sell in a $15,000 to $16,000 range.
On the other hand, оn the appeal to the Court of Common Pleas and in this court, the commission emphasized that although there was no evidence of *315 value other than that offered by the plaintiff’s witnesses, that testimony, even if credible, was predicated on an immediate conversion of the property to residential uses, whereas, in fact, the plaintiff could continue its own nonconforming industrial use of the property, although it could not thereafter devote the premises to other permitted industrial uses entirely inappropriate to the large residential community which it had itself constructed in the surrounding area.
There is littlе doubt that the plaintiff will be disadvantaged economically by the change of zone, but the change does not amount to confiscation or deprivе the plaintiff of all reasonable use of his land, as was the case in
Dooley
v.
Town Plan & Zoning Commission,
The trial court concluded from its review of the evidence, its inspection of the premises and our decision in DeForest & Hotchkiss Co. v. Planning & Zoning Commission, supra, that the reasons set forth by thе commission in the minutes of its executive session for allowing this zone change are more than adequate to sustain the commission’s action, that the change of zone was not confiscatory but a reasonable exercise of the police power to regulate the use of property, and accordingly was not arbitrary, illegal or in abuse of its discretion. On the record, this was a conclusion which the court could reasonably and logically reach.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
