The defendants are Donald and Amelia Beardmore, who own a parcel of land in a residential zone in the town of Woodb ridge, and the board of zoning appeals, which granted them a variance, on the ground of practical difficulties and unnecessary hardship, to allow the continued location of their house closer to the street than is permitted under the applicable zoning ordinance. None of the property owners in the vicinity objected, but an appeal from the granting of the variance was taken to the Court of Common Pleas by the members of the zoning commission of the town and by an individual member of the commission who is a taxpayer and lives about five miles from the property. The court concluded that the board did not act illegally in granting the variance, and dismissed the appeal.
We have decided to dispose of this appeal upon a ruling in the court below involving the right of the plaintiffs to maintain an appeal from the board of zoning appeals, since the ruling is decisive of the appeal to this court. The defendants contended in the trial court that the plaintiffs were not aggrieved per
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sons and therefore had no right of appeal. The court ruled that the individual plaintiff had a direct interest in the enforcement and preservation of the zoning ordinances and was therefore entitled to maintain the appeal. The court did not rule as to the status of the zoning commission as an appellant, but it noted that
Rommell
v.
Walsh,
Section 379d of the 1955 Cumulative Supplement to the General Statutes provides for an appeal from the doings of a zoning board of appeals by any person “aggrieved by any decision of said board, or any officer, department, board or bureau of any municipality, charged with the enforcement of any order, requirement or decision of said board.” The plaintiffs here are the zoning commission of the town and an individual who lives five miles from the property involved in the appeal. The individual plaintiff is a resident and taxpayer of the town. No other facts are alleged or found to show him to be aggrieved by the action of the board. The question is whether either the individual plaintiff or the zoning commission is entitled to maintain this appeal.
Section 12 of the zoning ordinance of Woodbridge
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provides specifically that the regulations shall be enforced by the selectmen or their duly authorized agent. They are required to appoint an inspector to be their agent in the enforcement of the zoning provisions. Woodbridge Zoning Ordinance, p. 48 (1954). Section 1 of the zoning ordinance prescribes the duties of the enforcement officer. It is clear that the zoning commission as such has no function in the enforcement of the requirements of the zoning board of appeals and no status under § 379d to appeal a decision of the board. We have recognized that there is a public interest involved in many appeals which should be represented before the court. In most such situations, the board or officer having the responsibility of making the decision is entrusted with the duty of protecting that public interest. Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc., p. 311. Accordingly, we held in
Rommell
v.
Walsh,
This brings us to the question whether the individual plaintiff, who lives five miles from the property involved, may maintain an appeal as an aggrieved person merely because he is a resident and taxpayer of the town. Under the statutes concerning appeals from probate, we have held that it is necessary for an appellant to show that some legally protected interest of his has been adversely affected before he can be held to be aggrieved.
Norton’s Appeal,
In
Beard’s Appeal,
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The essence of the holdings in
Beard’s Appeal,
supra, and the cases which have followed it, is that to be an aggrieved person within the meaning of the statute one must show a pecuniary interest injuriously affected by the action of the zoning board of appeals and that such a showing may be sufficiently made, in a ease where liquor traffic is involved, by proof that one is a taxpayer in the town, in view of the pecuniary effect upon every taxpayer resulting from the incidents of such traffic. Such a distinction recognizes, again, that in liquor traffic there is a possible source of danger to the public which is not inherent in other businesses and that therefore such traffic warrants distinctive and particular treatment.
Schwartz
v.
Kelly,
“It is a fundamental concept of judicial administration . . . that no person is entitled to set the machinery of the courts in operation except to obtain redress for an injury he has suffered or to
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prevent an injury he may suffer, either in an individual or a representative capacity.”
Bassett
v.
Desmond,
*663 In the interest of proper procedure, it should be noted that in any appeal taken pursuant to § 379d the statute requires the appeal to state the reasons upon which it shall have been predicated. Good practice also requires that the appellant allege in his appeal in what respects he is adversely affected by the decision appealed from.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
