This appeal again raises the question of the sufficiency of the grounds upon which a local zoning authority may grant a variance in the strict applicatiоn of a municipal zoning ordinance. The defendants Carmela M. and Teresa M. D’Esopo, as owners, and the defendant William P. Keefe, as prospective purchaser, applied to the defendant zoning board of appeals for a variance to permit the location of two doctors’ offices in thе D’Esopos’ one-family residence at 240 Ashley Street in Hartford and for a special exception to allow seven parking spaces in the rear of thе premises. The plaintiffs, owners of a two-family residence in the immediate vicinity, appeared at the public hearing in opposition. The board granted the variance and exception, and the. plaintiffs brought an appeal to the Court of Common Pleas. The present appeal results from a judgment dismissing the appeal in that court. Only that portion of the appeal dealing with the granting of the variance has been pursued.
We have many times declared that it is desirable for the board to state its reasons for granting a variance. If it does not, thе court must search the record to attempt to find some basis for the action taken.
Zieky
v.
Town Plan & Zoning Commission,
The prоperty in the present case is located in a residential zone and had been used for residential purposes by the D’Esopo family for twenty-eight years prior to the application for this variance. The record indicates that the applicants based their request on the grounds that the area in question was dоminated by the Saint Francis Hospital and that doctors’ offices represented the most appropriate use to which the D’Esopo property cоuld be put at the time of the application. The applicants stated that most of the surrounding properties were two-family and three-family houses, while theirs wаs a one-family residence, but they did not indicate any way in which the zoning regulations imposed a particular burden on the latter type of dwelling. It was also mentioned that the frontage of the subject property was only forty feet, but nothing was said concerning the frontage of the other lots in the immediate neighborhood. Therе was no specific assertion that the property could not be used for residential purposes, as it had been for twenty-eight years prior to the application.
On the record, there is nothing which significantly distinguishes the D’Esopo property from other residential property in the same area. When a
The case of
Parsons
v.
Board of Zoning Appeals,
The record in this case fails to demonstrate that a strict application of the ordinance created an unreasonable hardship оr had any adverse effect on the property of the defendant applicants in comparison with other properties in the same general arеa. Without such a showing the applicants would not be entitled to a variance.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to sustаin the appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Section 38-27 (3) of the Hartford zoning ordinance, which both parties have cited as applicable to this ease, authorizes the board to grant variances “where, by reason of exceptional shape, exceptional topography or other exceptional situations or conditions, unusual difficulty or unreasonable hardship would result to the owners of such property .... Before any variance is granted, it shall be shown that special circumstances attach to the property which do not generally apply to other property in the same neighborhood.”
Hartford Charter, c. 19, §§ 6, 7; 25 Speс. Laws 84 § 6, 85 § 7 (as amended, 28 Spec. Laws 843, § 6).
The D’Esopo residence was the second one on this block for which a variance to allow doctors’ offices had been sought and approved.
