On or about January 5, 1996, the plaintiff filed an application with the commission seeking a one-lot subdivision of land located off Route 320 in Willington, Connecticut (subject property) and a waiver of the lot-size requirements of the Subdivision Regulations of the Town of Willington (regulations). (Return of Record [ROR], Items 1, 18.) The commission advertised the application for a public hearing to be held on April 16, 1996. (ROR, Item 8.) On April 16, 1996 the hearing was continued CT Page 11607 to May 7, 1996, at which time the hearing was held and closed. (ROR, Item 14, p. 7)
On May 21, 1996, after discussion, the commission first denied the plaintiff's request for a waiver of the lot-size requirements. The denial of the waiver was based upon the plaintiff's failure to meet the five requirements of Chapter X of the regulations. (ROR, Items 14, 17.) Specifically, the commission found that the plaintiff failed to meet the requirements of sections (a), (c) and (d). (ROR, Item 14.) To qualify for a waiver, section (a) requires that conditions exist on the subject property which are not generally applicable to other land in the Town. The commission found that the existence of wetlands soils is not unique to the subject property. Section (c) requires that said conditions were not created by the property owner nor by his/her predecessor(s) in title. The commission found the plaintiff's predecessor in title created the subject property and therefore created the conditions, by creating an undersized lot without subdivision application or approval. Section (d) states that the granting of the modification or waiver be in harmony with the purpose and intent of the regulations. The commission found the granting of this waiver would not be in harmony with these regulations which specifically plan for larger lots since Willington is not served by a sewer system or public water. (ROR, Item 14, p. 7.)
The commission then denied the plaintiff's subdivision application for two reasons. (ROR, Item 14, p. 7.) First, the commission found that the plaintiff had failed to meet the requirements of Chapter VI Section 3 (f) (1) and Chapter VI Section 3 (f) (2). Chapter VI (f) provides in relevant part that "[t]o ensure that all proposed subdivision lots have an adequate area for on-site water and sewerage systems . . . to minimize drainage problems and facilitate ground water recharge . . . (1) the area and width of the proposed lots shall conform to the Willington Zoning Regulations . . . and shall be able to contain an area as nearly rectangular as possible of 40,000 square feet, such rectangle having no sides less than one hundred seventy-five 175 feet . . . with no part of that rectangle to be in soils classified as poorly or very poorly drained . . . (2) the lots shall be as nearly rectangular as is practical . . . ." The second reason for denying the subdivision was because the plaintiff "has not demonstrated that he will `minimize' drainage problems and the Commission is not convinced that there will not be creation of drainage problems through an increase in runoff CT Page 11608 toward abutting properties and the road." (ROR, Item 14, p. 7.)
The commission acted pursuant to General Statutes §
The plaintiff commenced this appeal on June 18, 1996 by service of process on the town clerk of the Town of Willington and the chair of the commission. (Sheriff's Return.) The commission filed the return of record and answer on September 16, 1996. On October 10, 1996 and November 4, 1996, the commission filed a supplemental return of record. On October 16, 1996 the plaintiff filed his brief in support of his appeal and the commission filed its brief on November 15, 1996.
II CT Page 11609
Pleading and proof of aggrievement are prerequisites to a trial court's jurisdiction over an administrative appeal. Jolly,Inc. v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
IV CT Page 11610
As in all administrative appeals, the burden is on the appellant to establish that the actions of the administrative agency were arbitrary in denying the application. Shailer v.Planning Zoning Commission,
The plaintiff claims that since the commission never indicated the plaintiff's subdivision application was lacking in any way or expressed concern about storm water runoff, the record does not support this reason, and thus, the reason fails. The commission argues that the plaintiff has the burden of meeting all the requirements of the regulations, including those pertaining to drainage, the plaintiff's application is void of any information regarding drainage, and the commission does not have the responsibility of informing the plaintiff of missing elements in the application.
"General Statutes §
The plaintiff's application consists of the compliance form with attachments, a map indicating the construction of a residence, a driveway, a well, a septic system, the regrading of a land area close to wetlands, and a request for the waiver. (ROR, Items 1, 3, 18.) The commission was presented with an application which it found to be defective due to the lack of proposal would not create drainage problems due to an increase in runoff and found the plaintiff did not provide any information indicating he would minimize drainage problems. It is the function of the commission to decide within the exercise of its legal discretion whether a particular section of the subdivision regulations apply to a given situation. Krawski v. Planning Zoning Commission,
As mentioned above, the regulations contain several provisions pertaining to drainage and runoff issues. Some of the drainage reports do not have to be provided until the commission CT Page 11612 makes a finding of necessity. See Chapter VI, Section 1 (d), Chapter VI, Section 1 (e) (3), Chapter VI, Section 4. Chapter VI, Section 1 (e) (1), however, requires that the subdivider furnish projections of the increase of storm water runoff created by various storms. This requirement is not conditional. Depending on the projections, an applicant may have to produce data regarding drainage arrangements, such as a storm drainage system, a drainage easement, or a flood plan management system.
The plaintiff argues that since the commission did not raise a concern about storm water runoff during the application process, this reason for denying the application is not supported by the record. The Connecticut Supreme Court has long held that "[t]his excuse is of no avail." Treat v. Town Plan ZoningCommission,
The court concludes that it was within the commission's discretion to apply Chapter VI, Section 1 (e) (1) of the regulations to the plaintiff's application. This regulation required the plaintiff to provide projections of storm water runoff, which the plaintiff failed to provide. The court finds the record supports the commission's decision to deny the subdivision application for the application's failure to conform to the regulations.
B. Meeting Lot-Size Requirements
The commission may enact regulations allowing the commission to waive certain requirements of the regulations where conditions exist which affect a certain property and are not generally applicable to other land in the area. General Statutes §
The record shows that when the subject property was subdivided in 1973, the plaintiff's predecessor did not obtain subdivision approval. When the plaintiff applied for subdivision approval, the subject property did not provide a buildable area of 40,000 square feet, with no side less that 175 feet excluding poorly drained soils, as required by Chapter VI, Section 3 (f) (1) of the regulation.1 One of the criteria for a waiver is that conditions exist that are not generally applicable to other land in the town. (ROR, Item 17, p. 53.) The commission found that the existence of wetlands soil is not unique to the subject property. Another criteria for a waiver is that the condition not be created by the owner or his predecessor in title. (ROR, Item 17, p. 53.) The commission found that the condition was created by the plaintiff's predecessor as he created this undersized lot and did not obtain subdivision approval.
"Upon appeal, the trial court reviews the record before the [commission] to determine whether it has acted fairly or with proper motives or upon valid reasons." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Shailer v. Planning ZoningCommission, supra,
Accordingly, the court dismisses the appeal.
Zarella, J.
