Mills v. City of Manchester, 5848

Decision Date31 January 1969
Docket NumberNo. 5848,5848
PartiesGardner MILLS et al. v. CITY OF MANCHESTER et al.
CourtNew Hampshire Supreme Court

Bois & Laflamme, Maurice P. Bois, Manchester, for plaintiffs.

James A. Manning, Manchester, for defendant Nicholas Labanaris.

J. Francis Roche, City Solicitor, for the city of Manchester, filed no brief.

GRIMES, Justice.

This is an appeal from the granting of a variance allowing Nicholas Labanaris to convert a barn connected to his house, into an eight-room rooming house. After a hearing with a view, the Trial Court made written findings and held that the variance had been improperly granted. The exceptions of the defendants were transferred by Bownes, J.

There was no record of the evidence before the board of adjustment, but the evidence before the Trial Court showed that Mr. Labanaris purchased in August 1964 a large house with connecting barn on Hanover Street in Manchester for $17,000. The property was in a generally rundown condition. The area was zoned as a general residence district in which only one and two family dwellings were permitted with the right to have up to four lodgers or boarders for each family. He was charged with knowledge of the zoning regulation. Hermer v. City of Dover, 106 N.H. 534, 215 A.2d 693.

A new zoning ordinance was adopted in January 1965 under which the area in which the Labanaris property was located was zoned as R-2 with substantially the same restrictions as before but only permitted the renting of not more than two rooms to not more than two people within the second degree of kinship.

When he purchased the property, he had a daughter and a son, both unmarried, who planned to live with him and his wife. After purchase, both married but continued to live with their parents with their spouses. However, the husbands soon went into the military service and the defendant Labanaris and his wife were left alone.

In September 1964, about a month after purchase, Labanaris obtained a permit to repair the porches, roof and some windows. In October he obtained another permit to replace an outside wall and build two inside partitions. In November he was refused a permit to convert the property from a two-family to a three-family dwelling. He continued to have work done on the house, including new plaster walls and interior remodeling. It is agreed that much of this inside work did not require permits.

On August 4, 1965, the building commissioner wrote Labanaris that an inspector had seen a sign advertising rooms on his lawn and informed him of the restriction on renting rooms.

In July 1966 he obtained a permit to replace certain windows and garage doors in the barn and to clapboard one side. Without obtaining a permit, and knowing he had no right to do so, he converted the interior of the barn, which at the time of purchase had been partitioned with a kind of wallboard, into eight rooms and a bath for the purpose of renting the rooms. In response to complaints that Labanaris was renting rooms, the premises were inspected and a notice of violation was given on January 20, 1967. Following this, he applied for the variance which is here in question.

The defendant Labanaris contends that the Trial Court substituted its judgment for that of the board of adjustment as to findings...

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8 cases
  • M & L Homes, Inc. v. Zoning and Planning Com'n of Town of Montville
    • United States
    • Supreme Court of Connecticut
    • May 25, 1982
    ...315, 323, 364 A.2d 603 (1976) (a corporate being, as well as a person, is chargeable with knowledge of the law); Mills v. Manchester, 109 N.H. 293, 295, 249 A.2d 679 (1969) (buyers of property are charged with knowledge of zoning regulations); 7 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d Ed.Rev.......
  • Pugliese v. Town of Northwood Planning Bd.
    • United States
    • Supreme Court of New Hampshire
    • October 12, 1979
    ...acted with knowledge of all the circumstances and that hardship, if any exists, was self-created. As we held in Mills v. Manchester, 109 N.H. 293, 295, 249 A.2d 679, 681 (1969), "if there is any hardship, it is self-created with knowledge of the restrictions. Such action cannot be made 'the......
  • Vannah v. Town of Bedford
    • United States
    • Supreme Court of New Hampshire
    • April 5, 1971
    ...burden of proving that the order of the Board of Adjustment denying the variance was unreasonable or unlawful. Mills v. Manchester, 109 N.H. 293, 295, 249 A.2d 679, 681 (1969). Furthermore all findings of the Board upon all questions of fact 'shall be deemed to be prima facie lawful and rea......
  • Beaudoin v. Rye Beach Village Dist.
    • United States
    • Supreme Court of New Hampshire
    • December 30, 1976
    ...full knowledge of the zoning regulation, and that Mrs. Schlott's petitions for a variance had twice been denied. See Mills v. Manchester, 109 N.H. 293, 249 A.2d 679 (1969). The finding by the trial court that 'there is no other area of the Village District so non-single family residence in ......
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