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Blevens v. Manchester

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Apr 28, 1961
103 N.H. 284 (N.H. 1961)

Summary

stating that statutes "like RSA 36:19-29 . . . seek to promote the orderly and planned growth of relatively undeveloped areas within a municipality"

Summary of this case from Bussiere v. Roberge

Opinion

No. 4870.

Argued March 7, 1961.

Decided April 28, 1961.

1. Legislation authorizing municipalities to enact ordinances regulating the subdivision of land to promote the orderly and planned growth of relatively undeveloped areas within the municipality is a proper exercise of the police powers.

2. An ordinance enacted pursuant to RSA 36:19-29 regulating the subdivision of undeveloped land is not rendered inapplicable to a particular development by the mere fact that the lot areas as laid out and the facilities servicing them are satisfactory both to the subdivider and prospective purchasers.

3. The subdivision statute (RSA 36:19-29) and an ordinance enacted pursuant thereto requiring a subdivider of land prior to sale to submit a plat of subdivision for approval by the municipal planning board were not retrospective in their application to plaintiffs' property previously subdivided with certain house lots sold without prior planning board approval, where the ordinance applied only to those lots unsold and any conveyed after the ordinance was adopted by the municipality.

4. The fact that a subdivider of land has recorded plans approved under a prior statute, which show contemplated streets or unaccepted streets, or that some lots previously sold are upon accepted streets does not constitute a vested right to be exempt from the operation of a subsequently enacted subdivision statute and ordinance as to future sales.

5. The provisions of the statute relating to subdivision of land (RSA 36:26(a)) that no building permit shall be issued unless the street shall have been accepted or received the status of a public street contemplates streets and highways as defined in RSA 230:1.

6. Although a municipal subdivision ordinance requires a subdivider of land to furnish municipal services to a particular lot in an unimproved block of lots wholly surrounded by unaccepted streets which would be beneficial to other adjacent lots not subject to the subdivision regulation, such requirement subject to any right to relief for practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship (RSA 36:26), is not as a matter of law arbitrary or discriminatory.

7. The subdivision of land statute (RSA 36:19-29) and a municipal ordinance enacted pursuant thereto requiring submission and city planning board approval of a plat of such subdivision and payment for municipal facilities in connection therewith prior to sale of the lots does not require that the subdivider's entire holding be submitted at one time and provides for exceptions and variances to avoid undue hardship or practical difficulty are neither unreasonable nor contrary to public policy.

8. Individual lots acquired by subdivision owner from previous subdivider were not affected by statute and ordinance imposing penalty on persons selling lots within unapproved subdivision (RSA 36:1, subd. VIII).

PETITION, for declaratory judgment (RSA 491:22) seeking a decree of the court that the subdivision ordinance of the city of Manchester adopted October 7, 1958 pursuant to the enabling statute (RSA 36:19-29) does not apply to the plaintiffs' property acquired by a series of purchases between the years 1936 and 1956. The ordinance imposes a penalty on persons selling a lot within a subdivision unless the plan of said subdivision has been approved by the city planning board. The ordinance which incorporates the regulations of the planning board further provides that no plan showing a subdivision will be approved unless the subdivider pays for all street grading and surfacing, curbing, sidewalks, water mains, sewers and other improvements.

Prior to the enactment of the ordinance, all of the land owned by the plaintiffs was subdivided into numbered house lots and such subdivision was approved by the city surveyor or by the city engineer, and plans showing such subdivision were filed in the Hillsborough County registry of deeds. The plaintiffs "have been, since 1946 to 1958, actively engaged in developing their property into a single family residential area. A substantial number of house lots were sold and a substantial number of private homes were built on this property. All sales were made by reference to the publicly recorded plot showing subdivision of the property . . . The Court finds that in the development of the property petitioners have expended substantial sums of money and have devoted a great deal of their own labor."

The plaintiffs excepted to findings of the Court and to the following ruling: "The Court rules that the petitioners have not acquired any vested right to continue development sales without compliance with the ordinance and that they may not proceed with the development without compliance with the ordinance." The plaintiffs' exceptions were reserved and transferred by Griffith, J. Additional facts appear in the opinion.

Emile R. Bussiere (by brief and orally), for the plaintiffs.

J. Francis Roche, city solicitor (by brief and orally), for the defendant.


The power of the State to pass enabling legislation permitting municipal ordinances to regulate the subdivision of land has been sustained generally as a proper exercise of the police power. Anno. 11 A.L.R. 2d 524; Webster, Urban Planning and Municipal Public Policy, ch. 9 (1958); Note, Land Subdivision Control, 65 Harv. L. Rev. 1226 (1952). "Since the subdivision of a large tract of land into a number of small building lots and the development thereof, either for residential or industrial purposes increases the value of the land in the aggregate to the subdivider and at the same time imposes new burdens upon the municipality and, if uncontrolled, upon other elements in the community, the validity of imposing a duty upon the subdivider to comply with reasonable conditions relating to location, site plan, location of and width of roads and sidewalks, the installation of necessary storm drains and sewers, and to restrictions on lot sizes so that the subdivision will conform to the local requirements for the safety, health and general welfare of the subsequent owners of the individual lots therein and of the community has been generally recognized." 2 Rathkopf, The Law of Zoning and Planning, c. 71, s. 9 (1960).

Statutes, like RSA 36:19-29, regulating the subdivision of land seek to promote the orderly and planned growth of relatively undeveloped areas within a municipality. Brous v. Smith, 304 N.Y. 164; Rhyne, Municipal Law ss. 32-60 (1957); Reps, Control of Land Subdivision by Municipal Planning Boards, 40 Cornell L. Q. 258 (1955). Planless growth and haphazard development accentuate municipal problems in the demand for streets, water and sanitary services which have a direct relation to traffic safety and health. 6 Powell, Real Property, s. 866 (1958); Stoneham v. Savelo, (Mass.) 170 N.E.2d 417; State ex rel Jack v. Russell, 162 Ohio St. 281; Petterson v. Naperville, 9 Ill.2d 233. The subdivision of land has a definite economic impact upon the municipality and hence the regulation of subdivision activities has been sustained as a means by which the interests of the public and the general taxpayer may be safeguarded and protected. Since the subdivider of land creates the need for local improvements which are of special benefit to the subdivision, it is considered reasonable that he should bear the cost rather than the municipality and the general taxpayer. Haar, Land-Use Planning, 347-351 (1959); Zastrow v. Brown Deer, 9 Wis.2d 100; Comment, 1961 Wis. L. Rev. 310, 312; Lynbrook v. Cadoo, 252 N.Y. 308, 314.

The plaintiffs' contention that "the police power is not involved" in this litigation cannot be accepted. The fact that the lot areas may be satisfactory to the subdivider and prospective purchasers, or that the streets and drainage are also satisfactory to them does not bar the application of the subdivision statute and the ordinance enacted pursuant to it. Note, An Analysis of Subdivision Control Legislation, 28 Ind. L. J. 544 (1953). "One of the problems that has arisen is that of seeing to it that building lots are not laid out and sold and houses put thereon without some decent minimum of street paving and without some decent safety and health minimum of water and sanitary facilities. We all know that where subdivision of land is unregulated lots are sold without paving, water, drainage, or sanitary facilities, and then later the community feels forced to protect the residents and take over the streets and in some way or other provide for the facilities. One of the ways in which law and legislation are attempting to prevent just such situations is that of requiring paving, water, and drainage facilities to be installed, up to minimum public specifications, as a condition of approval of the plat. By means, therefore, of this city planning approach and technique and these developments in modes of subdivision regulation, and evils of the inharmonious street system, overcongestion of population, and deficiency in paving and sanitation and water facilities are coming to be reduced and prevented." Bettman, City and Regional Planning Papers 74 (1946).

The plaintiffs' basic contention is that the subdivision law and the ordinance enacted pursuant thereto are "retrospective laws" forbidden by N.H. Const., Pt. I, Art. 23rd. The pertinent part of RSA 36:27 reads as follows: "Whoever, being the owner or agent of the owner of any land located within a subdivision, transfers or sells or agrees to sell or negotiates to sell any land by reference to, or exhibition of, or by other use of, a plat of a subdivision, before such plat has been approved by the planning board and recorded or filed in the office of the appropriate register of deeds shall forfeit and pay a penalty of one hundred dollars for each lot or parcel so transferred or sold or agreed or negotiated to be sold . . . ."

The subdivision law and ordinance apply to all of the plaintiffs' lots shown on their recorded maps which are unsold and any conveyed after the subdivision ordinance was approved by the city. This is not a retrospective law. Lake Intervale Homes, Inc. v. Parsippany-Troy Hills, 28 N. J. 423; Opinion of the Justices, 101 N.H. 515; Rochester v. Barcomb, 103 N.H. 247 (decided April 4, 1961); Pepin v. Beaulieu, 102 N.H. 84, 89. It is admitted that most of the petitioners' streets have not been formally accepted by the city of Manchester. See RSA 230:1; Harrington v. Manchester, 76 N.H. 347, 350; Wason v. Nashua, 85 N.H. 192. The provisions of the subdivision law that no building permit shall be issued unless the street "shall have been accepted or opened as or shall otherwise have received the legal status of a public street prior to that time" (RSA 36:26(a)) applies to streets and highways as defined in RSA 230:1. The subdivision law also applies to the layout of highways in subdivisions of the city which have been approved as provided in Laws 1915, c. 326. RSA 36:29. Hence the fact that the plaintiffs have recorded plans approved under a prior statute, which show "paper streets" or unaccepted streets or that some lots previously sold are upon accepted streets give the plaintiffs no vested right to demand that future sales shall be beyond the purview of the subdivision law and ordinance. What may have been an adequate proposed development when the plaintiffs' plan was first recorded may be clearly insufficient to municipal needs today. Mansfield Swett v. West Orange, 120 N. J. L. 145; 1 Yokley, Zoning Law and Practice (2d ed. 1953) s. 116; Johnson, Constitutional Law and Community Planning, 20 Law and Contemporary Problems 199 (1955).

The subdivision ordinance is attacked on the ground it is arbitrary and discriminatory. At the corner of Fairfield Street and Blevens Drive as shown on the plaintiffs' map are four lots, Nos. 145, 219, 232 and 146. The first two are owned by individual owners, the third is admittedly not subject to the subdivision ordinance while the fourth owned by the plaintiffs is subject to the ordinance. These lots are beyond the portion of Fairfield Street which has been accepted by the city, and as shown by the plan, lot 146 is situated in an unimproved block of twelve lots wholly surrounded by unaccepted streets. If the plaintiffs must under the ordinance supply municipal services for that lot, it will in effect be beneficial to the other lots not subject to the subdivision regulation. This is the price of progress in any attempt to improve land development, subject however to any right to relief because of "practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship" as provided by RSA 36:26. It is no different from the effect of zoning generally where certain property may be zoned in one class and a contiguous property in another. The city must have a starting point for any new law or ordinance and it is not discriminatory merely because every lot of land is not regulated in the same degree. Fagin, Regulating the Timing of Urban Development, 20 Law and Contemporary Problems 298 (1955); Reps, Land Subdivision Regulation in Int'l City Managers Ass'n, Local Planning Administration 345-368 (3d ed. 1959). The Trial Court has found that there has been no discrimination against the plaintiffs and the record supports that finding.

It is contended that the subdivision law and ordinance is unreasonable and contrary to public policy. Planning for land use has "become an accepted part of municipal law." Savage, Land Planning and Democratic Purposes, 34 Notre Dame Law. 65, 66 (1958). See 1 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d ed. 1949) s. 1.118. The ordinance contemplates that a plat may be submitted for approval which covers "only a part of the subdivider's entire holding," in which case a sketch of prospective future streets "of the unsubmitted part shall be furnished." A subdivider may thus avoid the expense of improving more land than will be immediately required. Both the statute and the ordinance provide for the granting in proper cases of exceptions, or variances from the literal enforcement of the regulations, to avoid "undue hardship" or "practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship." RSA 36:26. See Webster, Urban Planning Municipal Public Policy, supra, pp. 486, 487. Thus flexibility in applying the regulations to partially developed subdivisions is provided for. Certain lots owned by the plaintiffs were acquired by them as individual lots from a previous subdivider. As to them, the statute appears to be inapplicable. RSA 36:1 VIII.

We conclude that the subdivision law (RSA 36:19-29) and the Manchester ordinance which conforms to this law are valid and constitutional. What was said in 1954 by a unanimous court in Berman v. Parker, 348 U.S. 26, 33 is pertinent to this case: "The concept of public welfare is broad and inclusive . . . The values it represents are spiritual as well as physical, aesthetic as well as monetary. It is within the power of the legislature to determine that the community should be beautiful as well as healthy, spacious as well as clean, well-balanced as well as carefully patrolled."

Exceptions overruled.

All concurred.


Summaries of

Blevens v. Manchester

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Apr 28, 1961
103 N.H. 284 (N.H. 1961)

stating that statutes "like RSA 36:19-29 . . . seek to promote the orderly and planned growth of relatively undeveloped areas within a municipality"

Summary of this case from Bussiere v. Roberge

In Blevens v. Manchester, 103 N.H. 284, 170 A.2d 121 (1961), we upheld the constitutionality of the subdivision controls enabling legislation (RSA 36:19-29) as a valid exercise of a State's police powers.

Summary of this case from Hancock v. Concord
Case details for

Blevens v. Manchester

Case Details

Full title:CLARENCE G. BLEVENS a. v. MANCHESTER

Court:Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough

Date published: Apr 28, 1961

Citations

103 N.H. 284 (N.H. 1961)
170 A.2d 121

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