56 Mass. App. Ct. 904 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2002
The board urges us to consider the appeal as if from a final order, under the guidance found in Federman v. Board of Appeals of Marblehead, 35 Mass. App. Ct. 727, 730 (1994), arguing that the remand order gives it no leeway to act in any manner other than to grant the special permit. To the contrary, the
We note with some concern that a dismissal at this juncture burdens the plaintiff landowner with further proceedings and attendant delay of the proposed project. However, the plaintiff could hope for nothing more were we to consider the appeal in its present posture; even an affirmance of the judgment would send the matter back to the board for further proceedings. Moreover, no one raised the issue of delay below. In any event, the parties may not, by agreement or acquiescence, manufacture the requisite finality that warrants appellate review. The landowner’s remedy to avoid delays such as those occasioned by the pendency of this appeal is to move promptly to dismiss it.
Appeal dismissed.
The latter circumstance can leave the board with a Hobson’s choice: to risk contempt if it persists in its contrary interpretation on remand, or lose its opportunity to appeal the interpretation if it grants the permit.