19 Mass. App. Ct. 125 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1984
Fourteen plaintiffs, taxpayers in the town of Andover, commenced this “ten taxable inhabitants” action (G. L. c. 40, § 53) against town defendants (the town and town officials) and private defendants (a corporation, a limited partnership, and an individual) seeking to enjoin the defendants from violating certain provisions of State law in the course of carrying out a “sale/lease back” transaction involving the rehabilitation of old town-owned buildings. Declaratory relief was also sought. The questioned conduct had been completed
After study, Andover through regular procedures decided to use the sale/lease back contractual medium in order to accomplish the rehabilitation of the east and west wings of the East Union Junior High School. This required enabling legislation since the plan might otherwise offend against certain statutes circumscribing municipal powers. At Andover’s request the Legislature passed a special act, St. 1982, c. 530, effective December 15, 1982, directed specifically to the plan for the Andover school buildings and lifting the statutory restrictions set out in G. L. c. 40, § 4 (power to contract), § 15 (abandonment of land), § 15A (transfer of land), and in c. 44, § 31 (incurring liability in excess of appropriations). On January 3, 1983, Andover contracted on a preliminary basis and on July 19,1983, entered final agreements with Andover Office Associates (AOA) by which — in broad outline — Andover deeded the buildings to AOA (with reverter in forty years) and gave a ground lease of the land to AOA (running for forty years), with AOA leasing back the land and the buildings, as agreed to be renovated, to Andover for fifteen years with certain options to a limit of forty years. AOA contracted with Channel Building Co., Inc., for the latter to carry out the work. We pass over the details of the dollar amounts involved in the construction, rent payments, etc. By reason of the provisions of the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, P.L. 97-34, 95 Stat. 176 (see 26 U.S.C. §§ 46-48 [1982]), the sale/lease back arrangement was expected to result in tax advantages to AOA which would be passed on to Andover in substantial measure: the expected “saving” to Andover through the “privatization” of the project, calculated in comparison with the costs of a project in the more conventional style, was estimated to be about $500,000. Work looking toward rehabilitation began in January 1983.
The present plaintiffs brought their action on August 8, 1983, and charged violations by the defendants of G. L. c. 149,
A judge of the Superior Court by order of August 22, 1983, denied the plaintiffs’ application for a preliminary injunction, and their petition for relief from that order was denied by a single justice of this court on September 6, 1983. Upon the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, based on the incontrovertible facts, a judge of the Superior Court entered judgments on the merits for the defendants on October 31, 1983, and December 6, 1983, and it is these judgments that are here on review.
The plaintiffs have taken an unhurried course in bringing on the present appeal. It was heard in this court at a time when the rehabilitation phase of the project could be taken to have been completed. Injunctive relief at this stage would act upon a vacuum. See Reilly v. School Comm. of Boston, 362 Mass. 689, 694-695 (1972); Lowry v. Secretary of the Commonwealth, 372 Mass. 867 (1977); Planning Bd. of Cambridge v. Board of Zoning Appeals of Cambridge, 7 Mass. App. Ct.
We express no opinion on the merits. To assure that the plaintiffs shall be free of any collateral estoppel consequences of the judgments appealed from, we follow the established practice on moot appeals of vacating the judgments with notation that decision is not on the merits, and remanding the action to the Superior Court with directions to dismiss it. See Reilly, 362 Mass. at 696. Costs will not be taxed to either party.
So ordered.