270 Mass. 436 | Mass. | 1930
This is a petition for a writ of mandamus brought by the owner of property situated at the corner of Chauncy Street and Garden Street in the city of Cambridge, within the zoning district R-4, against John J. Terry, superintendent of buildings for the city of Cambridge, to compel him to revoke a permit granted to John J. Shine, Inc., intervenor, for the erection of a hotel at the southeast corner of Chauncy Street and Garden Street in the zoning district R-3.
The case was referred to an auditor for a finding of facts. After the auditor’s report was filed, the case was heard by a single justice of this court upon the petition, the answers, and the auditor’s report. The single justice found the facts
In substance, the facts found are as follows: The petitioner and intervenor are the owners respectively of the properties described in the petition. The city of Cambridge adopted a zoning ordinance in 1924 and this ordinance, except as amended from time to time, was in full force and effect as a zoning ordinance on December 13, 1928. The land of the petitioner is in residence district R-4, and the land of the intervenor is in residence district R-3. The division line between the two zones is in the street which separates the petitioner’s land from that of the intervenor. The respond
The facts found further disclose that on December 13, 1928, the intervenor filed an application and plans with the superintendent of buildings for the city of Cambridge, seeking a permit for the erection of a building to be occupied for residence on the intervenor’s property at the corner of Chauncy Street and Garden Street; that the plans filed with the application showed a hall marked "banquet hall” containing six thousand square feet; that a building permit was issued on January 19, 1929, after the department of
The facts found further disclose that the building which has been erected and is occupied as an apartment house and hotel, the hall being unfinished and unoccupied under the stipulation, has a ground floor of twenty-six thousand one hundred and thirty-six square feet. Above the first floor the building is considerably smaller. Of the ground floor space ten thousand seven hundred and sixty-two square feet are unoccupied. Ramps lead from the street to the floor level of this space. The hall is less than twenty-five per cent of the area of the ground floor of the building. “The building is four stories in height, contains forty suites of three rooms each, the suite consisting of a living room with a dining alcove, a chamber, a kitchenette and a bath. In addition to the suites there are sixty-eight hotel rooms .... This building is neither strictly an apartment house nor a hotel, but a combination of both. The building contains a public dining room seating about eighty-six people for the use of the hotel guests or others that may desire to patronize it. The hall in controversy is below the street level and is, as laid out, one hundred and sixteen feet long, forty-eight feet wide and about eighteen feet high. It contains a small stage, about sixteen by ten. . . . The hall will seat at a
On the above facts the petitioner concedes the ordinance permits the erection of a hotel upon the property of the intervenor, but contends that the hall in question, by reason of the fact that it can accommodate one thousand people at a meeting or five hundred at a banquet, gives to the building the character of a “special hall” and that the building is therefore a public building, as that term is defined in G. L. c. 143, § 1, namely, “any building or part thereof used as a public or private institution, schoolhouse, church, theatre, special hall, public hall, miscellaneous hall, place of assemblage or place of public resort.” “Special hall” is defined in G. L. c. 143, § 1, as “a building or part thereof containing an assembly hall with a seating capacity of more than four hundred which may be used for occasional performances for the entertainment of spectators, with the use of scenery under such conditions as the licensing officer shall direct, and for public gatherings.”
The facts found describe a building used in combination both as a hotel and as an apartment. Such a structure is a building which may be erected in a residence district, here R-3, under the provisions of section 10-D of the zoning ordinance. The “banquet hall” so called does not offend the provision of the ordinance that its use as an accessory building would occupy a total floor area of the largest one story of the building of which it is an accessory. Subdivision E of section ten of the zoning ordinance defining public buildings as “Buildings having an assembly hall or
Exceptions overruled.