58 Mass. App. Ct. 479 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2003
The plaintiff, Deborah Burnham (Burnham), operates a business from her home. The business, Designed for You, employed Burnham, her husband, and one full-time employee and one part-time employee, both of whom were not residents of the home. The alternate building inspector for the town of Hadley cited her pursuant to the town’s by-laws and
First, Burnham claims that the board violated G. L. c. 40A, § 15,
1. Constructive approval. Burnham challenged the “cease and desist” order to the board on October 15, 1997. Eighty-four days later (within the one hundred day period), the board voted to deny the plaintiff’s appeal. However, it did not file its decision with the town clerk until January 29, 1998, eleven days after the one hundred day period ended. The question put is whether the 1987 version of G. L. c. 40A, § 15, is to be read as requiring a board of appeals to “act” (i.e., decide or vote on an application for zoning relief) and file its final written decision with the town clerk within the same one hundred day period in order to avoid constructively granting the zoning relief requested, or whether the fourteen day period commences after expiration of the one hundred day period in which the board must act, as was held in O’Kane v. Board of Appeals of Hing-
The plaintiff suggests, as she did in the Superior Court, that the O’Kane analysis did not survive the 1987 amendment of § 15. By St. 1987, c. 498, § 3, the Legislature rewrote the section. It extended the period in which the board must act from seventy-five days to the present one hundred days and added a new requirement that within fourteen days after expiration of the one hundred day period, the applicant or petitioner must provide written notice of the constructive grant to the town clerk and all parties in interest, also informing them of their right to seek judicial review of it pursuant to G. L. c. 40A, § 17, by filing a notice of appeal to the court within twenty days of receipt of the notice.
Other than these two changes, the language of § 15 remained the same. As before, the board is required to make its decision within the prescribed period; and the failure to do that (“[fjailure by the board to act”) results in a constructive grant. As before, the board is to render its written decision and file it with the town clerk “within fourteen days” without specification when that period commences.
Of significance is the failure to bring § 15 into line with the zoning act’s analogous provision which requires a town permit granting authority “to take final action [i.e., decide and file a decision] within . . . ninety days” (emphasis supplied) after the conclusion of the public hearing or hearings on a special permit application to avoid constructively granting the application.
The Legislature did not conform § 15 with the “finality” requirements contained in the analogous provision. Rather, it chose to retain § 15’s seeming two-step process for handling zoning applications: first, the board must decide (“act”); then, second, it must reduce its decision to final written form and file it with the town clerk. “Finality” provisions that appear in some sections should not be implied or read into another section where they do not appear.
If, as the plaintiff suggests, amended § 15 requires the board both to decide and to file within the one hundred day period, there would be no reason for the Legislature to have included the additional proviso that the board must file “within fourteen days,” where that is merely directory according to the Zucker-man case, and where the board would not even get fourteen days to file its decision if it had acted or decided any time after the eighty-sixth day of the one hundred day period.
2. The town by-law. The home occupation issue is not as easily resolved. The Superior Court judge tracked the factual findings of the board, which essentially are not in dispute. The plaintiff began applying her own floral designs to premanufac-tured clothing in 1985. What originated as a one-person craft operation became a successful cottage industry. By 1997, the business sold approximately 5,000 miscellaneous items of hand-painted shirts, sweatshirts, and sweaters on an annual basis. Her husband and two other employees, one full-time and the other part-time, worked for her. Most of the actual work was done within a large room added to the residence in 1991 as a “family room.” She maintained a separate telephone line for the business. Marketing was conducted by Internet mail order, at various craft fairs, and in two retail stores. The plaintiff used a van parked in the family garage for business purposes, one employee parked in the plaintiff’s driveway, and delivery trucks came once per day during the busy season.
The pertinent part of the town by-law governing uses and accessory uses in residential districts provides as follows:
“Section III. Use Regulations
“Except as provided in Section V-A-l hereof, no building, structure or land, or part thereof shall be used for any purpose or in any manner other than for one or more of the uses hereinafter set forth as permitted in the district in which such building, structure or land is located, or set forth as permissible by special permit in said district and so authorized.
“III-A. Residence Districts
“1. Permitted Use
*484 “a. Detached one-family dwelling
(6
“d. Accessory use customarily incidental to a permitted main use on the same premises, including but not limited to the following:
“(1) Use of a room or rooms in a dwelling for customary home occupations, such as dressmaking, candy-making or for the practice, by a resident, of a recognized profession
“(2) Use of premises or building thereon in connection with his trade by a resident carpenter, electrician, painter, plumber, or other artisan, provided that no manufacturing or business requiring substantially continuous employment be carried on.”
The ultimate question is whether the plaintiff has shown that her business use is “accessory” and “customarily incidental” to the residential use. See, e.g., Harvard v. Maxant, 360 Mass. 432, 437-440 (1971); Cunha v. New Bedford, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 407, 411-412 (1999). See also 2 Ziegler, Rathkopf’s Zoning and Planning § 33:7, at 33-19 (2001):
“The use of a building as a residence necessarily involves, to a greater or lesser degree, some business activity. An attorney may discuss legal matters with a visiting friend or client, a salesman may compute his commissions or plan his forthcoming calls within the confines of his home, an engineer or architect may draw plans, or a business man may go over his accounts. These quasi-business uses are permissible as long as the type and magnitude of the business uses are such as to render them incidental to the primary residential use. When, however, they attain such magnitude as no longer to be incidental, they lose their status as an accessory use. In other words, the tail cannot wag the dog and the work cannot be conducted in such a fashion that it is of equal importance to the use of the buildings as a residence.”
Judgment affirmed.
The pertinent part of G. L. c. 40A, § 15, reads:
“The decision of the board shall be made within one hundred days after the date of the filing of an appeal. . . . Failure by the board to act within said one hundred days. . . shall be deemed to be the grant of the appeal. . . . The petitioner who seeks such approval by reason of the failure of the board to act within the time prescribed shall notify the city or town clerk, in writing, within fourteen days from the expiration of said one hundred days. . . . The board shall cause to be made a detailed record of its proceedings, . . . setting forth clearly the reason for its decision . . . copies of all of which shall be filed within fourteen days in the office of the city or town clerk.”
Zuckerman v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Greenfield, 394 Mass. at 666 (Zuckerman), held that it was merely directory, not mandatory, for the board to file its written decision within fourteen days of rendering its decision. There was no need in Zuckerman for the court to decide whether an outer time limit (i.e., the seventy-five day period prescribed by the previous version of § 15 in which the board must act, plus fourteen days thereafter) would apply because the board acted and filed its decision within the seventy-five day period, even though it did not file its decision within fourteen days of rendering its decision. Id. at 667.
The plaintiff argues that this interpretation of the law conflicts with the statute’s provision that the “petitioner who seeks approval by reason of the failure of the board to act within the time prescribed shall notify the city or town clerk, in writing, within fourteen days from the expiration of said one hundred days ....’’ G. L. c. 40, § 15. This language leaves open the question of what happens if the board acts within one hundred days but then fails to file its decision within the fourteen days provided by the statute. Under the reasoning of Capone v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Fitchburg, 389 Mass. 617, 624-625 (1983), this results in a constructive grant. To the extent that this hypothetical situation conflicts with the statute, we decline to reach the issue, as it is not presented on the facts before us.