This appeal involves the legality, as a nonconforming use under the zoning by-law of the town of Falmouth, of the current operation of a resort facility located in that town. The facility is owned by Cape Resort Hotels, Inc. (Cape Resort), and is known as the “Rrothers Four.” The appeal consists of two actions which were consolidated for trial. In the first action, Cape Resort seeks a declaratory judgment establishing its right to serve liquor without food or with hors d’oeuvres only and to offer live entertainment in a certain section of its main building. In the second action, twelve residents of Falmouth and an association of residential property owners from the Falmouth Heights area of Falmouth where the Rrothers Four is located (hereinafter collectively known as “the association”) seek to
enjoin
the present operation of the main building and two related buildings on the ground that the use of these buildings is in violation of relevant sections of the zoning by-law. The plaintiffs in the second action also seek an order directing the building inspector of Falmouth to enforce the zoning
A judge of the Superior Court heard oral testimony, reviewed written evidence, and took a view of the hotel premises. He made extensive findings of fact on the past and present operation of the buildings owned by Cape Resort. He then held that (1) the current use of the ground floor facilities of the Brothers Four was an impermissible extension or change of a prior nonconforming use, (2) the use made of that portion of the ground floor known as the “frolic room” was nevertheless protected by the provisions of G. L. c. 40A, § 7 (3), the use of a building called the “lodge” was a lawful prior nonconforming use, and (4) a building known as the “annex” could lawfully be used to house employees of the hotel but not to lodge hotel guests. The judge found both mandamus and injunctive relief to be appropriate. Both Cape Resort and the association have appealed. We
We review the facts concerning the main building of Cape Resort’s facility (hereinafter “the hotel”) as found by the judge. Facts relative to the buildings known as the “lodge” and the “annex” will be outlined in our discussion of the legal issues raised by their use.
The hotel was built before the turn of the century and was known, until relatively recently, as the “Terrace Gables.” It is located in the Falmouth Heights section of Falmouth. Falmouth Heights was originally a neighborhood of mostly single-family summer homes with a smattering of summer hotels. While there are still many private homes, the area now includes a significant number of guest houses and rental properties, some of which have been rented in recent years to groups of unrelated persons. From 1926, when zoning was adopted in Falmouth, until the mid-1950’s the Terrace Gables functioned as a traditional, full-service summer resort hotel for a mostly middle-aged and older clientele. Guests were met at the train or bus station by hotel personnel and stayed at the hotel for periods ranging from a week to the entire season. The ground-floor layout included a dining room, kitchen, lobby and reading area, sitting and television room, and porch. There were also a few guest rooms behind the lobby. The hotel offered three meals a day on an American or European plan. The dining room was also open to the public. A wide variety of food was cooked and served on the premises. Guests were required to “dress” for dinner. There were no separate bars or cocktail lounges, although drinks were available in the dining room
4
at tables and at a small bar on one side of the dining room. A piano player or trio occasionally provided music during the dinner hour. A range of entertainment was provided in the evenings. These activities, including cards, bingo, and movies, were generally concluded by
The 1950’s and 1960’s were a period of transition for the hotel. There was a change in management and more advertising to encourage nonguests to patronize the hotel for dining, dancing, cocktails, and entertainment. The effort to attract the public was also reflected in changes made in the physical layout. In the early 1950’s, a small cocktail lounge was built from a part of the dining room. In 1954, the outside porch was enclosed to create additional interior space. The former reading area became a coffee shop in 1960 and lunch was no longer served in the dining room. The hotel moved to a modified American plan for food. A cocktail lounge called “club 46” was opened. It offered a “happy hour” and music ánd dancing on weekends until midnight. In 1962, the ground-floor guest rooms were removed, the coffee shop was converted into a cocktail lounge, club 46 was closed, and a new “frolic room” was created and later enlarged. The judge found that the frolic room became “the principal focus of entertainment for guests and the public.”
Large numbers of young people came to the frolic room for a late afternoon “happy hour” and for dancing and entertainment in the evening. Traffic and parking problems developed and there was a significant amount of noise at closing time. A variance was granted in 1969 for the creation of a parking lot. A fee was charged to all except guests of the hotel. In 1970, there was another change in management. The clientele attracted to the hotel became increasingly younger and control problems increased.
The current management, Cape Resort, bought the hotel in 1971. With very few structural changes, Cape Resort has developed the hotel’s entertainment offerings to such an extent that it describes the hotel in its advertising as “the largest
The judge made factual findings on parking facilities, number of employees, and the income generated by the hotel. These figures show that there are an estimated 104 to 175 parking spaces available for over 100 guests, 40 to 60 employees, and a potential holiday weekend crowd of over 800 people. As very little parking is allowed on neighborhood streets, there have been some problems with patrons parking on private land. Information on the distribution of hotel employees suggests that the bulk of them are employed as waiters, waitresses, and bartenders. Only four or five are employed to prepare food. The income figures for the
Finally, the judge found that complaints generated by the operation of the Brothers Four related primarily to noise at closing time, especially on weekends, and parking problems. Although management has made efforts to control the crowds, closing time is frequently marked by loud talk, laughing, some fights, and considerable traffic noise. Thus, even though control problems are less severe than they were in the 1960’s, neighbors are still sometimes awakened or kept awake until 2 or 3 a.m. These problems are affected by the fact that the neighborhood contains two establishments which attract a clientele similar to, although smaller than, that of the Brothers Four. Guest houses in the area also add to the general outdoor activity.
1.
Ground-floor hotel entertainment facilities.
All parties, and the judge, agree that in 1926 the hotel was a nonconforming use under the original Falmouth zoning bylaw.
6
Therefore, as a prior nonconforming use, the hotel is
Bridgewater
v.
Chuckran,
The nature and purpose of the use made of the hotel’s facilities have changed dramatically. In 1926, the property was operated as a full-service resort hotel whose primary purpose was to provide lodging, meals, and entertainment for overnight guests. In recent years, by contrast, management has presented the hotel to the public as “the largest entertainment complex on Cape Cod.” The hotel has been billed as “Three Clubs under One Roof” with the aim of attracting the public in large numbers. The change is com
In the case now before us, lodging and meals have been supplanted as the dominant business of the hotel by fully developed entertainment facilities designed especially to attract crowds of young people. The judge’s description of the current situation is apt: “[Tjhis enterprise is much less a hotel with entertainment facilities present for its guests and the public, than it is an entertainment complex with some guest rooms.”
A comparison of the 1926 and current uses of the hotel demonstrates a fundamental difference in “the quality or character, as well as the degree, of use.”
Bridgewater
v.
Chuckran, supra
at 23. The same space which formerly housed a dining room, reading room, guest rooms, and lobby now houses seven bars distributed among three “clubs” and a game room. A kitchen equipped to prepare large quantities of food for diners who ate in the dining room has been scaled down to a small, short-order operation not much greater than that found in many households and staffed by only three or four employees. A predominately middle-aged and older clientele has been displaced by young people who are encouraged to patronize the hotel for its bars and nightlife. While the hotel has always served
Cape Resort’s reliance on the rule that a mere increase in the volume of business done does not constitute a change in use is misplaced. While it is true that a use is not different in kind simply because it is bigger,
Building Comm’r of Medford
v.
McGrath,
Cape Resort argues that the changes that have been made in the hotel’s ground-floor entertainment offerings merely reflect changes in public tastes in the years between 1926 and the present and that a disco and electronic game room are, in effect, modern equivalents of dances in the hotel
Cape Resort urges us to conclude that the entertainment facilities in question are a permissible aspect of the hotel business. In support of this claim it cites cases such as
Goff
v.
Fowler,
Finally, it is clear that the judge was correct in finding that the current use of the hotel property has an effect on the neighborhood “different in kind” from the effect of the use in 1926. Even when allowance is made for the limited use of automobiles in 1926, it is clear that the development of the hotel as a nighttime entertainment center capable of accommodating over 800 people has caused traffic and noise problems wholly different from those which would be generated by a business run primarily as a hotel. The change in effect on the surrounding area is sufficiently illustrated by the findings that nearby residents are sometimes kept awake until 2 or 3 a.m. and that management has found it advisable to station up to twelve employees outside the hotel at closing time to direct traffic and promote order. The findings, therefore, fully support the judge’s conclusion that, under all three of the tests reviewed in Bridgewater v. Chuckran, supra, Cape Resort has failed to sustain its burden of proving that the operation of the hotel is not a change in use.
2.
Effect of building permits and variance granted to prior owners of hotel.
Cape Resort also contends that the present use of the hotel’s ground-floor facilities is protected by the statute of limitations contained in G. L. c. 40A, § 7.
8
The judge found that the current use of the original frolic room is protected under G. L. c. 40A, § 7, while the uses being made of the remainder of the ground floor of the hotel are not. We agree with those conclusions.
Well over six years had elapsed between the time the frolic room was built in 1961 and the time the association brought its action to compel Cape Resort to limit its use of the space in 1977. Thus, c. 40A, § 7, bars the attempt to enforce the by-law with respect to the frolic room if it “has been improved and used in accordance with the terms of the original building permit.” The association argues (1) that § 7 has no application to this case because “original building permit” is limited to a permit which authorizes the “erection of a new and independent building or structure,” and
We agree with the judge that the meaning of “the original building permit” is not as narrow as the association suggests. The association’s position rests largely on an erroneous interpretation of the words “real property,” in the phrase “if real property has been improved and used in accordance with the terms of the original building permit,” as including only raw land. “Real property,” however, has always comprised both land and buildings.
Bates
v.
Sparrell,
Cape Resort’s further contention that G. L. c. 40A, § 7, protects the entire present use of the hotel’s ground floor must, however, be rejected. The sole support for this contention is the fact that an open porch on the ground floor was enclosed pursuant to a 1956 building permit and for the purpose of enlarging the inside floor area. Cape Resort introduced no evidence of the use to which the enclosed porch was put in 1956. It appears from a drawing of the present layout of the hotel’s ground floor that the porch no longer constitutes a distinct space in the hotel but is simply a part of the game room. In short, Cape Resort did not meet its burden of showing that the porch is being “used in accordance” with the permit authorizing its enclosure. Under these circumstances the 1956 permit cannot serve as the source of any additional protection for the current use of the hotel.
Finally, it is also clear that permission to operate the present ground-floor facilities cannot be implied from a variance for a parking lot granted to a prior owner of the hotel in 1969 by the Falmouth board of appeals. All the hotel’s owner requested and all he received in 1969 was permission to use a vacant portion of his land for a parking lot,
3.
Use of the “lodge” to house guests.
The lodge is a small wooden structure located to the rear of the main hotel building. It contains fourteen guest rooms and was used prior to 1962 for housing guests of the hotel. The association in effect concedes that this use of the lodge was a valid prior nonconforming use. In 1962 the lodge was conveyed to a Mr. and Mrs. Daley. There was evidence that the Daleys used the lodge as a rooming house. On June 27, 1975, Cape Resort acquired the property and it was used again to accommodate overnight guests of the hotel. The association contends that the lodge enjoyed protection as a nonconforming use only by virtue of its association with the main hotel building and that it lost that protection when it was separated from the hotel and sold in 1962. The association characterizes the 1962 conveyance as an abandonment of the use of the lodge to house hotel guests. Under § 18(d) of the Falmouth zoning by-law, “when a non-conforming use has been discontinued for a period of one year, it shall not be re-established . ...” The word “discontinued” is the legal equivalent of “abandoned.”
Pioneer Insulation
&
Modernizing Corp.
v.
Lynn,
We agree with the trial judge that the evidence does not establish an abandonment. Under our cases an abandonment of a nonconforming use results from the concurrence
4. Use of the “annex” to house hotel guests. The annex is, like the lodge, a small wooden building behind the main hotel. Until 1962 the annex was used as a dormitory for hotel employees. It was sold in 1962 to Asco Real Estate Trust and was acquired by Gape Resort in 1972. The judge found that some time after 1972 the annex was “converted” into accommodations for paying guests of the hotel. He noted, though, that there was no “significant evidence . . . concerning what, if any alteration or renovations were done to effect this conversion.” In 1977 Cape Resort applied for and received a permit “to repair existing annex due to fire damage by replacing damaged area.” The record does not reveal whether the work done pursuant to this permit facilitated the change from employees’ quarters to guest accommodations. There was also no evidence on whether the shift in clientele provoked a change in the effect on the neighborhood.
The remaining issue is whether the change in lodgers from employees to paying guests is an impermissible change of the nonconforming use. Under § 18(a) of the Falmouth zoning by-law “a non-conforming use may continue to be used for the same purpose.”
10
Cape Resort argues that the current use of the annex meets the tests set out in
Bridgewater
v.
Chuckran,
Although the question is a close one, the evidence warrants the judge’s conclusion that a change in use occurred. Several previous decisions of this court support this conclusion. In
McAleer
v.
Board of Appeals of Barnstable,
Furthermore, the change in use of the annex is analogous to the change in use in
Lexington
v.
Bean,
The evidence warranted the judge’s conclusion that a change in use of the annex had occurred and that its current use to house guests of the hotel is in violation of Falmouth’s zoning by-law. We note, as the judge did, that Falmouth’s by-law has been amended since these suits were begun so
5.
Laches and estoppel.
Cape Resort concedes in its brief that “prior Massachusetts case law establishes that loches or estoppel is not a defense to an action to enforce municipalities’ by-laws or zoning ordinances. ” See
McAleer
v.
Board of Appeals of Barnstable,
Nevertheless, Cape Resort urges us to find that the relief sought by the association and the building inspector is barred, citing us to the only decision of this court in a zoning case which appeared to apply a loches theory,
Chilson
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Attleboro,
6.
Constitutional claims and scope of relief granted.
Cape Resort argues that the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and art. 16 of the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution prohibit a court from restricting dancing and music in any nonconforming hotel, whether or not the hotel offered entertainment at the time it became a nonconforming use, on the theory that any such restriction would violate the hotel patrons’ and owners’ rights of free speech. On this ground, Cape Resort challenges the injunction entered against it. The only case cited in support of this proposition is
Commonwealth
v.
Sees,
Cape Resort does appear, however, to have a valid complaint with respect to the scope of the injunctive relief ordered by the judge. Cape Resort was enjoined “from using those portions of the ground floor facilities known as the Disco Room . . . , the Pub, and the Game Room for the purposes of selling or providing alcoholic beverages, providing live entertainment, providing recorded music and dancing, and providing coin operated machines such as pinball machines and billiard tables.” The judge specifically found, however, that in 1926, when the hotel became a nonconforming use, drinking, music, and dancing were offered to some extent in some of the areas covered by the injunction.
It appears, therefore, that the injunction ordered by the judge was too broad. We remand the cases for reconsideration of the scope of the relief granted in light of the scope of the protected prior nonconforming use. In fashioning a revised injunction, the judge should seek to ensure that Cape Resort operates its facility as a hotel, with primary focus on lodging, meals, and entertainment for overnight guests. Any upgrading of the hotel which is reasonably adapted to these functions would be permissible. Thus, dining facilities may be open to the public and in conjunction with these facilities music and alcoholic beverages may be provided. Rooms not used for dining (apart from the frolic room which draws its protection from another source) may be used for recreational activities ancillary to the hotel use. It would also be appropriate for the hotel to hold dances or other similar events for the general public as long as this type of activity is merely ancillary to the primary use of the property as a hotel furnishing meals and lodging to overnight guests. In short, the revised injunction should limit Cape Resort’s activities to those that could be said to
The judgments are reversed and the cases are remanded to the Superior Court for the entry of new judgments providing relief consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
It could be argued that the Superior Court lacked jurisdiction to hear the action brought by the Falmouth residents and neighborhood property owners. See
McDonald’s Corp.
v.
Seekonk,
It seems clear, however, that a landowner in doubt about the propriety of the use of his property under a zoning by-law may seek declaratory relief (as Cape Resort did in the first action) without making a demand on the building inspector under G. L. c. 40A, § 7. Furthermore, since the answer of the building inspector in the landowners’ action and his cross complaint in the second action sought a judicial determination of the rights of Cape Resort under its nonconforming use and requested that Cape Resort be enjoined from engaging in any act in violation of the Falmouth zoning by-law, all issues raised in the second action are properly before us and it is, therefore, unnecessary to reach the issue of the right of the neighbors to maintain their action. It should be noted that this issue of the neighbors’ right to maintain an action in their own names is not argued before us and apparently was not pressed in the Superior Court.
There was no allegation that the hotel has not always had the proper liquor licenses (except during prohibition when no licenses were issued).
As the judge pointed out, at the occupancy rate and room charges named by Cape Resort, the revenue from room rentals should have been much higher than it actually was. This discrepancy led the judge to question whether the hotel aspect of the operation was being deliberately maintained despite its limited financial return or even whether the income figures had been rearranged to conceal how unprofitable certain aspects of the hotel operation had become.
Cape Resort and the association stipulated that, at all times between 1926 and the present, the hotel has been located in an area zoned residential. The record does not reveal the exact manner in which the hotel failed to conform to the 1926 by-law.
Section 18 of the Falmouth zoning by-law reads as follows: “NonConforming Uses, (a) Any building, part of a building or premises which, at the time of the adoption of this by-law, is being put to a nonconforming use may continue to be used for the same purpose.” Zoning By-Laws of the Town of Falmouth § 18 (amended through July 1,1975).
The original version of this statute of limitations was passed in 1970 and was found in G. L. c. 40A, § 22. See St. 1970, c. 678, § 1. General
The association concedes that there may not have been such a permit for the erection of the original Terrace Gables Hotel.
Under G. L. c. 40A, § 6, local zoning by-laws shall apply to “any change or substantial extension” of a prior nonconforming use.
We note that Cape Resort bore the burden of proof on the nonconforming use issue.
Wellesley
v.
Brossi,
It was pointed out in
Gattozzi
v.
Director of Inspection Servs. of Melrose,
