324 Mass. 40 | Mass. | 1949
This is a bill in equity seeking to enjoin the defendants from conducting a clam shucking plant, a clam business, and a tin shipping container business upon certain premises in violation of the zoning ordinance of the city. The defendants admit that they maintain such a business at the said location, which, the city alleges, has been zoned as a general residential district in which the conduct of such a business is prohibited. The defendants contend that the ordinance itself, independently of a certain map which they say was not a part of the ordinance, did not establish the said district by metes and bounds, or by any other description with reference to streets, blocks or other physical objects, or in any other manner by which its boundaries may be determined. They concede that the bounds of the district were plainly delineated upon and could be readily ascertained from a certain map, but they contend that this map cannot be considered a part of the zoning ordinance.
We have a transcript of that portion of the testimony which the parties with the approval of the judge stipulated was all the material evidence, together with an agreement as to material facts, a copy of the plan, and also the findings of the judge. The issue before the judge and before us is whether the map was a part of the zoning ordinance. The answer to this issue rests upon documentary evidence and undisputed facts. Nothing turns upon the credibility of witnesses.
The zoning ordinance was enacted in 1940. It divided the city into five classes of districts, none of which was described in the ordinance itself by metes or bounds or by any physical bounds. No one could ascertain the location of any of these districts by a mere reading of the ordinance. The boundaries of these districts were established by § III of the ordinance, which in so far as material provided that “The boundaries between districts are as shown upon said map”; that zone lines shall be property lines and the center lines of streets where they may be so interpreted, but where a boundary is otherwise indicated “it is [to be] determined by its location on said map.” Boundaries' indicated as approximately parallel to a street shall be construed as parallel thereto, “and if there is any variance between the scaled distance between the boundaries and the side line of the street and the distance as marked in feet upon the map, the latter shall govern.” This section is the only provision contained in the ordinance fixing and establishing the boundaries of the various districts. The ordinance does not in terms identify the particular map by legend, name, date or other distinguishing marks to which it refers. It is merely referred to in this section as the map and in § XXXVI, providing for amendments to the ordinance, as “the zoning map.” The words “the map” or “the zoning map” indicate that the city council had in mind a definite and specific map although there is no evidence, other than the passage of the ordinance, that it took any
There is no evidence that any other zoning map was in existence when the zoning ordinance was enacted. No question is raised as to the accuracy of this map or that it is in any way inconsistent with any of the written provisions of the ordinance. The contentjpn simply is that it has not been sufficiently identified as the one mentioned in the
The city council could adopt an ordinance complete in itself or it could, as it did in this instance, adopt one fixing the location of the various districts by a map. The statute, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 40, § 27, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 269, § 1, then in force, authorizing the passage of zoning ordinances, does not require a city council to adopt a zoning map. If the council drafts an ordinance which would be incomplete and unintelligible without a map, it can supplement the ordinance by any map which is available and suitable for the purpose. The objection that the map selected could have no validity because it was not recorded in the registry of deeds in accordance with G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 41, § 81C, inserted by St. 1936, c. 211, § 4, is untenable. The map described in that section is unrelated to zoning and serves an entirely different purpose.
It is plain that the zoning map in the custody of the city clerk is the map referred to in the zoning ordinance and is a part of that ordinance. .
A decree is to be entered enjoining the defendants from
So ordered.