The plaintiff, city of Worcester (city), filed six complaints in Housing Court seeking permanent injunctive relief against the defendants, six condominium owners.
The facts, stipulated by the parties and found by the judge, are not disputed. The defendants each own one or more condominium units in a complex known as the Autumn Chase Condominium located at 920 Southbridge Street, Worcester. The condominium complex is located in a residential-zoned district within the city. Each unit contains two or three bedrooms and is occupied by four unrelated individuals, all of whom are students at the College of the Holy Cross, which is nearby. Each individual is a signatory on the lease for the unit he or she occupies; is jointly and severally liable for the rent; is responsible for his or her own heat and utilities; and “each possess a key to their (sic) respective units and have full use of the entire unit.”
Based on these facts, the judge distinguished between tenants and lodgers, noting that “a tenant has the right to exclusive possession of the premises,” whereas “[a] lodger has merely the right to use the premises.” He declared the ordinance to be unconstitutionally vague, and concluded that “the living arrangements of the [defendants’ group[s] of tenants, in their
Although there exists a historic distinction between a “lodger” and “tenant,” see White v. Maynard,
The ordinance was not unconstitutionally vague. Even were we to conclude that the definition of what constitutes a lodger or lodging house was not precise, local zoning provisions are “entitled to a strong presumption of constitutional validity . . . , and courts should be wary of declaring zoning fatally indefinite.” Commonwealth v. Jaffe,
Zoning ordinance terms “should be interpreted in the context of the [ordinance] as a whole and, to the extent consistent with common sense and practicality, they should be given their ordinary meaning.” Hall v. Zoning Board of Appeals of Edgartown,
“A dwelling or that part of a dwelling where sleeping accommodations are let, with or without kitchen facilities, to four (4) or more persons not within the second degree of kindred to the person conducting it, and shall include rooming houses, boarding houses and tourist homes, but shall not include hotels, motels, inns, sorority, fraternity and cooperative residences, dormitories, or convalescent*169 homes, nursing homes, rest homes, or group residences licensed or regulated by agencies of the Commonwealth. ”4
The ordinance further defines various forms of “dwelling” (e.g., single or multi-family) as places for human habitation providing independent living facilities for one or more persons, and “family” as one or more persons occupying a dwelling unit “and living together as a single housekeeping unit, not including a group of more than three (3) persons who are not within the second degree of kinship.” Taken together, a lodging house is clearly defined as a dwelling unit that is rented to four or more persons not constituting a family.
Nothing on the record suggests that the ordinance is open to a varied application. See Custody of a Minor (No.2),
We vacate the judgment and remand to the Housing Court for further proceedings.
So ordered.
Notes
The record does not include a copy of the complaints nor copies of legal memoranda or of the stipulations of fact submitted by the parties to the trial judge, who was also the motion judge in connection with the city’s request for preliminary injunctive relief. “The fact that parts of the record are not included in the appendix shall not prevent the . . . court from relying on such parts . . . .” Mass.R.A.P. 18(a), as amended,
The city protests that this was a ground not raised by the defendants or argued by the city. “We recognize that there will be instances where a judge may glimpse an issue not perceived by the parties. On those occasions, the course that the judge should follow is to notify counsel of his concerns and permit counsel to present evidence on the question which the judge perceives to be dispositive.” Messina v. Scheft,
The city’s ordinance resembles the definition of “lodging house” provided by G. L. c. 140, § 22. Chapter 140, generally, establishes licensing authorities and defines the scope of their authority.
