This is а suit in equity by Co-Ray Realty Company, Inc., under St. 1924, c. 488, § 20, as amended, by way of appeal from a decision of the board of zoning adjustment of the city of Boston which changed a certain area in Boston frоm a general residence district designated as R-40 to a general residence district designated as R-35. The case . is before us on an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree of the Superiоr Court dismissing its appeal from the decision of the board. The case was heard upon a transcript of the proceedings before the board, certain documentary evidence, and orаl testimony which is reported.
The plaintiff is the owner of a parcel of land in the changed area on the southeasterly corner of Corey and Evans roads appearing on the assessors’ records as 63 Corey Road, “vacant land.” On August 16, 1949, the building commissioner of the city of Boston issued a permit to one Morris Kaitz to construct on that part of the parcel located in Boston a twenty-eight fаmily apartment house. Construction
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began on the next day. On August 29 Mary Kaitz, the owner of the land, conveyed the property to the plaintiff and the name of the latter was substituted for that of Morris Kaitz in the permit. Construction of the proposed building was interrupted by an injunction obtained by the town of Brookline on the ground that the use of the rear part of the plaintiff’s land, which was in Brookline, as an adjunct to an aрartment house, would violate the zoning law of Brookline. The contention of the town was sustained by this court on July 3, 1950. See
Brookline
v.
Co-Ray Realty Co. Inc.
Meanwhile on July 26, 1950, the plaintiff’s building permit was revoked. On July 28 one Ida Mae Kahn filed a petition for the redistricting for zoning purposes оf an area in Boston adjoining the Brookline line which included the plaintiff’s land and in all about seventeen lots upon which, except for one or two vacant lots, one and two family houses had beеn built. The board -held a hearing on the petition on September 20 and on November 3 ordered the area in question changed from an R-40 district to an R-35 district in which the height of buildings is limited to two and one half stories and the erection of an apartment house like the one contemplated by the plaintiff is forbidden.
The plaintiff contends that the order of the board should be annulled on three grounds: “(1) The board of zoning аdjustment failed to mail notice to the appellant as one of the owners of property deemed by the board to be affected within the meaning of § 20. (2) Imposition was practised upon the board by the petitioner’s attorney in advising the board, contrary to the information of which he was possessed, that the appellant in effect did not care to oppose the petition but reаlized the thing for him to do was to build single *106 and two family houses. (3) The order of the board of zoning adjustment was in excess of the board’s authority.”
The board of zoning adjustment of the city of Boston was established under St. 1924, c. 488, § 20, in which a remedy was provided by writ of certiorari for a party aggrieved by a decision of the board. In such proceeding only errors of law apparent on the record could be corrected. The statute was amended by St. 1941, c. 373, § 19, which provided that “any person aggrieved [by a decision of the board may] . . . appeal to the superior court sitting in equity for the county of Suffolk; provided, that such aрpeal is filed in said court within fifteen days after such decision is recorded. It shall hear all pertinent evidence and determine the facts and, upon the facts as so determined, annul such decision if found to exceed the authority of such board, or make such other decree as justice and equity may require. The foregoing remedy shall be exclusive, but the parties shall have all rights of appeal and exception as in other equity cases.” By this amending statute appeals may be taken from the decisions of the board in the same manner as appeals from decisions of boards of appeal outside of Boston. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 40, § 30, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 269, § 1. An appealing party is now entitled to a hearing de nova in the Superior Court upon all evidence material to a decision of justiciable issues.
Lambert
v.
Board of Appeals of Lowell,
At the hearing on appeal there was evidence that the plaintiff received no notice of the hearing before the board and only learned of the hearing аnd the board’s decision by chance after November 3, although in time to perfect its appeal within the limited time of fifteen days. The requirements as to notice of a hearing by the board are stated in *107 § 20 of St. 1924, c. 488, as amended by St. 1941, c. 373, § 19: “notice shall be mailed ... to the owners of all property deemed by the board to be affected thereby as they appear in the current records of the assеssing department and also advertised in a daily newspaper published in the city of Boston.” The statute is silent as to the sources from which addresses of owners shall be obtained.
No question is raised concerning the newspaper publication. Preliminary to the prescribed notices by mail an agent of the board examined the records of the assessors and of the collector. He ascertained that the plaintiff, a Massachusetts corporation, was the owner of the lot at the corner of Corey and Evans roads, that the lot was numbered 63 Corey Road, and that it was vacant land. He found no other address of the plaintiff in the collector’s department and no listing of the plaintiff either in the telephone book or in the Boston directory. Thereupon he caused a notice to be mailed on September 5 to “Co-Ray Realty Co. 63 Corey Road Brighton, Mass.” It was one of some eighty-five notices mailed. The envelope containing the notice was returned unopened with the Post Offiсe notation “No such street number.” No other notice was mailed although the same agent rechecked the assessors’ and collector’s records. The judge found “that the board complied with all of the requirements of notice.”
Requirements of notice of a hearing before an administrative board are to be strictly followed, see
Prusik
v.
Board of Appeal of Boston,
Under St. 1924, c. 488, § 20, as amended by St. 1941, c. 373, § 19, “The board may adopt rules, not inconsistent with the provisions of this act, governing notice and pro
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cedure.” As nothing appears in the record concerning rules of the board it is “presumed in favor of [the] regularity of proceedings of public boards that there was compliance with such rules, if any exist.”
Roman Catholic Archbishop of Boston
v.
Board of Appeal of Boston,
We are not impressed by the second contention of the plaintiff that the board was imposed upon by the attorney for the petitioner in saying to the board, “I think perhaps the owner of that vacant land perhaps realizes the thing for him to do is to build single and two-family houses to keep the neighbоrhood the way it is kept now.” The judge could have found that it was not the kind of statement likely to *109 influence the board and he was not plainly wrong in finding that the board was not misled.
In our opinion the judge was right in finding that the deсision of the board did not constitute “spot zoning” as contended by the plaintiff. See
Leahy
v.
Inspector of Buildings of New Bedford,
The area here rezoned is a strip of land approximately 1,400 feet long and 150 feet wide which, on its southern and eаsterly borders, adjoins the town of Brookline. It is similar, in the character of its buildings, to the contiguous residential area in Brookline arid is dissimilar to much of the area in Boston on its northerly and westerly borders where mаny apartment houses have been erected. In our opinion the board did not exceed its authority in changing the area from an R-40 to an R-35 district.
The final decree provides that the appeal be dismissed. Instead of dismissing the appeal the decree should state that the decision of the board did not exceed its authority, that no modification of it is required, and that the clerk of the court within thirty days after the entry of the decree send an attested copy thereof to the board of zoning adjustment of the city of Boston. See
Lambert
v.
Board of Appeals of Lowell,
So ordered.
