Harold J. Cohen, formerly president of the Old Silver Beach Village Association, had long been at loggerheads with C. Keefe Hurley, a trustee and the leading spirit of Old Silver Beach Trust, over the private and general responsibilities of landowners in and about Old Silver Beach Village, and over the problems of conservation and development of the area. On May 18, 1982, after public hearings in which Cohen and others made known their doubts, the planning board of Falmouth approved under G. L. c. 41, § 81U, a major re-subdivision proposal by the trust. Because of shortness of time in which to arrange for a number of landowners to lodge an “appeal” pursuant to G. L. c. 41, § 8IBB, Cohen (as he testified) undertook to do so as an individual “person aggrieved.” Such an action goes against the planning board, but, as might be expected, the trust, as protagonist of the subdivision project, intervened as a party defendant. It answered Cohen’s amended complaint and, in addition, counterclaimed against him on grounds of abuse of process in bringing the § 8IBB action. The main action was speedily tried (see G. L. c. 231, § 59A) and resulted in a complete vindication of the planning board’s decision and correspondingly of the position of the trust. Cohen’s grounds of complaint were either withdrawn by him in the course of the proceedings or failed of proof. As one of his “rulings of law” the trial judge wrote, “The plaintiff has failed to prove by any credible evidence any of the allegations that he has specified . . . .” Cohen noticed an appeal to this court from the ensuing judgment, but he later abandoned it.
Now followed two attempts to make Cohen pay for his indiscretion in opposing the trust.
1. The trust moved under G. L. c. 231, § 6F, to compel Cohen to reimburse it for its reasonable counsel fees, expenses, and costs in defending Cohen’s action. The motion was heard at some length. Tracking the requirement of the statute, the judge concluded (referring back to his findings in the main action) that “Cohen’s claims were wholly insubstantial, frivolous, and not advanced in good faith.” Of the trust’s submitted
From the order of award, Cohen appealed to a single justice of this court, and the trust cross appealed. See G. L. c. 231, § 6G, inserted by St. 1976, c. 233, § 1. After hearing, the single justice, holding for the trust, modified the order appealed from by adding $7,500 for counsel fees. He also allowed a further $2,000 as reimbursement for the fees and expenses incurred by the trust in connection with the very appeals to the single justice. The panel now reviews the decision of the single justice. See
Katz
v.
Savitsky,
We think there was adequate record support for the trial judge’s award. Equally there was record support for the modification of that award by the single justice who, in accordance with § 6G, was to review the trial judge’s award “as if [he] were initially deciding the matter.” See
Katz,
As to the separate award of $2,000 against Cohen related to the § 6G appeals, the single justice had power to make it, see
Katz,
2. The trust appeals to this court from the judgment against it on its counterclaim for “abuse of process.”
*
Here the trust reached for a recovery in very large amount beyond its litigation
So ordered.
Notes
See Mass.R.A.P. 25, as amended,
Cohen’s counsel on appeal were not associated with the initiation of this action.
The judge denied Cohen’s motion under Mass.R.Civ.P. 52(b),
A rationale which supports the imposition of opponent’s counsel fees upon one who pursues a frivolous litigation (see Breyer, J., in
Natasha, Inc.
v.
Evita Marine Charters, Inc.,
