This bill for declaratory relief brings to us questions concerning the validity and effect of a purported amendment to the zoning by-law of the town of Arlington which imposed a two-year moratorium on the construction of apartment buildings in certain areas of the town. The plaintiff is a landowner in Arlington who, in November, 1972, applied to the town’s building inspector for a permit to construct a forty-unit, six-story apartment building on his realty. Under the zoning provisions then in effect, construction of such a building in the district in which the realty was located was permissible. On December 28, 1972, following the publication of proper notices on December 14 and 21, 1972, a public hearing was held in Arlington to consider an article to be proposed at the March, 1973, town meeting which would temporarily suspend construction of apartment buildings in certain districts of the town. The plaintiff, whose land was within one of these districts, attended the December hearing. The permit he had applied for was issued to him on January 15, 1973, but was accompanied by a notation by the building inspector that issuance was “with the warning that the Arlington Redevelopment Board has published a notice of a hearing for a zoning amendment that if properly adopted will affect this bldg, permit in accordance with General Laws Chapter 40A, Section 11.” 1 No construction under the permit has taken place to this date.
The proposed article, art. 57, was adopted by a two-thirds vote of the town meeting on March 19, 1973, and was subsequently approved by the Attorney General and properly published. In pertinent part, art. 57 provides as follows: “To see if the Town will vote to amend the Zoning By-Law by inserting the following new Section 9A immediately following the present Section 9:
*883 “Section 9A. Restrictions in Moratorium District #1.
“In Moratorium District #1, no new building or part thereof shall be constructed for use as an apartment house or for apartments or for any use in an Industrial District in Moratorium District #1 for a period of two years from the date of approval of this section by the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office, or September 1, 1975, whichever date is the longer period of time. Whereas the Town of Arlington is in the process of updating its Comprehensive Plan, it is desired to protect certain parts of the Town from ill-advised development pending the final adoption of a revised Comprehensive Plan and a moratorium on the issuance of building permits for the construction of apartment houses in a Moratorium District in excess of two families is hereby in effect for a period of time described above.”
The town contends that since the plaintiff’s building permit was issued after the first notice of a public hearing on art. 57, the provisions of G. L. c. 40A, § 11, apply to invalidate use of the permit in violation of the zoning by-law as amended by art. 57. The trial judge ruled in favor of the plaintiff on the ground that art. 57 did not amend the zoning by-law within the meaning of the statute and also because in any event art. 57 is prospective in operation only. He thus upheld the validity of the building permit and ruled that construction might begin in accordance with the terms of the building permit. Although the judge did not pass on the constitutionality of art. 57, the plaintiff argues that the town lacks the authority to enact a by-law temporarily suspending the operation of an existing zoning by-law.
We cannot agree with the judge’s conclusion that art. 57 did not constitute an amendment to the zoning by-law. The new § 9A of the by-law is an example of what has been called “interim zoning.” Anderson, Am. Law of Zoning, § 5.15 (1968). Rathkopf, Zoning and Planning, c. 8A (3d ed. 1974). Though it lacks the same degree of permanence typically found in zoning laws, see
*884
Enos
v.
Brockton,
The basic source of a town’s zoning power is G. L. c. 40A, § 2, which is a broad delegation of authority to cities and towns phrased in general language. We have
*885
not yet had occasion, as we have now, to consider whether the authority to adopt interim zoning provisions can be implied from that general language. Cf.
Tra-Jo Corp.
v.
Town Clerk of Methuen,
*886
We are not persuaded that the plaintiff has met that burden. The weight of authority is that reasonable interim zoning provisions may be enacted within the scope of a general zoning enabling act, without reliance on specific statutory authorization for interim ordinances.
Steel Hill Dev. Inc.
v.
Sanbornton,
In light of the authority which we believe can be found in The Zoning Enabling Act, the particular provision adopted by the town is permissible. First, it is significant that § 9A does not prohibit all uses of realty within the moratorium district but is primarily directed at construction of apartment buildings. This is an allowable restriction under G. L. c. 40A, §§ 2, 3.
Moss
v.
Winchester,
The plaintiff argues that even if the town could properly adopt this interim provision, the amendment operates prospectively only and, hence, does not apply to his building permit issued January 15, 1973. Article 57 was adopted by the town on March 19, 1973, and by G. L. c. 40, § 32, it could not take effect until subsequently approved by the Attorney General. However, the permit was issued after the first notice of hearing before the planning board on the proposed art. 57. Having concluded that art. 57 constituted an amendment to the zoning by-law pursuant to The Zoning Enabling Act, we therefore apply the provisions of G. L. c. 40A, § 11, to the facts. Section 11 states that where the permit is issued after such notice the permit does not justify violation of the subsequently adopted amendment provided that the requisite procedures for adoption of the amendment are followed without unreasonable delay.
Doliner
v.
Planning Bd. of Millis,
So ordered.
Notes
The parties agreed that “ [t]he Arlington Redevelopment Board is and was at all times material to this ‘bill’ the Planning Board” in the town.
There is some argument by the plaintiff that the town failed to satisfy fully the procedural requirements for amending a zoning by-law as set out in the town’s own by-law. The plaintiff bases this claim on § 5, par. 2, of the zoning by-law, which refers to giving notice by registered mail to abutters of land referred to in any petition for a proposed amendment to the by-law. However, even a cursory glance at the provision reveals that the notice by registered mail requirement applies only to amendments proposed by petition and not to proposals initiated by the town itself.
A second, independent repository of local zoning power may exist by virtue of § 6 of the Home Rule Amendment, art. 89 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the Commonwealth. See
Board of Appeals of Hanover
v.
Housing Appeals Comm. in the Dept, of Community Affairs,
The plaintiff disputes this fact but the evidence is clear that a study of the comprehensive plan had been recommended and initiated prior to the date the plaintiff applied for his building permit.
In light of the view we take of the merits of the plaintiff’s bill, we have no occasion to consider the town’s arguments respecting possible procedural infirmities in the bringing of this suit.
