389 Mass. 79 | Mass. | 1983
The plaintiff Fitz-Inn Auto Parks, Inc. (FitzInn), sought a declaration of its rights concerning regulations issued by the defendant Boston air pollution control commission (commission) in July, 1978, and approved by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Envi
The case was presented in the Superior Court on the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. There are no material facts in dispute. The motion judge rejected FitzInn’s claims and ordered the complaint to be dismissed. We agree with the motion judge’s rejection of the merits of FitzInn’s claims, but reverse the judgment dismissing the complaint because, in this declaratory judgment proceeding, a judgment declaring the rights of the parties should be entered. See MacKeen v. Canton, 379 Mass. 514, 516 n.3 (1980).
From before October 15,, 1973, until June 13,1980, when its lease terminated, Fitz-Inn operated a licensed parking lot with twenty parking spaces at the corner of Kilby Street and Exchange Place in downtown Boston. The premises have since been devoted to other uses. Fitz-Inn operated numerous other licensed parking lots prior to October 15, 1973, which it has since ceased to operate for various reasons. The commission has declined to recognize FitzInn’s unconditional right to transfer the twenty spaces from the Kilby Street and Exchange Place site to another leased location in downtown Boston, although the commission did allow the transfer on a conditional and temporary basis.
There is an “actual controversy” within the meaning of G. L. c. 231 A, § 1, concerning the lawfulness of the commission’s freeze regulations and the application of the regulations to Fitz-Inn so as to deny it the absolute right to
The regulations contain procedures for granting permits for commercial off-street parking facilities in certain portions of Boston. The regulations were purportedly adopted pursuant to G. L. c. 111, § 31C, material parts of which are set forth in the margin.
The fact that Boston may regulate parking uses by zoning ordinances
Fitz-Inn frankly grants that, if it had been allowed to retain its right to reallocate spaces lost when its original locations ceased to be available for parking, this action would probably not have been commenced. Fitz-Inn’s real grievance, therefore, is its loss of an absolute right to retain a specific number of parking spaces in its name and to transfer them to locations for which it has or will have the necessary parking lot licenses and special zoning permits. Fitz-Inn’s claim is that reasonable regulation of the number of off-street parking spaces in Boston, assuming regulation is allowed at all, requires a recognition of the continuing rights of those entities having permitted parking spaces as of the date the freeze became effective.
Fitz-Inn argues that it has a property interest in the right to operate a certain number of parking spaces independent of its right to operate a parking lot at a particular location. The city argues that the right to operate a parking lot relates to a particular location and that, when a lease at that location terminates, the right to operate the parking lot there belongs to the landowner who may lease the premises to another entity who in turn may operate a parking lot. If, as here, the lot ceases to be used for off-street parking, the question arises whether a former lessee has continuing rights in the number of parking spaces lost.
It is reasonable to place the allocation of the number of off-street parking spaces within the control of a governmental agency and not within the control of private entities. The freeze was not intended to reduce the number of off-street parking spaces below the number in operation when it became effective. If a private entity were allowed to “bank” or to hold in “inventory” spaces lost by it, public control over the number of spaces available would be relinquished to that extent to private entities. New parking locations, desirable to satisfy changing conditions or other needs, might not be established because the holders of dormant parking space “rights” might choose not to participate
Fitz-Inn did not have a property interest protected in a constitutional sense from control by the freeze regulations. A parking lot lessee may have protectable rights at a particular location during the terms of its lease, but its rights end with the termination of its lease. There is no showing that, even before the freeze, a lessee of an open-air parking lot had an absolute right to transfer parking spaces from an abandoned location to another location. We see nothing in the freeze regulations intended to increase the rights of a parking lot owner or lessee.
The judgment dismissing the complaint is vacated and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for entry of a judgment declaring that G. L. c. 111, § 31C, authorized the adoption of regulations restricting the number of off-street commercial parking spaces in designated portions of Boston and that the plaintiff does not have the absolute right to the number of parking spaces operated by it as of the effective date of the parking freeze.
So ordered.
The number of spaces is “frozen” as of October 15,1973, a date used in earlier regulations adopted under Federal authorization not involved in this case. See 40 C.F.R. § 52.1135 (1974).
General Laws c. 111, § 31C, as amended by St. 1975, c. 706, § 170, provides: “A board of health, or other legal authority constituted for such purpose by vote of the town or city council shall have jurisdiction to regulate and control atmospheric pollution, including, but not limited to, the emission of smoke, particulate matter, soot, cinders, ashes, toxic and radioactive substances, fumes, vapors, gases, industrial odors and dusts as may arise within its bounds and which constitutes a nuisance, a danger to the public health, or impair[s] the public comfort and convenience.
“Said board of health or other legal authority, subject to the approval of the department of environmental quality engineering, in this section called the department, may from time to time adopt and shall enforce reasonable rules and regulations for the control of atmospheric pollution.”
The concluding clause of the first sentence of § 31C (see n.3 above) is inartfully drafted. The function of the “and which” clause is ambiguous and is further troubled by the plural verb “impair.”
We need not decide whether G. L. c. 40A, The Zoning Act, applies to Boston. If G. L. c. 40A does not apply to Boston, a special act authorizing zoning ordinances in Boston does. See St. 1956, c. 665.