Residents and taxpayers of Billerica on October 20, 1969, filed this petition for a writ of mandamus (a) to compel the town clerk to strike from the town zoning by-law a certain amendment (permitting apartment houses in Billerica) adopted on March 29, 1969, and (b) to order the town inspector of buildings to enforce the zoning by-law as it existed prior to March 29, 1969, and to revoke all building permits for apartment houses. Certain holders of building permits for apartment houses, granted under the 1969 amendment, have intervened. A Superior Court judge “concluded that this is not a proper case for mandamus,” declined to issue the writ, and ordered the petition dismissed. The petitioners appealed from a final judgment dismissing it. The case is before us on the pleadings and the judge’s findings.
The disputed portion of the zoning by-law is § 5.8, Apartments. The section need not be quoted. 1 In sequence, the events leading to the town’s vote at its adjourned annual town meeting on March 29, 1969, are summarized below.
The proposed zoning law amendment was advertised for hearing before the planning board on Tuesday, February 25, 1969, at 10 p.m. The advertisements appeared in a local newspaper in the editions of Thursday, February 13, and Thursday, February 20, 1969, each actually published and
The findings show that at the hearing “there was a full and open discussion of the subject matter of apartments." The meeting was “well attended" and fifteen speakers addressed the board. Five persons “registered" in favor of the amendment, with none opposed. On March 22, 1969, the planning board submitted a written report recommending the amendment.
The planning board’s report was taken up at the annual town meeting (in connection with art. 68 of the warrant) and the amendment (§ 5.8) was adopted. The Attorney General approved the amendment on May 21, 1969, and it was published. G. L. c. 40, § 32 (as amended through St. 1967, c. 308).
Thereafter one intervener in 1969 applied for, and received, building permits for the erection of 265 apartments to be contained in seventeen buildings. In reliance on these permits, there has been an expenditure of about $500,000 and a loan commitment of more than $1,000,000. Other intervening permit holders have spent substantial amounts in proceeding under their permits.
1. The principal question presented is whether the by-law
In the judge’s findings, there is no suggestion of any intentional failure to give the full notice required by c. 40A, § 6. Indeed, he points out the likelihood that “everyone in the town, officials and citizens alike, either ignored or were unaware of” the fourteen-day requirement of § 6. Particularly is this likely in view of the existence of the improperly shorter notice requirement (fn. 2) of the town’s zoning by-law, with which there was compliance. No findings suggest any substantial prejudice to any petitioner because of the one-day reduction of the length of notice.
The interveners contend that a proper rule to apply would
We recognize that the precise terms about notice in c. 40A, § 6, may affect the principle discussed in the cases just cited. Nevertheless, some flexibility, and the employment of equitable principles in applying c. 40A, § 6, may be necessary with respect to notice of purely advisory proceedings before a town planning board on .zoning by-law amendments. Considerations of fairness, and some of the reasoning of the decisions just cited, suggest that amendments of zoning bylaws or ordinances ought not to be set aside lightly as invalid because of trivial procedural defects in their adoption, (a) at the behest of persons who have not shown themselves to be prejudiced significantly by the procedural deficiencies, and (b) at a very great or disproportionate cost to other persons who have relied in good faith upon the by-law as adopted and published. 5
There are limits, however, upon the extent to which there is discretion completely to deny relief by mandamus, where the petitioner attempts to assert a public right (see
Brady
v.
Board of Appeals of Westport,
2. The 1969 zoning amendment included a sentence stating, “The Building Code shall be amended to be consistent herewith.” We think the judge correctly ruled that this sentence (which, with § 5.805 to which it was added, is clearly separable from the balance of the amendment) was “merely suggestive” and was not designed (see Enos v.
Brockton,
3. The planning board’s report, although brief, was sufficient as a recommendation under c. 40A, § 6. See
4. We perceive nothing beyond the limits of proper zoning objectives in a provision of the amendment restricting apartments to three rooms, a kitchen, and a bath. This, as the judge ruled, is a size description, which cannot be said, as matter of law, to be unreasonable. If that provision has any effect upon the “density of population” in, or the “use” of, apartment buildings, those matters constitute appropriate considerations in the framing of zoning by-laws. See G. L. c. 40A, § 2 (as amended through St. 1959, c. 607, § 1), and § 3 (inserted by St. 1954, c. 368, § 2). We perceive no necessary conflict between the provision and G. L. c. 40B, §§ 20-23 (inserted by St. 1969, c. 774, § 1).
5. In requiring (§ 5.808) that no permit for apartment house construction be granted without a planning board hearing (and in requiring under § 5.807 that the applicant for a permit file a site plan.), there was no improper delegation of legislative power to the planning board. The purpose of §§ 5.807 and 5.808 plainly was merely to ascertain that the applicant had complied with the pertinent by-law provisions. See
Richardson
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Framingham,
6. The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
In general, § 5.8 provides that apartments may be constructed in specified zoning districts, defines area requirements (§ 5.801), lot coverage restrictions (§ 5.802), minimum setbacks (§ 5.803), height restrictions (§ 5.804),, construction safeguards (§ 5.805), and sewerage requirements (§5.806). It also (§ 5.807), directs that the planning board shall be furnished for each project a site plan containing specified information.
General Laws c. 40A, § 6 (as amended through St. 1968, c. 194), reads (emphasis supplied) in part: “Zoning . . . by-laws may . . . from time t.o timebe changed by amendment . . . but only in the manner hereinafter provided. No zoning . . . by-law originally establishing the boundaries of the districts or the regulations and restrictions to be enforced therein, and no such . . . by-law changing the same as aforesaid, shall be adopted until after the planning board, if any, . . . has held a public hearing thereon, first causing notice| of the time and place of such hearing and of the subject matter, sufficient for identification, to be published in a newspaper of general circulation in the . . . town once in each of two successive weeks, the first publication being not less than fourteen days before the day of such hearing or if there is no such newspaper . . . then by posting such notice in a conspicuous place in the . . . town hall for a period of not less than fourteen days before the day of such hearing, and has submitted a final report with recommendations to the . . . town meeting, or until twenty days shall have elapsed after such hearing without the submission of such report; provided, [proviso and balance of section not pertinent] . . ..” Section 18 of the town’s zoning by-law provides that notice by publication shall occur at least ten days prior to any hearing by the planning board with reference to any proposed amendments. Section 6 of the statute and § 18 of the by-law plainly are not consistent.
This notice stated that the meeting was to be at 8 p.m. whereas the newspaper notice set the time at 10 p.m.
The judge also invited attention to the circumstance that “when the building permits were issued, no appeals were undertaken by the petitioners or anyone else.” See G. L. c. 40A, § 13 (as amended through St. 1963, c. 207, § 1). Cf.
Bearce
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Brockton,
The desirability of finality and certainty concerning the validity of local zoning provisions has led the reporters for the American Law Institute’s Model Land Development Code (Tentative Draft No. 3, April 22, 1971) § 9-106 (3), to propose a strict and verjr short time limit upon asserting an “alleged defect in the process of adoption of . . . [an] ordinance.” This proposal is consistent with a very common and not unreasonable practice of lawyers and others interested in land matters to rely upon published zoning by-laws and ordinances (and, indeed, other ordinances) without making any detailed investigation of the proceedings by which they were adopted.
Even, in zoning matters, equitable considerations may affect the character of the relief granted and, in appropriate instances, may lead to the denial or conditioning of mandatory relief. See
Chilson
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeal of Attleboro,
See also
Cumberland Farms of Conn. Inc.
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeal of No. Attleborough,
