271 Mass. 482 | Mass. | 1930
The only clear allegations of this bill are that the plaintiff, owning property in Boston which he claims
Section 129 of the building law of the city of Boston (St. 1907, c. 550 with its many amendments) gives to any court having jurisdiction in equity, upon application by the city, power to restrain infringements of its requirements and to compel compliance; and, further, provides that “Any person, the value of whose property may be affected by any decision of the board of appeal, may have the action of said board reviewed by the court by any appropriate process ...” A bill in equity is not such “appropriate process.” The rights for the vindication of which a bill in equity is appropriate are ordinarily rights of property, Kelley v. Board of Health of Peabody, 248 Mass. 165, 168; and it has been decided that one has no property right to obedience by his neighbors to statutory requirements. Hagerty v. McGovern, 187 Mass. 479. Rudnick v. Murphy, 213 Mass. 470, 471. O’Keefe v. Sheehan, 235 Mass. 390. Kelley v. Board of Health of Peabody, supra. O’Brien v. Turner, 255 Mass. 84. The words of the heading of the section, “Enforcement — Jurisdiction in Equity,”
The contention that, since certiorari does not permit this court to set aside findings of fact if no error of law is involved in them while an appeal in equity would allow it, the latter is the remedy intended to be given, contravenes our view of the legislative purpose. Review contemplates not a rehearing of evidence and redetermination of fact by this court but an examination of a record to see if error which vitiates the decision is present. Swan v. Justices of the Superior Court, supra, at pages 547, 548. It cannot be that the Legislature, after taking extraordinary care to secure in the board of appeal a tribunal especially fitted by character, training and experience to deal with the subject matter,
The decree was right and must be
Affirmed with costs.