In preparing its appendix, the board failed to comply with Mass.R.A.P. 8(b)(1) and 18(a) and (b), as amended,
At oral argument, we brought to the attention of counsel to the board the fact that not one of the exhibits referred to in the board’s brief, including the zoning by-law, was before us. When he indicated that he would remedy the defect immediately after oral argument by availing himself of Mass.R.A.P. 9(b), as amended,
Although rule 9(b) provides, in part, that “the clerk of the lower court shall transmit any exhibit to the appellate court at the request of any party made at any time after the filing of the record appendix,” it does not necessarily follow that simply because the exhibits are transmitted, they are properly before us. By relying upon rule 9(b) without having obtained leave of the court prior to oral argument under rule 18(a) to refer to the exhibits omitted from the appendix, counsel to the board has done nothing other than to transfer custody of the exhibits from the clerk of the trial court to the clerk of this court.
There is nothing in rule 18(a) or (b) which precludes us from referring to the exhibits, but we decline to exercise our power to do so. Counsel for the plaintiffs requested that we refrain from doing so because he prepared his brief and oral argument in reliance upon the appendix compiled by the board. He argues that if we excuse the board’s procedural noncompliance at this late date, he will, in effect, be penalized for his reasonable expectation that we would require the board to present its appeal in accordance with rules 8(b)(1) and 18(a) and (b). Because this is a case of an inexcusable disregard for the Massachusetts Rules of Appellate Procedure rather than an instance of an inadvertent omission or an isolated misstep, we agree with the plaintiffs.
The board is not entitled to relief from the judgment for all the reasons discussed in Kunen, supra.
Judgment affirmed.
