70 Mass. App. Ct. 484 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2007
The defendants, Edward P. and Anna M. Fagan, appeal from a Superior Court judgment vacating the approval of their definitive subdivision plan by the planning board of Ipswich (board).
Background. The subdivision for seven residential lots proposed by the Fagans is on a twenty-three and one-half acre parcel of land with frontage on the easterly side of Heartbreak Road in a rural area of Ipswich. The lots range in size from a Httle over one acre to about six and one-half acres. Access to the approximately nineteen-foot wide two-lane Heartbreak Road would be through a T-shaped intersection with the proposed Blue Spruce Drive in the subdivision. Approximately thirteen acres of the parcel are wetlands on which a conservation restriction would be placed, and will not be developed. Throughout this case, two principal issues arose because of the concerns of the abutting plaintiffs over the safety of the intersection and the impact of the subdivision on endemic flooding and drainage problems in the area, which is un-sewered and lacks storm drains.
Procedural history. The Fagans submitted a preliminary subdivision plan to the board on October 5, 2001. They sought to obtain the benefit of a “grandfathering” provision in G. L. c. 40A, § 6, fifth par., before the town changed its zoning bylaw ten days later to increase minimum lot sizes from one to two acres.
The Fagans thereafter asserted that the definitive plan had been constructively approved because the board failed to act within ninety days after its submission on May 3, 2002. After a hearing on May 8, 2003, the board voted to rescind the constructive approval, and readopted its decision of January 8, 2003, fil
The Fagans subsequently requested a further hearing, and hearings were held by the board on four dates through December 4, 2003. At the hearing on December 4, 2003, the board voted to revoke its prior disapproval and to approve the amended plan that the Fagans submitted on October 23, 2003. That decision was filed with the town clerk on December 12, 2003. The plaintiffs again appealed to the Superior Court on December 30, 2003. Following the consolidation of that appeal on July 23, 2004, with the plaintiffs’ two previous appeals, the case proceeded to trial.
The Superior Court decision. Threading his way through what the judge described as an “astounding number of documents” introduced in evidence; “extensive factual stipulations”; “extensive testimony”; and “assorted dueling experts” during the March, 2006, four-day bench trial, the judge ruled that the board’s disapproval on May 8,2003, effectively ended the protection of G. L. c. 40A, § 6 (sometimes referred to as zoning freeze). The judge also ruled that the board’s purported approval of the plan on December 4, 2003, was in excess of its authority, as was its granting of certain waivers from local subdivision rules and regulations. Accordingly, on March 10, 2006, the judge ordered that the board’s decision of December 4, 2003, be reversed and vacated; that the waivers granted in the board’s decisions of January 8 and May 8, 2003, be vacated; and that judgment be entered for the plaintiffs. This appeal by the Fagans ensued.
Discussion. 1. Standing. General Laws c. 41, § 81BB, provides that any person who is aggrieved by a planning board’s decision regarding a subdivision plan may appeal to the Superior Court. In determining “who is an aggrieved person in the subdivision context, zoning decisions under G. L. c. 40A, § 17, provide guidance.” Rattner v. Planning Bd. of W. Tisbury, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 8, 10 (1998). See Bobrowski, Massachusetts Land
We are satisfied that there was sufficient credible evidence to support the judge’s finding that one of the abutters, plaintiff Elizabeth E. Krafchuk, demonstrated a “particular and individualized” potential of harm with respect to water run-off and the safety of the intersection of the proposed subdivision’s roadway with Heartbreak Road. See ibid, (“plaintiff must put forth credible evidence to substantiate [her] allegations”). With regard to the other plaintiff abutter, Buttonwood Nominee Trust, we agree with the judge’s determination that the Fagans produced nothing to rebut the presumption that that abutter was an aggrieved party. There was no error in the judge’s findings that the plaintiffs have standing in this case.
2. The zoning freeze. The Fagans argue that their amended plan is entitled to grandfather protection because certain inaction by the board during the review of their original definitive plan resulted in a constructive approval that constituted final approval under G. L. c. 40A, § 6, fifth par., thereby securing the eight-year zoning freeze.
As noted previously, following the disapproval of their
The belated assertion that the plan was constructively approved is without merit. The Fagans treated the board’s actions prior to January 8, 2003, as continuing steps in the review process. “The intention of relevant sections of the Subdivision Control Law is to set up an orderly procedure for definitive action within stated times ... so that all concerned may rely upon recorded action or the absence thereof within such times.”
*488 “The failure of a planning board either to take final action or to file with the city or town clerk a certificate of such action on the definitive plan within ninety days after such submission, or such further time as may be agreed upon at the written request of the applicant, shall be deemed to be an approval thereof. Notice of such extension of time shall be filed forthwith by the planning board with the city or town clerk.”
“The apparent purpose of the requirement of § 6 that the definitive plan be submitted within seven months of the date the preliminary plan was filed is to give the developer a reasonable time to work out details of an ap-provable plan with the planning board and the board of health, while at the same time avoiding an open-ended suspension of zoning amendments that are adopted by the town during the subdivision plan approval process. It is true that § 6 refers to a ‘definitive plan or an amendment thereof [which] is finally approved’; and that G. L. c. 41, § 81U, puts no limit on the time a developer has to amend his plan so as to meet the board’s reasons for disapproval. To preserve the sense of § 6, its reference to amended definitive plans must be read to apply only to those amended plans filed with the board within the seven-month period after submission of the preliminary plan. ‘[A]ny definitive plan, filed more than seven months after a preceding preliminary plan, is to be treated as a new plan, which gains protection under [G. L. c. 40A,] § 7A[, the predecessor of today’s § 6,] only from the date when it is filed and not as of the date of the filing of the preliminary plan.’ Green v. Board of Appeal of Norwood, 358 Mass. 253, 257 n.4 (1970).”13
3. Remaining issues. Since the amended plan filed on October
Judgment affirmed.
Counsel for the board and the town of Ipswich gave notice to this court on
That change would affect two adjacent lots in the proposed subdivision, each a little over one acre in size.
The plaintiffs explain the anomalous nature of this and their previous appeal by indicating that while the board’s decisions, on the surface, appeared favorable to them, those decisions included purported waivers of subdivision regulations that they challenged.
The relevant portion of G. L. c. 40A, § 6, fifth par., as amended by St. 1982, c. 185, provides:
“If ... a preliminary plan followed within seven months by a definitive plan, is submitted to a planning board for approval under the subdivision control law, ... the land shown on such plan shall be governed by the applicable provisions of the zoning ordinance or bylaw ... in effect at the time of the first such submission while such plan or plans are being processed under the subdivision control law, and, if such definitive plan or an amendment thereof is finally ap*488 proved, for eight years from the date of the endorsement of such approval.”
General Laws c. 41, § 81U, fifth par., as inserted by St. 1986, c. 699, § 2, provides:
Contrast Craig v. Planning Bd. of Haverhill, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 677, 678-679 (2005) (plan deemed constructively approved because notice of extension of time and board’s final decision were not timely filed with town clerk; appeal by plaintiff, an opponent of plan, a nullity because not filed within twenty days of date of constructive approval).
At trial, the Fagans submitted an affidavit of the town clerk, dated February 24, 2006, stating that there were no filings by the Fagans or the board during the ninety days after submission of the definitive plan, nor was any appeal filed subsequently. The Fagans request that we consider this affidavit sufficient to substitute for a timely issued certificate under G. L. c. 41, § 81V. There is no authority cited for this request, which appears to have no legal merit, and we do not consider it. Mass.R.A.P. 16(a)(4), as amended, 367 Mass. 921 (1975).
On July 10, 2003, the Fagans filed a complaint in Land Court seeking a ruling that the constructive approval was valid, and challenging the board’s decision to rescind. It is undisputed that there has been no activity in that case since the filing of an answer on May 7, 2004. Citing Massachusetts Broken Stone Co. v. Weston, 430 Mass. 637, 639-642 (2000), and Arenstam v. Planning Bd. of Tyngsborough, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 314, 317 (1990), the judge recognized that “normally” he would wait for the Land Court’s decision before ruling on the case before him. However, he concluded that he did not have to wait in this case because “[t]he parties have presented all the issues to this court for decision,” and his ultimate finding that the planning board should not have approved the amended plan “has the effect of rendering the Land Court case moot.”
In their brief to this court, the Fagans merely note that their “pending Land Court case challenges the May, 2003 rescission of the constructive approval.” They have not argued that the filing of the case in the Land Court preserved any of their rights, nor have they asserted any authority. For those reasons we do not further consider this issue. Mass.R.A.P. 16(a)(4).
Although there may appear to be a metaphysical aspect to the board’s rescission of an inchoate constructive approval, since the board’s rescission action was accompanied by the readoption of its January 8, 2003, disapproval, there is no longer any question of the legal status of the plan.
The Fagans further assert that rescission of the constructive approval did not end the zoning freeze. Their reliance on Heritage Park Dev. Corp. v. Southbridge, 424 Mass. 71, 75 (1997), is misplaced. In that case, there had been a final approval of a definitive plan, and the eight-year zoning freeze under G. L. c. 40A, § 6, fifth par., was secured. Id. at 74-75. A covenant provided that approval of the subdivision would be automatically rescinded if certain groundwork was not completed by a specified date; the developer was unable to complete the groundwork as required. Id. at 73. The operation of that rescission did not affect the zoning freeze. The Supreme Judicial Court stated that whether a subdivision approval is rescinded automatically or under G. L. c. 41, § 81W, “[wjhatever subdivision control the board may exercise cannot operate to deprive [the applicant] of the zoning protection it secured
We do not consider whether an amended definitive plan filed within seven months of the preliminary plan, but after final action disapproving the definitive plan, would operate to preserve the zoning freeze.