42 Mass. App. Ct. 921 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1997
Richard L. Fairfield received a building permit onDecember 17, 1991, to build a two-story bam on the southerly side of a two-acre lot on Pine Hill Road in Southborough. The principal stmcture on the lot was Fairfield’s single-family residence. Fairfield proposed to use the bam to do woodworking, a hobby he and his son passionately shared and in connection with which they had acquired a large collection of tools and machinery. On February 27, 1992, after Fairfield had completed framing the bam, the town building inspector revoked the building permit because an accessory building in the Residence A zoning district could, under the zoning by-law, have only one story. This regulation, the building inspector said, had been “called to his attention,” one surmises by Florence O. Livoli, Fairfield’s neighbor to the south, who was greatly displeased by the bam project. The barn is a sizeable structure. We have mentioned its height; its on-the-
Section 174-2 of the Southborough zoning by-law defines an “accessory building or use” as:
“A building, stmcture or use customarily incidental and subordinate to the principal permitted use of building or land, located on the same lot as the principal permitted building or use, and not prohibited by this chapter.”
The schedule of dimensional regulations in the zoning by-law permits accessory buildings on a lot in the Residence A district. That same schedule establishes a height limit of 35 feet and 2lh stories for the principal building on the lot. For an accessory building, the code sets a limit of one story but no height limit. A “story” is defined in § 174-2, as:
“The part of a building between the top of any floor and the top of the floor or roof next above, including a basement, but excluding a cellar or attic.”
Any statute, the plaintiffs remind us, should be interpreted so as to render it a “consistent and harmonious" whole, so far as reasonably practicable.
The plaintiffs embrace those reliable chestnuts to support a theory that the drafters of the Southborough zoning by-law could not possibly have contemplated a 32.3-foot high accessory building, if a 2
Judgment affirmed.
In their brief, the plaintiffs have failed entirely to comply with Mass.R.A.P. 16(g), as amended, 367 Mass. 920 (1975), which requires citations to decisions and other authorities to include, “in addition to the page at which the decision or section begins, a page reference to the particular material therein upon which reliance is placed, and the year of decision; as, for example: 334 Mass. 593, 597-598 (1956).”
We need not decide the correctness of the board’s decision that the upper limits of story height for an accessory building were established by the height ceiling for primary buildings in the Residence A district, i.e., 35 feet.