A Land Court judge, on cross motions for summary judgment, determined that the plaintiffs Robert and Linda Mar-hefka lacked standing to contest, on a complaint pursuant to G. L. c. 40A, § 17, the grant of a variance by the zoning board of appeals (board) of the town of Sutton (town) to Roseanne
1.
Background.
On appellate review of a judge’s decision on cross motions for summary judgment, we view the record in the light most favorable to the party against whom the judge allowed summary judgment, here the plaintiffs. See
Albahari
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Brewster,
The plaintiffs and defendants own adjacent homes in the town. Both properties have frontage on Ramshorn Pond, and the parties share a common, unpaved right of way to access their homes. The defendants’ access on the right of way is over the plaintiffs’ property. The defendants’ property consists of a 5,937 square foot lot with a single-family residence. They proposed to build a two-car garage, with attic space above, on a building footprint twenty-four feet by twenty-four feet.
The properties are within an R-l zoning district, which requires a minimum lot size of 80,000 square feet. Other dimensional criteria include 250 feet of minimum frontage, a minimum of fifty feet of front and rear setback, and twenty feet minimum of side setback. For accessory structures, such as the proposed garage, side and rear setbacks require only a minimum of ten feet. As to density, the by-law permits a maximum lot coverage of ten percent.
The defendants’ existing lot and use violate the dimensional and density provisions of the by-law.
5
The lot is 5,937 square feet, less than ten percent of the minimum 80,000 square feet.
The defendants’ existing use, while historically consistent with the cottage-campsite character of several surrounding properties, is nonconforming as to density and dimensions under the current by-law. The addition of the garage will increase the existing density and dimensional nonconformity, and the proposed garage will partially obscure the plaintiffs’ view of the pond from their home.
The plaintiffs appealed the grant of the variance in the Land Court pursuant to G. L. c. 40A, § 17. On cross motions for summary judgment, the judge allowed the defendants’ motion and denied that of the plaintiffs, reasoning that the plaintiffs had not alleged violation of an interest protected by the by-law. This appeal followed.
2.
Standard of review.
We review the Land Court judge’s summary judgment decision de novo.
Albahari
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Brewster, supra
at 248. Because the judge does not engage in fact finding in ruling on cross motions for summary judgment, we owe no deference to his assessment of the record.
6
See
ibid.
Contrast
Marashlian
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Newburyport,
A defendant seeking summary judgment may carry its burden by showing that the plaintiff has no reasonable expectation of proving an essential element of his claim. See
Kourouvacilis
v.
General Motors Corp.,
3. Standing. The judge determined that the plaintiffs’ claims of loss of view and resulting diminution of property value are not protected interests under the by-law. As a result, he concluded that the plaintiffs lacked standing to proceed under G. L. c. 40A, § 17. We disagree with the judge’s analysis.
Under the Zoning Act, only a “person aggrieved” may appeal a decision of a zoning board. G. L. c. 40A, § 17. This requirement is jurisdictional “in the sense that it is a criterion that must be met in order for the court to exercise jurisdiction, when the court otherwise is competent to decide the case.”
Southwick
v.
Planning Bd. of Plymouth,
In order to qualify as a “person aggrieved,” one must assert “a plausible claim of a definite violation of a private right, property interest, or legal interest.”
Harvard Square Defense Fund, Inc.
v.
Planning Bd. of Cambridge,
“The right or interest asserted must be one that the [by-law] under which a plaintiff claims aggrievement intends to protect.”
Standerwick
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Andover,
Specifically, where a by-law regulates density and dimensions, “[w]e have recognized an abutter’s legal interest in ‘preventing further construction in a district in which the existing development is already more dense than the applicable zoning regulations allow.’ ” (citation omitted).
Dwyer
v.
Gallo,
We conclude that the plaintiffs sufficiently alleged invasion of interests protected by the by-law. See
Dwyer,
The defendants presented appraisal evidence challenging the plaintiffs’ presumption of standing, thus requiring the plaintiffs to show particularized injury with credible evidence sufficient to qualify them as “person[s] aggrieved.”
Marashlian,
The board granted the defendants a variance to construct a garage that increased the preexisting density and dimensional nonconformity. The density and dimensional requirements of the by-law confer standing on the plaintiffs to challenge the variance based on the aggravation of the preexisting nonconformity of adjoining lots. The by-law extensively regulates the
“An undeveloped, naturally vegetated and/or landscaped strip required per the Table of Dimensional Regulations along the full length of a lot line on the same lot as a permitted structure and/or use, and lying between said structure and/or use and the nearest lot line, unobstructed from the ground upward and unoccupied except by specific structures and/or uses allowed by the provisions of this Bylaw. Said yard is intended to provide aesthetic value as well as serve as a spatial and visual buffer between lots.”
The by-law also addresses reduction of open space on any nonconforming lot. It is undisputed that the proposed garage would violate the by-law’s density and dimensional provisions. Accordingly, the plaintiffs have alleged an injury of an interest protected by the by-law. 8
The view injury the plaintiffs have alleged relates to protected density and dimensional interests. The by-law identifies open space and describes “yard” in such a manner as to make protection of view an implicit interest protected by the density and dimensional provisions of the by-law. As a matter of common sense, the yard and setback requirements have a purpose to preserve open space, implying the ability to see through the open space. As a result, the plaintiffs’ claims of diminished water view allege a violation of an interest protected by the bylaw.
Of course, the plaintiffs’ claim of an impairment of water view, without more, does not confer standing. See
Sheehan
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Plymouth,
The defendants presented evidence tending to show that the proposed construction would constitute, at worst, a de minimis invasion of the plaintiffs’ water view. The plaintiffs have submitted contradictory evidence claiming substantial loss of and damage to their protected interests. The disputed degree of the injury renders this case inappropriate for summary judgment. Because the degree of the quantity and quality of the view impairment due to the increased density was not decided by the Land Court judge, we decline to determine whether the plaintiffs have presented sufficient credible evidence of a particularized injury to warrant standing.
10
The Land Court judge must determine, in the first instance, whether the plaintiffs have met their burden to submit credible evidence of the alleged injury. See
Butler
v.
Waltham,
4. Conclusion. The judgment is reversed. The matter is remanded to the Land Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
As LaBarre and Scott are the only parties actively litigating this appeal, we will refer to them as “the defendants” throughout.
Understandably, the judge did not consider the parties’ substantive arguments with respect to the variance.
As shown in Appendix 1, the defendants’ property is abutted on two sides by the plaintiffs’ property. Appendix 2 shows the defendants’ property and the proposed garage in greater detail. These sketches were compiled from exhibits in the summary judgment record, and we took judicial notice of the online database of the assessors for the town, which established the living area for
Although we stand in the shoes of the judge and make an independent review of the same record, Molly A. v. Commissioner of the Dept. of Mental Retardation, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 267, 268 n.5 (2007), and the judge’s decision does not relieve us of our need to review the record independently, we are often assisted, as here, by the motion judge’s thoughtful memorandum of decision.
See discussion, supra.
Although the plaintiffs did not enumerate the density and dimensional violations in their complaint in the Land Court, we consider the issue fairly raised by their response to the defendants’ statement of undisputed material facts, where the plaintiffs enumerated the applicable by-law provisions and noted that the proposed garage would increase the density on an already nonconforming lot.
Kenner
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Chatham,
We note, however, that in
Dwyer
v.
Gallo,
