38 Mass. App. Ct. 162 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1995
At its 1987 annual town meeting, the town of Amherst voted to take the plaintiff’s property, a twenty-seven
Following a jury trial in Hampshire County Superior Court, the plaintiff was awarded the sum of $275,000, based on the property’s “highest and best use” as a residential subdivision consisting of single-family homes. The town has appealed the judgment and the denial of its motions for a directed verdict, and for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. On appeal, the town -argues that (1) the plaintiff failed to meet his burden of proving with a “reasonable probability” that he could have obtained the permits and approvals needed to develop his property to its highest and best use; (2) the trial judge committed error, both by refusing to instruct the jury on the plaintiff’s burden of proving its ability to obtain an easement that would be needed in order to develop the property for this use, and by refusing to declare as a matter of law that the property is not benefitted by an easement the plaintiff claims over an adjoining property; and, (3) the trial judge committed error by refusing to allow the town’s expert witness to give an opinion on the property’s value. We agree, in substance, with the town’s position and, therefore, reverse the judgment and remand for a new trial.
The record establishes the following facts. The plaintiff’s property (the locus) is unimproved land consisting mainly of open woodlands and fields. The locus lies at the east end of Olympia Drive, a statutory private way owned by the University of Massachusetts (University), which dead-ends approximately 170 feet inside the locus. Olympia Drive (and a branch thereof named Fraternity Road) provides access from the public way to the locus and to the University’s Fraternity-Sorority Park, the parcel immediately west of the locus (FSP parcel). For convenience of reference, a simplified diagram showing the locus and its surrounding area is appended to this opinion.
The locus is bounded on the east by unimproved land of the Vermont Central Railroad; and on the north by land of the University. There are no public ways accessible to the locus in either of these areas. Hence, the only access the locus currently has to a public way is over Olympia Drive (or Fraternity Road) to East Pleasant Street.
Under the town’s zoning by-law, the locus and the FSP parcel comprise a fraternity residence zone (FR zone), where the only significant uses allowed by right (upon plan approval by the town planning board) are fraternity or sorority residences and nonprofit educational institutions.
To avoid having to apply for a waiver, the plaintiff attempted to establish his rights to an existing easement over the VPA parcel southwest of the locus, that would enable him to extend Olympia Drive as a continuous loop through the locus and over the VPA parcel by way of the easement, to connect with East Pleasant Street south of that street’s intersection with Olympia Drive.
The plaintiffs expert obviously recognized the importance of the easement. In rough form, he outlined four possible subdivision schemes for the locus, three of which depended upon the easement in order to extend Olympia Drive as a loop — either as a completed and fully accessible road according to one of the options, or as an emergency means of providing secondary access to the locus according to the other two options. His first scheme contemplated an extension of Olympia Drive as a dead-end with no secondary access, but he acknowledged that the town planning board would almost certainly not accept that scheme.
There was conflicting evidence as to the number of house lots that would realize the highest and best use of the property. Numbers ranging from three or four large “estate” lots, to as many as twenty-two smaller lots were submitted to the jury. The disparity is not crucial: under any proposal to di
Each side attempted to rely on its own expert to testify as to the value of the locus at the time of the taking. The plaintiffs expert, James Brody, a real estate appraiser, described the locus in detail and expressed his opinion that its highest and best use was for three or four large residential homesites. He further testified that, in his opinion, the value of the locus was $331,000 at the time of the taking.
Mona Barto, a real estate appraiser from Amherst, hoped to testify for the town and was also asked to give her opinion as to the fair market value of the locus at the time of the taking. The judge, however, excluded that testimony, based primarily on his finding that she lacked “practical knowledge” and experience buying and selling property in the Amherst area.
1. We begin with the town’s claim that its expert witness, Barto, was improperly prevented from giving her opinion of value. The decision to qualify an expert to testify on a particular matter is based on findings of preliminary fact made by the judge acting within his discretion, Commonwealth v. Garabedian, 399 Mass. 304, 310 (1987), and will not be disturbed on appeal unless “there is no evidence to warrant the conclusion,” or there has been an abuse of discretion. Liacos, Massachusetts Evidence § 7.10.1, at 413-414 (6th ed. 1994).
In this instance, however, we think that the judge, who cited Barto’s lack of experience brokering real estate in the Amherst area, was in error, particularly where the plaintiffs expert, having similar qualifications, was allowed to testify on the same subject. “[I]t was error not to treat witnesses with similar qualifications in the same way,” Foley v. Foley, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 221, 224 (1989). See also Muzi v. Commonwealth, 335 Mass. 101, 106 (1956). At the least, Barto was minimally qualified as a residential real estate ap
Furthermore, when qualifying an expert to give an opinion of real estate value, we see no meaningful distinction (as the judge evidently did) between a real estate appraiser with brokering experience in the particular locality and an appraiser without that experience. See Lyman v. Boston, 164 Mass. 99, 106 (1895) (no requirement that an expert should have bought, sold, or owned land in the locality); Lee Lime Corp. v. Massachusetts Turnpike Authy., 337 Mass. 433, 436 (1958) (real estate broker or appraiser with sufficient professional knowledge and experience of other similar real estate in the area may testify); Lavin v. Lavin, 24 Mass. App. Ct. 929, 931 (1987) (expert who had “worked as an appraiser” and “who was in the process of earning professional designations in the appraisal field” may testify). The judge’s distinction is even less apt when it is recalled that the plaintiffs expert had not actively bought or sold property in the Amherst area for some time.
Even if the qualifications of the plaintiffs expert were arguably somewhat more impressive, that fact should have
2. We turn next to the related issues of the easement and of obtaining subdivision and special permit approval. Because the plaintiff’s likelihood of receiving these approvals depended in significant measure on his rights in the easement, we examine that issue first.
In 1971, Development Corporation of America owned the entire area that now includes the DCA and VPA parcels. The easement first appears on record as a reservation in a deed executed March 22, 1971, by which Development Corporation of America conveyed the westerly half of its property, including the property’s entire frontage on East Pleasant Street, to Village Park Associates, retaining the interior, or upland, portion. To assure its continued access to East Pleasant Street over the conveyed parcel, Development Corporation of America expressly reserved an “Access and Utility Easement,” for itself that is described in meticulous detail through language in the deed and also by reference therein to a “Plan of Land and Easements in Amherst, Massachusetts” dated March 10, 1971. The easement depicted on the plan does not cross the benefitted parcel to reach or touch the locus. The deed also states that the easement is “for the benefit of other land of the grantor located east of the [conveyed] parcel [i.e., the DCA parcel].”
Thereafter, by deed executed June 17, 1971, Development Corporation of America acquired the locus from Fraternity-Sorority Park, Inc. By express language (and also by reference to a “Plan of Easements” dated May 26, 1971), the deed conveyed easements benefitting the locus over Olympia Drive and Fraternity Road. Sometime in 1972 or 1973 (the transcript does not make clear when), the plaintiff acquired the locus from Development Corporation of America through foreclosure of a mortgage he held on the locus that had been
The easement reserved by Development Corporation of America in the March, 1971, deed plainly runs with the land comprising the DCA parcel and is appurtenant thereto. Nowhere does the deed itself, or the circumstances surrounding its execution, remotely suggest, as the plaintiff argues, that the parties to the deed intended an easement in gross, that was to be personal to the Development Corporation of America and unconnected with its ownership of the parcel and, therefore, possibly assignable by it to the plaintiff. Rather, the deed states that the easement is “for the benefit of other land of the grantor east of the [VPA] parcel” (emphasis supplied). See also Park, Real Estate Law § 273 (1981) (“An easement is not construed to be personal, or in gross, unless it cannot be presumed fairly as appurtenant to some estate”).
It also is the long-established rule in the Commonwealth, as elsewhere, that after-acquired property, such as the locus, may not be added to the dominant estate (here, the DCA parcel) without the express consent of the owner of the servient estate (the VPA parcel). Randall v. Grant, 210 Mass. 302, 304 (1911). Murphy v. Mart Realty of Brockton, Inc., 348 Mass. 675, 678-679 (1965). Pion v. Dwight, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 406, 410-411 n.5 (1981). Park, Real Estate Law, supra at § 279. The cited authorities further make clear that, absent such consent, use of an easement to benefit property located beyond the dominant estate constitutes an overburdening of the easement.
The plaintiff argues that consent of the servient estate holder is to be inferred from an unrecorded and unendorsed plan entitled “Village Park Subdivision, surveyed for Development Corporation of America” that is dated December 8, 1971. That plan arose after creation of the easement and was prepared for, and at the direction of, Development Corporation of America, not Village Park Associates. It is merely a conceptual road layout, simply names the imagined road “Village Park Lane,” and the subdivision “Village Park Sub
Based on the foregoing, we rule that the deeds offered by the plaintiff fail as matter of law to establish an easement over the VP A parcel benefitting the locus. There is no credible evidence in the record beyond the four corners of the deeds to support a contrary result. The judge’s failure to properly instruct the jury on the lack of an easement was error.
The plaintiffs theory of just compensation for the taking of the locus was based almost exclusively on its potential value as a residential subdivision.
It was clear at trial that the chief impediment to subdivision approval was the plaintiffs potential inability to provide
“A planning board may in any particular case, where such action is in the public interest and not inconsistent with the intent and purpose of the subdivision control law, waive strict compliance with its rules and regulations . . . .” (Emphasis supplied.)
G. L. c. 41, § 81R, as inserted by St. 1953, c. 674, § 7. The town’s regulation tracks the statutory language. See Meyer v. Planning Board of Westport, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 167, 169-170 (1990), for a general discussion of c. 41, § 81R waivers. We are aware of no reported case or other authority that orders or requires a board to grant a discretionary waiver. Furthermore, there is no evidence on the record to suggest that the Amherst planning board had an established history or practice of granting such waivers.
Beyond the hurdle of obtaining subdivision approval with waivers, the plaintiff would also have been required to obtain a special permit from the town’s board of appeals. In deciding whether to grant such a permit, the board is infused with considerable discretionary power, and its decision would not be disturbed on judicial review unless based “on a legally untenable ground ... or is unreasonable, whimsical, capricious, or arbitrary.” Subaru of New England, Inc. v. Board
To summarize, we hold that the judge committed reversible error by excluding testimony of the town’s expert as to the value of the locus. Furthermore, we hold that, based on evidence in the record, the plaintiff has no easement rights over the VPA parcel. At trial, therefore, the plaintiff was required to, but did not, prove that there was a reasonable probability that he could have obtained waivers from the town’s planning board and a special permit from the town’s board of appeals and thereby obtain approval for a residential subdivision on the locus. The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded for a new trial.
So ordered.
Under the “Dover Amendment,” nonprofit educational uses within this, or any other, zone may not be limited or excluded. See G. L. c. 40A, § 3.
Under Section V. G.l.d. of the town’s subdivision regulations, dead-end roads within subdivisions may not exceed 800 feet. The plaintiffs expert conceded that the town would not be unreasonable in calculating the length of Olympia Drive from its beginning at East Pleasant Street which, from that point to its present terminus 170 feet inside the locus, well exceeds 800 feet. Hence, Olympia Drive could not be extended to accommodate additional house lots on the locus without violating the regulation.
The court conducted a lengthy voir dire hearing during which it was established that Barto had worked as a real estate appraiser for some twelve years in the Amherst area and, during that time, had completed numerous appraisals of residential and unimproved property (such as the locus) for area banks and municipalities. She was a member of several professional organizations, including the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers from which she held the Residential Member (RM) designation. She had taught courses at the University of Massachusetts, sponsored by the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers, on real estate appraisal and valuation and had also previously worked in the New York area as a real estate broker buying and selling real estate.
For his part, the plaintiff’s expert, Brody, worked for the past thirty-five years primarily as a real estate appraiser and was also a licensed real estate broker in the Commonwealth, though his brokering experience occurred mainly from 1946 to the time when he began focusing on appraisal and valuation. Like Barto, Brody was a member of various professional organizations, including the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers, from which he held the designation MAI (a rank senior to that held by Barto). Brody also held the highest designation from other professional organizations and, like Barto, had taught courses and seminars on real estate appraising.
The town requested, but was denied, a jury charge on the plaintiffs’ burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, his rights in the easement. The town also requested, but again was denied, general instructions on the law pertaining to establishment of easements by deed. The court left it for the jury to compare and interpret the various deeds and plans introduced at trial, to determine the plaintiffs’ rights, if any, in the easement way.
The one supposed “comparable” (the Hart estate) relied on by the plaintiff as evidence of the value of the locus contained fifteen residential lots that were allowed as of right under the town’s zoning by-law. That property did not face the potential development and permit obstacles faced by the locus.