324 Mass. 57 | Mass. | 1949
This a bill in equity by way of appeal from the decision of the zoning board of appeal of the city of Attleboro brought under the provisions of § 30, inserted in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 40, by St. 1933, c. 269, § 1, as amended by St. 1935, c. 388, and St. 1941, c. 198, §§ 1, 2, to annul the decision of said board of appeal and to direct the inspector of buildings to issue to the plaintiffs a permit for an addition to their garage at 33 Ashton Road in said city. The plaintiffs have appealed from a decree entered by a judge of the Superior Court.
From the evidence, which is reported and essentially is not in dispute, it appears that the plaintiffs are the owners of a lot of land with a single family dwelling and garage thereon located in a “single residence district” as defined by § 2 of the zoning ordinance of the city of Attleboro which became effective on February 10, 1942. The house, containing seven rooms, is of wooden construction, Dutch colonial type, is thirty-five feet wide on its front or street side, and has a depth from front to back of twenty-five feet. As one faces it from the street there is a covered porch or piazza on the end of the house to the left and a one-car garage not over one and one half stories in height on the end to the right. The house, both on the front and on the rear, as well as the garage on the front, has a double pitched or gambrel roof. The roofs are of similar design, except that, in the rear, the garage roof has a single pitch. The garage is physically joined or “fastened” to the house. The garage is somewhat lower than the house, which is built upon a terrace, and the garage roof adjoins the house slightly below the level of the latter’s second story windows. Between the house and the garage, but under and within the roof and walls of the latter, is an area six feet in width and three feet in depth paved with flagstones. At the left a door leads from this area down a few steps into the basement of the house and at the right a door opens into
In the decision of the board of appeal after findings of fact it was stated, “application [Tor the permit] is hereby denied and dismissed.” The judge in the decree entered by his order adjudged that such denial and dismissal were within the jurisdiction of the board of appeal and, therefore, its decision should not be annulled. The refusal to annul, being based on jurisdictional grounds (see Clap v. Municipal Council of Attleboro, 310 Mass. 605), only amounted to a finding, in the language of the statute, that the decision of the board of appeal did not “exceed the authority of such board.” To dispose of the merits of the issues raised by the plaintiffs’ bill the words “and that no modification of it is required” should be added after the word “annulled.” See Lambert v. Board of Appeals of Lowell, 295 Mass. 224, 228. As so modified the decree is affirmed with costs.
So ordered.