At issue is whether the planning board of one town has standing to obtain judicial review of a decision of the zoning board of an adjacent town. After a bench trial, a judge in the Superior Court affirmed a decision of the zoning board of appeals of Pembroke (zoning board) on the ground that the planning board of Marshfield (planning board) lacked standing to challenge the decision. We granted the planning board’s application for direct appellate review. We agree with the judge that Marshfield’s planning board did not have standing. Therefore, we conclude, as did the Superior Court judge, that it
We set forth the facts which are not in dispute. The planning board is the municipal board of Marshfield that is concerned with issues of zoning, traffic access, land use planning, and watershed protection in that town. It regularly proposes changes to the Marshfield zoning bylaw to address planning needs identified by it. It is the special permit granting authority under the Marshfield zoning bylaw for the water resource protection district created by that bylaw.
Route 139 is the primary means of access to and egress from Marshfield. Route 3, the principal highway connecting the south shore with the rest of the Commonwealth, divides the town of Pembroke with ninety per cent of the town to the west and ten per cent to the east. Marshfield lies completely to the east of Route 3 with one access, Route 139, to the principal highway. Development of the small section of Route 139 lying between the Marshfield-Pembroke town line and Route 3 in Pembroke has the potential to affect the concerns addressed by the Marsh-field zoning bylaw and will have a greater impact on the health, safety, and general welfare of the inhabitants of Marshfield than on their counterparts in Pembroke.
The defendant trustee, G. Stephen Miers, owns a parcel of land located on Route 139 in Pembroke adjacent to Marshfield.
The judge acknowledged the planning board’s evidence that
The planning board argues that it does have standing as a municipal board within the meaning of the statute.
General Laws c. 40A, § 17, provides that “any municipal officer or board may appeal” a decision of a zoning board of appeals without showing that its interests are harmed by the decision. See Harvard Square Defense Fund, Inc. v. Planning Bd. of Cambridge,
This, however, is not the end of the inquiry. In each of the cases cited above, the plaintiff was a city council member or a
The § 17 grant of standing to municipal officers and boards is exceptional in that it does not require any showing of injury to a legally protected interest. We think the provision must be construed narrowly so as to minimize the class of parties who have suffered no legal harm, yet “can compel the courts to assume the difficult and delicate duty of passing upon the validity of the acts of a coordinate branch of government.” Ginther v. Commissioner of Ins., ante 319, 322 (1998), quoting Tax Equity Alliance v. Commissioner of Revenue,
Moreover, in Carr, supra at 79, interpreting Reading, supra at 662, we stated that “a municipal board seeking to appeal . . . must have duties which relate to the subject matter.” The subject matter of this case is not zoning generally, but zoning in Pembroke, more specifically, the Pembroke zoning bylaw’s application to a project to be developed in Pembroke. The planning board therefore has no duties relating to the subject matter of this case.
Finally, we reject the planning board’s argument that, because it is a “party in interest” with a right to notice of hearings and of zoning appeal decisions, see G. L. c. 40A, §§ 11, 15, it has standing to challenge those decisions. The term “party in interest,” defined in § 11 and used in § 15, does not appear in the standing provisions of § 17. The Legislature apparently did not intend to grant the right of appeal to all “parties in interest.” See Ginther, supra at 324 (where Legislature uses different language in different parts of same statute, it intends different meanings). We also reject the planning board’s contention that it can represent the interests of Marshfield residents. The planning board has shown no reason why Marshfield residents, if they are “person[s] aggrieved” within the meaning of § 17,
Although we agree with the judge’s conclusion that the planning board lacks standing to obtain judicial review of the zoning board’s decision, we differ as to the proper disposition of this case. Standing is an issue of subject matter jurisdiction. Ginther, supra at 322. Because the planning board lacks standing, the judge should have dismissed the planning board’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction rather than affirmed the zoning board’s decision.
The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for entry of a judgment dismissing the complaint.
So ordered.
Notes
The other defendant, the zoning board, has not filed a brief. We are advised that the zoning board is relying on Miers’s argument.
The planning board concedes that it does not have standing as a “person aggrieved.”
The planning board argues that it is attempting to assert not the private rights of Marshfield property owners, but the Marshfield residents’ “public rights” of the sort considered in Harvard Square Defense Fund, Inc. v. Planning Bd. of Cambridge,
