413 Mass. 359 | Mass. | 1992
The plaintiff owns a parcel of land on Liberty Street, a forty foot wide paved public way, in the town of Braintree. He proposes to divide his property into twelve lots, each of which contains at least fifty feet of frontage on Liberty Street as required by Braintree’s zoning by-law. General Laws c. 41, § 810 (1990 ed.), provides that no one may subdivide land in a town in which the subdivision control law, G. L. c. 41, §§ 81K-81GG (1990 ed.), is in effect, as it is in Braintree, without first submitting a plan of the
After trial, a judge in the Land Court decided that the planning board had exceeded its authority in refusing the requested endorsement. He annulled the board’s decision and remanded the matter to the board with instructions that the board endorse the plan as requested. The board appealed and, by a memorandum and order under its rule 1:28, the Appeals Court reversed. We allowed the plaintiffs application for further appellate review. We agree with the Appeals Court, and we reverse the decision of the Land Court judge.
The judge found that “[tjhere is a guardrail located within the Liberty Street right of way, approximately seven feet from the boundary of the [plaintiffs land]. As shown on the Lot Division Plan, this guardrail extends from a railroad bridge at the southeasterly corner of [the property], and runs northerly for about 650 feet along Lots No. 1 through 8. It ends approximately midway across the frontage of Lot No. 8. . . . The State Department of Public Works (‘State DPW’) installed the guardrail on Liberty Street due to the existence of a downward slope between such street and portions of [the property]. It is the policy of the State DPW to remove guardrails when the reason for their installation has been ex
In annulling the planning board’s decision, the Land Court judge reasoned essentially as follows. General Laws c. 41, § 81L, provides that “the division of a tract of land into two or more lots shall not be deemed to constitute a subdivision within the meaning of the subdivision control law if, at the time when it is made, every lot within the tract so divided has frontage on ... a public way ... of at least such distance as is then required by zoning or other ordinance or by-law if any.” In addition, the judge recognized that this court and the Appeals Court, construing c. 41, §§ 81L & 81M together, have concluded that, in addition to frontage requirements being met, an endorsement that “approval under the subdivision control law is not required” is inappropriate unless there is “adequate access” from the public way to each of the proposed lots. See Gifford v. Planning Bd. of Nantucket, 376 Mass. 801, 807 (1978); Perry v. Planning Bd. of Nantucket, 15 Mass. App. Ct. 144, 150-151 (1983). The judge was satisfied that there was adequate access from Liberty Street to the several lots. He concluded that “neither the slope nor the guardrail constitutes an insurmountable impediment to a finding that adequate access from. Liberty Street to the lots [was] present [because] there [was] no impediment to [the plaintiffs] filling and regrading the property, which action [would] result in the removal of the slope, and hence the extinguishment of any need for the guardrail.”
Planning boards may properly withhold the type of endorsement sought here when the “access implied by the frontage is . . . illusory in fact.” Corcoran v. Planning Bd. of Sudbury, 406 Mass. 248, 251 (1989), quoting Fox v. Planning Bd. of Milton, 24 Mass. App. Ct. 572, 574 (1987). The plaintiff argues that the access is not illusory in this case because, as the judge determined, the plaintiff could regrade the slope, and regrading would result in the DPW’s removal
We conclude, as did the Appeals Court, that c. 41, §§ 81L & 81M, read together, do not permit the endorsement sought by the plaintiff in the absence of present adequate access from the public way to each of the plaintiff’s lots. It is not enough that the plaintiff proposes to regrade the land in a manner satisfactory to the DPW and that the DPW may respond by removing the guardrail. In an analogous situation, the Appeals Court upheld the refusal of a planning board to issue an “approval not required” endorsement where the public way shown on the plan did not yet exist, even though the town had taken the land for future construction of a public street. The Appeals Court concluded that public ways must “in fact exist on the ground” to satisfy the adequate access standard of c. 41, § 81M. Perry v. Planning Bd. of Nantucket, supra at 146, 150-151. While Perry dealt with nonexistent public ways, and this case deals with nonexistent ways of access, the principle is the same. There should be no endorsement in the absence of existing ways of access.
In addition, we reject the argument, based on Anzalone v. Metropolitan Dist. Comm’n, supra, that, at least after regrading, the plaintiff would have a common law right of access that would entitle him to the requested endorsement. It is not a right of access, but rather actual access, that counts. In Fox v. Planning Bd. of Milton, supra at 572-573, the Appeals Court held that abutting lots had adequate access to a Metropolitan District Commission (MDC) parkway, not merely because the abutter possessed a common law right of access, but because, in addition, the MDC had granted the landowner a permit for a common driveway to run across an MDC green belt bordering the parkway. In the present case, the plaintiff has not received such an approval.
So ordered.