The board appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court annulling its decision to deny Prudential’s application for site plan approval to construct two four-story office buildings in a zoning district in which office use is permitted as of right. (An earlier aspect of the case was decided at
Prudential sought review of the board’s decision in the Superior Court pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 40A, § 17. The parties stipulated that the buildings will contain 285,000 square feet of office space, with related parking facilities; that they will cover 4.2% of the 39.5 acres of land on which they will be situated; and that traffic from the site will feed principally into Route 109 in Westwood, an interchange for Route 128, Boston’s major circumferential highway. It was also found that the office use contemplated by Prudential is permitted as of right in the A-R-0 zoning district, 1 the least restrictive zoning district in Westwood, and that Prudential’s site plan, required by § 10A(d) of the Westwood zoning by-law, had received approval from the town’s planning board and the other municipal agencies required to pass upon it, including approval by the board of appeals of all requirements for such a site plan other than the requirement imposed by § 10A(e) (3). 2
1. The board argues that the site plan approval in this case involves a proceeding analogous to an application for a special permit, and that the judge failed to take into account the discretion conferred on a local zoning board in passing upon such an application. The board directs attention to decisions holding that, in special permit cases, a court cannot substitute its judgment for that of the board, see, e.g.,
Gulf Oil Corp.
v.
Board of Appeals of Framingham,
The argument misconceives the limited nature of the regulation. The Westwood by-law carefully delineates between uses
The question remains as to the role of the judge in reviewing a board’s decision denying approval of a site plan submitted in connection with a use allowed as of right. Such a review proceeds in accordance with the well-established principles governing judicial review under G. L. c. 40A, § 17.
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As the issue involves approval of a site plan for a use permitted as of right, the judge inquires whether (in the language of § 10A[e] of the Westwood by-law) the public interest can be protected “to a degree consistent with the reasonable use of the site for the uses permitted ... in A-R-O districts.” The leading case on site approval, in these circumstances,
Y.D. Dugout, Inc.
v.
Board of Appeals of Canton,
The judge in this case proceeded in this fashion. He considered all the evidence without regard to the weight given by the board to the evidence of the traffic experts. He determined, in a decision supported by exhaustive factual findings, that the view of the traffic situation suggested by Prudential’s consultants and their plans to alleviate the board’s concerns were sound, rejecting in the process the board’s contrary views. He concluded, in substance, that Prudential had made adequate provision for vehicular and pedestrian movement both inside and outside the project. There is ample evidentiary support for the judge’s findings. It follows that the judge had sufficient bases (a) for concluding that the board’s resolution of the only point in issue, the traffic situation, was unjustified because the board, in effect, had improperly forbidden a permitted use which could be conducted with reasonable conditions, and (b) for annulling the board’s decision and ordering the approval of Prudential’s site plan subject to such reasonable conditions as the board might impose.
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We add only that, in approving
2. The remaining arguments of the board do not require extensive discussion.
(a) The judge received evidence from a traffic consultant retained by Prudential whose proposals had not been presented to the board, although traffic plans in evidence prepared by other experts retained by Prudential had received board consideration. The board contends that the material constituted a new site plan which should have been rejected, or at the least, should have led to the case being remanded for the board’s consideration in the first instance of the new proposal. Prudential argues that the information constitutes only added evidence which was open to consideration by the judge under the principle expressed in
Bicknell Realty Co.
v.
Board of Appeals of Boston,
We are inclined to think the evidence in dispute falls within the latter principle. However, we need not decide the question whether the new information was so essential to the site plan that fairness required its consideration by the board because the judge made it clear that he found that
“each
site plan introduced by Prudential makes adequate provision for the convenience of vehicular and pedestrian movement within the site, and in relation to adjacent streets, property or improvements in compliance with § 10A(e) (3)”
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(emphasis supplied).
(b) The judge’s refusal to qualify a Westwood police sergeant as an expert in all phases of the traffic problem is well supported by the rule that “[a] judge . . . has broad discretion to determine whether an expert witness has a proper basis, in terms of adequate information and preparation, to render an opinion on the matter in dispute.”
Louise Caroline Nursing Home, Inc.
v.
Dix Constr. Corp.,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
A-R-O is the by-law’s acronym for an administrative-research-office zoning district, which in § 10A(b) of the by-law permits as of right “(1) office uses primarily involving . . . accounting . . . financial services . . . [and] (2) [ojther administrative uses ....’’
This provision requires that the site plan show “adequate provision for the convenience of vehicular and pedestrian movement within the site, and in relation to adjacent streets, property or improvements.”
The judge also took a view of the site and surrounding locale, with an eye towards the parties’ contentions as to the traffic question.
These uses include, in addition to offices for professional, financial and scientific and research uses, (1) other administrative uses “except those which regularly render services to patrons, customers, clients or members on the premises,” and (2) “any use permitted as of right in a [s]ingle [Residence [district.”
These uses include medical offices, health care facilities like convalescent or nursing homes, funeral homes, and uses subject to the grant of a special permit in a single residence district.
In both cases, the approval of site plans is justifiable as an informational tool which discloses the specifics of the project, including the proposed location of buildings, parking areas, and other installations on the land, and their relation to existing conditions such as roads, neighboring land uses, public features, and ingress and egress roads.
These principles have been variously stated but involve at least the following: “In a word, the matter is heard de nova and the judge makes his own findings of fact, independent of any findings of the board . . . .”
Bicknell Realty Co.
v.
Board, of Appeal of Boston,
Indeed, the drafters of the Westwood by-law appear to have used language practically identical to the language of the Canton by-law analyzed in the Y.D. Dugout decision.
Our conclusion does not mean that a board authorized to approve site plans is devoid of regulatory power over such plans. A board may lawfully reject a site plan that fails to furnish adequate information on the various considerations imposed by the by-law as conditions of the approval of the plan. See
Auburn v. Planning Bd. of Dover,
We do not consider the judge’s use of the words “site plan” as meaning that a new site plan had been prepared. The record shows that the new expert retained by Prudential for the trial made additional proposals related to the movement of pedestrian and vehicular traffic on the site plan that had originally been submitted.
