324 Mass. 75 | Mass. | 1949
The defendants have appealed from a decree enjoining their use, hereinafter described, of certain premises on Farwell Street in the city of Newton in violation
Star Market Co. is engaged in the sale and distribution of food mainly through its stores in Newtonville, Watertown, Wellesley and Somerville. In these stores it sells meat,, fish, produce, delicatessen, groceries and dairy products. The premises on Farwell Street are used by it as a general supply depot in which food is prepared and processed, equipment and supplies are stored, and fixtures and equipment including counters, shelves and carriages used in the stores are repaired and painted. To some extent the counters and shelves are manufactured. Fishcakes are fried, and hams and beef as well as chicken and beef pies are cooked. Salads are made. Coffee, walnuts, hard candies, cheese and cookies are packaged. Uncooked vegetables such as beets, cabbage, spinach and carrots are washed, trimmed and wrapped in cellophane. The equipment of the depot includes stoves, a salad mixing machine, a vegetable shredder, a potato peeler, a steam oven, and a deep frying kettle. Perishable food products are stored in a cooler and an outdoor refrigeration unit. A compressor operates the cooler and an ice machine prepares flaked ice. Cardboard boxes, tools, paint supplies, store shelving and equipment, both used and unused, for the maintenance and repair of the stores are kept on the premises. For repairing and fabricating there are power driven tools including a band' saw, a round blade ripsaw, a radio saw, a planer, and a shearer for snipping and bendr ing sheet metal.
It is apparent from the foregoing summary that the judge’s finding that “the present uses of the land and buildings are different in kind from the [nonconforming] uses permitted under the zoning ordinance” is not plainly wrong. In Moulton v. Building Inspector of Milton, 312
It is patent that the present tenant of the premises is not conducting a dairy farm nor is it using the premises for any agricultural purpose. Without generally characterizing the business now being carried on, essentially it involves the cooking of meats, the washing, packaging and processing of vegetables and other food products for sale in stores remote from the premises, and also the manufacture, painting and repair of the equipment for these stores.
Whether the present use of the premises is no more detrimental to the neighborhood than the former use is not material where, as here, the characteristics of the respective uses are manifestly dissimilar.
The use of the premises by the tenant Star Market Co. presumably with the knowledge and consent of the landlord H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc., who had a right to terminate the tenancy, was a use by the defendant H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc., which, being in violation of the ordinance, may be enjoined. Lexington v. Bean, 272 Mass. 547, 554.
In the decree, paragraphs numbered 2 (b) and 2 (e) concern the use of the premises for the filleting and processing of fish and as a garage and grease pit for the maintenance and repair of motor vehicles, and storage of motor vehicles, parts and accessories, which uses were discontinued before the filing of the present bill. Paragraph 3 of the decree is a general injunction against uses in violation of the ordinance and is too comprehensive in its terms to
So ordered.