The board of appeals of Harwich (board) granted The Snow Inn Corporation (Snow Inn) a special permit allowing changes and extensions to structures that preexisted the Harwich zoning by-law and did not fully conform to the by-law’s setback requirements. The plaintiffs, neighbors of Snow Inn, appealed the board’s decision to the Land Court. A judge of that court affirmed the board’s decision, and the plaintiffs appealed. We granted the plaintiffs’ application for direct appellate review and now reverse the judgment below. 3
We set out the few facts that are essential to our decision. For many years a large complex has existed adjacent to Wychmere Harbor in the Harwichport section of Harwich. The major structures include Thompson’s Clam Bar with a deck overlooking the harbor, a Victorian-era building known as The Snow Inn, and the Wychmere Harbor Club. The latter two buildings do not comply with the setback requirements of the Harwich zoning by-law. Those failures of compliance constitute nonconformities protected by G. L. c. 40A, § 6 (1988 ed.). Snow Inn’s proposed project, for which it obtained board approval, would increase the square footage of the building coverage of the lot from 64,740 square feet to 85,865 square feet.
The zoning by-law requires that the buildings must not cover more than fifteen per cent of the Snow Inn lot. The lot is bounded on one side by the Atlantic Ocean (Nantucket Sound). If the lot is deemed to extend to the “extreme low water mark,” as that term is used in modern tidal charts, that is, to reflect the lowest level ever reached by the sea at that location, the percentage of the lot that would be covered
General Laws c. 40A, § 6, provides in relevant part: “Except as hereinafter provided, a zoning ordinance or by-law shall not apply to structures . . . lawfully in existence . . . before the first publication of notice of the public hearing [concerning the adoption of a proposed zoning ordinance or by-law] required by section five, but shall apply ... to any reconstruction, extension or structural change of such structure . . . except where . . . reconstruction, extension or structural change to a single or two-family residential structure does not increase the nonconforming nature of said structure. Pre-existing nonconforming structures or uses may be extended . . . provided, that no such extension . . . shall be permitted unless there is a finding by the permit granting authority or by the special permit granting authority designated by ordinance or by-law that such . . . extension . . . shall not be substantially more detrimental than the existing nonconforming use[
4
] to the neighborhood.” We conclude,
If we were not to construe G. L. c. 40A, § 6, in that way, the provision in the first quoted sentence that a zoning ordinance or by-law “shall apply ... to any reconstruction, extension or structural change of [a protected nonconforming structure]” would be meaningless surplusage. Indeed, even as to a single or two-family residence, structures to which the statute appears to give special protection, the zoning ordinance or by-law applies to a reconstruction, extension, or change that “would intensify the existing nonconformities or result in additional ones.”
Willard
v.
Board of Appeals of Orleans,
Section X (J) of the Harwich zoning by-law tracks the second sentence quoted from G. L. c. 40A, § 6. Section X (J) provides: “Pre-existing non-conforming structures or uses may be changed, extended or altered on special permit from the Board of Appeals, provided that no such change, extension or alteration shall be permitted unless there is a finding by the Board that such change, extension or alteration shall not be substantially more detrimental to the neighborhood than the existing non-conforming use.” Section X (J) is applicable under G. L. c. 40A, § 6, but, contrary to the trial judge’s apparent understanding, we do not understand Sec
Neither Snow Inn nor the board contends that a finding that the project will not be substantially more detrimental to the neighborhood than the existing nonconforming structure would itself justify extensions or changes that violate the bylaw’s lot coverage or other requirements. The board contends, however, that the only question before it, and hence before the Land Court judge and this court, was the “substantial detriment” question. The board maintains that the question whether Snow Inn’s proposed project may violate lot coverage or other zoning requirements was not germane to the special permit hearing or the Land Court judgment and is better left to subsequent proceedings. The plaintiffs and Snow Inn do not appear to agree with that proposition. Rather, they vigorously argue several issues having to do with whether Snow Inn’s proposed extensions and changes would violate the lot coverage and other by-law requirements. It may be that the plaintiffs could have waited until after the grant of the special permit was finalized before raising the question whether the buildings could be extended in such a way as to violate by-law restrictions. We need not decide that matter. In view of the parties’ extensive arguments about whether the proposed project would conform to the by-law, and in light of the adjudication and order in the Land Court that “the improvements for which Snow Inn sought approval from the [board] met the statutory test forth in [G. L. c. 40A, § 6,] as well as that in the zoning by-law, [and] that they are protected by such provisions,” we deem it appropriate for us to determine now whether the project as proposed would run afoul of the by-law.
We need to focus on only one question to resolve this case. That question is whether Snow Inn’s property on its ocean side extends to a line that reflects the lowest level ever
The Colonial Ordinance of 1641-1647 declared that, “in all creeks, coves and other places, about and upon salt water, where the sea ebbs and flows, the proprietor of the land adjoining shall have propriety to the low water mark, where the sea doth not ebb above a hundred rods, and not more wheresoever it ebbs further.” The Book of General Lawes and Libertyes 50 (1649). In
Storer
v.
Freeman,
In addition, the court said in
Storer, supra
at 438: “The sea-shore must be understood to be the margin of the sea,
in its usual and ordinary state.
Thus, when the tide is out, low water mark is the margin of the sea; and when the sea is full, the margin is high water mark. The sea-shore is therefore all the ground between the ordinary high water mark and low water mark.” (Emphasis added.) The boundary line between
Thirty years after
Storer
v.
Freeman, supra,
was decided, this court decided
Sparhawk
v.
Bullard,
We think that the confusion engendered by the arguable departure of the
Sparhawk, Sewall & Day Cordage Co.,
and
Iris
line of cases from the text of the Colonial Ordinance of 1641-1647 and
Storer
v.
Freeman, supra,
may be substantially alleviated by resort to the reasoning in
East Boston Co.
v.
Commonwealth,
Since our decision in
Iris
v.
Hingham, supra,
in 1939, there have been no decisions of this court focusing on the issue discussed above. However, the Justices have spoken twice in advisory opinions. In
Opinion of the Justices,
Resolution of this appeal does not require us to decide whether the proper measure of the low water mark to which littoral property may extend is the mean low water mark or, instead, is the extreme low water mark that results from usual causes and conditions. According to the evidence in this case, the difference between the mean low water mark and the mark established by an ebb of the tide resulting from usual causes and conditions is only .07 of a foot (approximately 1/16 of an inch) in elevation, and therefore the buildings as proposed by Snow Inn would cover more than fifteen per cent of the lot regardless of whether private ownership extends to the extreme low water mark under usual and ordinary conditions or to the mean low water mark. Accordingly, we need not and do not decide whether the proper measure of the low water mark to which littoral property may extend is the mean low water mark or, instead, is the extreme low water mark that results from usual causes and conditions.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
We acknowledge the submission of briefs by the Commonwealth and the Conservation Law Foundation of New England, Inc., as amici curiae.
In
Willard
v.
Board of Appeals of Orleans,
