The town seeks to enjoin the defendant from stripping the loam from a tract of about nineteen acres of land in violation of the town’s zoning by-law.
The facts appear from findings of the judge and from the evidence, which is reported. The by-law took effect on August 1, 1945. On July 29 the defendant placed a stеam shovel on the premises and stripped the top soil from an area thirty to thirty-five feet wide and extending from one of the roads bounding the property back to a railroad that bisects it. He рiled the soil upon the lot. His purpose was and is .to sell the loam. He asserts that by reason of whаt he did before the by-law became effective he acquired an “existing use” under which he can strip the entire acreage. The town, on the other hand, contends that any further stripping would be an extension of the use and therefore a violation of the by-law. The judge recognized the defendаnt’s right to remove the loam that was stripped and piled before the by-law took effect, but enjoined any further stripping, except for certain limited purposes permitted by the by-law. The defendant appeals.
The statute that confers upon cities and towns power to pass zoning ordinаnces or by-laws provides that “Such an ordinance or by-law or any amendment thereof shall not apply to existing buildings or structures, nor to the existing use of any building or structure, or of land to the extent to which it is usеd at the time of adoption of the ordinance or by-law . ” It further provides that such an ordinance or by-law shall apply to any alteration of a building or structure td provide for its use for the same рurpose “to a substantially greater extent.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 40, § 26, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 269, § 1. There is nothing in the by-law itsеlf that saves existing nonconforming uses of land to any greater degree than required by the statute. See § 12 of the by-law; LaMontagne v. Kenney, 288 Mass, 363.
It is plain that the Legislature intended that existing uses
This construction is consistent with the provision of the statute which prevents the alteration of a building in such manner as to extend the area of an existing use •— a provision which it seems clear would apply - even, if changed circumstances should render it impracticable or impossible to continue the existing use without such extension. The extension of a use tо which the statute refers is extension of the area devoted to the use and not increase in amount of • use within the same area. Building Commissioner of Medford v. McGrath,
It does not necessarily follow from what has been said that an existing use for the operation of a stone quarry, for example, or a sand or gravel business, or even for the removal of loam can never be continued by increasing the area of exсavation after the passage of a zoning ordinance or by-law excluding such use from the neighbоrhood. It is conceivable that a larger area than that previously excavated may have been devoted to the use by actual occupation of the land in a manner physically appropriating it to the use, as for example by means of structures, use for storage or wаys, preparation of the ground, or even perhaps by fencing off the portion to be used, if thе fencing had particular relation to the use. See Burlington v. Dunn, 318
The defendant further contends that the by-law as applied to him is unconstitutional. This subject hаs been so recently discussed with reference to a similar by-law in Burlington v. Dunn,
Decree affirmed with costs of appeal.
