Plaintiffs Harrison and his wife brought this civil rights action in 1968 against certain officials of the Town of Braintree.
1
The court dismissed the complaint for want of jurisdiction. We upheld the dismissal as to the first eight counts brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, but reversed as to counts IX and X which purported to state claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3).
Harrison v. Brooks,
In 1964 Textron, Inc. built a factory adjacent to the Harrisons’ home and laid driveways across the residentially zoned area оn both sides of the house. The Harrisons brought a mandamus proceeding in state court against defendant Ma-loney to compel him to enforce a zoning by-law which in their view prohibited this use of residentially zoned property. The lоwer court refused to issue the writ, but the Supreme Judicial Court upheld the Harrisons’ interpretation of the ordinancе, staying its writ “to give an opportunity for orderly municipal action in respect to providing legal access to land in the industrial zone.”
Harrison v. Building Inspector,
Counts IX and X, citing 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3), allege that after the Supreme Judicial Court’s first decision the defendаnts, acting under color of state law, conspired to deprive plaintiffs of their right to equal protection of the law by “urging” and “persuading” the Braintree planning board to recommend and the town meeting to adopt an unconstitutional and invalid by-law to permit the continued use of the driveways.
2
Griffin v. Breckenridge,
The class asserted by appellants, that of “residential property owners who own adjacent residential land illegally crossed by industrial access driveways” is descriptive of one group affected by appellants’ dispute with appellees, but has little to do with appellees’ reasons for advocating positions opposed to appellants.
See Bricker
v.
Crane,
Affirmed.
Notes
. During the relevant period defendant Brooks was chairman of the town Industrial Commission; defendant Hunt, town counsel; defendant Magaldi, chairman of the Planning Board; and defendant Maloney, building inspеctor.
. At trial plaintiffs sought unsuccessfully to amend the complaint to extend the conspiracy backwards in time tо encompass the entire period from the construction of the Textron plant forward. Although evidence оf events during this period was admitted, the court limited its significance to providing “background” for the conspiracy alleged in the complaint.
. Defendants testified they opposed the closing of the access roads becаuse the relocation of the industrial plants which might result from this step would cause the town great economic hаrm. They also testified that they believed the driveways were permissible under the town’s zoning ordinances, an interpretаtion to which they persuaded the lower court in the mandamus action. In light of this testimony, their refusal to take action to close the roads during this period could not support an inference of malice toward residential owners; nor would Maloney’s deviation from his usual practice of having complainants meet with alleged zoning law violators in order to work out an accommodation or Maloney’s submission of pleadings identical to Textron’s in the mandamus action. Nor does the record show that in responding to the Supreme Judicial Court’s invitation to take “orderly municipal action” after the driveways were held to violate the zoning by-laws defendants adopted an ordinance they knew to be unconstitutional or were motivated by malice. Magaldi’s acceptance оf guarantees from industrial developers on a bank loan he took out bespeaks injudicious self-interest rather than animus toward residential property owners.
Cf. Kennedy Park Homes Ass’n v. City of Lackawanna,
. E. g., Brooks’ remark to a Textron official during trial of the Harrisons’ state court nuisance action against Textron “I hope you beat [Harrison] and beat him good.”
