When laid out in 1971 as part of a proposed subdivision, lot 40 (the “locus”) conformed to the dimensional requirements of the zoning by-law of Wareham. Nine days after the preliminary plan for the proposed subdivision (it disclosed seven lots on a point projecting into Buzzards Bay) was filed with the Wareham planning board, the inhabitants of the town, on June 21, 1971, adopted an amendment to their zoning by-law requiring larger area and more frontage for residential lots in the zoning district (Residence C-3) in which the peninsula was classified. Each of the seven lots was conveyed to owners unrelated to one another and unrelated to the original owner of the entire site by August 2, 1973, and houses have been built on six of the seven lots. There is appended to this opinion a plan, incorporating the salient features of a plan filed with the Plymouth County Registry District of the Land Court on February 28, 1972, which shows the locus and the other lots in the subdivision.
Since 1984, the parties — the Tsagronises, who own lot 41, which abuts the locus (lot 40); successive owners of the locus; and the board of appeals — have fought their way through successive administrative and judicial proceedings. In those proceedings, the town and the owners of the locus have exerted themselves persistently to achieve the eligibility of the locus for a permit to build a single family residence, while the Tsagronises, equally persistently, have insisted that nothing at all may be built on the locus. Three cases result
The first case was a statutory appeal, i.e., under G. L. c. 40A, § 17, by the Tsagronises from a variance granted on December 3, 1984.
4
As the board’s variance decision was innocent of any trace of supporting findings, the Superior Court judge before whom the matter came lost no time in entering an order that the variance exceeded the board’s authority. See
Josephs
v.
Board of Appeals of Brookline,
After the controversy returned to the board, the building inspector issued a permit to the Forresters on the basis of a grandfathered small lot exemption derived from G. L. c. 40A, § 6. The Tsagronises appealed from that permit grant to the board of appeals, which affirmed the action of the building inspector. From that decision of the board the Tsagronises appealed. 5 A second judge of the Superior Court concluded that the locus was no longer exempt from application of the revised zoning law, that exemption having expired December 13, 1978. The judge, thus, annulled the decision of the board and ordered revocation of the permit. In so doing, the judge suggested the owners of the locus might have another go at a variance.
1.
Aggrieved party status of the plaintiff's.
As examination of the plan appended to this opinion will disclose, lot 41, which the Tsagronises own, has no greater frontage than any of the other six lots in the subdivision and, like those other lots, is below the one-acre requirement which became effective after the subdivision plan was first submitted. Indeed, the Tsagronis lot has substantially less road frontage or beach frontage than does the locus.
6
How then, the defendants ask, can the Tsagronises, who use their land as the owners of the locus wish to use theirs, be aggrieved persons entitled to maintain an appeal within the meaning of G. L. c. 40A, § 17? Cf.
Circle Lounge & Grille, Inc.
v.
Board of Appeal of Boston,
Unlike the properties of the plaintiffs in the
Circle Lounge
and
Redstone
cases, however, the Tsagronis property lies within the restricted zone. As owners of a lot abutting the locus, the Tsagronises were entitled to notice of the board of appeals’ action and, therefore, enjoy a presumption of aggrieved person status.
Waltham Motor Inn, Inc.
v.
LaCava,
2. Grandfather rights. When the subdivision plan was endorsed as approved by the planning board on December 13, 1971, the lots depicted on it acquired the benefits of G. L. c. 40A, § 7A, as amended by St. 1965, c. 366, § 1, and, so the defendants argue, the benefits of G. L. c. 40A, § 5A, as amended through St. 1961, c. 435, § 1. Both sections appeared in “old” c. 40A and were superseded by provisions of the “new” Zoning Act, St. 1978, c. 808, § 3, which Ware-ham adopted on April 18, 1978.
Section 7A of “old” c. 40A provided that if a lot shown on a preliminary subdivision plan, when first submitted, conformed with then existing municipal zoning law, it could be built upon for seven years from the date of endorsement of the plan, even though subsequent amendment to the local zoning law rendered the lot undersized.
8
That grace period
The Forresters seem to reason that since, under § 7A, a single-family house could have been built on the locus when, on December 7, 1972, it came into ownership separate from that of adjoining owners, the lot, i.e., the locus, conformed with local zoning regulations when it was recorded; ergo, it was entitled to permanent grandfather rights. Put another way, the Forresters say that on December 7, 1972, they complied with the dimensional requirements of Wareham’s zoning by-law because the lot then still enjoyed a dispensation from those dimensional requirements. The reasoning is circular in that, as in
Mendes
v.
Board of Appeals of Barnstable,
When the building inspector of Wareham granted a building permit for the locus in July, 1986, and the board of appeal on February 27, 1987, upheld his action, they purported to act under § 6 of “new” c. 40A. Under G. L. c. 40A, § 6, as appearing in St. 1975, c. 808, § 3, and as amended through St. 1985, c. 494, the “freeze” exemptions and dispensations which appeared in various sections in “old” c. 40A were reorganized in a single section. See
Wright
v.
Board of Appeals of Falmouth,
3.
The variance.
In the variance case, the pivotal question was whether the locus was afflicted with “circumstances relating to the soil conditions, shape, or topography” which differentiated it from other land in the zoning district in which it was located. See G. L. c. 40A, § 10, as appearing in St. 1975, c. 808, § 3. The board in its findings focused on the isolation of lot 40 in the otherwise fully developed peninsula. The judge fleshed this out. See
Sherman
v.
Board of Appeals of Worcester,
The balance of the variance criteria of § 10 fell easily into place and both the board and judge touched on them. Absent relief, the lot could not be used for a residence, the purpose for which it had been laid out with the approval of the planning board and for which the balance of the lots in the subdivision were being used. Literal enforcement, therefore, produced a hardship, and as Sias Point had come to be developed so that all the other lots were used in the fashion the Forresters desired to use theirs, desirable relief could be granted without detriment to the public good or derogating from the intent and purpose of the zoning fly-law. The entire peninsula had lawfully become a special case within the zoning district.
It is a difficulty, however, that the segment which the cul-de-sac removed from the locus, causing it to be oddly shaped, had less to do with lot 40’s disqualification under the Ware-ham zoning by-law than did that lot’s deficiencies in area and frontage. Ordinarily, failure to meet dimensional requirements does not satisfy the odd shape criterion of the statute. See
Warren
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Amherst,
The judge appears to have observed, however, that the alignment of the road and cul-de-sac in the approved subdivision plan impinged particularly on lot 40 and in such fashion as taxed its area and possibly its street frontage. What confronted the board and the judge was the consequence of the planning board’s view, back in 1971, of how lots on Sias Point might best be laid out. We are of opinion that the planning decisions of the town, as manifested in the approval of the subdivision plan, and the execution of that plan as to all but one remaining lot are factors which the board of appeals could take into account in arriving at a finding that the locus had become burdened with an oddity of shape. Our view recognizes the finite time allowed under G. L. c. 40A, § 6, to “build out” a subdivision, but respects as well the local prerogative of a board of appeals under G. L. c. 40A, § 10, to find that in particular circumstances a residual un-built lot in a subdivision has become an aberration as to shape and dimension such as to warrant relief consistent with the planned area in which it is located. Cf.
Pendergast
v.
Board of Appeals of Barnstable,
The judgments in Plymouth docket no. CA87-372 and no. CA84-20413 (which were consolidated below) annulling the action of the board of appeals in approving the issuance of a permit on the basis of rights conferred by G. L. c. 40A, § 6, are affirmed. The judgment in Plymouth docket no. CA89-2563B, that the board of appeals acted in accordance with its authority in granting a variance to the owner of lot 40, is affirmed.
So ordered.
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Notes
That date, in any event, was the date of the notice given by the board of appeal to the town clerk that a variance had been granted, following a hearing on November 28, 1984.
That case (Plymouth docket no. CA 87-372) was consolidated with the prior case (no. CA 84-20413), over which the court had retained jurisdiction.
The locus has 168 feet of frontage on the road, compared to 100 feet for the Tsagronis lot. The locus contains 22,600 square feet, compared to 25,900 square feet in the Tsagronis lot.
We place no reliance on a stipulation in the grandfather rights case that the court had jurisdiction to determine the validity of the issuance of the building permit. Jurisdiction cannot be conferred by agreement of the parties.
Flynn
v.
Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd.,
So far as material, § 7A provided that the zoning by-law “in effect at the time of the submission of the first submitted plan shall govern the land shown on such approved definitive plan, for a period of seven years from
For purposes of considering whether certain “zoning freeze” benefits apply under “new” G. L. c. 40A, § 6, the parties stipulated that the freeze period ended December 15, 1978. Nothing turns on the two-day difference.
