A Superior Court judge, in a pair of consolidated cases, ordered summary judgment for the plaintiffs, Raymond and Deborah Valcourt and Paul, Wilhelmina, and Joseph Pelletier, abutters to a parcel of land owned by Gale Martelly, trustee оf the Martelly Land Trust, in the town of Swansea, the result of which was to annul a decision of the Swansea Zoning Board of Appeals (board) and to declare invalid a building permit issued to Philip R. Martelly, husband of Gale (Martellys). The Martellys, Philip Martelly’s рarents, the board, and the building inspector (collectively, the appellants) appeal, claiming that the abutters lack standing and that the judge erred in concluding that the term “frontage” means an uninterrupted line. The Martellys also claim on appeal, for the first time, that the interpretation of the zoning by-law advanced by the abutters deprives them of all economically viable uses of their land, and as such constitutes a taking. We affirm.
The material facts are not in dispute. Philip’s parents acquired approximately 19.5 acres in Swansea on December 15, 1961. The tract had frontage of approximately 260 feet on Pearse Road and frontage in two noncontinuous sections of 262 feеt and 122 feet on Wilbur Avenue, both public ways. Over the years, they conveyed smaller parcels from the tract and, by 1994, were left with approximately 16.2 acres having frontage of 20 feet on Pearse Road and frontage in two noncontinuous sections of 111.91 feet and 50 feet on Wilbur Avenue. The 16.2 acres is depicted roughly on the sketch appended to this opinion, shown thereon as two shaded areas labeled A and B.
Philip Martelly filed a plan with the Swansea planning boаrd showing a division of his parents’ 16.2 acre tract into the parcels A and B, as shown on the sketch. Parcel A is shaped like a lower case letter “h.” It contains 5.9 acres and has frontage on Wilbur Avenue in noncontinuous segments of 111.91 feet аnd 38.09 feet, respectively, for a total of 150 feet, the minimum frontage required under the zoning by-law.
Armed with the plan, Philip applied for a building permit to construct a house on parcel A. The building inspector issued the permit on May 8, 1995. On June 15, the abutters made demand on the building inspector, pursuant to G. L. c. 40A, § 7, to enforce the by-law and rescind the permit on the ground that parcel A did not have 150 feet of frontage, measured as a continuous line, and that the proposed division would reduce the frontage of parcel B below the minimum requirements of the by-law. See note 6, supra. The building inspector rеsponded on June 27, declining to rescind the permit. The abutters, filed an appeal with the zoning board on July 18,
The Martellys filed a complaint for declaratory relief on November 17 seeking a declaration that there had been no constructive grant and that board’s decision was timely and valid.
1. Standing. The appellants argue that the abutters lack standing to appeal the board’s dеcision because they failed to establish their status as persons aggrieved within the meaning of G. L. c. 40A, § 17. The abutters contend that, as abutters, they are presumed to have standing, and, absent a proper challenge to their status as persons aggrieved, the presumption is sufficient to confer standing to maintain their appeal.
A decision of a zoning board may be challenged only by a “person aggrieved” within the meaning of § 17. See Marashlian v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Newburyport,
The appеllants do not dispute that the abutters were entitled to the presumption of standing. Rather, they contend that the presumption disappeared when that status was challenged by the Martellys’ answer to the abutters’ complaint and by the aрpellants’ memoranda of law opposing the abutters’ motions for summary judgment. It is not enough simply to raise the issue of standing in a proceeding under § 17. The challenge must be supported by evidence. See Watros v. Greater Lynn Mental Health & Retardation Assn.,
2. Frontage. The appellants argue that the judge erroneously concluded that frontage must be a continuous line. They urge us to overturn the judgment of the Superior Court because zоning is “a local matter,” Burnham v. Board of Appeals of Gloucester,
The by-law does not define the term “frontage,” and the board based its decision on the absence of any requirement in the by-law that frontage be continuous. “In the absence of an
The motion judge concluded that from the “dearth of any reported decisions on divided frontage . . . landowners, develoрers, and zoning enforcement authorities commonly understood the term” “frontage ... to mean a single, continuing property line of a lot running along a public way, an approved way, or a street that conforms to the by-law.”
Section VIII F of the Swansea zoning by-law states:
“Lot frontage shall be as required for the particular district or not less than one hundred fifty (150) feet and shall be measured along the street lot line between the side lot lines, provided that the width of the lot shall not be less than one hundred twenty (120) feet for that part of the lot between the street and the straight line connecting the points of the side lot lines distance fifty (50) feet from the street, mеasured at right angles thereto.”
3. The claim of a taking. The Martellys argue that the interpretation advanced by the abutters and adopted by the motion judge constitutes an unconstitutional taking. This issue was never raised in the Superior Court. “The general rule is that an issue not raised in the trial court cannot be argued for the first time on appeal.” M.H. Gordon & Son, Inc. v. Alcoholic Bevs. Control Commn.,
There has been no showing here that the Martellys could not create a building lot on parcel A by utilizing the procedures under G. L. c. 41, §§ 81K et seq., the subdivision control law. Nor has there been a showing how the facially valid 150 foot frontage requirement is unconstitutional as to parcel A. Compare MacNeil v. Avon,
The judgments were not in error and must be affirmed.
So ordered.
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Notes
The Swansea zoning by-law, § III B(1)(a), prohibits the erection of a principal structure on a lot “having a frontage of less than one hundred fifty (150) feet.”
The zoning by-law, § III B(1)(b), prohibits reducing a parcel to the point where it does not comply with frontage requirements. Cоmpare Sorenti v. Board of Appeals of Wellesley,
A previous board decision concluded that two noncontinuous segments of 112 feet and 50 feet provided sufficient frontage for the undivided lot. That decision does not appear to have been appealеd.
Planning board endorsement of a plan under G. L. c. 41, § 81P, does not constitute approval under the zoning by-law. See Cricones v. Planning Bd. of Dracut,
There is no dispute as to the timeliness of that appeal, filed within thirty days of the response to their § 7 request for enforcement. See Vokes v. Avery W. Lovell, Inc.,
On appeal, neither party has addressed these issues; they are, therefore, waived. See Mass.R.A.P. 16(a)(4), as amended,
Leading treatises do not discuss divided frontage as an issue that arises in the interpretation of frontage requirements of zoning by-laws, and the appellants have cited no authority that has considered the issue. See Bobrowski, Massachusetts Land Use and Planning Law § 12.7.2 (1993); Healy, Massachusetts Zoning Manual §§ 17.13-17.20 (1995); Eno & Hovey, Real Estate §§ 23.1 et seq (1995); Randall & Franklin, Municipal Law and Practice § 616 (1993); Anderson, American Law of Zoning § 9.65 (3d ed. 1986 & Supp. 1992); Annot., Validity and Construction of Zoning Regulations Prescribing a Minimum Width or Frontage for Residence Lots,
