After waiting a little over three months for the Spencer building inspector to act on its application for a permit to build a radio tower and ground broadcasting system, the plaintiff filed an appeal with the defendant board, asking the board to issue the permit. Construing the plaintiff’s request as one for an order directing the inspector to act on the application, the board refused to issue any such directive. The reason
1. Alleged jurisdictional defect. In arguing for a reversal of the judgment, the board challenges the court’s jurisdiction under G. L. c. 40A, § 17, by attacking its own jurisdiction to hear and decide the plaintiff’s appeal under G. L. c. 40A, § 8, and § VII (B) (1) of the Spencer zoning by-law. We need not set out the board’s argument in any detail. It is sufficient to state that it is based upon the fact that the inspector, by his failure to act, failed to file a decision with the town clerk, a condition precedent, alleges the board, to any appeal.
Two recent cases dealing with jurisdictional issues arising out of an inspector’s failure to act on enforcement requests are sufficiently analogous to control and dispose of the board’s contention. In
Vokes
v.
Avery W. Lovell, Inc.,
Reading
Yokes
and
Hogan
together, we conclude that the board’s assertion of want of jurisdiction for it to have entertained the plaintiff’s appeal was not timely asserted in the circumstances of this case. The plaintiff sought a permit from the board on the specific ground that the inspector had failed to act. Knowing full well that only the inspector could issue (or deny the issuance of) the permit and that the inspector had failed to act, the board could have declined to act and thereby
2. The plaintiffs intended use. In annulling the board’s decision, the judge concluded that the plaintiff is a nonprofit educational corporation and that the purpose of the radio station is “both religious and educational in nature.” The board does not dispute that the plaintiff is a nonprofit corporation, and there is record support for that fact.
What the board contends first is that the plaintiff has no right to further any religious purposes, as its articles of organization provide that the radio station is to be operated “exclusively for charitable, scientific, and educational purposes.” The board claims that the plaintiff cannot advance any religious purposes without first amending its articles of organization. The argument lacks persuasive force. Cf.
Congregational Church of Chicopee Falls
v.
Attorney Gen.,
To determine whether the plaintiff’s intended use is for religious or educational purposes and, hence, within the protective ambit of § 3, focus must be placed on the use of the structure rather than on the structure itself. See
Attorney Gen.
v.
Dover,
Evidence of the plaintiff’s intended use of its proposed radio station is provided in its licensing application filed with the Federal Communications Commission (commission).
4
Attached
From the plaintiff’s “Proposed Program Schedule,” also filed with its application before the commission, we learn that of the daily eighteen hours of airtime, approximately four hours will be for designated religious programs described only as “Morning Devotion,” “Morning Service,” “Inspirational Programs,” “Evening Service,” and “Evening Inspiration.” Remaining hours are assigned to categories such as news, weather, sports, classical music, and community events.
There is evidence to show that the commission issued the plaintiff a license to operate its radio station in a “range of frequencies known as the “‘Educational Band.’” It does not follow from this fact, however, that the plaintiff’s use of the radio station is for religious or educational purposes within the meaning of § 3. There are very distinct differences between the purposes of zoning regulation (“to stabilize the use of property and to protect an area from deleterious uses,”
Enos
v.
Brockton,
Although the plaintiff apparently satisfied the commission’s licensing requirements, see 47 Code Fed. Regs. § 73.503 (1985), there is nothing in those regulations which requires an applicant to make any demonstration of a furtherance of a “goal that reasonably could be described as educationally significant,”
Whitinsville Retirement Soc., Inc.
v.
Northbridge,
394 Mass, at 761 n.3, such as is necessary under § 3. However broad the phrase “religious or educational purposes” may seem, see, e.g.,
Mount Hermon Boys’ School
v.
Gill,
Our holding is a narrow one. We do not conclude that the plaintiff’s intended use can never be exempt from regulation under § 3 or that its presently intended use may not in fact be for religious or educational purposes. If the plaintiff claims the exemption, much more information will be needed, such as greater descriptions of the information to be conveyed, by whom it will be conveyed, and what religious or educational goals will be furthered thereby. See, e.g., Whitinsville Retirement Soc., Inc. v. Northbridge, 394 Mass, at 761 & n.3, and cases discussed therein. For all that appears in the record before us, the plaintiff’s intended use of the radio station is to provide a listening audience with programs which the plaintiff perceives to be of greater intellectual and inspirational value than those currently available. Although that purpose is laudable, it is neither religious nor educational within the plain meaning of § 3.
3.
The judgment.
No error appears on the face of the judgment. By its terms, the building inspector will be directed by the board to act on the plaintiff’s application. From the decision which accompanied the judgment, however, the board and the
Accordingly, the final paragraph of the judgment is amended to provide that the matter is remanded to the board of appeals with the direction that it enter a decision instructing the building inspector to determine whether the plaintiff is exempt from zoning regulation and, if so, what reasonable regulations are to be imposed upon the plaintiff in the construction of its radio tower and ground broadcasting system. As amended, the judgment is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
General Laws c. 40A, § 3, as appearing in St. 1975, c. 808, § 3, provides in pertinent part: “No zoning . . . by-law shall. . . regulate or restrict the use of land or structures for religious purposes or for educational purposes on land owned or leased ... by a nonprofit educational corporation; provided, however, that such land or structures may be subject to reasonable regulations concerning the bulk and height of structures and determining yard sizes, lot area, setbacks, open space, parking and building coverage requirements.”
The board contends that when a person is aggrieved by an inspector’s refusal or failure to act on an application for a building permit, the administrative remedy is an appeal to the State Building Code Appeals Board pursuant to 780 Code Mass. Regs. § 126.1 (1980). If there are certain situations in which this argument may have force, the instant case does not represent one of them. We see no applicability of the State Building Code to the question whether the plaintiff’s intended use of its proposed radio station is for religious or educational purposes, as compared to issues involving the proposed structure itself, such as “structural strength, adequate egress facilities, sanitary conditions, equipment, light and ventilation and fire safety.” 780 Code Mass. Regs. § 100.4 (1980). See also
Enos
v.
Brockton,
The board cites Gallagher v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 32 Pa. D.&C.2d 669, 673 (1963), as authority for the proposition that a radio station is not within the common understanding of church or religious use. The reliance is misguided. That decision is based on the peculiarities of the zoning code there controlling and providing, in pertinent part: ‘“[Cjhurches, chapels, convents, monasteries, and their adjunct residential dwellings or other places of worship’ are permitted uses . . .and. . .‘accessory uses . . . customarily incident to any of the . . . permitted uses’ are permissible.” Id., at 670.
The plaintiff’s licensing application was specifically relied upon by the judge in reaching his conclusion that the intended use “is both religious and
