Board of Health of Sturbridge v. Board of Health of Southbridge

461 Mass. 548
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 461 Mass. 548 (Board of Health of Sturbridge v. Board of Health of Southbridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Health of Sturbridge v. Board of Health of Southbridge, 461 Mass. 548 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Botsford, J.

In July of 2008, the plaintiffs filed an appeal in the Superior Court from a decision of the defendant board of health of Southbridge (board) approving a “minor modification” to the site assignment for an existing landfill and related processing facility in that town under G. L. c. Ill, § 150A (§ 150A).3 The plaintiffs brought their appeal pursuant to G. L. c. 30A, § 14. In response to a motion to dismiss, two judges in the Superior Court ruled that as parties before the board, the plaintiffs had standing to bring their complaint for judicial review to the Superior Court. However, the second judge (motion judge) concluded that the plaintiffs’ challenges to the board’s decision failed on the merits. Final judgment entered on December 16, 2009, affirming the board’s decision.

We transferred the plaintiffs’ appeal from the judgment to this court on our own motion to consider in particular the issue of the plaintiffs’ standing to seek judicial review in the Superior Court of the board’s decision. However, there is a threshold issue whether the appeal must be dismissed because the plaintiffs’ notice of appeal was not timely filed in the Superior Court. For the reasons we shall discuss, we conclude that the Superior [550]*550Court judge had authority to allow the plaintiffs’ motion to extend the time for filing their notice of appeal. With respect to the other issues raised, we conclude that on the record before the court, (1) the plaintiffs lacked standing to seek judicial review of the board’s decision in the Superior Court; and (2) the plaintiffs’ substantive challenges to the decision lack merit.4

1. Background. The basic background facts are not in dispute.5 The defendant Southbridge Recycling and Disposal Park, Inc. (SRDP), operates a landfill and an associated processing facility at 165 Barefoot Road in Southbridge. On February 27, 2008, SRDP filed an application for a minor modification of its exist-ing site assignment with the board pursuant to § 150A and 310 Code Mass. Regs. §§ 16.00 (2001), the implementing regula-tions of the Department of Environmental Protection (depart-ment). At that time, SRDP was operating both the landfill and the processing facility under a site assignment decision of the board issued in April, 1999.6 The minor modification SRDP requested had two components: (1) to reallocate a specified num-ber of tons per year of waste from the processing facility to the landfill, thereby increasing the volume of waste accepted by the landfill and decreasing by a corresponding amount the volume of waste accepted by the processing facility; and (2) to allow the landfill to accept waste from the processing facility regardless of its geographic origin.

Between March 27 and May 21, 2008, the board held a public hearing on SRDP’s modification request. On March 27, the first of what turned out to be eleven hearing dates, the hearing offi-cer admitted the plaintiff ten-citizen groups (citizen groups) as “Parties” to the hearing with the right to participate fully in it. See 310 Code Mass. Regs. §§ 16.20(9), (10)(e). Through their counsel, the citizen groups did so by presenting and witnesses, presenting and responding to motions, [551]*551making opening and closing statements to the board’s hearing officer, and submitting a proposed decision. At the hearing, approximately sixty witnesses testified, and seventy-two exhibits were admitted as well as seven chalks. The board issued its decision on June 9, 2008. It granted SRDP’s application for a minor modification of the site assignment, but with fifty-eight specific conditions imposed. The plaintiffs timely filed a complaint for judicial review in the Superior Court on July 8, 2008, naming the board and SRDP as defendants.7

2. Timeliness of the plaintiffs’ notice of appeal, a. Facts. The Superior Court judgment entered on December 16, 2009. Under Mass. R. A. P. 4 (a), as amended, 430 Mass. 1603 (1999), the plaintiffs were required to file their notice of appeal in the Superior Court within thirty days of that date.8 The plaintiffs apparently mailed their notice of appeal to the Superior Court on January 15, 2010, but the court did not receive or docket the notice until January 19 (January 18 was a holiday), more than thirty days after the date of the judgment.

On February 3, 2010, SRDP and the board jointly moved to strike the notice of appeal as untimely filed. At the hearing on the defendants’ motion, held on March 23, the motion judge permitted the plaintiffs’ counsel to make an oral motion to enlarge the time to file the notice of appeal under Mass. R. A. P. 4 (c), as appearing in 378 Mass. 928 (1979).9 On April 1, the motion judge allowed the motion to enlarge and denied the defendants’ motion to strike. The plaintiffs’ appeal was entered in the Appeals Court on May 14. On May 17, the defendants [552]*552moved to dismiss the appeal based on what they claimed was the late filing of the notice of appeal. On June 4, 2010, a single justice of the Appeals Court entered an order denying the motion and stating that the untimely filing “may be raised as an issue in appellee’s brief.”

b. Discussion. SRDP and the board press their claim that the plaintiffs’ appeal must be dismissed because the motion judge lacked authority to allow the plaintiffs’ motion to enlarge the time for filing the notice of appeal. We reject that argument.

The judgment entered on December 16, 2009. To be timely under Mass. R. A. R 4 (a), the notice of appeal was required to be “filed with the clerk of the lower court” within thirty days, i.e., on or before January 15, 2010. The plaintiffs did not file their notice within that period. While it appears the notice was mailed on Friday, January 15, 2010, it was not received by the court, and therefore it was not “filed with the clerk,” until January 19, 2010.10 See Garrett v. Director of the Div. of Employment Sec., 394 Mass. 417, 420 (1985) (filing and mailing are distinct concepts). It was therefore a few days late. Nonetheless, the motion judge was authorized by Mass. R. A. R 4 (c), “[ujpon a showing of excusable neglect, . . . [to] extend the time for filing the notice of appeal . . . for a period not to exceed thirty days from the expiration” of the initial thirty-day appeal period. Because the plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal on January 19, they only required a four-day extension — well within the judge’s authority — to render timely their notice of appeal filed on that date.

The fact that the plaintiffs did not move to enlarge the time for filing their notice of appeal until March 23, 2010,11 did not deprive the motion judge of her power to grant an enlargement of time to January 19. Nothing in our jurisprudence requires that a motion to enlarge time be made or filed within the time [553]*553permitted for an extension under rule 4.12 What is critical is that the actual notice of appeal is filed within that time. In other words, the limitation in rule 4 is a limitation on the length of the extension of time that the judge is empowered to grant for filing the notice of appeal itself; the limitation does not restrict the period in which the judge may act or prescribe when a motion to enlarge time may be filed.

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Bluebook (online)
461 Mass. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-health-of-sturbridge-v-board-of-health-of-southbridge-mass-2012.