Burke v. Metropolitan District Commission

159 N.E. 739, 262 Mass. 70, 1928 Mass. LEXIS 1024
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 159 N.E. 739 (Burke v. Metropolitan District Commission) 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
Burke v. Metropolitan District Commission, 159 N.E. 739, 262 Mass. 70, 1928 Mass. LEXIS 1024 (Mass. 1928).

Opinion

Sanderson, J.

This is a petition for a writ of mandamus, which was reserved on the pleadings and the auditor’s report for determination by the full court. The petitioner owns a parcel of land about one hundred feet square abutting on Memorial Drive, in Cambridge, a parkway under the jurisdiction of the respondents. He has leased the land to a corporation for a gasoline filling station. Upon his application for two driveways opening on Memorial Drive, each twenty-five feet wide, to be located at either extremity of the frontage, leaving a fifty-foot space between the driveways, the respondents granted him a permit for one driveway fifteen feet in width. The prayer of the present petition is for a writ to issue ordering the respondents to grant a permit for two driveways of the width and at the location set forth in his application.

Formerly all the land bounding on the Charles River in this vicinity was owned by the Dover Stamping Company, which conveyed a portion of it abutting upon the river to the city of Cambridge for'park purposes, with a covenant on the part of the city to construct along the boundary line of the park within the parcel of land a roadway and walk to which the company and its successors and assigns (owners or occupants of adjoining lands of grantor) shall have free access, with the right to use the same for the purpose of a way, subject to such reasonable rules and regulations as may from time to time be made by the Park Commissioners of said City or by any other board or department having for the time being control or management of said park . . . .”

Roads and boulevards, built under authority of St. 1894, c. 288 (G. L. c. 92, § 35), have been held to be public ways. [73]*73Whitney v. Commonwealth, 190 Mass. 531. Gero v. Metropolitan Park Commissioners, 232 Mass. 389. Anzalone v. Metropolitan District Commission, 257 Mass. 32. Metropolitan District Commission v. Cataldo, 257 Mass. 38. Kimball v. Metropolitan District Commission, 257 Mass. 55. Van Poppel v. Boston Elevated Railway, 258 Mass. 389. But roadways constructed as a part of public parks, by park commissioners acting under the general authority conferred by St. 1893, c. 407 (G. L. c. 92, § 33), and amendments thereof, are not public ways, but an integral part of the park or open space for recreation. Gero v. Metropolitan Park Commissioners, supra, page 392.

The roadway in question was to be constructed by the city of Cambridge within the park, and as a part of its park system under St. 1892, c. 341, and St. 1893, c. 337. A way so constructed does not become a public way in which abutters have special rights apart from agreement. Oliver v. Worcester, 102 Mass. 489, 496. Jones v. Boston, 201 Mass. 267. The park, including the roadway in question, was conveyed by the city of Cambridge to the Commonwealth in pursuance of the authority granted by St. 1920, c. 509, and it is therein provided that the metropolitan district commission shall have all the powers conferred upon the metropolitan park Commission by St. 1893, c. 407, and acts in amendment thereof; and in the deed the Commonwealth was given the right to enforce all covenants, agreements and restrictions made or created by former owners of the lands with or in favor of the grantor, “said covenants, conditions, agreements and restrictions being for the benefit of the land hereby conveyed.”

Statute 1893, c. 407, gave the commissioners power to acquire, maintain and make available to the inhabitants of the metropolitan district open spaces for exercise and recreation, and to that end they were given power to acquire land for “public open spaces” and to preserve and care for such open spaces, and they were authorized to make rules and regulations for the. government of such reservations. The authority of the respondents in the case now under consideration is derived from St. 1893, c. 407, and amend[74]*74ments thereof (G. L. c. 92, § 33), and Memorial Drive is a part of a public park and not a public way.

The only right of access the petitioner has to this drive is derived from the reservation in the deed of his predecessor in title, the Dover Stamping Company. He has no rights merely as an abutting owner, and cases bearing on the rights of such owners in public ways are not controlling.

On January 1, 1927, the petitioner executed a lease of the land to the Tide Water Oil Sales Corporation for a period of fifteen years, by a lease duly recorded, the lessor agreeing to obtain for the lessee a license and permit for the keeping, storing and sale of petroleum products; also to procure for the lessee the necessary authority to permit it to construct two driveways, each twenty-five feet in width, running from the premises to Memorial Drive. The driveways petitioned for would pass over a sidewalk and cut through an adjacent strip of grass or lawn in which trees have been planted. One of these trees is in the proposed location of one of the driveways, and the auditor found that this tree could easily be moved. He also found that one driveway fifteen feet in width would be wholly inadequate to the efficient use of the petitioner’s lot as a gasoline station, and that the lessee considers that a single driveway of twenty-five feet in width would no more meet its requirements than one fifteen feet in width, and that it will cancel the lease if a permit for more adequate driveways is not obtained.

The petitioner is entitled to have his legal rights recognized by the respondents and protected by the court. It is assumed that the reservation of the right of access to the parkway in the deed of the Dover Stamping Company gives him a right of access to Memorial Drive, but the decision of the questions whether his right of access should be by one way or two, and if by one what its width should be, depends upon facts and involves the exercise of judgment and discretion by the respondents. The principles which ordinarily control the court in such matters were stated in French v. Jones, 191 Mass. 522, 532: “. . . whenever the performance of a duty is dependent upon the exercise of judgment and discretion on the part of the person to whom its per-i [75]*75formance is assigned, that judgment and discretion will not be interfered with or controlled by the writ of mandamus, and this for the reason that there is no warrant of law justifying the substitution of the judgment of the court for the judgment and discretion of the individual exclusively entrusted with the performance of that particular duty.” See also McLean v. Mayor of Holyoke, 216 Mass. 62.

The respondents, acting reasonably and in the exercise of a sound discretion, had the right to fix the location and width of the petitioner’s driveway, having in mind the fact that he had a right of access, and also that the public safety and convenience should be considered. Anzalone v. Metropolitan District Commission, 257 Mass. 32. “The court cannot pass upon these questions of fact: they are to be decided by the commissioners.” Metropolitan District Commission v. Cataldo, 257 Mass. 38, 42. The conclusions of the commission in matters of fact within its jurisdiction cannot be controverted in the absence of bad faith. Filoon v. City Council of Brockton, 252 Mass. 218, 223. Morley v. Police Commissioner of Boston, 261 Mass. 269, 278.

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Bluebook (online)
159 N.E. 739, 262 Mass. 70, 1928 Mass. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-metropolitan-district-commission-mass-1928.