Chatham Conservation Foundation, Inc. v. Farber

779 N.E.2d 134, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 584, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1462
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 25, 2002
DocketNo. 01-P-63
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 779 N.E.2d 134 (Chatham Conservation Foundation, Inc. v. Farber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatham Conservation Foundation, Inc. v. Farber, 779 N.E.2d 134, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 584, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1462 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Cypher, J.

Jonathan and Bonnie Farber (Farbers) appeal from a judgment entered in the Land Court in favor of the Chatham Conservation Foundation, Inc. (Foundation). In 1998, the Foundation sought declaratory and injunctive relief in that court, requesting that it interpret and enforce a conservation restriction (restriction) on three parcels of land in Chatham. The Farbers, successors in interest to the grantors of the restriction and the [585]*585sole parties on appeal,2 argue that inherent in their express right to “pass and repass” along the restricted portion of their property-is the right to replace an existing wooden plank walkway with an elevated walkway, which, in addition to providing safer passage, will be more environmentally beneficial to the marshland than the current walkway.

The judge, acting on the Foundation’s motion for summary judgment, concluded that (1) language in the restriction prohibiting structures precluded construction of such a walkway, and (2) notwithstanding that the grantors of the restriction had expressly noted that it was not to affect their right to pass and repass on the restricted property, they had not explicitly reserved the right to improve the existing walkways. We conclude that the grantors of the restriction did not need to reserve explicitly the right to improve the walkway. We also conclude that whether the proposed elevated walkway is a reasonable repair or improvement incidental to the right to pass and repass turns on disputed issues of fact that must be resolved by a trial.

1. The undisputed facts. The following facts are not in dispute. The Farbers, the Goulds, and the McAdamses own adjacent parcels of land in Chatham. The parcels are each bisected by Linnell Lane, a private way. To the north of Linnell Lane sit dwelling houses on each of the three parcels and to the south is an expanse of salt marsh, coastal dune, and beach abutting Chatham Harbor. In 1969, the then owners of the three parcels of land conveyed a conservation restriction to the Foundation.3 The restriction states, in pertinent part:

“[F]or the purpose of preserving the premises as nearly as may be in the natural state in which they now are:
[586]*586“(1) no building or other structure (including, subject to existing easements, public utility poles and drains, but excepting fences) will be erected or placed on the premises;
“(2) no soil, sand, loam, gravel or rock on the premises will be moved or excavated . . . ;
“(3) no paving, filling or dumping will be permitted . . . ;
“(4) no roads will be constructed on the premises; and
“(5) no motor vehicles will be permitted on the premises, except by the grantors ... or their respective successors in title . . . .”

The conveyance also states:

“Nothing in this instrument shall be construed to affect the right of the grantors and their respective successors in title to the premises to pass and repass over the premises, or their right to regulate or control access by the public to the premises.”

The grantors reserved the right to maintain pipes and drains, and, although the purpose of the conservation restriction is to preserve the land “as nearly as may be in the natural state,” the grantors expressly reserved the right “to top, trim, cut or remove trees and other vegetation on the premises to preserve the view from any part or parts of the remaining land of the grantors or any of them.” There was no explicit reservation of right to modify the walkway.

When the restriction was conveyed in 1969, at least two of the parcels had walkways across the salt marsh leading to the beach.4 In addition to the walkways, which consisted of seventeen inch wide planks secured by ropes to anchors, small bridges set on concrete blocks crossed a narrow creek partway [587]*587through the salt marsh. In 1996, the Goulds replaced the plank walkway on parcel one with an elevated walkway. Before constructing the elevated walkway, they received approval from the Army Corps of Engineers (Corps), the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), the Massachusetts Coastal Zone Management Office (CZM), and the Chatham conservation commission.5

The Foundation, however, did not learn of the Goulds’ elevated walkway until the Farbers requested approval for a similar elevated walkway on parcel three.6 The Foundation refused the Farbers’ request and notified the Goulds that their elevated walkway violated the conservation restriction because it fell within the prohibition against “structures.”

In 1997, the Farbers applied for a special permit to construct an elevated walkway. The Chatham zoning board of appeals (board of appeals) voted 3-2 in favor of granting the Farbers a special permit, but that was less than the required super majority.

The following year, the Farbers again applied for a special permit, with a “scaled-down proposal” for an elevated walkway, twenty-four inches wide and twenty inches high, in the same location as the current walkway. The vote remained the same and the Farbers were not granted the special permit.

The Foundation’s complaint requested (1) a determination that the conservation restriction prohibits the construction of elevated walkways across any of the three parcels and (2) an order compelling removal of the Goulds’ existing elevated [588]*588walkway. The Land Court granted summary judgment for the Foundation, declaring that the restriction prohibited elevated walkways and directing the Goulds to remove their walkway.

2. Discussion. The judge reasoned as follows. The terms of the restriction were clear; they prohibited the erection or placement of new structures other than fences; elevated walkways were structures, and therefore were not permitted. He observed that the grantors had not explicitly retained a right to erect structures incidental to the right to pass and repass, and implicitly ruled that such a retention would have to be explicit.

The judge acknowledged that the proposed elevated walkway was environmentally preferable to the existing plank walkway but rejected that as the central purpose of the restriction, ruling that “[a] plain and expressed purpose of the restriction is to preserve the aesthetic character of the restricted premises in a natural state, and the prohibition against structures is in furtherance of that objective.”7

The Farbers stated in their affidavit in support of their opposition to the Foundation’s motion for summary judgment that the existing wooden system was unsightly and unsafe. They argue that interpreting the restriction to prohibit the construction of an elevated walkway would effectively render useless their right to pass and repass.8 The Foundation argues that permitting [589]*589elevated walkways would create an “expedient exemption” to the restriction against structures that would defeat the purpose of preserving the land in its natural condition. Goldmuntz v. Chilmark, 38 Mass. App. Ct. 696, 699 (1995).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
779 N.E.2d 134, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 584, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatham-conservation-foundation-inc-v-farber-massappct-2002.