Cunha v. City of New Bedford

713 N.E.2d 385, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 407, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 803
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1999
DocketNo. 97-P-1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 713 N.E.2d 385 (Cunha v. City of New Bedford) 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
Cunha v. City of New Bedford, 713 N.E.2d 385, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 407, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 803 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Warner, CJ.

The plaintiff, an attorney, seeks to use the bottom floor of one of his three homes as a professional office. Further, he wishes to allow other attorneys in his employ occasionally to use the home office for the legal work of the plaintiff. A judge of the Land Court, after trial, held that the plaintiff was permitted to use the residence as a professional office and in doing so could employ as many “support staff” as reasonably necessary. However, the judge ruled also that other attorneys employed by the plaintiff could not use the home office. On appeal, the plaintiff claims that § 9-208 of the New Bedford zoning ordinance permits other attorneys to use his residence. In the alternative, the plaintiff claims that if the ordinance does not so provide, it is unconstitutional.

[408]*408The Land Court judge found the following facts. Brian Cunha, the plaintiff, is an attorney licensed to practice law both in Massachusetts and in Rhode Island. On August 4, 1994, the plaintiff purchased a residence located at 172 Page Street in New Bedford. Number 172 Page Street is located within a “Residence A” district, as defined by § 9-208 of the New Bedford zoning ordinance. The plaintiff also has homes in Newport, Rhode Island, and in Quincy. The plaintiff resides at his Newport home from approximately May until October of each year. During the remainder of the year, he spends approximately one or two nights per week at his Quincy home, and the same amount of time at his New Bedford home; the record is unclear as to where the plaintiff resides the rest of the week during these months.

The plaintiff is the principal in his law firm and has offices, in addition to the subject of this dispute, in Fall River, and East Providence, Rhode Island. The plaintiff employs eight other attorneys and approximately seventeen support staff, all of whom have their offices in East Providence and Fall River. The plaintiff uses the New Bedford office primarily to interview clients who cannot or will not travel to Fall River. The New Bedford office is used for approximately four to five hours per week, and the only office equipment located there is a photocopier. The property is fully furnished as a residence.

After acquiring the property, the plaintiff began to „ perform renovations, which included an upgrade of the heating, plumbing, and electrical systems. Shortly thereafter, the building commissioner (commissioner) issued a cease and desist order, prohibiting the plaintiff from renovating the property and from using it as an office. Although the commissioner later retracted this order, he issued another cease and desist order prohibiting the plaintiff from using the property as an office. The plaintiff appealed to the zoning board of appeals, which upheld the order, finding that the plaintiff did not reside at the property, as required by the ordinance, and thus was not eligible to use the property as a home office.

The plaintiff then commenced an action in the Land Court, where a judge found that the plaintiff did reside at the property, and thus was eligible to use the property as a home office. However, the judge determined also that § 9-208(3) of the zoning ordinance permitted use of a home office by only one professional person, the resident. Therefore, the judge concluded that [409]*409attorneys employed by the plaintiff could not make use of the home office, and the plaintiff appealed.

Central to the Land Court judge’s holding was a literal reading of § 9-208(3). That section states, in pertinent part, “[wjithin any Residence ‘A’ district, ... no building or premises shall be used ... for industry, trade, manufacture, commerce, or for other than . . .. (3) The office or studio of a . . . lawyer ... or other professional person residing on the premises . . . .” The judge noted that the ordinance refers to the various enumerated professions in the singular (i.e., a lawyer, or other professional person), and thus decided that the ordinance permits only a single professional person to work at a home office in a Residence A district.

The Land Court judge further reasoned that this holding was consistent with the purpose of the ordinance, which he described as “to allow a person to conduct a professional business in his or her home where the business is of a type that will not disrupt the residential nature of the neighborhood.”

Finally, in holding that, although the plaintiff would not be permitted the assistance of additional attorneys in the conduct of his home office, he could employ as many nonprofessional support staff as reasonably necessary, the Land Court judge cited Framingham Clinic, Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Framingham, 382 Mass. 283, 293 (1981), in which the court said, “absent some express limitation, the right to employ personnel . . . reasonably necessary to a particular professional use is implicit in the authorization to establish a professional office.”

The defendants, including the commissioner, the city, and the zoning board of appeals, assert two grounds for upholding the judgment of the Land Court. First, the defendants cite to the first phrase of the language quoted from Framingham Clinic, Inc. (“absent some express limitation”), and argue that the ordinance does contain an express limitation in the form of both the singular language which the Land Court judge found determinative, and the phrase “residing on the premises.” Therefore, the defendants argue, the ordinance permits only a single professional person residing on the premises to use the home office. Additionally, the defendants assert that while additional, nonresident attorneys may be necessary to the conduct of a larger law firm, such professional support is not necessary to the operation of the home office of a resident lawyer.

[410]*410The defendants’ first contention, regarding the singular language as an express limitation, is not convincing. The ordinance simply does not contain any specific numerical restriction. Although the singular form is used, the operative word in § 9-208(3) is not “lawyer,” but, rather, “office.” That is, the ordinance, generally speaking, states that no building may be used for business other than for the office of a lawyer living on the premises. The ordinance simply does not address the issue of what personnel, or how many, may assist in the conduct of that office. Contrast DeShazo v. Huntsville, 416 So. 2d 1100, 1102 (Ala. Crim. App. 1982) (zoning ordinance provided that accessory uses were to be “conducted only by one person resident in said business”).

Also instructive is § 9-271, a more restrictive provision of the New Bedford zoning ordinance which governs so-called residence “AA” districts. That section, like § 9-208, contains a provision which explicitly permits the use of a residence for the office of a lawyer residing on the premises. However, § 9-271 contains a restriction that § 9-208 does not. Section 9-271 states that “not more than two (2) persons shall be employed who are not resident[s] on the premises.” This final clause is precisely the sort of “express limitation” that Framingham Clinic, Inc., supra, contemplates. Given that § 9-208 provides no such express limitation, the question becomes whether additional, subordinate attorneys are “personnel . . . reasonably necessary” to the particular professional use. 382 Mass, at 293.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
713 N.E.2d 385, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 407, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunha-v-city-of-new-bedford-massappct-1999.