DANA STRAYTON & Another v. MARTHA'S VINEYARD COMMISSION &Others

CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 3, 2021
Docket2018-8
StatusPublished

This text of DANA STRAYTON & Another v. MARTHA'S VINEYARD COMMISSION &Others (DANA STRAYTON & Another v. MARTHA'S VINEYARD COMMISSION &Others) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DANA STRAYTON & Another v. MARTHA'S VINEYARD COMMISSION &Others, (Mass. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

SUPERIOR COURT

DANA STRAYTON & another[1] vs. MARTHA’S VINEYARD COMMISSION &others[2]

Docket: 2018-8
Dates: March 23, 2021
Present: Paul D. Wilson, Justice of the Superior Court
County: DUKES, ss.
Keywords: FINDINGS OF FACT, RULINGS OF LAW, AND ORDER FOR JUDGMENT

            Plaintiffs Dana and Robert Strayton own property on Chappaquiddick Island, in the Town of Edgartown. On the nearby property of Defendant Robert Fynbo, Defendant New

Cingular Wireless PCS, LLC (“AT&T”)[3] has constructed a cell phone tower (the “Tower”). As one step in its permitting process for the Tower, AT&T obtained a favorable decision from Defendant Martha’s Vineyard Commission (the “MVC”). This lawsuit is an appeal from that decision of the MVC.

            The parties tried the case before me, without a jury, on October 26, 27 and 28 and December 14, 2020.[4] We began the second day of the trial by taking a view of Plaintiffs’ property, Defendant Fynbo’s nearby property where the Tower is located, and two alternative sites that AT&T had considered.

---------------------------

[1]Robert Strayton

2 New Cingular Wireless PCS, LLC; MVWIFI, LLC; and Robert Fynbo

[3]Although Defendant New Cingular Wireless PCS, LLC was the cell phone carrier that filed the application that ultimately led to this lawsuit, at trial all parties referred to that carrier as “AT&T,” perhaps, I infer, because of a later corporate merger. I will do so as well.

[4]The first three trial days were conducted mostly in person (although some witnesses testified virtually) in the courtroom of Dukes Superior Court, which was made as safe as possible during a time of pandemic. Because commitments of trial counsel prevented a fourth consecutive day of trial in Dukes Superior Court, with the consent of all parties the fourth day of evidence and the later closing arguments were held virtually, with me being in virtual courtrooms in other Superior Courts.

                                                            -1-

            Ten witnesses testified. Two of them were parties to this lawsuit: Plaintiff Dana Strayton and Defendant Robert Fynbo. Three of them were public officials: MVC Senior Planner Edward Veno, Edgartown Fire Chief Alex Shaeffer, and Edgartown Information Technology Director Adam Darack. Three others were AT&T consultants: site consultant Dan Bilezikian, structural engineer Marc Chretien, and radio frequency engineer Dan Goulet. Two others were expert witnesses: real estate appraiser George Valentine for AT&T, and radio telecommunications engineer David Maxson for Plaintiffs. The parties introduced 48 exhibits into evidence, many of them comprising several separate documents or photographs.

            After the final witness completed her testimony in December 2020, the parties submitted post-trial briefs or proposed findings of fact and rulings of law. After I reviewed those filings, I heard closing arguments on January 20, 2021.

Findings of Fact

            Based on all the credible evidence presented at trial, and all the reasonable inferences drawn from that evidence, I find the following facts.

            1.         The Parties and Their Properties

            Plaintiffs own a parcel of land at 307 Chappaquiddick Rd. in the Town of Edgartown, on the island of Chappaquiddick. Chappaquiddick Road is a paved public way. Plaintiffs’ parcel extends along Chappaquiddick Road from Enos Avenue to Sampson Avenue.

            Defendant Fynbo owns a parcel of land at 14 Sampson Ave. Sampson Avenue is a narrow unpaved road that begins at Chappaquiddick Road and proceeds approximately northeast for a short distance. The Fynbo parcel is on Sampson Avenue, four lots away from Chappaquiddick Road, and on the opposite side of Sampson Avenue from Plaintiffs’ parcel. Plaintiffs’ parcel and the Fynbo parcel are not directly opposite each other on Sampson Avenue.

                                                            -2-

            The physical relationship between the two properties can be seen on Exhibit PP,[5] a property map prepared for the Edgartown Town Assessor. On this map, Plaintiffs’ parcel is labeled as Lot 196.1, while Defendant Fynbo’s parcel is labeled as Lot 197. Exhibit UU also shows the physical relationship between the two properties. That exhibit, which resembles an aerial photograph, is actually a “visual representation . . . prepared by the landscape architect to show the current conditions,” according to Plaintiffs’ counsel. Transcript (“TR”) 4-23. On that exhibit, the boundaries of Plaintiffs’ parcel are outlined in white. The boundaries of Defendant Fynbo’s parcel are not directly outlined, but his house and an antenna are shown in the middle of a circle outlined in red and labeled “140 ft Radius.” (This exhibit misidentifies Sampson Avenue as “Eno’s Ave.” In fact, Enos Avenue is the unpaved road on the other side of Plaintiffs’ parcel, mislabeled on this Exhibit as “Cassandra’s Path.”) The boundaries of Defendant Fynbo’s parcel, and its relation to the Plaintiffs’ parcel, are shown clearly on a different tax assessor’s map found in a real estate appraiser’s report that AT&T submitted as part of its application.  See Exhibit D at PB 00631.

            Plaintiffs purchased their parcel in 2015. Plaintiffs also own a home in Natick. Plaintiff Dana Strayton owns a bakery in Bedford, where she works two or three days a week.

            Plaintiffs’ parcel contains three structures. One is the main house, located close to Enos Avenue. In the middle of the parcel is a barn. Closer to Sampson Avenue is a cottage, which Plaintiffs occasionally rent out, on either a long-term or a short-term basis. Plaintiffs also sometimes allow friends to stay in the cottage. When I took a view of the property, two friends of Plaintiffs were staying there.

[5]In a departure from the usual practice, the parties agreed that admitted exhibits would be designated by letters rather than numbers.

                                                            -3-

            The Edgartown zoning bylaw sets the minimum lot size for parcels in this neighborhood at three acres. Neither Plaintiffs’ parcel nor the parcel of Defendant Fynbo meets this requirement. Plaintiff’s parcel is 40,000 ft.², which is just under an acre. See Exhibit NN. It is undisputed that Defendant Fynbo’s lot is .55 acre.

            Defendant Fynbo has lived for decades in the house at 14 Sampson Ave. Since the late 1970s and continuing through the events at issue here, he operated a business at 14 Sampson Ave., individually and through Defendant MVWIFI, LLC. That business provided radio, TV, and local emergency services, and later provided high-speed wireless Internet, to Chappaquiddick residents who subscribed and paid for such services.

            To provide those services, Defendant Fynbo erected various structures at 14 Sampson Ave. When Plaintiffs purchased their property in 2015, the structure in place at 14 Sampson Ave. was an 84-foot guyed lattice-style tower (the “84-foot Tower”)[6] that Defendant Fynbo erected in 2010. The 84-foot Tower is shown in photographs found in Exhibits U and V.

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Bluebook (online)
DANA STRAYTON & Another v. MARTHA'S VINEYARD COMMISSION &Others, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dana-strayton-another-v-marthas-vineyard-commission-others-masssuperct-2021.