Davenport v. Planning Board of Dennis

920 N.E.2d 912, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 221
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 2010
DocketNo. 09-P-321
StatusPublished

This text of 920 N.E.2d 912 (Davenport v. Planning Board of Dennis) 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
Davenport v. Planning Board of Dennis, 920 N.E.2d 912, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 221 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Brown, J.

DeWitt P. Davenport, trustee of the Davenport Realty Trust, appeals from a decision of a Superior Court judge affirming the grant by the planning board of Dennis (board) of a special permit to Dennisport Partners, LLC, to build a municipally sponsored affordable housing development pursuant to § 4.9.2.4 of the Dennis zoning by-law (by-law). At issue is whether, where §§ 4.9.2.2 and 4.9.2.4.2 of the by-law [222]*222specifically grant the board discretion to reduce the minimum lot area requirements as set forth in the by-law’s intensity of use schedule (§ 2.3.2), the board correctly inferred the discretion to reduce all intensity of use requirements set forth in that schedule, including width, frontage, setback, and maximum coverage, as well as the requirements set forth in a separate section that governs multiple principal buildings on a lot (§ 2.3.4. 2a). We conclude that the board exceeded its authority.

Background, a. The proposed development. Dennisport Partners, LLC (developer), proceeding pursuant to § 4.9 of the by-law, was granted a special permit to construct a six-building, eighteen-unit affordable housing development on a 71,000 square foot lot (1.63 acres) (lot) in the residential (R-40) zoning district of Dennis. The lot is 214.63 feet wide and contains 200 feet of frontage on a “statutory private way” that leads to Great Western Road, a public way.3 The judge found that excluding parking and roadways, the proposed lot coverage is fourteen and one-half percent. Pursuant to the intensity of use schedule contained in § 2.3.2 of the by-law,4 multidwelling units in the R-40 district require a minimum area of 120,000 square feet,5 frontage of 100 feet, width of 150 feet, and front, side, and rear setbacks of fifty feet. The maximum site coverage allowed is twenty-five percent.6 Additionally, § 2.3.4.2a of the by-law provides:

“[t]wo (2) or more principal residential structures may be erected on the same lot, provided the minimum lot area, width and frontage shall be the sum of the requirements for each principal residential structure for the district in which the lot is located and provided further that the [223]*223minimum distance between said buildings shall be thirty (30) feet, all the requirements of § 2.3.2, Intensity and Use Schedule, are met, and site plan review is obtained pursuant to Section 4.1.1.”

b. The affordable housing special permit by-law. Pursuant to the authority granted in G. L. c. 40A, § 9,7 the town adopted § 4.9 of the by-law, entitled “Provisions to Encourage the Development of Affordable Housing in Dennis,” which provides developers with an alternative to proceeding pursuant to G. L. c. 40B by relaxing certain zoning requirements to meet affordable housing goals. The town planner testified that faced with a number of developments created pursuant to G. L. c. 40B, the town adopted § 4.9 in an effort to allow the town to work cooperatively with developers while retaining some control over the aesthetics, location, and type of affordable housing developments.

Section 4.9 provides express relief from density requirements for affordable housing developments. Indeed, § 4.9.2.2.1 provides that “[t]he Planning Board shall have discretion to reduce or suspend the minimum area requirements otherwise applicable under Section 2.3.2 for an Affordable Housing Development, provided however that there must be at least 10,000 square feet for each bedroom created in an affordable housing development.”8 Other special permit requirements for affordable housing developments include a minimum tract of two and one-half acres and front, rear, and side vegetated buff[224]*224ers of twenty-five feet. §§ 4.9.2.3.1 and 4.9.2.3A In addition, the board may reduce the number of off-street parking spaces required pursuant to § 3.1.3.2. See § 4.9.2.3.3.

It is clear from the language of the by-law and the testimony of the town planner that the town intended to provide greater zoning relief as the percentage of affordable housing in a given development increased. Thus, these requirements are further modified for a “municipally sponsored project” pursuant to § 4.9.2.4.2, such as the development at issue here, where at least “fifty percent of the units [will] be affordable to households earning between 65% and 80% of the median income and the remainder of the units shall be affordable for people earning no more than 120% of the area’s median income.”9 See § 4.9.2A4. For municipally sponsored projects, the minimum area per unit mandated in § 2.3.2 is eliminated entirely; development of tracts of less than two and one-half acres is allowed; maximum density may exceed one bedroom per 10,000 square feet without further qualification; and front, rear, and side vegetated buffers may be less than twenty-five feet. See § 4.9.2A2. Apart from those specific modifications, however, the by-law provides that a permit for an affordable housing development may issue only if the development conforms “to all other requirements of the Zoning By-law.” See § 4.9.2.3.6.

While conceding that it is within the board’s discretion to reduce the lot area requirement, the plaintiff, the owner of abutting properties,10 contends that the proposed development must still meet the necessary frontage, width, setback, and site coverage components of the intensity of use schedule contained in § 2.3.2 and comply with the requirements of § 2.3.4.2a (setting out the requirements that must be met before two or more principal residential structures are erected on same lot). The Superior Court judge adopted the board’s interpretation of the by-law to the effect that notwithstanding § 4.9.2.2.1’s specific reference only to the “area” component of the intensity of use schedule in § 2.3.2, [225]*225the board has authority to grant exceptions from all of the components of the intensity of use schedule, as well as the provisions of § 2.3.4.2a. To hold otherwise, both the board and the judge reasoned, would be inconsistent with the by-law’s goal of encouraging affordable housing development by providing zoning relief.

Discussion. “We will uphold a zoning board’s decision and that of the reviewing Superior Court ‘if a rational basis for the [decision] exists which is supported by the record.’ ” Eastern Point, LLC v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Gloucester, 74 Mass. App. Ct. 481, 486 (2009), quoting from Davis v. Zoning Bd. of Chatham, 52 Mass. App. Ct. 349, 356 (2001). We apply ordinary principles of statutory construction to zoning ordinances, “ ‘with some measure of deference ... to the board’s interpretation.’ APT Asset Mgmt., Inc. v. Board of Appeals of Melrose, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 133, 138 (2000). . . . However, a measure of rational deference still requires meaningful review.” Ibid. Although we conclude that the board exceeded its authority with regard to some of the issues raised by the plaintiff, we comment briefly on all of the issues before us in the event they come up again.

a. Setbacks. The plaintiff argues that the vegetated buffers referred to in §§ 4.9.2.3.4 and 4.9.2.4.2d are in addition to the setback requirements contained in the intensity of use schedule in § 2.3.2 and that the development must comply with those setback requirements as § 4.9 does not provide express relief from them.

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Bluebook (online)
920 N.E.2d 912, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-planning-board-of-dennis-massappct-2010.