Fitzsimonds v. Board of Appeals of Chatham

484 N.E.2d 113, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 53
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 484 N.E.2d 113 (Fitzsimonds v. Board of Appeals of Chatham) 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
Fitzsimonds v. Board of Appeals of Chatham, 484 N.E.2d 113, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 53 (Mass. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

The plaintiffs George and Delores Fitzsimonds, husband and wife, owners of a summer house in South Chatham, *54 appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court which affirms a decision of the defendant board of appeals of Chatham (board) refusing them a special permit to make certain alterations of the house. We vacate the judgment so that the matter may be reconsidered by the board.

1. The case. The plaintiff’s house was originally one of ten similar units of a “cottage colony” bounded by Sea Shells Drive and Sea Mist Lane, South Chatham, comprising a total area of some 80,000 square feet. Evidently the colony was owned by one person or entity which used to rent the cottages for summer occupancy. On March 13, 1976, the colony was “condominiumized” pursuant to G. L. c. 183A, and on November 9, 1976, the plaintiffs bought the particular cottage for a stated price. 2 Under the deed, the plaintiffs secured title to the one-story, single-family, frame structure and its underlying land (the “footprint”) plus a ten percent undivided interest in the “common areas and facilities” of the former colony (the areas other than the footprints of the ten units). By the terms of the deed, the units are subject to the restriction that they are intended “for recreational and vacation uses, and may not be used as permanent year-round residences.” 3

The house is nonconforming (as are the others in the condominium). Town by-law 1.46, enacted in 1978, states with respect to a cottage colony converted to a condominium that “the lot upon which each condominium unit is located” shall have a “[l]ot area, minimum” of 15,000 square feet if the lot is “not provided with either public water or sewer.” 4 The plaintiffs’ lot has neither. By-law 1.46 has other requirements such as minimum lot frontage, minimum front and rear yard, minimum side yard, roadway access, off-street parking space, and *55 approval of the sewage disposal system by the board of health. Although the present record lacks detail, we are to assume that there is nonconformity with respect to some of these requirements if only because of the nature of the plaintiffs’ ownership.

In August, 1980, the plaintiffs applied to the local building inspector for a permit to add (in effect) a livable second story to their house. More particularly, they proposed to raise a dormer — to swing it up as if hinged, as counsel put it — and enlarge what was probably an attic crawl space to encompass a living area of 320 square feet, with, in addition, a deck of 78 square feet. These additions compare with a living area of 789 square feet on the floor below. Starting with three bedrooms, bath, living room, and kitchen, on the one floor, the proposed rearrangement would yield two bedrooms, bath, living room, dining room, and kitchen on the first floor, and one bedroom, bath, den, and deck on the second.

The building inspector granted the permit on August 25, 1980. However, a neighbor protested, and when the alterations were perhaps 80 to 90 percent complete at a cost of $6,105.30, the building inspector issued a stop-work order, and by letter of October 26, 1980, informed the plaintiffs that in his opinion they must apply to the board for a special permit. Similar stop-work orders and letters were sent to two other house owners in the condominium.

The plaintiffs applied to the board, which, at an open meeting on February 25,1981, following a public hearing, unanimously denied the request for a special permit. By letter of March 11, 1981, the board set out its reasons. Upon the plaintiffs’ “appeal” under G. L. c. 40A, § 17, a judge of the Superior Court upon findings and rulings held the board’s action to be not arbitrary or capricious or in excess of its authority.

2. Statutory framework. The relevant provisions of The Zoning Act are the first two sentences of G. L. c. 40A, § 6, as appearing in St. 1975, c. 808, § 3, reproduced as an appendix to this opinion. 5 These are as difficult and infelicitous as other *56 language of the act recently reviewed, 6 but we think it is possible to say the following. An alteration, reconstruction, extension, or structural change of a nonconforming single-family or two-family residential structure is legitimated under the second “except” clause of the first sentence if it “does not increase the nonconforming nature of said structure”; otherwise (as occurs in certain events in regard to changes of other structures referred to in the language preceding the “except” clause), it must be submitted to the special permit procedure of the second sentence for a determination by the board of the question whether it is “substantially more detrimental than the existing nonconforming use to the neighborhood.”

There can be argument that the present case does not fit the “except” clause at all because, for purposes of that text, the structure is still a cottage, or at least not a single-family structure, which ordinarily assumes ownership of some verge of land, with definite bounds, beyond the footprint, and also assumes (though more doubtfully) a right to occupancy year-round. From another angle there can be argument that, if the plaintiffs intended to insist that their alteration was within the “except” clause, they must refrain from applying for a special permit, and await or undertake independent litigation. However, we think it right to proceed on the basis that the plaintiffs’ house is a single-family structure in relation to the “except” clause, and that the plaintiffs’ application to the board may (and as a matter of procedural economy should) combine a contention that the alteration is validated by the “except” clause with a request (failing that contention) that the board grant a special permit after considering “detrimental” effect.

3. Inadequate treatment by the board. In this view (to repeat), the board should first have considered whether the alteration fit the “except” clause and, if the answer was no, gone on to the question of “detriment.” But, judging by the board’s letter of March 11, 1981, it did not address itself to the first question, and made a dubious approach to the second.

*57 (a) The plaintiffs urge as matter of law that the “except” clause applies; that the “nonconforming nature” of their structure relates to density, as expressed in the minimum lot size requirement of by-law 1.46, and that this “nature” cannot be considered “increased” when the alteration reaches upward rather than laterally, with the structure remaining single-family, although much enlarged. We think it would be unwise for the court to decide this question of the application of the “except” clause as if it presented a nice legal point upon a motion to dismiss an action for failure to state a claim. A local board of appeals brings to the matter an intimate understanding of the immediate circumstances, of local conditions, and of the background and purposes of the entire by-law; and so, at least in the first instance, the board’s administrative view is valuable and is wanted.

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Bluebook (online)
484 N.E.2d 113, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzsimonds-v-board-of-appeals-of-chatham-massappct-1985.