Fromm v. Boston Redevelopment Authority

19 Mass. L. Rptr. 490
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedMay 13, 2005
DocketNo. 032951F
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Mass. L. Rptr. 490 (Fromm v. Boston Redevelopment Authority) 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
Fromm v. Boston Redevelopment Authority, 19 Mass. L. Rptr. 490 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Walker, Joseph M., J.

In this action, plaintiff David Fromm (“Fromm”) and his real estate development company Keith Realty Corporation (“Keith Realty”) (collectively, “the plaintiffs”) have brought a sixty-three-count suit against twenty individual and agency defendants alleging various federal and state civil rights violations and tort claims due to an allegedly unlawful denial of building permits. The City Defendants3 and defendant Sunny Brent Harding (“Har[491]*491ding”) (collectively, “the defendants") now move to dismiss all counts against them for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, pursuant to Mass.RCiv.P. 12(b)(6). In addition, Harding moves to dismiss pursuant to G.L.c. 231, §59H, (the “anti-SLAPP statute”). For the following reasons, the defendants’ motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) are ALLOWED. Additionally, Harding’s special motion to dismiss under the anti-SLAPP statute is ALLOWED.

BACKGROUND

For purposes of a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), the Court accepts as true the following factual allegations in the plaintiffs’ complaint.

Fromm is president and principal of the real estate development company Keith Realty. Beginning in 1997, Fromm, by and through Keith Realty, sought to develop twenty-two single-family townhouse units across eight lots of land on Washington, Guild and Juniper Streets in the Roxbuiy section of Boston (the “Project”). In October 1997, following several meetings with officials from the Boston Redevelopment Authority (“BRA”), Keith Realty submitted an application for building permits to the Inspectional Services Department of the City of Boston (“ISD”). The application was in compliance with the Boston Zoning Code (the “Code”) and included the requisite proposed architectural design and site plans. Pursuant to the Code, Keith Realty would undergo a design review process with the BRA as a first step toward attaining the building permits. Upon completion of the review, the BRA would transmit a certificate attesting to completion of the review to the ISD, which, in turn, would issue the requisite building permits. Keith Realty delivered copies of the proposed plan and design to the BRA to ensure that the BRA would have all of the necessary paperwork to begin its design review process for the Project.

In April 1998, the BRA informed Keith Realty that the review of the proposed design and site plans had not yet begun, but would start immediately. Over the next several months, representatives of Keith Really and the BRA held four to five meetings. During the last of these meetings, the BRA instructed Keith Realty to retain an architect to bring the design plan into compliance with changes the BRA would ultimately require. In response, Keith Realty engaged project architect Randy Cox to interface with the BRA’s design review personnel throughout the remainder of the design review process.

As part of the “standard operating procedure” of the BRA’s design review process, Keith Realty had to participate in a “community process,” whereby a developer holds or participates in a number of community meetings and events to solicit feedback from area residents regarding a proposed development. Throughout 1997 and 1998, Keith Realty participated in or held at least fourteen meetings or events, including an open house, an area association meeting, an abutters meeting, and a neighborhood council meeting. James Arthur Jemison (“Jemison”), Deputy of Roxbury for the BRA, oversaw the community process. In addition to the BRA personnel, staff from the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Services of Boston attended, participated in, or oversaw many of these meetings.

Sometime in 1998, Harding and other unnamed individuals organized and formed the Juniper Street and Friends Neighborhood Coalition (the “Coalition”) to oppose the Project. Over the course of the year, Harding and others within the Coalition held a number of community meetings, wrote articles to the local newspapers including the Boston Globe and the Roxbury Banner, and held a press conference. The Coalition also wrote letters to various individuals, government officials, and agencies, including Fromm, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, Massachusetts State Senator Diane Wilkerson, and the Zoning Board of Appeals to express its opposition to the Project. Harding sent copies of their letters and other correspondence in opposition to the Project to the BRA. The plaintiffs claim that Harding met with BRA and ISD officials on several occasions to “stop, thwart or impede the issuance of design certification by the BRA and the issuance of building permits by the ISD” for the Project. The plaintiffs further allege that during one neighborhood meeting in July 1998, Harding implied that, because of Fromm’s race, which is Caucasian, she opposed Keith Realty’s efforts to develop properties in her neighborhood.

Upon a public review of documents in the BRA files, Keith Realty located copies of two newspaper articles, one from the Boston Globe and one from the Roxbury Banner. In an April 7, 1999 Boston Globe article, Harding was quoted as saying that she and her neighbors would like to keep their neighborhood “comfortable, middle class and black.” In an August 17, 1998 Roxbury Banner letter to the editor, Harding stated that she and her coalition had “established suggested development guidelines to help builders while minimizing delays in the permitting process. Mr. Fromm needs only to review them and work diligently to comply with the suggestions of neighbors he states he will be living among when his proposed project is complete.” Harding also stated in the letter that she wanted to put “developers on notice that we live here, we have vested interests in this community because our houses are our financial investments." These letters were kept in the normal course of the BRA’s business operations.

From October 30,1998 through February 1999, the BRA’s design review of the Project continued in an uninterrupted manner. Keith Realty worked in close conjunction with Jemison and Prataap Patrose (“Patrose”), a BRA architect, on the review process for the Project. Keith Realty made all of the changes that the BRA requested in a timely fashion and in full [492]*492compliance with the BRA’s requests. On January 9, 1999, Jemison wrote to Keith Realty that Keith Realty had made “significant effort and has provided us with sufficient information to review this project ...” By February 1999, Keith Realty’s application for review, with final revised plans, was complete and ready for final review and approval. From April-May 1999, the BRA conducted an extensive review of the Keith Realty’s final revised plans.

In April 1999, Jemison contacted Keith Realty’s legal counsel Appolo Caíala (“Caíala”) and informed him that the Project was scheduled for a design review approval hearing at the Board of Directors’ May 1999 meeting. On the day immediately prior to the meeting, without explanation, Jemison called Caíala and informed him that the BRA withdrew the Project from the meeting’s agenda. In response, Fromm called Jemison to inquire what had happened. Jemison responded by “threatening Fromm and admonishing him not to ‘make any waves’ or ‘rock the boat’ in any way if he ever wanted to see the BRA approve [Keith Realty’s] design review.” On May 25, 1999, Fromm called Collings to inquire why the Project had been removed from the agenda and asked when he could expect it to be rescheduled.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Mass. L. Rptr. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fromm-v-boston-redevelopment-authority-masssuperct-2005.