Gargano v. Barnstable Conservation Commission

24 Mass. L. Rptr. 291
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJuly 14, 2008
DocketNo. 033141
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Mass. L. Rptr. 291 (Gargano v. Barnstable Conservation Commission) 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
Gargano v. Barnstable Conservation Commission, 24 Mass. L. Rptr. 291 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Fremont-Smith, Thayer, J.

This case is an appeal from an enforcement order of the Barnstable Conservation Commission wherein the Commission reaffirmed previous enforcement orders. Plaintiff Paul A. Gargano’s alleged prohibited activities have been the source of constant litigation since 1998.1 The Commission has counterclaimed, seeking enforcement of its prior orders, including its orders for removal of a miniature golf course consisting of putting greens installed without Gargano’s filing of a prior notice of intent or approval by the Commission. The Commission also contends that Gargano has improperly mowed a grassed area behind his garage, placed boardwalks, installed underground lights and sprinklers and cut a thicket of vegetation, all in an area which is behind or adjacent to his garage and is within the fifty-foot buffer zone from a resource area provided by the Wetlands Protection Act or the hundred-foot buffer zone provided by Barnstable’s municipal by-laws for the protection of wetlands.

For enforcement of its orders, it is the Commission’s burden of proof to substantiate a violation. Bourne v. Austin, 19 Mass.App.Ct. 738, 741-42 (1985).

Gargano’s earlier appeals, although dismissed on procedural grounds, were never adjudicated on the merits and the Commission’s previously-appealed enforcement orders have now been effectively resurrected by its most recent “enforcement order” of July 28, 2003,2 which is the subject of Gargano’s present appeal.3

Based on the Court’s own view of the property and on all of the credible evidence at trial, the Court makes the following findings and-rulings.

Gargano’s Engagement in Activities Within the Protected Wetlands Area

The Commission’s exasperation with Gargano has understandably resulted from his repeated activities in the protected wetlands area without his filing a notice of intent and without the Commission’s prior approval. The Commission is justifiably galled by this, as the Act makes it illegal to alter a protected area without its prior permission.

G.L.c. 131, 40 provides in relevant part that: No person shall remove, fill, dredge or alter4 any bank, riverfront area, fresh water wetland, coastal wetland, beach, dune . . . marsh, . . . bordering on the ocean or on any estuary creek, river, stream, pond, or lake . . . other than in the course of maintaining, repairing or replacing, but not substantially changing or enlarging, an existing and lawfully located structure . . . without filing written notice of his intent . . . and without receiving and complying with an order of conditions

As noted in the “Commentary” following 310 CMR 10.02,

The Department has determined that activities within Areas Subject to Protection under G.L.c. 131, 40 are so likely to result in the removing, filing, dredging or altering of those areas that pre-construction review is always justified, and that the issuing authority shall therefore always require the filing of a Notice of Intent for said activities. (Emphasis supplied.)

Thus, Gargano’s continuation of such activities in the protected area, except to the extent the Court determines that they are grandfathered or exempted by the Act, will be henceforth enjoined unless a “notice of intent” has first been filed by Gargano and the activity has been approved by the Commission.

Gargano’s Installation of Irrigation and Lighting

Gargano does not dispute that he installed, without a previous “notice of intent” or defendants’ approval, in-ground lighting and irrigation in the buffer areas, but contends that these have already been removed. To the extent that they were installed by Gargano5 and have not been removed, Gargano will be ordered to remove them and all attendant tubing or pipes within thirty days.

Gargano’s Cutting of Grass and Pruning of Plants

Gargano has admitted that he has cut the grass without prior approval. He has, however, at various times in the past, sought the Commission’s approval to cut his grass as he deemed necessaiy, but it has agreed only that he may cut the grass, at most, two times a year. The Commission never responded to his most recent “notice of intent” and his request for a hearing in that regard in 2003, and no hearing date was ever scheduled by the Commission.

More importantly, aerial photographs which predate his ownership of the property indicate that grass-cutting in the disputed area had been done for decades by previous owners so that a “grand-fathered use” in this regard exists. See 310 CMR 10.58(6).

As the Court observed during the “view," moreover, plaintiffs neighbor has not been prohibited from cutting his grass on an adjacent grassy area within the buffer zone. When a Commission witness was asked at trial why the Commission has not similarly objected to the neighbor’s grass cutting, the Commission’s witness testified that, if no complaint is made about [292]*292such grass cutting, it is the Commission’s practice to give a landowner “the benefit of the doubt” as to whether such grass cutting was a pre-existing use.6

Most importantly, when asked what, if any, adverse impact Gargano’s grass cutting could have on the wetlands or on the protected buffer areas, the Commission witness admitted that he could discern none. Gargano’s own expert, moreover, who inspected the property in 2003, similarly testified to the lack of any adverse impact.

A Certificate of Compliance was provided to Gar-gano by the Commission in November 1996, and, in 2001 and 2007, the Department of Environment Protection (“DEP”) inspected the premises and concluded, by letters dated August 23, 2001 and May 11, 2007, that “pruning of landscaped areas” and “mowing of lawns” were not violative of the statute. See 310 CMR 10.58(6) and 310 CMR 10.02 (pruning and mowing are “minor activities” not subject to the Act). As a comparison of the relevant sections of the Town by-law with the Wetlands Act indicates that the bylaw is not more stringent than the Wetlands Act as regards “excepted” or “grandfathered” activities, the DEP’s superseding orders prevail over the ordinance as well as over the Commission’s orders. Degrace v. Conservation Comm’n of Harwich, 31 Mass.App.Ct. 132, 133-36 (1991); Hobbs Brook Farm Property, supra.7 Accordingly, the Court will dismiss the Commission’s counterclaim in this regard.

Gargano’s Alleged Cutting of Thickets and Underbrush

In spite of the Commission’s admission of spying on Gargano through binoculars from across the inlet, its witnesses at trial admitted that they had never been able to catch Gargano actually cutting a thicket or underbrush within the buffer areas. A Commission employee did testify, however, that she had gained access to Gargano’s property (without any authorized permission)8 and had witnessed newly-cut stubble of a thicket. The photographs offered in support of this contention, however, do not establish any area of newly-cut stubble and the historical aerial photographs do not show any significant previous uncut stubble area or undergrowth in the area. The Commission also complains that Gargano pruned vegetation or brush within the protected area.

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Related

Town of Bourne v. Austin
477 N.E.2d 420 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1985)
DeGrace v. Conservation Commission of Harwich
575 N.E.2d 373 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1991)
Hotchkiss v. State Racing Commission
701 N.E.2d 642 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1998)
Conservation Commission v. Pacheco
733 N.E.2d 127 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2000)
Hobbs Brook Farm Property Co. v. Conservation Commission
838 N.E.2d 578 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
24 Mass. L. Rptr. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gargano-v-barnstable-conservation-commission-masssuperct-2008.