Giuffrida v. Zoning Board of Appeals

862 N.E.2d 417, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 396, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 230
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMarch 6, 2007
DocketNo. 06-P-153
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 862 N.E.2d 417 (Giuffrida v. Zoning Board of Appeals) 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
Giuffrida v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 862 N.E.2d 417, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 396, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 230 (Mass. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Armstrong, J.

Background. In 1994, Daddario applied for a special permit to allow him to excavate thirty-five acres of his land in Falmouth for sand and gravel in increments of five acres (development or project). The board did not then schedule a hearing on Daddario’s application but referred it directly to the Cape Cod Commission (commission), established by St. 1989, c. 716 (the Act), for its approval as a “development of regional impact” (DRI). See § 12(6) of the Act. The commission, on February 25, 1995, disapproved the plan under § 13(a) of the Act. Daddario appealed the commission’s denial to the Land Court under § 17(6) of the Act, attacking (1) the commission’s decision as a regulatory taking and a denial of equal protection of the laws, and (2) the Act itself as void due to the vagueness in the criteria governing the commission’s authority. On June 14, 1996, a judge of the Land Court agreed that the commission’s denial amounted to a regulatory taking and ordered the commission to approve the development, subject to certain conditions.2 The commission appealed that decision.

Meanwhile, as that appeal was pending, the board, whose consideration of Daddario’s application for a special permit had been suspended during the commission’s review, resumed its processing of Daddario’s application.3 The board at first denied the application without notice or hearing, possibly because it [398]*398regarded the application as moot in light of the independent rejection of the commission. Daddario appealed the board’s denial to the Land Court, where the parties on August 6, 1996, entered a stipulation that the board would schedule a public hearing forthwith and decide the application in accordance with the Falmouth by-laws in effect at the time of the initial submission of Daddario’s application in March, 1994.4

Following the hearing on November 12, 1996, the board granted Daddario a special permit to proceed with the development, subject to twenty-three conditions. Two are relevant to the appeal presently before us. Condition no. 20 stated that the special permit would “expire three years from the date this decision is filed with the Town Clerk as the By-law limits any earth removal permit to a maximum of three years.”5 The other, condition no. 23, “recognize[d] that work may not proceed on the development unless and until [the Land Court decision dated June 14, 1996,] is upheld by the Appellate Court(s).”

The decision on Daddario’s appeal, which had been taken on direct appellate review by the Supreme Judicial Court, was handed down on July 11, 1997. Daddario v. Cape Cod Comma., 425 Mass. 411, cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1036 (1997) (Daddario 1). The decision vacated the Land Court’s ruling that the commission’s denial constituted a regulatory taking, and it remanded the case to the Land Court for further proceedings on the regulatory taking claim, including the establishment of a factual record that more amply showed what kind of development, if any, the commission would approve, and for consideration of Daddaño’s other constitutional claims. A different Land Court judge, sitting on the case on remand, denied each of Daddario’s remaining claims and ordered Daddario’s appeal from the commission’s denial dismissed. This second decision of the Land [399]*399Court was affirmed by this court December 18, 2002. Daddario v. Cape Cod Commn., 56 Mass. App. Ct. 764 (2002) (Daddario II). Daddario’s application for further appellate review was denied, 438 Mass. 1110 (2003), as was his petition for certiorari, 540 U.S. 1005 (2003). At that point, therefore, all avenues of appeal from the commission’s denial had come to an end.

Present appeal. We come now to the matter of the present appeal. The special permit that the zoning board granted to Daddario on November 12, 1996, was approaching its three-year expiration date in the late summer of 1999 — indeed, the ninety-day notice period required for renewal would be reached on August 12, 1999. In July, 1999, therefore, Daddario applied for a renewal of the permit, pointing out that he had been precluded from excavating due to the then still pending appeals from the commission’s refusal to approve the project. The board held a hearing on the application on August 25, 1999, and denied the extension on November 8, 1999, primarily for the reason that, as a result of the 1995 by-laws amendment, earth removal work was no longer a specially permitted use in the water resource protection district in which Daddario’s entire property lay.6

Daddario took a timely appeal to the Land Court from the board’s 1999 decision, but the appeal was stayed while Daddario’s appeals from the commission’s denial dragged on. Those appeals finally ended in November, 2003, when the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari to review this court’s decision in Daddario II. No motion to remove the stay (as well as to allow the substitution of Laura Giuffrida) was brought, however, until August, 2005. Over objection, a Land Court judge allowed the substitution motion, removed the stay of proceedings, and allowed the board’s motion to dismiss the appeal as moot. Giuffrida appealed to this court, arguing that it was error for the Land Court to dismiss the appeal as moot. The board argues that it was error to allow Giuffrida’s substitution [400]*400as plaintiff, though it (i.e., the board) neither filed a notice of appeal nor entered an appeal in this court.

It is necessary to deal only with Giuffrida’s appeal. The board’s argument in support of its motion was that Giuffrida, lacking the commission’s approval for the work contemplated by the special permit application, cannot proceed with excavation work even if she should succeed in getting the special permit extension from the board; that is to say, the extension at issue in the appeal is no longer of any practical importance.

Giuffrida’s response is that the approval by the commission of the sand and gravel excavation project neither is nor was required under the Act, because the contemplated work is not a DRI. It was merely assumed, Giuffrida argues, in Daddario I and Daddario II that the commission’s approval was required, but there was no holding to that effect, precisely because it was not a disputed issue. Thus, Giuffrida argues, the statement in Daddario I, 425 Mass. at 413, “The project qualified as a development of regional impact and the board referred it to the commission for review,” and the statement in Daddario II, 56 Mass. App. Ct. at 765 n.2, “A DRI is defined by statute to be a ‘development which, because of its magnitude or the magnitude of its impact on the natural or built environment, is likely to present development issues significant to or affecting more than one municipality.’ § 2(h) of the Act.

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Bluebook (online)
862 N.E.2d 417, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 396, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giuffrida-v-zoning-board-of-appeals-massappct-2007.