Graney v. Metropolitan District Commission

13 Mass. L. Rptr. 492
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedAugust 28, 2001
DocketNo. CA19882397B
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Mass. L. Rptr. 492 (Graney v. Metropolitan District 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
Graney v. Metropolitan District Commission, 13 Mass. L. Rptr. 492 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Hinkle, J.

Plaintiff Michael Graney was injured in a bicycle accident which occurred on land maintained by defendant Metropolitan District Commission (“MDC”). The matter is now before the court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment. After a hearing, for the reasons stated below, defendants’ motion is DENIED.

BACKGROUND

The undisputed material facts as established by the summary judgment record are as follows.2

[493]*493The Southwest Corridor Park (the “Park”)3 is a five-mile, 60-acre park. It extends from Forest Hills in Jamaica Plain to Copley Square in Boston, passing through the South End. The Park is an active and passive recreation park. It consists of open green space, basketball courts, tennis courts, spray pools, a public skating rink, a street hockey rink, two amphitheaters, a bicycle path, a pedestrian walkway and 180 community garden plots. Most of the Park is adjacent or superjacent to tracks used by the Orange Line of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (“MBTA”) and Amtrak, and to various city streets. No fee is charged for use of the Park.

The Park, or at least the relevant portion thereof, is owned by the MBTA4 and the MDC is responsible for all its maintenance and repair.5 A staff of five persons perform the maintenance work, which includes maintaining recreational facilities, plants, benches, lighting, trash receptacles and the irrigation system and removing snow.

An extensive irrigation system runs the length of the Park, consisting of underground piping and sprinkler heads at or near the ground surface. The MDC’s trucks often cannot drive over the grass because they would damage the sprinkler heads. Thus, vehicles or other items are sometimes in the bike path or the walkway for short periods while maintenance and repairs are carried out. At times, mulch is left on the bike path for a short period before maintenance staff attend to the mulch.

The bike path has no hills, and the posted speed limit is 15 miles per hour.

Plaintiff lives in Jamaica Plain near the Park, and at all relevant times used the bike path regularly. His principal mode of transportation was a bicycle. Plaintiff worked evening hours and returned home at night. On June 16, 1996, at about 9:00 p.m., while he was returning home, plaintiff collided with a pile of mulch which he did not see and which was in the middle of the path, completely obstructing the lane of travel. The pile was several feet high and as wide as the path (approximately six feet). Plaintiff could not see the pile because it was after sunset and thus dark.6 As a result, plaintiff broke both elbows and was out of work for six weeks. His elbows are permanently damaged. The mulch pile had been there for about a week before the accident, and plaintiff is aware that an individual had previously been injured when his bicycle hit the same pile.7

The Park came into being as a result of the Orange Line Relocation project. By that project, the MBTA relocated some 4.7 miles of Orange Line track to the Penn Central Corridor and replaced a four-track intercity and commuter railway with three tracks. The new transit and railroad tracks consist of partially and fully depressed sections. The then-existing elevated Oránge Line structure was removed. The cost of the project was estimated to be $671,900,000. The Urban Mass Transportation Administration ("UMTA”) of the Federal Department of Transportation agreed to provide $481,500,000 for the Orange Line portion of the project. The Federal Railroad Administration (“FRA”) agreed to provide $62,000,000 for the intercity railroad portion of the project. UMTA’s funds were to be provided under the Interstate Transfer Provisions of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1973; the FRA’s funds were provided by Congress for the Northeast Corridor Improvement Program.

According to a UMTA memorandum, Federal funding of the Orange Line Relocation project was justified by user benefits (including reduced travel time and relief of congestion), operating cost savings and urban area benefits. The urban area benefits included community development. A Southwest Corridor development plan referenced in the memorandum identified “parcels to be jointly or independently developed for commercial use, public facilities, housing, recreation, shopping areas, a college and a major addition to Boston’s open space network.” The Southwest Corridor development plan “consists of the following major non-transportation development: . . . [85] acre Regional Park System that will serve as a major addition to the Olmstead Emerald Necklace of parks in Boston; completion date 1985.” The urban area benefits also included economic development. The catalyst for this development “is, of course, the planned transportation improvements.” The City of Boston planned “capital improvements adjacent to the corridor in order to upgrade the neighborhoods.” The planned projects were “largely institutional (schools, community facilities, etc.) or recreational (playgrounds, open space).”

A letter from the UMTA to the MBTA (which appears to be dated July 9, 1984) expresses concern over a proposed interagency agreement between the MBTA and the MDC regarding the anticipated transfer of land within the Southwest Corridor Project. The UMTA was concerned that there was no indication whether transfer of title to the land was necessary “for the MDC to perform its function of providing public park and recreational facilities on any land proposed to be transferred.” The UMTA was also concerned that it may be entitled to the fair market value of the transferred land. Finally, and most significantly for this decision, the UMTA was concerned that “if the land transferred to the MDC is designated parkland, question arises as to whether it would be available to the MBTA for future transportation improvements, if such improvements would interfere with the land’s potential for actual park or recreational use by members of the public.” This concern arose because of then-existing Federal law. See Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 411 (1971) (citing 23 U.S.C. §138 (1964 ed., Supp. V) and 49 U.S.C. § 1653(f) (1964 ed., Supp. V)) (“This language is a plain and explicit [494]*494bar to the use of federal funds for construction of highways through parksonly the most unusual situations are exempted”). The letter also states:

While UMTA has always taken steps to minimize any environmental damage, and to mitigate adverse impacts, I am concerned that an unrestricted transfer of land to the MDC could have the effect of preventing the MBTA from constructing additional and otherwise necessary and desirable improvements within the corridor if those improvements could be shown to adversely affect a newly created park or recreational use. Therefore, it is essential that the deed, and any agreement related to the transfer and use of the affected property, entered into by and between the MBTA and the MDC specifically state that the properly is impressed with a primary

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Bluebook (online)
13 Mass. L. Rptr. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graney-v-metropolitan-district-commission-masssuperct-2001.