Harbyana Family Trust v. Town of Bolton

1 Mass. L. Rptr. 392
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1993
DocketNo. 93-0022
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Mass. L. Rptr. 392 (Harbyana Family Trust v. Town of Bolton) 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
Harbyana Family Trust v. Town of Bolton, 1 Mass. L. Rptr. 392 (Mass. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Toomey, J.

FINDING OF FACTS

On August 12 and September 23, 1992, plaintiff Harbyana filed applications with the Planning Board of the Town of Bolton seeking the Board’s approval of a Special Permit for a common driveway and a Special Permit for a backland lot. The Board scheduled a hearing upon the application for October 14,1992, but the hearing was continued to October 28, 1992. On that date, the applications were heard by four of the five-member Board, the Chair having recused himself because of a perceived conflict of interest, and the matter was further continued to November 18, 1992.

The November 18, 1992 Meeting

Because Board member Anthony was not present and the Chair was recused, only three members were available for the November 18, 1992 meeting and, accordingly, the matter of plaintiffs applications was not addressed during the public phase of the meeting. There was, however, some concern on the part of the three members present with respect to the prospect of litigation should the Board ultimately vote to deny the applications. Accordingly, the members repaired to private session in the company of the Board’s secretary and Town Counsel.

The subject of litigation in connection with the applications was not in fact discussed in the private session. The three members engaged in some discussion relative to the applications, but there was no “meeting of the minds” or decision made as to the disposition of the applications. The members had been advised by Town Counsel to the effect that the private session was not a fact-finding or decision-making session, but was for discussion purposes only.

The members instructed Town Counsel to prepare a document denying the applications and reciting reasons in support thereof. The document was to be employed should the Board’s ultimate determination be to deny the applications. No document approving the applications was ordered to be drawn because, in the event approval was voted by the Board, no challenge to that determination would follow and, consequently, no documentary rationalization of the Board’s decision would be required. After the private session terminated, Town Counsel drafted the document as requested by the three members.

The December 16, 1992 Meeting

The next public meeting of the Board was scheduled for December 16, 1992, a deviation, occasioned by the holiday season, from the Board’s usual practice of sitting on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month. The Secretary of the Board had, on November 5, 1992, sent notice to the Town Clerk of the December schedule of public meetings of the Board. That notice was received by the Clerk on November 10, 1992 and was posted by her on that date. Posting was accomplished by the Clerk’s entry of the item on the December 16 block of a master calendar affixed to a ten-foot-long bulletin board. The board was positioned on an interior wall in the Houghton Building which housed many, if not all, of Bolton’s government offices and agencies. The wall was in the immediate vicinity of the entrance to the Town Clerk’s Office and was not obscured in any material fashion.1

The Clerk’s notation, in the December 16 block of the calendar, read, “Planning Bd 7:30 TH.” In the same block, just below the “Planning Bd” reference, was the [393]*393following: “Nashoba Reg. Sch. Comm 7:30 H.S.” There was no other direction presented by the calendar with respect to the locus of the Planning Board’s December 16, 1992, meeting.

The Clerk’s Office was open to the public for fourteen hours per week and the bulletin board was accessible to the public for at least those hours.2 The bulletin board was not cluttered and no item was posted over another. It was not necessary for anyone desirous of examining the bulletin board to position himself or herself between the opened door and the board.3

At the December 16, 1992, meeting, four members of the Planning Board were present and engaged in about thirty minutes of public discussion on the merits of the applications. The Board reviewed the applications, the minutes of the October 28, 1992, hearing,4 and the “draft decision" prepared by Town Counsel. The draft was viewed by the Board as advisory and not as an operative instrument. The Board then voted unanimously (four members participating) to deny the applications and the “draft decision” was presented through the Board secretary to the Town Clerk to aid her in preparation of the official decision.5

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

Although the parties seem to be willing to characterize the second (private) phase of the November 18, 1992, meeting as an “executive session,” this court is not so inclined. According to G.L.c. 39, §23A an “executive session” is defined as, “any meeting of a governmental body which is closed to certain persons for deliberation in certain matters.” (Emphasis added.) The same statute defines “deliberation” as, “a verbal exchange... attempting to arrive at a decision on any public business ...” (Emphasis added.) Id. Because the instant session was not, according to the documentary evidence and the testimony offered at trial, an exercise at which the participants were “attempting to arrive at a decision,” it was not a “deliberation,” and, because the session was not a deliberative occasion, it was ipso facto not an “executive session.” Therefore, there was no requirement that the gathering comply with the procedural niceties of G.L.c. 39, §23B (third and fourth unnumbered paragraphs) and no unlawfulness will now be ascribed to its convening and its activity.

The December 16,1992 proceedings of the Planning Board are, however, of more suspect legality. While this court is satisfied that the posting of the notice of the meeting was timely (satisfying the forty-eight-hour rule of the sixth unnumbered paragraph of G.L.c. 39, §23B) and was “public” (in accordance with that same unnumbered paragraph of said §23B), there exists some concern that the content of the notice was not sufficiently informative to apprise interested parties and the public of the locus of the hearing at which the application would be granted or denied.

The composition of the notice, inserted in the December 16 block of the posted calendar page, read, in handprinting:

Planning Bd 7:30 TH
Nashoba Reg. Sch.
Comm. 7:30 H.S.

(Exhibit 4.) There was testimony that the reference to “TH” was intended to convey that the Board would meet at the Town Hall. This court is not persuaded, however, that interested parties and the public were sufficiently conversant with the Clerk’s employment of abbreviations to be on notice that ‘TH” meant “Town Hall." The suggestion of adequate notice is rendered all the more remote by the reality that most, if not all, Bolton governmental functions are conducted at the Houghton Building. That is to say, it would not be unthinkable for a reader of the December 16 block, who was not steeped in Bolton town arcana, to assume that the Houghton Building was the Town Hall. And, the neighboring reference to the “Nashoba Reg. Sch Comm. 7:30 H.S.” may well have reasonably suggested to such a reader that the Planning Board was to meet at the High School Building at the indicated hour. In sum, the court finds the notice to be insufficient to satisfy the statutory demand that,

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Related

Tebo v. Board of Appeals of Shrewsbury
495 N.E.2d 892 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1986)
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Bluebook (online)
1 Mass. L. Rptr. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbyana-family-trust-v-town-of-bolton-masssuperct-1993.