Inhabitants of Greenfield v. Burnham

145 N.E. 306, 250 Mass. 203, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1137
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 306 (Inhabitants of Greenfield v. Burnham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inhabitants of Greenfield v. Burnham, 145 N.E. 306, 250 Mass. 203, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1137 (Mass. 1924).

Opinion

Wait, J.

This is a bill in equity seeking to restrain the defendant from infraction of by-laws establishing building linesun certain streets in Greenfield; to compel him to make restoration of the surface of sidewalks excavated by him, and to exact performance by him of a stipulation made on his receipt of a license to excavate. The answer denies the validity of the establishment of the building lines. A replication sets up that the defendant is estopped to object to the validity of the establishment of the building fines by the pendency of a petition filed by him for the assessment of damages caused by such establishment.

The cause was referred to a master who reported in substance as follows:

On February 2, 1923, the selectmen of Greenfield, acting under G. L. c. 82, § 37, which, with the provisions of earlier laws now embodied in said section, had theretofore been duly accepted by the town, gave a public hearing on the establishment of building fines on Main Street and on Davis Street. On the next day, the town clerk saw a plan of the proposed layouts in a vault in the town building where he kept town records. This vault was not in his office. It was not locked. It was used by the town clerk in common with many other officials of the town including the town engineer, all of whom had access to it. The plan had not then been delivered to him. It had not been left at his office, nor had it been called to his attention by any one. The town clerk, after he noticed it, made no record of the plan, nor did he mark it or identify it in any way until after the town meeting held March 17, 1923.

At a town meeting on March 17, 1923, the town, acting under articles in the warrant: “ To see if the town will vote to accept building fines [on Davis Street and] on Main Street [206]*206... as laid out by the Selectmen February 2, 1923, or pass any vote or votes in relation thereto,” voted unanimously to accept building lines on [Davis Street] and on Main Street as laid out by the Selectmen on February 2, 1923.” The plan was brought to the place of meeting by the town engineer and was exhibited and discussed at the meeting. After the meeting and on the same day, it was indorsed and signed by the town clerk, and, thereafter, it remained in his custody. Except this plan no other document or paper relating to the establishment of the building lines in question was ever filed in the office of the town clerk.

Portions of the defendant’s property on the corner of Main Street and Davis Street were included within the building line areas shown on the plan on Davis Street and on Main Street.

About July 20,1923, the defendant, without first obtaining a license therefor, made an excavation along both streets at their intersection. The by-laws of the town forbid any excavation in the highways without license of the selectmen; and, if any excavation is made under a license, they require restoration of the surface to the satisfaction of the selectmen before the expiration of the license. They authorize the selectmen to grant licenses but require the licensee to execute a written agreement to hold the town harmless and to indemnify it against damage or cost. The town, accordingly, at once filed a bill in equity to restrain the defendant; but dismissed the bill on his applying for a license. The license was granted July 25, 1923. The defendant signed a stipulation reserving his rights if the layouts of the building lines were invalid. After obtaining the license, which expired in thirty days, he made no further excavation; but did not, before the expiration of the license, fill in the excavation already existing.

On January 31, 1924, he filed a petition in the Superior Court for a jury to assess damages caused by the taking of land by establishing building lines. This petition is between the same parties and relates to the same land involved in this bill. It alleges a layout of building fines by the Selectmen on February 2, 1923; a vote by the town on March [207]*20717, 1923, at the annual town meeting to accept the building lines as laid out; a taking of valuable land from the petitioner causing him damage and loss as regards the land and buildings thereon for which he has been awarded no damage and has been unable to obtain adequate compensation; and a deprivation from utilizing his land for the purpose of erecting a building thereon to his great loss and damage. It alleges, further, that the petitioner “ is aggrieved by the establishment of said building fines and the taking of his land,” and prays that a jury may determine “theloss, injury and damage sustained by him by reason of the establishment of said building fines and the taking of said land.” This petition is still pending and has not been tried.

On August 2, 1924, the defendant erected a brick pier in the excavation at the corner of Main Street and Davis Street. On this he proposes to support a steel column, to support in its turn steel beams for an addition to his present buildings which would constitute a new structure within the building fine area. The plaintiff requested the defendant to remove the pier, fill the excavation and cease to erect buildings or structures within the building fine area except ordinary and incidental repairs to present buildings and structures. The defendant refused to comply; and, on August 5, 1924, the present bill was brought. On the return day of an order of notice, the defendant stipulated that he would “ do no construction work outside the limits of the so called building fines on the northerly side of Main Street •and the easterly side of Davis Street until the further order of the court.”

The master reported that the excavations made by the defendant on Davis Street and Main Street about July 20, 1923, with the pier and the proposed structure for which the pier was designed, were within the property fines of the defendant and within the building fine area; but at the hearing on confirmation of the report (at which no exceptions weré taken) the judge found that there was error in this, and that,’in fact, portions of the excavation thirty and one half feet long by two feet wide on Davis Street and ten feet long by two feet wide on Main Street were within the highways [208]*208and outside both the defendant’s property line and the building fine area. The hearing on confirmation of the report and the merits of the case was held on September 6, 1924; and the judge, in addition to the finding already stated, also found that the defendant had caused the excavation outside this property line and the building line area and within the highway to be filled, and had made satisfactory arrangements to replace the concrete walk. The defendant contended that there was no valid establishment of the building lines so far as his property was concerned and that his acts had not been illegal. The plaintiff contended that the establishment of the building lines was valid; and that the defendant by filing his petition for the assessment of damages arising from the establishment of the building lines was estopped from questioning their validity. The master made no ruling of law, but found that if there was no estoppel and if there was no valid establishment of the building lines, the defendant was acting within his rights.

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 306, 250 Mass. 203, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-greenfield-v-burnham-mass-1924.