KATHLEEN A. FISHER v. PRESTI FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP & another (and a consolidated case ).

100 Mass. App. Ct. 234
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 100 Mass. App. Ct. 234 (KATHLEEN A. FISHER v. PRESTI FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP & another (and a consolidated case ).) 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
KATHLEEN A. FISHER v. PRESTI FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP & another (and a consolidated case )., 100 Mass. App. Ct. 234 (Mass. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FISHER vs. PRESTI FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 234

KATHLEEN A. FISHER vs. PRESTI FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP & another [Note 1] (and a consolidated case [Note 2]).

100 Mass. App. Ct. 234

March 11, 2021 - September 16, 2021

Court Below: Land Court

Present: Wolohojian, Englander, & Hand, JJ.

Practice, Civil, Zoning appeal. Zoning, Appeal, Appeal to board of appeals, Board of appeals: decision, Board of appeals: jurisdiction, Timeliness of appeal, Enforcement.

In consolidated civil actions brought in the Land Court and Superior Court, arising from a landowner's appeals to the zoning board of appeals from a zoning enforcement officer's (officer's) denial of her enforcement requests, a Land Court judge erred in allowing summary judgment in favor of the abutting landowners, where, although the landowner did not timely appeal the officer's earliest letter denying her requests for zoning enforcement against certain uses of the abutting landowners' property, her failure did not foreclose her from pursuing the same relief through her timely appeals from the officer's subsequent letters denying her requests, in that nothing prevented the landowner from renewing her requests as to ongoing uses of the abutting landowners' property. [239-244]


CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Land Court Department on January 9, 2018.

CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on January 3, 2018.

After consolidation, the cases were heard by Howard P. Speicher, J., on a motion for summary judgment.

Mark Bobrowski for Kathleen A. Fisher.

Robert E. McLaughlin, Sr. (John G. Hofmann also present) for Presti Family Limited Partnership & another.


WOLOHOJIAN, J. These two cases are before us on appeal from judgments entered following the decision of a Land Court judge allowing Presti Management Corporation's (Presti) motion to

Page 235

dismiss or, in the alternative, for summary judgment. [Note 3], [Note 4] In essence, the question presented is whether the Land Court judge erred in concluding that, as a matter of law, Kathleen A. Fisher's appeals to the zoning board of appeals (board) of Stow (town) from the zoning enforcement officer's denial of her requests for zoning enforcement were untimely, thus depriving the board of jurisdiction. We conclude that although the zoning enforcement officer's letter of May 26, 2017, denying Fisher's requests for zoning bylaw enforcement against certain uses of property owned by Presti was an appealable decision from which Fisher did not timely appeal, her failure to appeal that decision did not foreclose her from pursuing the same or related relief through her timely appeals from the zoning enforcement officer's letters of June 30, 2017, and August 7, 2017, denying Fisher's subsequent requests for zoning enforcement against ongoing uses of Presti's property. We accordingly vacate the judgments.

Background. We review a summary judgment motion de novo, looking at the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See 81 Spooner Rd., LLC v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Brookline, 461 Mass. 692, 699 (2012); Central St., LLC v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Hudson, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 487, 491 (2007).

On April 7, 2017, Fisher sent a letter (April 7 letter) requesting zoning bylaw enforcement to Craig Martin, the town building commissioner and zoning enforcement officer. She asked that Martin issue a "cease and desist order for the commercial traffic being generated [by Presti and his commercial tenants] along [her abutting] property." Fisher then pointed to certain provisions of the zoning bylaw, and asserted that Presti's use of its property had changed over time without Presti obtaining any special permits. Fisher also noted that vehicles using the Presti property had

Page 236

damaged three fences on her property. [Note 5]

Without having yet received a response to her April 7 letter, Fisher again wrote to Martin on May 22, 2017 (May 22 letter) "to ask that [he] stop the commercial traffic that is growing and increasingly dangerous and is in violation of the zoning regulations in [t]he [t]own." Fisher noted that Presti's property was "business zoned only and not commercial business or construction zoned," and identified several additional specific concerns about Presti's property and the activities being conducted there: (1) damage to the three fences on her property, some of which was caused by a Presti tenant that operated an automobile dealership; (2) the clearing of land and leaving of construction debris by another commercial tenant; (3) the removal of soil and trees from Presti's property, resulting in a loss of buffer between the business properties and Fisher's residential one; (4) removal of soil near the conservation land at the rear of Presti's property, and operation there of a commercial trucking and trash operation; (5) the parking by Presti's employees and tenants along Fisher's fence, an area that was a required buffer; (6) the increased noise, vibration, and shaking of Fisher's home due to the commercial uses of Presti's property; (7) the increased dust and dirt; and (8) the noise and traffic beginning as early as 5:30 a.m. seven days per week. Fisher closed the May 22 letter with the following:

"Please respond as to the status of the cease and desist order or please give me the proper documentation showing why you and the town believe [Presti] has the right to start up a commercial operation abutting residential properties without notice from [t]he [t]own . . . .

"I have owned my property longer than [Presti] and none of this is a grandfathered use."

On May 26, 2017, Martin responded in writing (May 26 letter) to both of Fisher's letters, which he identified as "requesting cease [and] desist action to stop commercial traffic on the [Presti] property" -- a characterization with which Fisher does not disagree. Martin noted that he had met with Richard Presti and had inspected the property. He stated that Presti's tenants were using the property to store "trucks, cars, snowplowing equipment, trailers,

Page 237

building [and] construction materials, piles of cord wood, wood chippers, clean dumpsters and school buses." But Martin concluded that these "types of uses" were "grandfathered," [Note 6] as he had concluded several years earlier, in 2010. [Note 7] Martin also stated that he expected that traffic on and off Presti's property would be variable but that, in any event, he had no jurisdiction or control over traffic. Finally, Martin stated that he had met with Richard Presti to evaluate the excavation activity near the conservation land and that he (Martin) had provided direction on protecting the adjacent land and providing stabilization and erosion control. Martin's May 26 letter concluded with an invitation to Fisher to contact the building department should she need any further information. The May 26 letter did not inform Fisher that it was an appealable decision or what the process was for appeal. Nonetheless, Fisher acknowledged in her deposition that she "understood [Martin] was not going to give [her] the relief [she was] seeking." Fisher did not file an appeal to the board within thirty days of the May 26 letter.

Fisher next wrote to Martin on June 8, 2017 (June 8 letter).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Mass. App. Ct. 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kathleen-a-fisher-v-presti-family-limited-partnership-another-and-a-massappct-2021.