Killorin v. Anderson

27 Mass. L. Rptr. 250
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 14, 2010
DocketNo. 072226
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 250 (Killorin v. Anderson) 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
Killorin v. Anderson, 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 250 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Kaplan, Mitchell H., J.

These consolidated cases came before the court for trial, without a jury, on June 8, 2010. One witness testified and twenty-six exhibits were received in evidence. In consideration of the testimony, exhibits, pretrial written submissions, and arguments of counsel, the court makes the following findings and rulings and orders that judgment enter for the defendant.

INTRODUCTION

These cases arise out of appeals from decisions of the Andover Zoning Board of Appeals (the “Board”) denying the plaintiffs’ applications to modify restrictions on the use of a parcel of land located at the intersection of Central and School Streets in the Town of Andover assigned the address 36 Central Street (the “Parcel” or “Lot 1”). These restrictions are contained in an earlier 1940 Decision of the Board (the “1940 Decision”) granting a special permit to use the Parcel in a manner that would otherwise violate Andover zoning by-laws then in force, and still in force today. The plaintiffs are the Trustees of the Geneva H. Killorin 1992 Trust, which owns the Parcel. The defendants are the chairperson and members of the Board and the Town of Andover. (For simplicity, the plaintiffs will hereafter be referred to as the Trust and the defendants, collectively, as the Board.) The Trust first applied for a modification of the 1940 Decision in August 2007. After two public hearings, the application was denied, without prejudice to reapply, in November 2007. The Board’s decision contained suggestions of actions that the Trust could undertake to improve its position and, presumably, increase the likelihood of favorable action by the Board, if it filed a revised application. The Trust both filed a timely appeal from that 2007 Decision to the Superior Court and began steps to act upon the Board’s suggestions. On January 10,2008, it filed a second application for modifications to the 1940 Decision. The Board held smother public hearing, but denied that application on March 24, 2008. The Trust once again appealed and that appeal was consolidated with the earlier appeal of the Board’s 2007 decision.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The relevant facts underlying this appeal are not materially in dispute. Rather, the parties’ dispute primarily involves the conclusions to be drawn from those facts.

The Parcel was originally part of a larger tract of land. In 1891 a colonial revival sfyle “summer home” (i.e., “mansion”) was constructed on that larger tract. Access to the property was then from School Street and the mansion’s address was 53 School Street. Today, this property is part of the Central Street National Register Historic District.

In 1940, and today, this area of Andover is within a district in which permitted uses under the Zoning By-Laws include only single-family residences. In 1939, the owner of the property applied to the Board for a special permit to subdivide the land into six lots and to convert the mansion into eight apartment units. In 1940, the Board issued a decision approving a special permit allowing these uses, but with a number of conditions.

[251]*251The mansion was to be situated on Lot 1. So long as it continued to be used as an apartment house, Lot 1 could not be further subdivided, and could contain only the mansion and a garage that could accommodate eight cars. If the mansion ceased to be used as an apartment house, Lot 1 could then be subdivided into four parcels and a single-family dwelling built on each, provided that the subdivision and buildings complied with the building and zoning regulations then in force. Thereafter, the mansion was converted into eight apartments and at some time, at least many years prior to trial (and perhaps as early as 1940), the driveway to Lot 1 was moved to Central Street and the mansion assigned its current address, 36 Central Street.

With respect to the other five lots, the 1940 Decision also included a restriction that none of those lots could be further subdivided and each could contain only one single-family residence. Each of the deeds for the Lots 1 through 6 incorporated these restrictions, for the benefit of the other five Lots, to remain in effect even if the applicable zoning by-laws were to change, and referenced the 1940 Decision. The use restrictions in the deeds, however,- stated that they would expire in 1980. In 1959, the owners of all six Lots mutually agreed to “eliminate . . . any restrictive covenants,” in particular the restriction on further subdivision of the Lots. Thereafter, there was subdivision of some of Lots 2 through 5; however, these “subdivisions” were only to adjust boundaries between the Lots. They appear to have eliminated Lot 4 by merging it into Lot 3, and each remaining Lot continues to have only one residence and to be generally of its original size (except that two lots merged into one). Modifications of the 1940 Decision to permit those “subdivisions” were, apparently, not sought, and the Board, apparently, took no steps to enforce the restrictions applicable to those subdivisions.

In 1966, Geneva Killorin and her husband acquired the Parcel. Ownership thereafter passed to the Trust. After Mrs. Killorin’s death, the Trustees sought to sell the Parcel so that the proceeds could be distributed among the beneficiaries of her will; however, the only offer that they received was predicated on Lot 1 being subdivided into two parcels, such that a new residence could be constructed on the newly created lot that did not include the mansion. This effort to sell the Parcel caused the Trustees to apply for a modification to the 1940 Decision that would permit Lot 1 to be divided into two lots — 1A and IB. The mansion would be on proposed Lot IB and continue to be an apartment house. A new residence that met all current zoning by-laws would be constructed on Lot 1A.

As noted above, the Trust’s initial application was denied by the Board, after two public hearings, in November 2007. The position expressed to the Board by the Andover Preservation Commission is notable:

The intersection of School Street and Central Street is, without a doubt, the most historically important intersection in Andover. Representative of the social and religious core of Andover, it is a center point in an architecturally and visually impressive neighborhood . . . The residence at 36 Central with its impressive stone walls, sweeping lawn and mature plantings would be irreparably damaged by subdivision of the lot. . . The Preservation Commission encourages the ZBA preserve this important property as the 1939 decision intended.

The 2007 Decision listed a number of grounds for the denial, including the Board’s conclusion that, given that the mansion would continue to have eight apartments, the original reason for the restriction that the mansion be the only dwelling on Lot 1 continues to be “as important today” as it was in 1940. The 2007 Decision also concluded that; “The conditions in the [1940 Decision] protect not only private interests but also public interests in the integrity and character of the SRA zoning district and the neighborhood in which the [Parcel] is situated.”

The 2007 Decision went on to state that the “Board ... is not unalterably opposed to modifying certain conditions in the [1940] Decision to allow a modest change to the use or configuration of the” Parcel. It then offered some suggestions to the Trust of actions it should consider before reapplying.

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Related

Patterson v. Paul
448 Mass. 658 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2007)
Wyman v. Zoning Board of Appeals of Grafton
715 N.E.2d 459 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1999)
Davis v. Zoning Board of Chatham
754 N.E.2d 101 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
27 Mass. L. Rptr. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killorin-v-anderson-masssuperct-2010.