MacLaurin v. City of Holyoke

475 Mass. 231
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedAugust 18, 2016
DocketSJC 11865
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 475 Mass. 231 (MacLaurin v. City of Holyoke) 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
MacLaurin v. City of Holyoke, 475 Mass. 231 (Mass. 2016).

Opinion

Lenk, J.

We are called upon in these consolidated cases to construe G. L. c. 148, § 261, the residential sprinkler provision, one of a number of provisions requiring the installation of automatic sprinkler systems contained in G. L. c. 148, the fire prevention act. The residential sprinkler provision mandates the installation of automatic sprinklers in new residential buildings of four or more units, and in such existing buildings when they are “substantially rehabilitated so as to constitute the equivalent of new construction.” See G. L. c. 148, § 261.

In 2006, the plaintiff, Robert MacLaurin, 8 purchased the second of two vacant apartment buildings in the city of Holyoke (city), which he intended to rehabilitate and return to occupancy. As existing residential buildings of four or more units, the build *233 ings were subject to the residential sprinkler provision. MacLaurin contends that the renovations he undertook on the buildings do not meet the statutory standard triggering the requirement that sprinklers be installed. Concluding, to the contrary, that the two buildings had been substantially rehabilitated within the meaning of the residential sprinkler provision, the city’s fire chief ordered, without a hearing, that automatic sprinkler systems be installed in each building.

The residential sprinkler provision differs from all of the other automatic sprinkler provisions in the fire prevention act 9 in that it contains no statutory right of appeal. After several agencies had declined jurisdiction, MacLaurin filed complaints seeking relief in the nature of certiorari and declaratory judgment, challenging the orders as arbitrary and capricious. Following a remand of the consolidated matters for reconsideration in light of additional facts, which the fire chief concluded had no effect on his decision, a judge of the Housing Court affirmed the chiefs orders, and this appeal followed.

The statutory standard that installation of automatic sprinklers is necessary only where an existing multi-unit residential building has been “substantially rehabilitated so as to constitute the equivalent of new construction” is not defined in the residential sprinkler provision or anywhere else in the fire prevention act, and the language does not appear in any other section of the fire prevention act. Moreover, there is no controlling appellate jurisprudence and no applicable Statewide guidance akin to that which has been developed by entities such as the automatic sprinkler appeals board, in considering appeals from the requirement to install sprinklers under other statutory provisions, all of which do include a statutory right of appeal.

In construing the meaning of the statutory standard that installation of automatic sprinklers in existing residential buildings is required only when a building has been “substantially rehabilitated so as to constitute the equivalent of new construction,” we therefore turn to fundamental principles of statutory interpretation. See, e.g., Boston Police Patrolmen’s Ass’n v. Boston, 435 *234 Mass. 718, 719-720 (2002). In doing so, we consider the ordinary meaning of the words the Legislature used, in conjunction with their specialized meaning in certain contexts, the course of the enactment of the automatic sprinkler provisions within the fire prevention act, as well as the goals the Legislature intended to achieve. We conclude that, in order to require the installation of sprinklers in an existing multi-unit residential building, the rehabilitation must be so substantial that the physical structure is rendered “the equivalent of new construction,” i.e., in essence as good as new. 10 Where the rehabilitation is suitably substantial in this regard, a corollary is that the cost of installation of automatic sprinklers ordinarily will approximate the cost of installing sprinklers in a comparable newly constructed building.

Although the fire chiefs decision states that, after the modifications were complete, the buildings had been “substantially rehabilitated so as to constitute the equivalent of new construction,” the decision neither contains any explicit findings of fact nor sets forth the test used to evaluate the nature of the work done. Given this, coupled with the absence of controlling authority, the Housing Court judge was not in a position to ascertain whether the fire chiefs interpretation of G. L. c. 148, § 261, reasonably reflects the intent and purpose of the residential sprinkler provision, nor could the judge have ascertained whether the application of that interpretation is supported by the facts of record. Accordingly, no determination properly could be reached as to whether the decision was legally erroneous or so devoid of factual support as to be arbitrary and capricious. See State Bd. of Retirement v. Woodward, 446 Mass. 698, 703-704 (2006). Thus, the judgment affirming the fire chiefs decision must be vacated and, with the guidance we now provide as to the meaning of “substantially rehabilitated so as to constitute the equivalent of new construction,” the matter remanded to the chief of the city fire department for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 11

*235 Background and prior proceedings, 12 The two vacant apartment buildings at issue here were built in the late 1800s, of wood frame construction with brick facade. One, a three-story building on the corner of Essex and Chestnut Streets, has a total of twenty apartments on three floors and two commercial spaces on the ground floor; the other, a four-story building on the corner of Main and Spring Streets, has a total of thirteen apartments on four floors and two commercial spaces on the ground floor. 13 Each has sustained fire damage in the past, including while empty. MacLaurin purchased both buildings, which had been boarded and abandoned, with the intent to rehabilitate them and return them to occupancy. He obtained building permits, hired contractors, and undertook the proposed work; 14 each portion of the work, such as electrical and plumbing modifications, was approved by the relevant city inspectors as it was completed.

The city adopted G. L. c. 148, § 261, a “local option” statute, in February, 1996. 15 On its face, the city’s general application form for a building permit requires that a plan for an automatic sprinkler system be submitted with the application, and it is undisputed that sprinkler plans, 16 and modifications to one set of plans, were *236 attached to MacLaurin’s permit applications. 17

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 Mass. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maclaurin-v-city-of-holyoke-mass-2016.