Miles v. Planning Board

526 N.E.2d 1313, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 317
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1988
DocketNo. 87-1118
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 526 N.E.2d 1313 (Miles v. Planning Board) 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
Miles v. Planning Board, 526 N.E.2d 1313, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 317 (Mass. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Armstrong, J.

The plaintiffs own a six-acre parcel in Millbury which they propose to develop for seven residences on a street ending in a cul-de-sac. The parcel is zoned for industrial use, but the plaintiffs were granted a variance for residential use subject to the “condition[] that they meet the zoning requirements for a residential district.” Their subdivision plan was then approved, but the approval was made subject to three conditions to which they object: (1) that the utility lines (electric, telephone, cable) be underground; (2) that a [318]*318concrete sidewalk be constructed on one side of the street; and (3) that a sloped granite curbing be installed on both sides of the road and around the cul-de-sac. The last two conditions represent partial waivers by the planning board: its regulations, dating from 1980 and 1981, call for concrete sidewalks on both sides of the street and upright granite curbing, which is more expensive than sloped curbing.

The legal basis for the plaintiffs’ challenge is a proviso added to G. L. c. 41, § 81Q, by St. 1981, c. 459: “that in no case shall a city or town establish rules or regulations regarding the laying out, construction, alteration, or maintenance of ways within a particular subdivision which exceed the standards and criteria commonly applied by that city or town to the laying out, construction, alteration, or maintenance of its publicly financed ways located in similarly zoned districts within such city or town.”2

The proviso derived from a Governor’s message to the Legislature, House Doc. No. 6566 (1981), which was based on the Report of the Governor’s Commission to Simplify Rules and Regulations (1980) (Commission Report). Part of the Commission Report (recommendation no. 24) focused on the role of government regulations in increasing the cost of new housing by setting standards beyond those necessary for the health and safety of residents. Rejecting the concept of fixing Statewide maximum standards (compare the discussion in the Commission Report concerning sewage disposal regulation, p. 43), the commission recommended a flexible approach “that would limit the standards and criteria for roads and service specifications in subdivision control regulations to those used by the city or town in the construction of its own roads and services for similar levels of usage. For example, specifications for privately developed residential streets and utilities would be [319]*319the same as those used by the city or town for publicly built roads and services, and the same principle would apply to industrial and commercial streets and services as well.” Commission Report at 40.

The highway surveyor of Millbury testified that, in his seventeen years in that position (he had been with the town’s highway department since 1943), the town’s own construction and upkeep of ways had never involved the installation of underground utilities or of granite curbs or concrete sidewalks. All sidewalks and curbs installed by his department, apparently regardless of zoning district, were of asphalt — a less durable but cheaper method of construction. Examples of recent new construction were few in number, because the town itself (as opposed to developers of subdivisions) has done little such work since the 1970’s. The examples of reconstruction that were offered in evidence were largely discounted by the judge: Grafton Street, because it was a project constructed under G. L. c. 90, financed fifty percent by the Commonwealth and built to Commonwealth specifications;3 Holman Road4 and Farnsworth Court5 because they were not parts of new residential subdivisions; Gagliardi Way, because it was constructed by the Commonwealth rather than the town.6 Certain other examples were abandoned after [320]*320objection because the construction work was done before the proviso took effect. Other examples were thought irrelevant because the work had been done before the witness’s tenure as highway surveyor. The lack of what seemed to be regarded at the trial as perfect examples — post-1981 new construction by the town, with its own money exclusively, in residential subdivisions — was permitted to obscure the fact that developers were being asked to adhere to a standard of construction that the town itself had not followed in its own construction or reconstruction projects for at least the tenure of the highway surveyor (seventeen years) and apparently for some time before that. The most that could be said was that other subdivision developers were being required to and did adhere to the standards being imposed on the Mileses.

There is no suggestion in this case that the conditions put by the board on the Mileses’ subdivision approval were either imposed in discriminatory fashion or lacked rational justification. The proviso, however, was intended by the Legislature to limit the authority of a planning board to require more of the developer than the town requires of itself. The standard is not what the town through its boards and officers recognizes as the ideal; rather, it is the standard “commonly applied” by the town in its own construction work. There is nothing in the “commonly applied” standard that makes pre-proviso construction irrelevant, where, as here, there is no evidence that the town imposed the regulations on its own construction. There is nothing in the standard that makes one-hundred percent funding by the town a condition precedent to relevancy. It is true, as the judge emphasized, that the proviso should not be read to constrain the town from upgrading construction standards applicable to ways. The proviso, however, requires that the town must itself be applying the higher standards. Here, it was clear from the testimony of the highway surveyor that the town had not upgraded construction standards applicable to its own work in the five years since the effective date of the proviso. Indeed, in work that was in progress even at the time of trial (see n.4, supra), the town was continuing to adhere to the lower standards to which the highway surveyor testified.

[321]*321What has been said applies clearly to the conditions imposed by the board relative to the sidewalk and the curbing. It is less clear that it applies to the condition requiring underground utility lines.7 The Governor’s commission intended that its proposed legislation apply to utilities. Its calculations of excessive costs typically imposed by regulations included the added costs associated with underground utilities. Commission Report at 42. The commission’s own draft legislation, however, was phrased in terms of “the laying out and construction of ways and streets within a subdivision” (id. at 40), and the legislation recommended by the Governor (House Doc. No. 6566, appendix L) rephrased this as “the laying out, construction, alteration, or maintenance of ways within a particular subdivision.” The Legislature adopted this phraseology.

While the question is close, we think the proviso can be read and, in view of the clear intent, should be read to encompass utilities constructed within the ways of subdivisions. In new construction, utilities typically follow the routes of ways, Sansoucy v. Planning Bd. of Worcester, 355 Mass. 647, 649 (1969), and the proviso itself was adopted only six years after the Legislature had (by St. 1975, c. 610) amended G. L. c.

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Related

Miles v. Planning Board of Millbury
536 N.E.2d 328 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 N.E.2d 1313, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-v-planning-board-massappct-1988.