Moskow v. City of Newton

3 Mass. Supp. 729
CourtMassachusetts Land Court
DecidedJune 14, 1982
DocketNo. 106294; No. 81-6612
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Mass. Supp. 729 (Moskow v. City of Newton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Land Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moskow v. City of Newton, 3 Mass. Supp. 729 (Mass. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

DECISION

, The plaintiffs in both actions are Michael B. Moskow, Donna Moskow, Laylor Burdick and Sidney Schein; all of Newton in the County of Middlesex, and Frank M. Perkins of Brookline in the County of Norfolk. They seek relief from the action of the Board of Aldermen of the City of Newton in adopting an amendment to the zoning plans which changed the district boundaries applicable to a large parcel of land in Florence Street from a Private Residence District to a Residence E District, and from the further action of the Board in granting a special permit to use the lánd thus zoned as a Residence E District for mid-rise condominiums. Both actions originally were filed in the Superior Court Department for the County of Middlesex. Civil Action 81-6611 which seeks a declaratory judgment that the zoning change is invalid and relief in jthe nature of mandamus was transferred to the Land Court Department on motion of the defendants to . which the plaintiffs assented. The defendants in this action are the City of Newton, Chestnut Hill Development Corporation, the developer, Eleanor Thanos, Trustee of the Sidney Hill Trust, owner of the land affected by the rezoning, and Alan Fraser, the building commissioner of the City of Newton. Civil Action 81-6612 which attacks the special permit was transferred to the Land Court Department by the Chief Administrative Justice, after consultation with the Administrative Justice of the Superior Court Department, to be heard by a Land Court Department Justice sitting as a justice of the Superior Court Department pursuant [731]*731to a standing order dated January 27, 1979. The defendants in the second action are the developer, the Board of Aldermen of the City of Newton and each individual member, and the City.

I find and rule that the change in the zoning of the locus from a Private Residence District to a Residence E District and the simultaneous granting of a special pbrmit covering the area rezoned to be used for purposes permitted in a Residence E District are not vulnerable to the plaintiffs’ attack and are upheld.

The two cases were heard together (although not formally consolidated because of the diversity of departments) on March 29 to 30 and April 1, 1982. A view was - taken by the Court in the presence of counsel on March 30. At the trial a stenographer was appointed each day to record and transcribe the testimony. It was agreed that all evidence would apply to each action. All exhibits introduced into evidence are incorporated herein for the purpose of any appeal. There were four witnesses called by the plaintiffs: Barry V. Canner, Director of Planning and Development in Newton, Eugene F. Kennedy, senior planner in the Planning division, Professor John T. Howard, an expert in planning, and one of the plaintiffs, Laylor Burdick. Witnesses for the defendant were Mr. Canner, William Pressley, a landscape architect, Charles Downe, a community planning consultant, Ethel W. Sheehan, a Newton Alderman at large and a member of the Board’s Land Use Committee, and J erold Kayden, a member of the faculty at Harvard University lecturing in urban law and planning. There were thirty exhibits introduced into evidence, some of which have multiple parts. The exhibits included a mounted two sheet planting and site plan of The Fountains (the name of the proposed condominiums), a compiled plan of the area showing the zoning districts and a mounted color-keyed plan of present land use in the area.

íe parties entered into a statement of agreed facts in which they stipulated that certain facts might be taken as true and certain described documents as genuine copies of the originals. The facts to which the parties so stipulated are these, and I adopt them:

“1. The site which is the subject of these actions is a rectangular-shaped parcel of land consisting of approximately 331,578 square feet (approximately 7.6 acres) known as 77 Florence Street, Newton, Massachusetts. The site is approximately 360 feet wide where it fronts on Florence Street and is approximately 1020 feet deep. On the assessor’s map, the site is located at Ward 8, Section 82, Block 4, Lots 73 and 74.
2. Plaintiffs Michael B. and Donna Moskow own and reside at the property located at 190 Dudley Road, Newton, Massachusetts, which abuts the south side of the site. Plaintiff Laylor Burdick owns and resides at the property located at 180 Dudley Road, Newton, Massachusetts, which is close to the south side of the site.
3. Plaintiff Stanley Schein owns and resides at the property located at 28 Tanglewood Road, Newton, Massáchusetts, which abuts the east side of the site.
4. Plaintiff Frank M. Perkins owns and resides at the property located at 28 Lyon Road, Brookline, Massachusetts.
5. Defendant Eleanor Thanos, as she is Trustee of the Sidney Hill Trust, is the owner of the site. '
6. Defendant Chestnut Hill Development Corp. is a corporation organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and was the applicant for the chance of zone and special permit which are the subjects of these actions.
7. Defendant Alan Fraser is the Building Inspector of the City of Newton and at all relevant times was the official responsible for the enforcement of the zoning laws of the City of- Newton. The other individual defendants were members of theBoard of Aldermen of the City of Newton at all relevant times.
8. On the site is located the Sidney Hill Country Club, which was constructed in or shortly after 1955. In December 1981, [732]*732the facilities of Sidney Hill Country Club included a clubhouse, a swimming pool, six tennis courts, and parking lots (both in front and at the rear of the clubhouse) with a capacity of 232 cars.
9...........
10. On September 16, 1981 defendants Thanos and Chestnut Hill Development Corp. filed an application for a change of . zone with respect to the site. That application was assigned No. 190-81C. On the same date, those parties filed an application with respect to the site for a special permit and site plan approval. That application was assigned No. 190-81D. Both applications were filed with the City Clerk of the City of Newton, the Board of Aldermen, and the Planning Board.
11. At the time that the aforesaid . applications were filed the site was in a Private Residence zone.
12...........
13. Among the salient features of each of the residential zoning classifications in the City of Newton are the following:
I. Single Residence Districts
1. Residence A — single-family house; minimum lot of 25,000 square feet;
2. Residence B — single family house; minimum lot of 15,000 square feet.
3. Residence C — single family house; minimum lot of 10,000 square feet.
II. Other Residential Districts
1. Private Residence — two-family home; minimum lot of 10,000 square feet; attached dwellings permitted if special permit granted.
2. Residence D — townhouses and garden apartments if special permit granted.
3. Residence E — apartment buildings if special permit is granted.
4.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Mass. Supp. 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moskow-v-city-of-newton-masslandct-1982.