Musto v. Planning Board

768 N.E.2d 588, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 831
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 24, 2002
DocketNo. 00-P-67
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 768 N.E.2d 588 (Musto 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
Musto v. Planning Board, 768 N.E.2d 588, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 831 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Lenk, J.

The Medfield planning board appeals from a decision of the Land Court, which overturned the planning board’s denial of the Mustos’ definitive subdivision plan.2 The judge found that the planning board’s decision was not legitimately [832]*832based on any of the three stated reasons for the denial but was instead principally motivated by a desire to limit the number of lots developed on the locus to fewer than would be permissible under the subdivision control law and the town’s rules and regulations. On appeal, the planning board contends that the judge misapplied pertinent law; it does not contend that the judge’s findings of fact are clearly erroneous. We affirm.

Background. We first recite the judge’s findings of fact and rulings of law in some detail. The Mustos own an 8.3 acre parcel of land in Medfield (the Musto parcel). This land, plus an additional abutting 1.3 acres then owned by the trustees of the Hoover Realty Trust (Trust), is the subject of the subdivision plan at issue here (the locus). Since 1993, the Mustos have presented to the planning board various plans related to their parcel and the locus. .

During review of the various plans, planning board members consistently expressed the view that the plans proposed too many lots for the site (nine was the highest number proposed) and that there should be no through connection between the locus and adjacent property owned by the Trust, part of which later formed the Woodcliff Hills subdivision. These views arose, respectively, from concern for the presence of wetlands on the locus and concern that a through connection of the locus and the Woodcliff Hills subdivision would generate an undesirable increase in traffic through surrounding residential areas.

In July, 1995, the Mustos and the Trust submitted for approval a preliminary subdivision plan for the locus which contained nine lots. The frontage was on a road, shown as Erik Road Extension, which extended from the end of the then-constructed dead end of Erik Road at the western boundary of the locus and continued to the eastern boundary of the Musto parcel, where the road connected to a proposed roadway in the adjacent Woodcliff Hills subdivision. Prior to this filing, the Trust had obtained approval of a preliminary plan for the Wood-cliff Hills subdivision.

The planning board held a hearing on the preliminary plan for the locus on August 21 and September 25, 1995, at which [833]*833the Musios presented a conceptual plan that extended past the Musto parcel’s eastern boundary into the Trust’s adjacent property in the locus and ended in a cul-de-sac. The planning board affirmed its desire that no through connection exist between Woodcliff Hills and the Musto parcel.

At the September 25 meeting, the board approved the preliminary plan, subject to the following conditions:

“1. That there be no further connection to any other subdivision.
“2. That the [cul-de-sac] be brought back into the subdivision sufficiently that there be at least portions of buildable lots between the [cul-de-sac] and the property line.
“3. That no additional roads be built within the subdivision.
“4. That the applicant discuss with the trails committee the possibility for any trails through the development.
“5. That the utility easement also be encumbered as a trail easement.
“6. That there be no more than [nine] buildable lots in the subdivision.
“7. That the conditions of all other town boards be met.”

The board also indicated it “would consider” waivers from the town’s rules and regulations with regard to the maximum length and width of the road ending in the cul-de-sac.3 Less than two weeks later, the board approved the definitive plan for the Woodcliff Hills subdivision. In so doing, it waived the dead-end street length requirement in exchange for an agreement by the Trust not to permit a through street connection to the Mustos’ proposed subdivision.

On December 27, 1995, the definitive plan for the locus was submitted. As with the preliminary plan, this version proposed nine lots, with frontage on Erik Road Extension extending from [834]*834the end of the then-constructed dead-end of Erik Road at the western boundary. The layout width of the roadway was to be forty feet. Instead of connecting to the Woodcliff Hills subdivision, as in the preliminary plan, the road continued to its end in a cul-de-sac, whose bulb extended beyond the Musto parcel’s eastern boundary. A twenty-foot wide strip of land was included within two of the lots and wrapped around the end of the culde-sac, separating it from the Trust’s adjacent land. The subdivision roadway extended approximately 750 feet from the previously-constructed dead end of Erik Road; the total distance from the intersection of Erik Road and the nearest connecting street to the end of the proposed cul-de-sac was approximately 900 feet.

On February 1, 1996, the board of health recommended against approval of the definitive plan. On April 24, however, the board of health advised the Mustos that it would recommend approval if the definitive plan incorporated certain specified modifications to the proposed drainage system. After agreeing to make the suggested revisions, the Mustos requested that the board of health inform the planning board of its willingness to approve a plan in compliance with its suggestions. Though a copy of the minutes was forwarded to the planning board, the Mustos did not thereafter submit a revised plan to the board of health for formal action, and the board of health never formally modified its earlier recommendation against approval.

The planning board held hearings on February 5, March 4, and May 20, 1996. At the May 20 hearing, the planning board reviewed a copy of the board of health’s April 24 meeting minutes. The planning board chair stated that the adverse February recommendation still reflected the board of health’s formal position on the definitive plan. The Mustos explained that they intended to submit a revised plan to the board of health after reviewing the proposed modifications with the planning board. The planning board declined the Mustos’ request to extend the public hearing so that they could submit a revised plan to the board of health. Instead, the planning board closed the hearing and denied approval of the definitive plan. In its May 21, 1996, certificate of denial, the planning board cited three reasons for its decision: (1) that the board of health had denied approval of [835]*835the plan; (2) that the proposed street layout did not satisfy the required fifty-foot layout; and (3) that the proposed street would exceed the 500-foot length limit for dead-end streets.

The judge also found that, between June, 1994 and October, 1995, the planning board had waived the maximum dead-end street-length requirement in order to approve six subdivisions, including Woodcliff Hills. Except for Woodcliff Hills, the judge found the record insufficient to permit a comparison of the characteristics of those subdivisions with those of the locus. As to Woodcliff Hills, however, he found that the street-length requirement had been waived in exchange for an agreement by the Trust not to permit a through-street connection to the locus.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
768 N.E.2d 588, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musto-v-planning-board-massappct-2002.