Perry v. Robbins

13 Mass. L. Rptr. 501
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 2001
DocketNo. CAB000135
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Mass. L. Rptr. 501 (Perry v. Robbins) 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
Perry v. Robbins, 13 Mass. L. Rptr. 501 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Garsh, J.

The plaintiffs brought this suit to prevent the City of Attleboro (“the City”) from selling a portion of a parcel of land located in the Locust Valley to a private corporation for expansion of a golf course. This matter is before the court on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.P. 56. For the reasons discussed below, the defendants’ motion is allowed with respect to Count I of the Amended Complaint and denied with respect to Count II.

BACKGROUND

The undisputed facts as contained in the summary judgment record are as follows.

In 1994, the Resolution Trust Corporation (“RTC”), as the receiver of Old Stone Federal Savings Bank (“the Bank”), was the owner of 325 acres of land located in the City of Attleboro in the area known as Locust Valley. The Bank had acquired title to the 325 acres by foreclosing on a mortgage to a developer who had been seeking approval of a residential subdivision plan for the construction of200 to 300 single-family homes. RTC planned to market the 325 acres of land for sale. Because the City was concerned about the financial burden such a potentially large residential development would place on municipal services and schools, the City offered to purchase the entire 325-acre tract for $1,800,000. RTC rejected its offer and made a counteroffer of $2,150,000, a sum that the City could not afford. Thereafter, RTC and the City entered into an extended period of negotiations over the land.

Beginning in March of 1995, the City developed a plan to divide the 325-acre tract into two parcels in order to accomplish both the RTC’s price objective and the City’s desire to reduce residential development and use as much of the land as possible for recreation and open space. Under the City’s plan, the City would purchase 132 acres of the tract (“Parcel A") and use it for recreation and open space, while the remaining 193 acres (“Parcel B”) would be sold to a private developer. Parcel B contained an existing nine hole golf course open to the public, known as Locust Valley, owned and operated by a private corporation, KAADD, II Ltd. (“KAADD”). The City’s plan contemplated that 121 acres of Parcel B, including the area where the golf course was located, would be restricted to recreational use while the remaining 72 acres would be available for development. The City’s preference for the 72 acres on Parcel B was for the golf course to be expanded to eighteen holes, with fewer than 64 homes built.

One difficulty with the City’s plan was that a portion of Parcel B designated for the development of some of the 64 residential lots (“the Form A lots") also contained parts of three existing golf holes, a putting green, the club house and the parking lot. To address this problem, RTC and the City agreed that the City would make a portion of Parcel A available to the purchaser of Parcel B to compensate for the part of the golf course that would be displaced by the development of the Form A lots. The Ciiy also agreed to grant easements on Parcel A to accomplish the development of the eighteen hole golf course. The City engaged an engineering firm to develop a concept plan for Parcel [502]*502B showing the areas to be developed and the areas that could not be developed.

On April 18, 1995, the Attleboro City Council voted to appropriate $650,000 “for the acquisition of 132 acres of land in the area known as Locust Valley for public domain.” The Mayor approved and signed this vote on April 26. By letter dated June 6, 1995, the City offered to purchase Parcel A from RTC for $647,000; RTC subsequently indicated that it would accept this offer upon the conditions that it could sell Parcel B at a price that would allow it to achieve its price objective and that the City would make part of Parcel A available to the purchaser of Parcel B to relocate golf holes that would be displaced by development of the Form A lots. RTC then put Parcel B out to public bid. On October 31, 1995, in reliance on the City’s concept plan, KAADD agreed to purchase Parcel B from RTC for' $1,382,657.

On November 30, 1999, at the City’s request, University of Massachusetts Wildlife Biologist Scott Jackson (“Jackson”) visited 154 acres of the Locust Valley tract. Thereafter, he reviewed materials provided by the Attleboro Planning Department and prepared a report entitled, “A Preliminary Ecological Assessment of City of Attleboro Land in the Locust Valley” (“the Assessment”). The Assessment states that its purposes are to describe the natural communities occurring on the property, to identify any rare or unusual natural communities, to identify areas of particular value for wildlife and biodiversity protection, to assess the overall significance of the property in terms of wildlife and biodiversity protection, and to discuss options and make recommendations concerning conservation of wildlife habitat and biodiversity. The Assessment explicitly states that it is not an exhaustive natural resource inventory, an inventory of state/federally listed species occurring on the property, or a detailed wildlife habitat evaluation for any regulatory purpose.

The Assessment states that the Locust Valley property is comprised of upland oak forest interspersed with forested wetlands and vernal pools, and opines that, although the oak forest community is not rare or uncommon in Massachusetts, it is particularly valuable as habitat for wildlife. With respect to the forested wetlands, the Assessment states that some of the wetlands may be suitable for nesting habitat for the four-toed salamander, a state-listed species, although none have been documented on the property. Further, the northeastern corner of the site contains forested wetlands dominated by green ash and swamp white oak, which the Assessment concludes “is an unusual and valuable natural community and should be a priority for conservation." With respect to six vernal pools on the property, the Assessment states that several state-listed species tend to use vernal pools as breeding habitat. The Assessment concludes that long-term protection of the vernal pools would require protecting most of the site and possibly land abutting the site to the east and west, and recommends that an inventory of the vernal pools be conducted to determine which species utilize these pools. Finally, with respect to the forest interior, the Assessment states that the Locust Valley property “is probably highly used by forest interior birds” and concludes that development of the property “has strong potential to fragment the forest resulting in significant reductions in habitat values on the site as well as on surrounding land.”

On December 1, 1995, the City purchased Parcel A from RTC for $647,000 and the land was conveyed to the City that day subject to the deed restriction “that no portion thereof shall be used for any purpose other than recreational, park and conservation purposes duly authorized by the City of Attleboro.” The deed states that this restriction is for the benefit of the remaining 193 acres of Parcel B land. On December 1, 1995, the City also entered into a formal agreement with RTC requiring the City “to make its best efforts to make such land available from Parcel ”A" to the third-party purchaser [of Parcel “B”), its successors or assigns, as third-party purchaser, its successors or assigns, may require to relocate those golf holes, or parts thereof, displaced by development of [the] Form A lots."

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Bluebook (online)
13 Mass. L. Rptr. 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-robbins-masssuperct-2001.