Shirley Wayside Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Appeals of Shirley

961 N.E.2d 1055, 461 Mass. 469, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 24
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 961 N.E.2d 1055 (Shirley Wayside Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Appeals of Shirley) 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
Shirley Wayside Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Appeals of Shirley, 961 N.E.2d 1055, 461 Mass. 469, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 24 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Cordy, J.

Shirley Wayside Limited Partnership (Wayside), owner of a mobile home park in the town of Shirley, sought a special permit from the town’s zoning board of appeals (board) in order to expand its mobile home park, a lawfully nonconforming use, from sixty-five to seventy-nine units. The board refused to grant the special permit, finding that Wayside had failed to establish that the expansion would not be substantially more detrimental to the neighborhood than the existing mobile home park. Deeming the concerns articulated by the board to be mere pretexts and unsupported by the evidence, a judge in the Land Court overturned the board’s decision and ordered the board to issue the special permit. A divided panel of the Appeals Court reversed, finding that the board acted within its discretion because of the density of the proposed expansion. Shirley Wayside Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Appeals of Shirley, 78 Mass. App. Ct. 19 (2010) (Shirley Wayside). We granted Wayside’s application for further appellate review.

We conclude that the expansion complies with the zoning bylaw at issue, which we interpret as imposing minimum lot size dimensions on the entire mobile home park and not on individual mobile homes, governed only by board of health regulations.1 We further agree with the Land Court judge that [471]*471there is no evidence that either the density within the mobile home park expansion or the modest increase in traffic will be detrimental to the surrounding neighborhood. We therefore affirm the judgment of the Land Court judge.2

1. Background. We summarize the essential, undisputed facts. Wayside owns and operates a mobile home park on approximately twenty acres of land partially located in a residence 3 (R3) zoning district and partially in a residential rural (RR) zoning district. Minimum lot area for single-family homes and most other uses is 15,000 square feet in the R3 district and 80,000 square feet in the RR district.3 § 3.1 of the Revised Protective Zoning By-law of the Town of Shirley (1994) (bylaw). The lot also is located in a water supply protection zone, and it contains a portion of a pond in one corner.

The mobile home park currently contains sixty-five mobile homes, one of which is abandoned. Wayside owns the land, and the residents, who own the mobile homes, pay a monthly rental charge for the space they occupy. Wayside builds and maintains its own roads, is responsible for snow removal, and contracts for its own trash removal. Around the end of 2003, the park was connected to town sewer and water, for which it is paying the town a betterment assessment.

The park is restricted to persons of age fifty-five years and over. As set forth in the park’s rules and regulations, at least one member of every family must be aged fifty-five, and no guest under the age of fifty-five may stay longer than fourteen days. In 2003, Wayside’s sixty-four functioning mobile homes housed ninety-six people; four were children.

The park is accessed from Clark Road, a two-lane public way. Clark Road is connected to other roads but is not a main thoroughfare. At trial, Wayside presented evidence of trip generation in the form of a vehicle counting study. The study showed that 434 vehicles per day currently make use of Clark Road. [472]*472Wayside presented expert testimony at trial gauging the proposed impact of the expansion on traffic. The expert predicted that the proposed expansion would generate an additional sixty to seventy-five trips per day. The board neither performed its own traffic study nor had the Wayside traffic study reviewed by its own consultant.

In 1985, Shirley amended its zoning bylaw and deleted mobile home parks as a permitted use in all zoning districts. Wayside, which has existed since the 1950s, was protected as a preexisting nonconforming use. See G. L. c. 40A, § 6. Shirley supervises Wayside and the other remaining mobile home parks through its local board of health regulations. See G. L. c. 140, § 32B (authorizing local boards of health to regulate manufactured housing communities). The board of health regulations require 5,000 square feet of space for each mobile home, on a lot containing minimum dimensions of fifty by one hundred feet. There must be thirty feet of clearance between individual mobile homes and twenty feet of setback between mobile homes and the park boundary. Wayside’s sixty-four functioning mobile homes, having been laid out prior to the promulgation of these regulations in 1960, do not and are not required to comply with these dimensions.

The bylaw permits expansion of preexisting nonconforming uses if the landowner satisfies three conditions. First, the expansion of a nonconforming structure or use “shall not exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of its area on said lot” supporting that structure or use.4 § 2.8.4 of the bylaw. Second, the board must find “that such extension, alteration, reconstruction or repair is not substantially more detrimental to the neighborhood than the existing non conforming structure or use.”5 Id. Finally, the expansion “must be physically located within the perimeter of the lot as said perimeter existed and upon which the non [473]*473conforming structure or use was situated on the date the structure or use originally became non conforming.” Id. In addition, under § 4.13.3 of the bylaw, expansions in water protection zones may increase the total area impervious to drainage (i.e., paved roads and buildings) by no more than twenty-five per cent.

In 2005, Wayside applied for a permit to replace the abandoned mobile home and to add an additional fourteen mobile homes. The proposed expansion will be toward the rear of the property, in an area well screened by trees and other buffers.

It is agreed that Wayside’s proposal satisfies the first and third conditions for expansion — the square footage of the mobile homes would increase by 23.8 per cent, and the proposed expansion is entirely within the borders of Wayside’s property. The proposal also satisfies the water protection bylaw, because the expansion of the area impervious to drainage would be 24.9 per cent. The proposed expansion will abide by all current board of health regulations, including those respecting lot size and setback. Each new mobile home will be situated on a 5,000 square foot lot, and the closest distance between a proposed mobile home and an abutting property line will be twenty-two feet, two feet more than required by the board of health regulations. Nevertheless, the board denied Wayside’s application, finding that Wayside “did not satisfy the burden that this expansion will not be more substantially detrimental to the neighborhood due to the density of the expansion and the encroachment of the [twenty-five per cent] rule.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
961 N.E.2d 1055, 461 Mass. 469, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shirley-wayside-ltd-partnership-v-board-of-appeals-of-shirley-mass-2012.