Southwick v. Planning Board

839 N.E.2d 351, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 315
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedDecember 20, 2005
DocketNo. 05-P-384
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 839 N.E.2d 351 (Southwick 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
Southwick v. Planning Board, 839 N.E.2d 351, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 315 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Green, J.

The questions in this subdivision appeal are (i) whether the plaintiff’s claim that the subdivision parcel has no right of access over the roads serving an adjacent subdivision (of which the plaintiff’s land is a part) is sufficient to support his standing to maintain the appeal; and (ii) whether his claim requires annulment of defendant Plymouth planning [316]*316board’s (board) approval of that subdivision. We conclude that the plaintiff’s claim is not merely sufficient to support his standing, but establishes that the subdivision is without the right of access on which it depends. We accordingly reverse the summary judgment dismissing the plaintiffs complaint, and direct entry of judgment in the plaintiffs favor, annulling the subdivision approval.3

Background.4 In 1987, the board approved a definitive plan of subdivision for Shallow Pond Estates (Shallow Pond subdivision). Among other conditions imposed on the subdivision approval was a requirement that the project proponent convey to the town of Plymouth, for nominal consideration, a certain lot in the subdivision described as lot 7-El.5 The subdivision proponent (a predecessor in interest to the plaintiff) conveyed lot 7-El to the town in 1988, under a deed which included the following language:

“The Grantor also grants, gives, bargains, and conveys, to the said Grantee an easement and right of way to use the roads and ways in the subdivision as shown on [the Shallow Pond subdivision] Plan for all purposes for which public ways and roads may be lawfully used in the Town of Plymouth in common with others lawfully entitled thereto. The Grantor specifically reserves to itself and to its successors and assigns the easement and right of way to use such roads and ways as shown on [the subdivision] Plan for all purposes for which public ways and roads may be lawfully used in the Town of Plymouth in common [317]*317with others lawfully entitled thereto, as well as the right to grant such easement and rights to others.”6

Following a foreclosure, the plaintiff acquired the Shallow Pond subdivision from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation by deed in 1995, and since has conveyed all but two lots in the subdivision to other parties.7 The Shallow Pond subdivision roadways remain private, and (pursuant to G. L. c. 183, § 58, the so-called “derelict fee statute”) the owner of each lot owns the fee to the centerline of the roadway adjacent to such lot.8 Accordingly, the plaintiff owns the fee in the portion of Shallow Pond Lane abutting lot 7-192.

At its northeastemmost extension, lot 7-El abuts the roadway in the Shallow Pond subdivision known as Shallow Pond Lane. As the lot extends southward from Shallow Pond Lane, it is eventually bounded to the east by the land that is the subject of the subdivision at issue in the present case. That land (the Wildes parcel) is currently owned by defendant Jonathan Wildes, and was previously owned by defendant Second Church of Plymouth (church). The Wildes parcel was not a part of the land included within the Shallow Pond subdivision, and it does not abut Shallow Pond Lane or any other roadway within that subdivision. It likewise has no deeded right of access to or from any other roadway outside the subdivision; the parcel is landlocked.9

In 1992, while the Shallow Pond subdivision was still owned by its original developer, the church requested on at least three occasions that the developer grant it an easement for access [318]*318over the Shallow Pond subdivision roadways. However, no such grant occurred.

In 2000, Wildes entered into an agreement to buy the Wildes parcel, conditioned on his ability to obtain approval of a subdivision of the parcel, and to acquire from the town of Plymouth an easement for access to the parcel over lot 7-El. In 2000, the Plymouth town meeting approved the grant of an easement over lot 7-El. In 2001, the board approved the definitive subdivision plan of the Wildes parcel, and the plaintiff appealed the board’s approval to the Superior Court. Despite the appeal, Wildes purchased the Wildes parcel from the church. Upon the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment, a judge of the Superior Court entered judgment dismissing the complaint, based on his conclusion that the impact of increased traffic from the proposed two-lot subdivision, coupled with the plaintiff’s ownership of only the portion of Shallow Pond Lane abutting the plaintiff’s lot 7-192, was insufficient to support the plaintiff’s standing to appeal.

Discussion. Though the immediate access to the Wildes parcel is over lot 7-El (by means of the easement approved by the town), the parties acknowledge that access to the proposed subdivision relies in addition on the roadways in the Shallow Pond subdivision or, more particularly, Shallow Pond Lane and Kathleen Drive. The plaintiff contends that the Shallow Pond subdivision roadways may not be used to furnish access to the Wildes parcel; Wildes contends that such use is permissibly within the scope of the easement rights granted to the town incident to the conveyance of lot 7-El.

The case is governed in all material respects by the rule described in Murphy v. Mart Realty of Brockton, Inc., 348 Mass. 675, 678-679 (1965): “[a] right of way appurtenant to the land conveyed cannot be used by the owner of the dominant tenement to pass to or from other land adjacent to or beyond that to which the easement is appurtenant.” For a recent application of the rule, see McLaughlin v. Selectmen of Amherst, 422 Mass. 359, 364-365 (1996).10

Wildes argues, without reference to any authority, that the [319]*319town’s extension of its easement over the Shallow Pond subdivision roadways to serve the Wildes parcel is not governed by the general rule because the town is a public entity, rather than a private owner as in Murphy, McLaughlin, and other like cases. Accordingly, the easement conveyed to the town under the 1988 deed of lot 7-El as appurtenant to that lot may be used by any resident of the town to gain access to the town land and, most likely, Shallow Pond itself.11 As Wildes sees it, it is nonsensical to suggest that an easement held for the benefit of every resident of the town could be overburdened by extending its use for the benefit of two additional lots. The argument is inapposite, as it conflates the question of overburdening an easement by frequency, type or intensity of use, see, e.g., Boudreau v. Coleman, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 621, 634 (1990), with the question of which land may enjoy the benefit of an appurtenant easement.12

Because the easement held by the town over the Shallow Pond subdivision roadways is appurtenant to the town’s ownership of lot 7-El, and because the Wildes parcel enjoys no easement over the roadways as appurtenant to it, use of the roadways to furnish access to the Wildes parcel would overload the town’s appurtenant easement over the roadways. Because the plaintiff owns the fee in a portion of Shallow Pond Lane, he is among [320]*320those entitled to assert the claim that such use would overload the easement over his servient estate, and therefore among those entitled to appeal the board’s approval of the proposed subdivision.13

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Bluebook (online)
839 N.E.2d 351, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwick-v-planning-board-massappct-2005.