Toothaker v. Planning Board of Billerica
This text of 193 N.E.2d 582 (Toothaker v. Planning Board of Billerica) 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.
Opinion
The planning board of the town of Bil-lerica has appealed from the final decree in the Superior Court which ruled that “the subdivision of the petitioners’ land is not subject to the ‘subdivision control law’ as set forth in Gr. L. c. 41, §§ 81K to SlGrGr,” inserted by St. 1953, c. 674, § 7, as amended. The ease was heard on a statement of agreed facts.
The plaintiffs own approximately 1,200 lots in a subdivision of over 1,800 lots on or adjacent to two public ways, Pond Street and Salem Road. The subdivision is shown on a plan recorded in 1914. Twenty-three ways are shown as within the subdivision, of which six or seven have been partially graded. The others are now partly covered with brush and trees. All save one, which has a width of sixty feet, are fifty feet in width. Several of the ways are shown with dead ends and a number of others have two-way access for their full length only as they join an unaccepted way which bounds the subdivision on the southeast. Most of the lots on the plan have frontages of twenty-five feet and
areas of 2,500 square feet.
The subdivision control law became effective in Billerica on March 3, 1951. At that time 649 of the lots had been sold and were Owned by others than the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title who then owned all the other lots. Some of these 649 lots are now owned by the plaintiffs. Appur *438 tenant to each of the 649 lots other than those fronting on a public way, is a right of way “over the street upon which it is located either to Pond Street or [to] Salem Road.” At least one such lot is located on every way of the subdivision except four short dead-end ways at its rear.
Twenty dwelling houses have been built in the subdivision, the actual lot for each house comprising, on an average, ten of the subdivision lots. The subdivision is in ? 30,000 square foot residence district zone, and the plaintiffs intend to conform to all zoning law requirements. The tract has not been registered. The building commissioner, on a ruling from the planning board, has refused permits pending compliance with the subdivision control law. 1
General Laws c. 41, § 810 provides in part: “No person shall make a subdivision of any land in any city or town in which the subdivision control law is in effect unless he has first submitted to the planning board of such city or town for its approval a plan of such proposed subdivision, showing the lots into which such land is to be divided and the ways already existing or which are to be provided by him for furnishing access to such lots, and the planning board has approved such plan in the manner hereinafter provided. ...”
Section 81L defines “subdivision” as “the division of a tract into two or more lots.” It exempts a subdivision wherein, ‘ ‘ at the time when it is made, every lot within the tract so divided has frontage on (a) a public way, or (b) a way shown on a plan theretofore approved in accordance with the subdivision control law, or (c) a way in existence when the subdivision control law became effective in the city or town in which the land lies, having, in the opinion of the planning board, sufficient width, suitable grades and *439 adequate construction to provide for the needs of vehicular traffic in relation to the proposed use of the land abutting thereon or served thereby, and for the installation of municipal services to serve such land and the buildings erected or to be erected thereon. ...”
Section 81FF provides in part that the “recording of the plan of a subdivision in the registry of deeds before the subdivision control law was in effect . . . shall not exempt the land within such subdivision from the operation of said law except with respect to lots which had been sold and were held in ownership separate from that of the remainder of the subdivision when said law went into effect . . . and to rights of way and other easements appurtenant to such lots” (emphasis supplied).
The plaintiffs’ tract is, plainly, a subdivision within the meaning of <§. 81L. Nothing in the exceptions to that definition exempts the plaintiffs’ land. Nor can it be argued that the planning board lacks power under § 810 and § 81FF to regulate access to the lots of the 1914 plan. A purpose of § 81FF is to make it clear “that plans of subdivisions [of unregistered land] in a city or town recorded prior to the going into effect of the law in such city or town shall be valid only with respect to lots held in separate ownership when the law went into effect in such city or town, and to rights of way appurtenant to such lots. ’ ’ 1953 House Doc. No. 2249 at p. 60.
At issue, therefore, is the meaning of the exemption in § 81FF of appurtenant rights of way.
We hold that the words emphasized in the foregoing quotation from § 81FF relate only to each lot sold before the subdivision control law became applicable and refer to the substance of the rights of way or easements appurtenant thereto. The words of the statute do not exempt the owners of the other lots from compliance with the subdivision control law. Nor does the statute fix the location or extent of the rights of way appurtenant to lots sold before the subdivision control law became applicable. Those rights are determined by the private grants. Prentiss v. Glouces *440 ter, 236 Mass. 36, 52-54. Wellwood v. Havrah Mishna Anshi Sphard Cemetery Corp. 254 Mass. 350, 354-355. Goldstein v. Beal, 317 Mass. 750, 754-756. Compare Walker v. E. William & Merrill C. Nutting, Inc. 302 Mass. 535, 539-540.
Of course, both the owners and the planning board must so apply the law that the existing exempt rights of way of the lots separately owned in 1951 are not destroyed or substantially limited or interfered with. The agreed facts do not set out the precise language by which the rights of way were granted to the buyers of the lots sold “over the street upon which . . . [the lot] is located either to Pond Street or [to] Salem Road.” It appears likely from this statement in the agreed facts that there is no more definition of the course of the way than is contained in a reference to the way on which the lot is located and that all that was granted in each case was a right of way to one or the other of the public ways, whichever is nearer. See Prentiss, Wellwood, and Goldstein cases, supra. In any event, nothing would preclude application of regulations requiring construction of ways and installation of municipal services.
Whatever the precision of definition of the private rights of way, the planning board, as a condition of approving a subdivision plan for the plaintiffs’ land, may impose any lawful requirements, and may disregard the 1914 plan and its scheme except so far as regard thereto is necessary in order to leave the lots which were separately owned in 1951 with the substance of their rights of ways.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
193 N.E.2d 582, 346 Mass. 436, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toothaker-v-planning-board-of-billerica-mass-1963.