Walker v. Board of Appeals

3 Mass. Supp. 341
CourtMassachusetts District Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1982
DocketNo. 24727
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Mass. Supp. 341 (Walker v. Board of Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Board of Appeals, 3 Mass. Supp. 341 (Mass. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

In the District Court Department, Orleans Division:

Justice: Robert A. Welsh, Jr.

Date of Finding or Decision Appealed From: December 3, 1980.'

Docket No: 24727

Date of Entry in Appellate Division: March 6, 1981.

In the Appellate Division:

Justices: Rider, P.J., Staff, J., Black, J.

Sitting at: District Court Department, Orleans Division

Date of Hearing: August 28, 1981

Date Opinion Certified: March 16, 1982

DECISION AND ORDER

This cause came on to and was heard in the Appellate Division for the Southern District; sitting at Orleans upon Report from the District Court Department, Orleans Division and it is found and decided that there was no prejudicial error.

It is hereby

ORDERED: That the Clerk of the District Court Department, Orleans Division make the following entry in said case on the docket of said Court, namely: REPORT DISMISSED.

Opinion filed herewith.

Danlal H. Rider, Presiding lustice Richard O. Staff, Justice Charles E.. Black, Justice Patricia D. Minotti, Clerk

Black, J.

This is an action brought on July 24, 1980, by Rufus F. Walkeir, as owner of a certain parcel of land, located on Main Street, Route 28, South Harwich, Barnstable County, Massachusetts [343]*343under G.L.c. 40A, s. 17, seeking judicial review of a decision by the Harwich Zoning Board of Appeals in which the plaintiff alleges to be an aggrieved party due to the granting of a special permit to the defendants, George B. Nelson and Ruth C. Nelson, for a change of a nonconforming use of a motel to a residential time-sharing condominium and for certain structural alterations to accomodate the proposed use. An answer was duly filed by the defendants, George B. Nelson and Ruth C. Nelson, denying most of the essential allegations of the complaint and specifically asserting that the plaintiff was not a person aggrieved under the provisions of G.L.c. 40A, s. 17. The Board of Appeals did not file an answer or other responsive pleading and did not participate in the judicial review proceedings before the court.

Thereafter the court allowed the plaintiff’s motion for leave: to amend complaint so as to name the plaintiff as Trustee of the Walker Trust rather that individually. The defendants, George B. Nelson and Ruth C. Nelson, filed an answer to the amended complaint, set* ting forth the i same answers aá in their original answer and specifically pleading lack of standing on the part of the plaintiff, Rufus F. Walker, Trustee. The case was presented to the court on the basis of a stipulation with certain exhibits annexed. The court also heard from a defense witness who testified, in substance, that the proposed change would not adversely affect property values in the area. Further testimony was received from the defendant, Ruth C. Nelson, who stated that she and her husband had owned the motel property since 1959 when it consisted of sixteen (16) units, that twenty (20) additional units were added in 1965 and that some of the units have kitchen facilities. There are plans to add seven (7) more units for a total of forty-three (43). The units would be sold as time-sharing condominiums wherein fifty (50) weekly intervals of each unit would be sold. The time sharing would exclude the first two weeks in January of each year. The court took a view of the locus.

The court found that the premises in question are operated by the Nelsons as a motel in a residential district (C-H-l) and ' that this is a valid non-conforming use, having been operated since 1959, prior to the date of the present Zoning By-Law. Eighteen (18) pf the motel units have kitchen facilities and the court found that the installation of additional kitchen facilities and the other changes contemplated in the units would not adversely affect the neighborhood and would not be substantially more detrimental tó it than the existing non-conforming use. Similarly, the court found that an addition of seven additional units as time-/ sharing condominiums would not be substantially more detrimental to the neighborhood and would not adversely affect the public good. *

The court further found that thq requested Special Permit was properly applied for and properly granted under Section XJ of the Town of Harwich Zoning By-Laws. Section XG, which gives the Planning Board authority to issue permits for hotels, motels, and multi-unit dwellings, was determined to be inapplicable to applications for .permission to alter or change non-conforming uses. The deci-. sion of the Board of Appeals was found , legally adequate and the Board’s exercise of its discretion to issue the permit in this case was found to be within its authority and not to have been exercised in an arbitrary or capricious manner. No variance was found to be required in order to effect the change of use from a motel to time-sharing condominiums since the structure of a non-conforming use, and the external changes would largely be of a sort normally associated with an accessory use for a motel, such as a putting green and and enclosure for an existing swimming pool, and would not appeal to offend set-back or other requirements of the Zoning, By-Law. Moreover, the possible expansion from seasonal to virtually year-round occupancy or use of the property as a nonconforming use would not necessarily preclude the grant of the special permit sought (McAleer v. Board of Appeals of [344]*344Barnstable, 361 Mass. 317, 323-324 [1972]). The court found no local policy directed against condominium conversion of pre-existing and established uses, unlike the by-law involved in Goldman v. Dennis, 375 Mass. 197 (1978).

Accordingly, the court affirmed the decisin of the Board of Appeals without modification on December 3, 1980. The plaintiff duly requested a report on December ’ll, 1980, and filed his draft report; on the same date. The defendants, George B. Nelson and Ruth C. Nelson, claiming to be aggrieved by . the court’s finding and ruling that the plaintiff was an aggrieved person within the meaning of the statute, filed their draft report on December 12, 1980. The draft reports were approved on January 30, 1981. Both the plaintiff and the defendants sought review of the case by the Appellate Division, but the trial judge reached the tentative conclusion that further review, after disposition in the District Court Department, would be by the Appeals Court, not the Appellate Division. The court, being in doubt as to the correct avenue for further judicial review, voluntarily reported the question of jurisdiction to the Appellate Division along with the other matters raised by the plaintiff and the defendants.

There are three issues presented by this appeal: (1) Does the Appellate Division have jurisdiction to helar this appeal? (2) Does the plaintiff have standing to maintain this action? (3) Was the trial judge correct on his ruling on the merits?

APPELLATE DIVISION JURISDICTION

The jurisdiction of the Appellate Division to hear zoning appeals is apparently a question of first impression. Under G.L.c. 40A, s. 17, as amended by St. 1978, c. 468, s. 32, there is concurrent jurisdiction in the District and Superior Court Departments to hear zoning cases. (It shoud be noted, however, that in Hampden County jurisdiction is shared only by the Superior and Housing Court Departments.) '

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Bluebook (online)
3 Mass. Supp. 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-board-of-appeals-massdistct-1982.