Warner v. Lexington Historic Districts Commission

831 N.E.2d 380, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 78, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 701
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJuly 22, 2005
DocketNo. 03-P-1140
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 831 N.E.2d 380 (Warner v. Lexington Historic Districts Commission) 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
Warner v. Lexington Historic Districts Commission, 831 N.E.2d 380, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 78, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 701 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Armstrong, C.J.

The plaintiff, Ranne Warner, owns a house and lot at the comer of Hancock Street and Hancock Avenue in Lexington (town). Her land lies within one of the three historic districts (the Hancock-Clarke Historic District) established in the town by St. 1956, c. 447 (the Act). In 2000, she sought a certificate of appropriateness from the town’s historic districts commission (commission) for improvements to her driveway and yard that she had largely already constmcted. The commission denied her application, and Warner sought judicial review of its decision under § 10 of the Act. In 2003, a Superior Court [79]*79judge, acting on the commission’s motion for summary judgment, entered a final judgment affirming the commission’s decision. Warner appeals from that judgment.

The improvements at issue are these: first, a gravel driveway extension of a paved driveway that runs from Hancock Avenue parallel to the rear line of Warner’s lot,1 the purpose of the extension being to provide additional parking; second, a low, railroad-tie retaining wall, topped by a cast iron rail fence,2 separating the gravel extension from Warner’s yard; and, third, cedar fencing for a compost pile located between the end of the gravel extension and the back comer of the lot.

We mention, by way of background, that this was not Warner’s first encounter with the commission. In 1994 and 1995, she received certificates of appropriateness for major improvements to the same property. These included rebuilding and enlarging a passageway from her house to a bam, extending the driveway from Hancock Street around the barn and out to Hancock Avenue (thus forming a paved segment that Warner has lengthened by the gravel extension), creating a parking cut-out off the Hancock Avenue segment of the driveway to accommodate off-street parking, and repainting the house, bam, and shutters with a new, agreed-upon color scheme. By 2001, the commission had come to quarrel with Warner’s execution of the work authorized in 1994-1995.

Lexington’s was one of the earliest of the Commonwealth’s historic district statutes, being preceded, so far as we know, only by St. 1955, c. 616, which created the Historic Beacon Hill District in Boston. The purpose of the Act was to protect “historic buildings, places and districts through the development of appropriate settings for said buildings, places and districts and through the maintenance of said buildings, places and districts as landmarks of historic interest.” St. 1956, c. 447, § 1. The role of the commission is to police the construction, alteration, and demolition of visible buildings and structures within the defined district, including changes of color and post[80]*80ing of signs. In particular § 9 of the Act, as applied to Warner’s application, required the commission to “pass upon . . . [t]he appropriateness of exterior architectural features of . . . structures to be erected within the historic districts whenever such features are subject to view from a public street, way, or place.” St. 1956, c. 447, § 9(a)(1). Warner acknowledged that the gravel drive extension, the railroad-tie retaining wall and cast iron rail fence, and the cedar fence proposed for the compost area were all at least “slightly visible” from Hancock Avenue, thus establishing the necessity of a certificate of appropriateness to proceed with the work.3 On appeal Warner does not argue that the wall, the two fences, and the gravel driveway extension are not “structures” within the commission’s jurisdiction.4

Upon receipt of an application for a certificate of appropriateness for a project involving “external architectural features,” the commission is required by the statute to conduct a public hearing (St. 1956, c. 447, § 8) and to render a determination on the application within a specified time. In making its determinatian, the commission is required to “consider, among other things, the historic value and significance of the building or structure, the general design, arrangement, texture, material, and color of the features, sign or billboard involved and the relation of such factors to similar factors of buildings and structures in the immediate surroundings.” St. 1956, c. 447, § 9(a)(4), third [81]*81par. Where a project is deemed generally inappropriate, the commission is directed to consider whether a “failure to approve an application will involve a substantial hardship to the applicant and whether such application may be approved without substantial detriment to the public welfare and without substantial derogation from the intent and purposes of this act.” St. 1956, c. 447, § 9(a)(4), second par. Then, “[i]n the case of disapproval of an application for a certificate of appropriateness,” the commission is required to “notify the applicant in writing, setting forth therein the reasons for its determination,” and it “may make recommendations to the applicant with respect to appropriateness of design, arrangement, texture, material, color, and similar factors” (emphasis supplied). St. 1956, c. 447, § 9(c).

Here, the commission’s notice of determination, after a brief introduction describing the application, consisted of five dis-positive paragraphs. The first three described the failure of Warner and her husband to complete satisfactorily the work done under the 1994-1995 certificates of appropriateness. The painting of the bam was incomplete. The cupola had been left a different color from the bam itself. The slate roof remained in a state of disrepair. Shutters removed from the house during the repainting had never been put back, and, indeed, Warner, despite assurances to the commission that the shutters would be rehung, had removed most of the hardware necessary for rehanging. Neighbors were complaining of peeling paint. The commission stated in its determination that “the Warners had never completed their original project. All Certificates of Appropriateness clearly state that upon completion of construction, the work is expected to be kept in good condition; clearly this was not the case with the bam.”

The remaining two dispositive paragraphs of the notice of determination, set out below,5 relate that the commission considered the various factors that the Act, as quoted above, [82]*82directed it to consider. This it does largely by reciting the statutory language; missing are explanations of how those statutory factors bore on their denial of the certificate, the reasons, in effect, for their determination.6

The Superior Court, in reviewing the adequacy of the decision of a historic district commission, applies “a standard of review analogous to that governing exercise of the power to grant ordinary special permits,” taken from the zoning context. Gumley v. Board of Selectman of Nantucket, 371 Mass. 718, 719 (1977). See Marr v. Back Bay Architectural Commn., 23 Mass. App. Ct. 679, 682-683 (1987). A “decision of the commission cannot be disturbed . . . ‘unless it is based on a legally untenable ground, or is unreasonable, whimsical, capricious or arbitrary.’ ” Gumley v. Board of Selectman of Nantucket, suprat 723, quoting from MacGibbon v. Board of Appeal of Duxbury, 369 Mass. 512, 515-516 (1976). The judge should conduct a two-step inquiry. First, the judge should determine whether [83]

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Bluebook (online)
831 N.E.2d 380, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 78, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-lexington-historic-districts-commission-massappct-2005.