ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF BRAINTREE v. 383 WASHINGTON STREET, LLC, & Others (And a Consolidated Case)

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 18, 2025
Docket23-P-1213
StatusPublished

This text of ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF BRAINTREE v. 383 WASHINGTON STREET, LLC, & Others (And a Consolidated Case) (ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF BRAINTREE v. 383 WASHINGTON STREET, LLC, & Others (And a Consolidated Case)) 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
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF BRAINTREE v. 383 WASHINGTON STREET, LLC, & Others (And a Consolidated Case), (Mass. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

APPEALS COURT

ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF BRAINTREE vs. 383 WASHINGTON STREET, LLC, & others[1] (and a consolidated case[2])

Docket: 23-P-1213
Dates: February 13, 2025 – June 18, 2025
Present: Englander, Hodgens, & Smyth, JJ.
County: Norfolk
Keywords: Zoning, Comprehensive permit, By-law, Housing appeals committee, Low and moderate income housing, Board of appeals: decision. Permit. Housing. Practice, Civil, Zoning appeal. Statute, Construction. Administrative Law, Agency's interpretation of regulation.

      Civil actions commenced in the Superior Court Department on April 14, 2022. 

      The cases were heard by Joseph F. Leighton, Jr., J., on motions for judgment on the pleadings.

      Roger L. Smerage (Carolyn M. Murray also present) for the plaintiff.

      Peter L. Freeman for 383 Washington Street, LLC.

      John R. Hitt, Assistant Attorney General, for Department of Housing and Community Development & another.

      ENGLANDER, J.  This case involves applications for comprehensive permits under G. L. c. 40B.  The applicant, 383 Washington Street, LLC (developer), seeks to develop two adjacent properties in Braintree -- proposing on one property an eight-unit townhouse, and on the other, a seventy-unit apartment building.  Certain of the units in each development will be dedicated for low or moderate income housing.  The developer invoked chapter 40B in an attempt to streamline the local permitting process.  See the Comprehensive Permit Act, G. L. c. 40B, §§ 20-23.  That effort initially failed, as the zoning board of appeals of Braintree (board) denied the comprehensive permits.  The denials were thereafter reversed on appeal by the housing appeals committee (HAC), so as the case reaches this court, the board has been ordered to issue the comprehensive permits.

      The case presents issues, in particular, regarding how to calculate the so-called "safe harbor" under G. L. c. 40B, § 20, that is afforded to cities and towns that achieve a 1.5 percent threshold for land area dedicated to low or moderate income housing (sometimes called the "general land area minimum" or "GLAM" provision).  See G. L. c. 40B, § 20; 760 Code Mass. Regs. § 56.03(3)(b) (2012).  In the proceedings below the board took the position that the town of Braintree (town or Braintree) had satisfied the statutory "safe harbor," and that accordingly any denial of the comprehensive permits by the board must be upheld as a matter of law.  On appeal, the HAC denied the board's claim to the safe harbor, and thereafter ruled that the permits must issue.  A Superior Court judge upheld the HAC decisions.

      On appeal to this court the board continues to press that it had achieved the 1.5 percent threshold, thereby validating the denial of the comprehensive permits as a matter of law.  The board also argues, in the alternative, that the permits were properly denied based upon Braintree land use regulations that were "consistent with local needs" -- in particular, that the proposed projects failed to comply with open space, or "open recreational space," requirements, and that one project failed to make adequate provision for fire safety.

      As discussed below, we affirm the rulings of the HAC (and the Superior Court judge).  Braintree did not establish that it qualified for the 1.5 percent safe harbor, nor do we perceive error in the HAC's rejection of the board's denials based upon open space and fire safety concerns.

      Background.  In February of 2017, the developer applied to the board for two comprehensive permits, proposing two developments on adjacent parcels of land in Braintree.  The first development would constitute eight townhouse-style units in two buildings, of which two units would be designated as low or moderate income housing (townhouse project).  The second development would constitute an apartment building with seventy units, of which eighteen would be low or moderate income (apartment project).

      In March of 2017, the board asserted that denying the comprehensive permits would be "consistent with local needs as a matter of law," because Braintree met the 1.5 percent safe harbor.  The developer successfully challenged this assertion before the Department of Housing and Community Development (department),[3] and the board took an interlocutory appeal to the HAC.  Before the HAC, the board claimed that low or moderate income housing existed on sites comprising 1.65 percent of the total applicable land area in Braintree.  However, the parties disputed the board's GLAM calculation -- both the numerator (the land area containing low or moderate income housing) and the denominator (the total applicable land area).  The HAC ultimately found that low or moderate income housing existed on just 1.396 percent of the total applicable land area and denied the board's claim.

      The board then resumed consideration of the permits.  In February of 2020, the board denied the comprehensive permits as inconsistent with local standards.  The board gave several justifications, including that (1) both developments did not offer adequate "outdoor recreational areas" for residents, and (2) the apartment project would not provide adequate access for firefighters.[4]

      On appeal, the HAC again reversed the board.  While the HAC found that both projects did not comply with the town's open space bylaw, it also found that the bylaw had not been applied equally to subsidized and unsubsidized housing, and thus that the board could not rely on it.  The HAC also rejected the board's conclusion that the apartment project failed to meet local fire safety requirements.  The board sought judicial review of the HAC's decisions in the Superior Court, which affirmed all decisions.

      Discussion.  1.  The 1.5 percent "safe harbor" issue.  On appeal the board reiterates its position that Braintree satisfied the 1.5 percent GLAM "safe harbor" provision of chapter 40B.  See G. L. c. 40B, § 20.  The relevance of the GLAM provision is that, if satisfied, a local zoning board's denial of a comprehensive permit is deemed to be "consistent with local needs," as a matter of law, for chapter 40B purposes.  Id.  And under chapter 40B, a zoning board denial that is "consistent with local needs" is conclusive with respect to any review by the HAC, and may not be overturned by that body.  G. L. c. 40B, § 23.  See Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Sunderland v. Sugarbush Meadow, LLC, 464 Mass. 166, 169 & n.3 (2013) (Sugarbush) (HAC hearing limited to whether appeal board decision denying permit was consistent with local needs).  As discussed below, however, we agree with the HAC that Braintree did not meet the GLAM requirements.

      The basic structure of chapter 40B has been described in previous cases, and we reiterate it only briefly here.  An applicant under chapter 40B must show that its proposed project is eligible to be subsidized under a government low or moderate income housing program.  G. L. c. 40B, §§ 20, 21; 760 Code Mass.

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Zoning Board of Appeals of Greenfield v. Housing Appeals Committee
446 N.E.2d 748 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1983)
Board of Appeals of Hanover v. Housing Appeals Comm.
294 N.E.2d 393 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1973)
Zoning Board of Appeals v. Sugarbush Meadow, LLC
981 N.E.2d 690 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2013)
Zoning Board of Appeals v. Housing Appeals Committee
953 N.E.2d 721 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2011)

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ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF BRAINTREE v. 383 WASHINGTON STREET, LLC, & Others (And a Consolidated Case), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zoning-board-of-appeals-of-braintree-v-383-washington-street-llc-massappct-2025.