Chiuccariello v. Building Com'r of Boston

Decision Date09 November 1990
Docket NumberNo. 89-P-674,89-P-674
Citation562 N.E.2d 96,29 Mass.App.Ct. 482
PartiesMario CHIUCCARIELLO et al., trustees, 1 v. BUILDING COMMISSIONER OF BOSTON et al. 2
CourtAppeals Court of Massachusetts

Floyd H. Anderson, Jr., Boston, for plaintiffs.

Henry C. Luthin, Asst. Corp. Counsel, Boston, for the Building Com'r of Boston and another.

James L. LaMothe, Jr., Boston, for Alan S. Goldberg and others.

Before KASS, KAPLAN and IRELAND, JJ.

IRELAND, Justice.

This is a land use case in which abutters challenge a variance on the ground that they did not receive written notice of the hearing on the variance application as required by the zoning enabling act for Boston. 3 A judge of the Superior Court ruled that the plaintiff-abutters failed to appeal the variance in a timely manner and that they were not entitled to relief in the nature of mandamus. 4 We conclude: 1) that relief in the nature of mandamus was available; 2) that although there was no evidence of written notice to the abutters there was nonetheless actual knowledge; 3) that the abutters failed to act within a reasonable period of time once they had actual knowledge of the variance; and 4) that ordinary principles of laches govern. We, therefore, affirm the lower court's decision.

The parties have stipulated the dispositive facts. The abutters are trustees of the 328 Commercial Street Realty Trust and own property immediately abutting 300-322 Commercial Street, Boston. On November 3, 1983, the developers, trustees of Beacon Wharf Development Trust, applied to the building department of the city of Boston for permission to combine the lots at 300-322 Commercial Street and to rehabilitate a warehouse use thereon to ninety-eight residential apartments, several commercial units, and seventy-two parking spaces. That application was promptly denied for failure to comply with use of the parapet setback provisions of the Boston zoning ordinance. The developers sought relief through a conditional use permit and variances from the board of appeal (board) which scheduled a hearing on December 20, 1983. Notice of the hearing was published in the Boston Herald on December 6, 1983. The hearing was continued until January 10, 1984, and notice of the new hearing date was published in the Boston Herald on January 6, 1984. The board has no record of sending notice of the hearing, as originally scheduled or continued, to abutters, and the abutters did not receive any such notice. After the hearing, the board granted a conditional use permit allowing residential use of the property and granted two variances, allowing construction of 105 condominium units and 89 parking spaces.

On June 14, 1984, the abutters, by letter, requested the board to rehear the developers' petition, on the basis that the abutters had received no notice of the hearing. In another June 14, 1984, letter, the abutters informed the developers that they were seeking a rehearing and rescission of the developers' demolition permit, and that "any construction in accordance with the plan would be at their peril." On August 3, 1984, the abutters wrote to the board, noted that work was progressing on the property, and stated that if they did not hear from the board within a week, they would presume their request for rehearing was denied and would sue. On August 13, 1984, the developers obtained a building permit. No notice of the issuance of the permit was given to the abutters, nor would such notice ordinarily be required or given. The abutters protested to city officials, from time to time, through January 23, 1985, when they wrote to the board requesting that it revoke the permit. The board advised the abutters that it would take no such action, and that a new hearing would be required.

On January 28, 1985, six months after the abutters notified the board of the notice problem, the abutters filed an action in Superior Court seeking declaratory relief under G.L. c. 231A and alleging that they were aggrieved parties with regard to the 300-322 Commercial Street property. Specifically, the abutters sought to have the actions of the board declared invalid for want of the required notice to them. The abutters also sought relief in the nature of mandamus, asking the court to order a new public hearing by the board, to revoke the building permit until after such a new hearing and the time for appeal therefrom, if any, had passed, or a final court judgment thereon. The abutters did not, and do not now, seek injunctive relief. Construction on the 300-322 Commercial Street property was completed on August 12, 1986, when the city building department issued certificates of occupancy. As of January 28, 1985, ninety-three condominium units in the property had been conveyed to persons not parties to the original action. As of this appeal, all units have been conveyed by the developers to third persons, bona fide purchasers for value, none of whom was a party to the original action or, apparently, had knowledge of it. Those purchasers are purportedly represented on appeal by the managers of the Mariner Condominium Association who were substituted for the developers.

The Superior Court judge ruled that the abutters' delay barred their action. He reasoned that the fifteen-day period for filing an appeal from a decision of the board, provided for in the Boston enabling act (St.1956, c. 665 § 11, as amended by St.1974 c. 669, § 1 5) should be measured from the date of the abutters' actual knowledge. The abutters commenced their action more than six months thereafter.

The issue on appeal is whether the abutters, as aggrieved parties, who lacked statutory notice of a public hearing but had actual knowledge of the developers' demolition and construction activities, may be barred by laches from receiving declaratory relief and relief in the nature of mandamus.

The abutters argue that the variances granted by the board are invalid because the failure to provide them with notice of the public hearing deprived the board of jurisdiction. The abutters' status and right to notice as aggrieved parties is not contested. See Bedford v. Trustees of Boston University, 25 Mass.App.Ct. 372, 376, 518 N.E.2d 874 (1988) ("abutting landowner enjoys a presumption of being a 'person aggrieved' "); St.1956, c. 665, § 8. The failure to provide notice as required by statute, however, did not deprive the board of jurisdiction. The defendants correctly point to Kasper v. Board of Appeals of Watertown, 3 Mass.App.Ct. 251, 256, 326 N.E.2d 915 (1975), in which we said that "not every decision of an administrative board need be invalidated for the board's failure to comply precisely with each of the notice provisions of a statute such as G.L. c. 40A, § 17.... To rule that a board of appeals loses jurisdiction to act in every ... instance [of defective notice] would be to rule that every successful petitioner before the board, who has no control over the manner in which the board performs its duties ... would remain indefinitely subject to attack in proceedings in the nature of mandamus." (In Kasper we reached the same conclusion under the similar provisions of G.L. c. 40A, § 17, where the plaintiff had received actual notice but not statutory mail notice.) Successful attack on a board's decision, in the face of actual notice but in the absence of statutorily required notice, should be restricted to circumstances where prejudice is demonstrated. See id. at 257, 326 N.E.2d 915.

In regard to prejudice, despite their lack of notice, the abutters were not barred from seeking relief from the board's decision. The abutters could have sought, and did seek, relief in the nature of mandamus. Gamer v. Zoning Board of Appeals of Newton, 346 Mass. 648, 649, 195 N.E.2d 772 (1964), held that for "persons aggrieved who were not parties to the proceedings before the [b]uilding [c]ommissioner to obtain a permit ... their only means for relief is a petition for writ of mandamus to enforce [the zoning ordinance]."

Relief in the nature of mandamus is the proper remedy for aggrieved persons to pursue where, e.g., "applicable provisions in respect of time of appeal are unreasonable." Brady v. Board of Appeals of Westport, ...

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    ...the statutory notice requirements of G. L. c. 40A, § 17." Id. at 195, 837 N.E.2d 1147. Accord Chiuccariello v. Building Comm'rs of Boston, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 482, 488, 562 N.E.2d 96 (1990) ("defective notice should not necessarily invalidate exercise of jurisdiction by the board"). Defects i......
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