Case Law Kirk v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Weston

Kirk v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Weston

Document Cited Authorities (7) Cited in (3) Related
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 1:28

The plaintiffs, abutters to the site of a proposed affordable housing project in Weston, appeal from a judgment of the Land Court affirming the grant by the defendant, zoning board of appeals of Weston (board), of a comprehensive permit under G. L. c. 40B, § 21, that authorized construction of the project. We discern no cause to disturb the judgment, and affirm.

Declaratory judgment. We first consider the plaintiffs' challenge to the declaratory judgment entered by the Land Court, which concluded that the defendant, 269 North Ave, LLC (developer), may cut back all roots and branches of trees protruding onto its property. First set out in Michalson v. Nutting, 275 Mass. 232, 233-234 (1931), the so-called "Massachusetts rule" allows property owners to cut back the intruding branches and roots of their neighbors' trees. "Where the trunk of a tree stands wholly on the land of one proprietor, he has been deemed the owner of the entire tree ... though there is no doubt of the right of the adjoining proprietor to cut off limbs and roots which invade his premises." Levine v. Black, 312 Mass. 242, 243 (1942). Notably, the Supreme Judicial Court recently reaffirmed the Massachusetts rule, holding that "[o]ur resolution has been and remains to authorize the cutting back of overhanging branches and intruding roots." Shiel v. Rowell, 480 Mass. 106, 112 (2018). Nothing in the case law suggests that the Massachusetts rule should be constrained by a reasonableness standard along the lines urged by the plaintiffs in the present case, nor by factors such as whether the cutting is "defensive" (i.e., to abate nuisance) or "offensive" (i.e., to develop land), or whether the trees are needed to enhance privacy when neighbors live in close proximity to one another.4

We likewise reject the plaintiffs' contention that, because a tree straddling a boundary line is coowned by the property owners on either side of the boundary line, each coowner owes a duty to the other to refrain from harming that tree. The lone binding authority cited by the plaintiffs observes that, in some jurisdictions outside Massachusetts, a coowner has the "right to prevent his neighbor from so dealing with [the neighbor's] part as unreasonably to injure or destroy the whole," but notes that "[e]ven under [this] view it is difficult to see why either owner should have any less right to cut off branches and roots than he would have if the trunk stood entirely upon the other's land" (emphasis added). Levine, 312 Mass. at 243-244. The developer does not plan to cut down the whole of the boundary line tree. At most, under the guidance of a certified arborist the developer will cut back the roots and branches of the boundary line tree that have grown onto the developer's property. Thus, even if Levine established a right for coowners to prevent the unreasonable destruction of a boundary line tree, that right is neither implicated nor violated here.

We accordingly agree with the Land Court judge that the developer may cut back the roots and branches of both boundary line and nonboundary line trees, subject to the conditions set out in the permit, irrespective of the effect the cutting may have on the trees. Doing so will not violate any property rights of the plaintiffs, so the plaintiffs are not entitled to injunctive or declaratory relief.

Comprehensive permit. "[T]he Legislature's intent in enacting G. L. c. 40B, §§ 20 - 23, is ‘to provide relief from exclusionary zoning practices which prevented the construction of badly needed low and moderate income housing’ in the Commonwealth." Standerwick v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Andover, 447 Mass. 20, 28-29 (2006), quoting Board of Appeals of Hanover v. Housing Appeals Comm., 363 Mass. 339, 354 (1973). To that end, G. L. c. 40B confers upon zoning boards the authority to waive local regulations that may hamper the construction of affordable housing, particularly in circumstances, as in Weston, where fewer than ten percent of the town's housing stock meets the criteria for affordable housing.5 See Board of Appeals of Hanover, supra at 354-355. "The statute reflects the Legislature's considered judgment that a crisis in housing for low and moderate income people demands a legislative scheme that requires the local interests of a town to yield to the regional need for the construction of low and moderate income housing, particularly in suburban areas." Standerwick, supra at 29. We cannot disturb the board's grant of a comprehensive permit "unless it is based on a legally untenable ground, or is unreasonable, whimsical, capricious or arbitrary." Jepson v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Ipswich, 450 Mass. 81, 96 (2007), quoting MacGibbon v. Board of Appeals of Duxbury, 356 Mass. 635,...

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