Summary
In Whittemore v. Falmouth, 313 Mass. 248, 249, we said that "It is not permissible `to single out one lot located within what is essentially a residential district and impose restrictions upon this lot that are less onerous than those imposed upon the remaining portions of what is really the same zoning district.'"
Summary of this case from Beal v. Building Commissioner of SpringfieldOpinion
January 5, 1943.
February 23, 1943.
Present: FIELD, C.J., DONAHUE, LUMMUS, DOLAN, COX, JJ.
Zoning.
In the circumstances, a vote of a town purporting to change the zoning of a lot of land on which the owner manufacture ice from a single residence district in which the manufacture of ice was not permitted to a light industrial district in which it was permitted, was void as a singling out of that one lot for different treatment from that accorded to similar surrounding residential land from which it was indistinguishable in character, all for the economic benefit of the owner of that lot.
PETITION, filed in the Superior Court on January 31, 1941, for a writ of mandamus.
The case was heard by Brown, J.
J.P. Sylvia, Jr., for the respondent.
S.R. Wrightington, for the petitioner.
This controversy has been here twice before Whittemore v. Town Clerk of Falmouth, 299 Mass. 64. Whittemore v. Selectmen of Falmouth, 304 Mass. 72. The zoning by-laws of Falmouth provide for single residence districts in which only specified uses of land may exist, and those uses do not include the manufacture of ice. The land of one Cahoon on which he manufactures ice was zoned as a single residence district until February 16, 1938, when the town voted to change the zoning of his land to a light industrial district in which the manufacture of ice would be permitted. The petitioner, the owner of neighboring land zoned for single residences, brought this petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondent building inspector to enforce the zoning by-law against Cahoon as it stood before the amendment of February 16, 1938. The judge ordered that a writ of mandamus issue as prayed for. The case is here on exceptions taken by the respondent.
The statute as to zoning by-laws provides that "all such regulations and restrictions shall be uniform for each class or kind of buildings, structures or land, and for each class or kind of use, throughout each district." It provides also: "The ordinances or by-laws established hereunder in any city or town shall be the same for zones, districts or streets having substantially the same character." G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 40, § 25, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 269, § 1. It is not permissible "to single out one lot located within what is essentially a residential district and impose restrictions upon this lot that are less onerous than those imposed upon the remaining portions of what is really the same zoning district." Leahy v. Inspector of Buildings of New Bedford, 308 Mass. 128, 134. In the same case, at page 133, it is said: "Mere economic gain to the owner of a comparatively small area is not sufficient cause to invoke an exercise of this amending power for the benefit of such owner." In that case it was held that the amendment changing a lot from a residential to a business district was invalid because it would not result in uniformity of regulations and restrictions for zones, districts or streets having substantially the same character.
An auditor found, without contradiction, that "the Cahoon lot is in the vicinity of a long-established residential area where no substantial change in the character or use has occurred since the zoning by-law was first enacted. The Cahoon lot is surrounded on all sides for a substantial distance by an area zoned for single residences. There are valuable summer residences within a few hundred yards (nearest one being approximately three hundred yards) east, south and west of the Cahoon lot." About a quarter of a mile west of the Cahoon lot are the waters of Buzzards Bay.
The judge could have found, and, in view of his result, must be taken to have found, that the amendment of February 16, 1938, was a singling out of one lot for different treatment from that accorded to similar surrounding land indistinguishable from it in character, all for the economic benefit of the owner of that lot. Upon such a finding the amendment was unlawful. An examination of the requested rulings that were given and refused discloses no error.
Exceptions overruled.