Talmo v. Zoning Board of Appeals of Framingham
Talmo v. Zoning Board of Appeals of Framingham
Opinion
*1191 *626 In this zoning appeal, we must decide whether the trial judge could determine sua sponte that a direct abutter's presumptive standing was rebutted where the defendants did not *627 press the issue at trial. We conclude that the judge properly reached the question and affirm the judgment of dismissal.
Background . The defendants Carleton J. Buckley and Heidi Pihl-Buckley (collectively, the Buckleys) reside at 30 Nixon Road, Framingham, in a converted barn located on the same lot as Heidi's parents' single-family home. 2 The barn was constructed in 1971 and used as a horse stable and then as storage for Heidi's father's business. In the mid-1980s, the barn was converted into a residence without any permits authorizing the renovation. The Buckleys, who have owned the parcel since 2009, have resided in the converted barn since the mid- to late-1980s and reared their now-adult children there. In 2004, Heidi's father applied for a building permit to construct a twelve foot by twenty-four foot addition onto the barn to serve as a "great room." The permit was granted and the addition was built.
The plaintiff, Robert D. Talmo, owns 28 Nixon Road, which directly abuts the Buckleys' property. In 2009, Talmo sought zoning enforcement from Framingham's building commissioner (see G. L. c. 40A, § 7 ), requesting that the Buckleys be ordered to cease using the converted barn as a residence. The building commissioner denied the request, and Talmo appealed to the zoning board of appeals (the board). The board reversed the building commissioner's decision, and ordered him to take all action necessary to enforce Framingham's zoning by-law. 3
Thereafter, the Buckleys filed an application for a building permit seeking to convert the barn into "additional living space for main house. Not to be used as a separate dwelling. Not to include permanent provisions for cooking." A permit issued on June 17, 2010. 4 The Buckleys then removed their stove and oven from the barn's kitchen and had the stove connection capped.
On October 18, 2010, Talmo initiated a second zoning enforcement *628 action. The building commissioner again denied his request for relief, taking the position that the converted barn could no longer be considered a dwelling unit for purposes of the by-law because the cooking facilities had been removed, making the building a permissible "accessory use." Talmo appealed and the board denied Talmo relief. He appealed that decision to the Land Court.
The case was tried to a Land Court judge on December 8, 2015, and the judge took a view the next day. In his decision, the judge did not reach the substance of Talmo's argument that the board exceeded its authority in upholding the building
*1192
commissioner's determination that the converted barn now qualifies as a permissible accessory use. Instead, he found that Talmo's presumed "aggrieved person" standing as a direct abutter to the Buckleys' property was rebutted by evidence presented at trial. See
81 Spooner Rd., LLC
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Brookline
,
Talmo filed a motion for new trial. The judge allowed the motion in part, reopening the trial on the issue of standing. Talmo then offered evidence related to alleged contamination of his drinking water well, on the theory that the contamination was caused by the existence of a second septic system on the Buckleys' property. The judge found that Talmo's evidence was insufficient to show that he is aggrieved by the board's decision, and declined to alter the prior judgment. This appeal followed.
Discussion
. 1.
Rebuttal of presumption
. "Under the Zoning Act, G. L. c. 40A, 'only a "person aggrieved" has standing to challenge a decision of a zoning board of appeals.' G. L. c. 40A, § 17."
81 Spooner Rd
.,
A rebuttable presumption "continues only until evidence has been introduced which would warrant a finding contrary to the presumed fact."
Scaltreto
v.
Shea
,
Here, the judge found that Talmo's presumption of aggrievement was rebutted by evidence introduced by Talmo, amplified by the judge's view. Although the defendants asserted lack of standing as an affirmative defense in their answers, they never claimed at trial that Talmo lacked standing, and Talmo argues that the judge was not permitted to reach the issue on his own.
Talmo's standing, however, was a "jurisdictional" prerequisite to proceeding with the case in the sense that his status as an aggrieved person is an essential prerequisite to judicial review. See
Watros
,
There being no impediment to the judge's reaching the issue, his factual determination that the evidence warranted a finding contrary to the presumption is reviewed for clear error. See
Murray
v.
Board of Appeals of Barnstable
,
The case before us might be more difficult had Talmo not been given notice of the issue and an opportunity to introduce countervailing evidence of his aggrievement once the judge determined sua sponte that the presumption was rebutted. Certainly, the better practice would have been to alert the parties that the judge was concerned that Talmo's presumptive standing had receded in light of evidence presented at trial, and invite the parties to offer evidence and possibly briefing on the issue prior to the entry of judgment. However, where, as here, the judge reopened the trial as to the standing issue upon Talmo's motion, we see no procedural or factual error, nor abuse of discretion, in the judge's determination that the presumption was rebutted.
2.
Factual determination on reopened evidence
. Once the presumption of standing has been rebutted, whether an abutter qualifies as an aggrieved person "will be decided on the basis of all the evidence, with no benefit to the plaintiff from the presumption of aggrievement."
81 Spooner Rd
.,
During the reopened trial, Talmo's sole basis for asserting particularized injury was alleged contamination of his drinking water well. 7 The judge found, however, that the amount of nitrates and nitrites detected in Talmo's well was so far below the level of contamination permissible under Federal regulations that any contamination did not constitute a specific cognizable injury. Moreover, even if there were an injurious level of contamination, the judge found that the evidence was insufficient to establish a nexus between that contamination and the septic systems on the Buckleys' property. 8
To prove aggrieved person status, the plaintiff in a zoning appeal "must put forth credible evidence to substantiate his allegations" of particularized or special injury, with "credible evidence" being comprised of both quantitative and qualitative components.
*632
Butler
v.
Waltham
,
Judgment affirmed .
We refer to Heidi Pihl-Buckley by her first name to avoid confusion.
The board found that the by-law was "ignored not only as to the construction of a second single family dwelling on one lot, but the location was used for commercial purposes." After the board's decision, the building commissioner informed the Buckleys that they would have to cease using the converted barn as a single-family dwelling, and instructed them to apply for a permit necessary to make the alterations required to achieve that goal. See
Lord
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Somerset
,
Talmo received notice of the 2010 building permit through his attorney on July 29, 2010.
Whether to take a view is a matter within the discretion of the trial judge, and a view may be taken on the judge's own motion. See
Sargeant
v.
Traverse Building Trust
,
"The adverse effect on a plaintiff must be substantial enough to constitute actual aggrievement such that there can be no question that the plaintiff should be afforded the opportunity to seek a remedy. To conclude otherwise would choke the courts with litigation over myriad zoning board decisions where individual plaintiffs have not been, objectively speaking, truly and measurably harmed."
Kenner
,
"The right or interest asserted by a plaintiff claiming aggrievement must be one that G. L. c. 40A is intended to protect."
Kenner
,
Specifically, the judge found that the evidence was insufficient to show: (i) that the septic systems on the Buckleys' land were inadequately separated from groundwater; (ii) that the groundwater flows from the Buckleys' land toward Talmo's well; or (iii) that several other potential sources of contamination, including Talmo's own septic system, could be ruled out as the cause of any harm to Talmo's well.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.