310 N.E.2d 609
Appeals Court of Massachusetts. Bristol.March 22, 1974.
April 29, 1974.
Present: ROSE, GOODMAN, GRANT, JJ.
Equity Pleading and Practice, Rehearing, Agreed facts. Real Property, Removal of material.
In a suit in equity for declaratory relief as to the validity of an amendment of a town’s earth removal by-law which was applicable to “all present and future holders” of removal permits and, “recognizing” that specified materials were “an ever increasingly precious commodity,” prohibited the transportation thereof “outside the limits of the” town, this court determined that a brief statement of agreed facts on which the suit had been submitted was wholly inadequate to allow a decision of the issue raised, and accordingly discharged the statement of agreed facts, vacated the final decree, and remanded the case to the Superior Court for further proceedings. [191-196]
BILL IN EQUITY filed in the Superior Court on January 6, 1972.
A purported report of the suit was by Frank E. Smith, J. A final decree, from which the plaintiffs appealed, was entered b Mason, J.
Charles J. Hayes for the plaintiffs.
Robert I. Kalis for the defendants.
GRANT, J.
The principal purpose of this bill in equity brought against the town of Norton (town) and its board
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of selectmen (selectmen) is to secure declaratory relief with respect to the validity of a 1971 amendment of the town’s earth removal by-law (G.L.c. 40, § 21[17], as amended through St. 1967, c. 870). The case was submitted to a judge of the Superior Court on a brief statement of agreed facts. That judge ruled (in effect) that the challenged amendment was valid, ordered that a decree be entered dismissing the bill, and purported to “report the case.” The plaintiffs did not at that time take any of the steps required by Rule 1:02(2) of the Appeals Court, 1 Mass. App. Ct. 883 (1972). Some two months later, following the retirement of the first judge, another judge of the Superior Court entered a final decree which expressly purported to declare the validity of the challenged amendment, and to dismiss the bill. The plaintiffs claimed an appeal from that decree. We find it unnecessary to decide whether the case is properly here under one or more of G.L.c. 214, §§ 19, 30A or 31A.
The original earth removal by-law of the town, as adopted in 1953, prohibits the removal of sod, loam, soil, clay, sand, gravel or stone from any land in the town not in public use except as authorized by a permit issued by the selectmen (§ I). “To protect the health, safety, convenience and welfare of the community and its inhabitants, to promote appropriate use of land and to protect the value, use and enjoyment of property” the selectmen may issue a permit “upon conditions[3] varying
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with . . . circumstances,” some of which are expressly stated (§ II). Removal for certain purposes and transferals in certain circumstances are exempted from permit requirements (§ III).
At a special town meeting held on September 13, 1971, the town voted to amend the by-law by the addition of § IV, which appears to have been intended to take effect on January 1, 1972, and to apply to “all present and future holders of Earth Removal Permits.” Section IV reads as follows: “To protect the health, safety, convenience and welfare of the community and recognizing that loam, soil, clay, sand and stone are an ever increasingly precious commodity the [t]own of Norton prohibits the transporting of any of the above listed outside the limits of the [t]own.”[4]
By their bill brought on January 6, 1972, the plaintiffs seek to challenge the validity of § IV in general and of its application to their preexisting earth removal operations in particular. See Kelleher v. Selectmen of Pembroke, 1 Mass. App. Ct. 174, 185-186 (1973); Byrne v. Middleborough, 364 Mass. 331, 334 (1973). They recognize in their brief that the burden is on them to show that the new section is unconstitutional or otherwise invalid if sought to be applied to their lands lying in the town. See Wilbur v. Newton, 302 Mass. 38, 39 (1938); Seekonk v. John J. McHale Sons, Inc. 325 Mass. 271, 274 (1950); Butler v. East Bridgewater, 330 Mass. 33, 36 (1953); Lexington v. Simeone, 334 Mass. 127, 131 (1956); Byrne v. Middleborough, 364 Mass. 331, 331-332, 335 (1973). Yet, they have sought to present their
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case on a statement of agreed facts which occupies but one and a half typewritten pages of the record, does not purport to state all the facts which are or might be material to the controversy, and contains some statements of fact which might be thought to be inconsistent with admissions founds in the pleadings. The statement leaves us in almost total ignorance of the various factors which have been considered relevant in the earlier cases which have determined the validity or applicability of ordinances or by-laws concerned with earth removal, whether adopted under G.L.c. 40, § 21(17), as from time to time amended, or under what is now G.L.c. 40A. We point to a few of those factors, with the caveat, necessitated by present obscurities, that not all of them may be relevant to the circumstances of this case.
Although we are told that one plaintiff (George F. Davey, Inc.) has been engaged in earth removal operations since 1967 under various permits issued by the selectmen[5] and that the other plaintiff was issued permits for the years 1970, 1971 and 1972, we have no idea of the location or the extent of any earth removal operations which either plaintiff may actually have conducted prior to the intended effective date of the amendment of the by-law.[6] There is nothing to indicate the amount of
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earth materials already excavated or stockpiled by either plaintiff on the intended date.[7] We have no means of knowing whether the amount of materials, whether stockpiled or later excavated, which (but for the present controversy) would have been removed (presumably by trucks[8] ) “outside the limits of the [t]own” (§ IV) would have been “more than such a trivial amount that the law . . . [would] not [have] consider[ed] it” (Butler v. East Bridgewater, 330 Mass. 33, 38-39 [1953]).[9] Nor do we know but what some other use of the plaintiffs’ lands
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would have been more valuable.[10] Least of all do we know whether there is any basis for the stated premise of the amendment, that the earth materials referred to therein “are an ever increasingly precious commodity” in the town. See Joseph De Vries Sons, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 339 Mass. 663, 665 (1959).
It should be obvious from what has been said that we are of the opinion that neither of the plaintiffs has yet put forth “a set of definite facts . . . [upon which] a court [can] decide a constitutional question with confidence that relevant considerations have not been overlooked” (Bowe v. Secretary of the Commonwealth, 320 Mass. 230, 246 [1946]). We have not been asked to order the bill dismissed for failure to set out a case appropriate for declaratory relief. See Duane v. Quincy, 350 Mass. 59, 61-62 (1966); Johnson v. Framingham, 354 Mass. 750, 754-755 (1968). We join the parties in their desire to resolve an apparent controversy, and the fact that they have argued the case at some length leads us to believe that the deficiencies in the present record can be met in the course of further proceedings in the Superior Court. Accordingly, we shall discharge the statement of agreed facts and remand the case for the factual determinations necessary to put the case in proper perspective. Compare School Comm. of Springfield v. Board of Educ. 362 Mass. 417, 445-446 (1972); Peace v. Peace, 362 Mass. 536, 538-539 (1972).[11]
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We strongly urge the parties to consider certain matters which have not been argued before us. If by-laws such as the amendment in this case should proliferate from town to town, the Commonwealth could become effectively balkanized. Would such a result be permitted by anything found in G.L.c. 40, § 21(17), as amended, or by anything found in G.L.c. 43B, § 13 (inserted by St. 1966, c. 734, § 1), or in art. 89 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the Commonwealth? See also H.P. Hood Sons, Inc. v. Du Mond, 336 U.S. 525, 531-539, 545 (1949).
The statement of agreed facts is discharged, the final decree is vacated, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion. Costs of appeal (or on report) are not to be awarded to any party.
So ordered.
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