Ajootian v. HOUSING BOARD REVIEW OF PROVIDENCE

201 A.2d 905, 98 R.I. 370, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 3, 1964
DocketM.P. No. 1614
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 201 A.2d 905 (Ajootian v. HOUSING BOARD REVIEW OF PROVIDENCE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ajootian v. HOUSING BOARD REVIEW OF PROVIDENCE, 201 A.2d 905, 98 R.I. 370, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 172 (R.I. 1964).

Opinion

*371 Joslin, J.

This is a petition for certiorari to review a decision of the housing board of review of the city of Providence denying the petitioner’s appeal from a compliance order of the city’s director of the division of minimum housing standards issued in accordance with the provisions of chapter 1040 of the Minimum-Standards Housing Ordinance. Pursuant to the writ the pertinent papers have been certified to this court.

The petitioner was notified in writing by the director that an examination of a tenanted dwelling house owned by him and located on Wiekenden street in Providence disclosed about twenty violations of the ordinance. Thereupon petitioner claimed a hearing before the director or other “proper person” and requested the director to disqualify himself from acting as the hearing officer on the ground that he should not act as both prosecutor and judge in the same proceeding. The director did not pass directly on the request for disqualification but instead, after a hearing at which petitioner was present, in effect ordered compliance with the notice of violation, from which order an appeal was duly prosecuted to the housing board of review.

The board took a view of the premises and at the hearing petitioner, admitting that the premises were “not fit for a dog to live in,” asked that enforcement of the order be stayed pending eviction by him of the occupants of the *372 property. The board denied the appeal, finding that “the occupants occupying the instant premises to be living under overcrowded, substandard and deplorable conditions which in the opinion of the members of the Housing Board of Review is detrimental to the health, safety and welfare of said occupants * * It is to review that decision which the board designated as a resolution that this petition for certiorari has been brought.

In issuing the writ we did not act in the exercise of our supervisory jurisdiction over inferior tribunals but rather under P. L. 1956, chap. 3715, the enabling legislation pursuant to which the ordinance was enacted. It is provided in section 18 thereof that any person aggrieved by a decision of the board may present to this court a petition setting forth wherein the decision to be reviewed is illegal in whole or in part and specifying the grounds of illegality.

The petitioner, however, does not point to any illegality in the board’s decision but assigns as reason for its quashing that the ordinance in conferring both executive and judicial powers upon the director violates the due process clause of art. XIV of the amendments to the federal constitution and the provisions of the state constitution relative to the division of powers of government and the judicial power. The unconstitutional delegation is found, the petitioner asserts, in su'bsecs. 3.3, 3.7, and 3.8 of the ordinance wherein it is provided that it is the director who not only issues a notice of violation of the provisions of the ordinance or rules or regulations adopted pursuant thereto but also1 determines after a hearing as provided for therein whether that notice should be sustained, modified or withdrawn.

The thrust of his contentions, as we understand them, is thaJt the alleged unconstitutional action of the director in exercising both the functions of prosecutor and judge was at least sub silentio approved by the board and that such approval so taints the proceedings before it with *373 illegality that it should 'be set aside by us. A consideration of his argument so construed raises the issue of the nature of the proceedings before the board and requires us to determine whether it exercises an appellate jurisdiction or in the alternative reviews de novo compliance orders issued by the director.

To resolve that question we go to the enabling legislation. Although subsec. 5.14 of the ordinance provides that “All hearings of the Housing Board of Review shall be ‘de novo’,” it does not control. When the local legislature creates an administrative tribunal pursuant to a legislative grant of authority, its function is determined by the legislature and its jurisdiction Can neither be enlarged nor restricted by provisions contained in local ordinances. See Mello v. Board of Review, 94 R. I. 43, 177 A.2d 533.

The controlling statutory provision is contained in sec. 16 of chap. 3715 wherein it is provided that in hearing and deciding appeals from a compliance order issued by the director who is referred to therein as “the enforcing officer,” the board “may * * * reverse or affirm wholly or partly, or may modify any order, requirement, decision or determination of the enforcing officer and may make such order, requirement, decision or determination 'as ought to be made, and to that end shall have all the powers of the enforcing officer from whom the appeal was taken.” Moreover, in circumstances' where as a result of unusual conditions a literal enforcement of its1 terms would result in undue hardship, the board in order thaJt substantial justice may be achieved has the additional authority under chap. 3715, sec. 15(b), to vary or modify the ordinance or any rule or regulation adopted pursuant thereto to the end that its spirit shall be observed and the public health, safety, morals and general welfare secured.

Such a latitudinous grant of authority clearly evidences a legislative intention that an alleged violation under the ordinance be heard anew by the board and that the proceed *374 ings before it constitute an independent trial or hearing separate and distinct from any antecedent proceeding before the director. In our opinion the clear legislative contemplation was to provide for a de now rather than an appellate hearing and that the board, endowed as it is not only with all the powers possessed by the enforcing officer but also with full authority to make any determination of the matter deemed by it appropriate to the circumstances, is to- act just as if there had been no hearing before the director. Hallene v. Smith, 98 R. I. 360, 201 A.2d 921.

We return now to the question of whether this petition which seeks a review of the decision of the board reaches beyond it to the alleged unconstitutionality of the original proceedings before the director. The appeal to the board provided a plenary review at which petitioner was afforded and availed himself of the opportunity to present his case fully, to offer matter in extenuation and to argue the merits of his position. That de novO' hearing resulted in independent findings and a new decision which superseded the order issued by the director. Hayes v. Joseph E. Seagram & Co., 222 Ind. 130; Wall v. Registrar of Motor Vehicles, 329 Mass. 70; Neiden Bar & Grill Inc. v. Municipal Board of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 40 N. J. Super. 24.

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Bluebook (online)
201 A.2d 905, 98 R.I. 370, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ajootian-v-housing-board-review-of-providence-ri-1964.