ALC Dev. Corp. v. Town of Maine

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 16, 2005
DocketCUMcv-03-498
StatusUnpublished

This text of ALC Dev. Corp. v. Town of Maine (ALC Dev. Corp. v. Town of Maine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ALC Dev. Corp. v. Town of Maine, (Me. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-03-498 ¢ } haw — C Vv ‘ ve Of / foe i

ALC DEVELOPMENT CORP, et al,

Plaintiffs v. + ORDER TOWN OF SCARBOROUGH,

APR § Defendant R 20 2005

Before the court is plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment on count II of their complaint.

Plaintiffs are the owners of several contiguous parcels of land located in Scarborough, Maine. Specifically, their combined properties are located south of Broadturn Road and immediately to the south and west of what is known as the Dunstan or Dunstan Corner area of Scarborough. The Dunstan area of Scarborough is centered at the intersections of Route 1, the Broadturn Road, and the Pine Point Road. The northern end of plaintiffs’ land runs along the Broadturn Road west of the ‘developed area of Dunstan Corner over to the Maine Turnpike. The southern end of plaintiffs’ land runs between Route 1 and the Maine Turnpike.

Plaintiffs seek to develop their property into a mixed use village-style development which they contend is designed precisely in accordance with the development standards contemplated for the area around Dunstan in the Town’s 1994 Comprehensive Plan. The current zoning regulations in that area of Scarborough

preclude the kind of development which plaintiffs have proposed. By way of background, in June 2003 plaintiffs entered into a Contract Zoning Agreement with the Scarborough Town Council that would have allowed them to build their planned development, which they have styled as “The Great American Neighborhood.” * However, the contract zoning necessary for this development was thereafter challenged by referendum and repealed by a referendum vote on July 29, 2003. See Scarborough Zoning Ordinance (annexed as Exhibit B to the June 24, 2004 stipulation of the parties), Section XXIII, {6 page 135.

Plaintiffs thereafter commenced this action, challenging (in counts I, III through V, and VII of the complaint) the legality of the July 2003 referendum on state law grounds, alleging (in counts VI and VIII of the complaint) that the result of the referendum violated their constitutional rights under the due process and contract clauses, and seeking (in count IX of the complaint) an order requiring the Town to implement its comprehensive plan. The count that is specifically before the court on plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment is count II of the complaint, which seeks a declaration that because the Scarborough Zoning Ordinance as it applies to plaintiffs’ property is not consistent with the Town’s Comprehensive Plan, that zoning is no longer in effect pursuant to 30-A M.R.S.A. §4314(2) (Supp. 2004).

The motion for partial summary judgment thus turns on whether Scarborough’s current zoning in the Dunstan area and with respect to plaintiffs’ property in particular is consistent with the Town’s Comprehensive Plan. See 30-A M.RS.A. §§ 4314(2), 4352(2) (Supp. 2004). The Law Court has held, and the court does not understand the

parties to disagree, that this is an issue of law. E.g., City of Old Town v. Dimoulas, 2002

' According to plaintiffs, the proposed development includes 397 residential units, with residential density as low as one unit per 5,000 square feet and with open space set asides providing an overall density of 3 units per acre, plus 50,000 square feet of commercial space.

2 ME 133 718, 803 A.2d 1018, 1023. Moreover, the relevant facts (adoption of the Comprehensive Plain, text of the Comprehensive Plan, text of the Scarborough Zoning Ordinance, zoning actions by the Town after the adoption of the Comprehensive Plan) are not disputed. Although both side have offered affidavits from respected city and regional planners in support of their divergent positions (see Rickert Affidavit dated August 23, 2004; Rickert Rebuttal Affidavit dated August 31, 2004; DeWan Affidavit dated August 31, 2004), counsel for both sides acknowledged in a telephone conference on January 21, 2005 that the underlying facts are undisputed and that they could not see any circumstance where the court would have a trial on count II of the complaint. The

issue therefore, is ripe for summary judgment.

1. The 1994 Comprehensive Plan

Scarborough’s Comprehensive Plan was adopted on July 20, 1994 and was amended in minor respects on June 20, 2001. At the time Scarborough’s plan was adopted, the applicable state statutes required that the Town, as part of its local growth management program, have a comprehensive plan and an implementation program. See 30-A M.RS.A. §4326 (1996)? Maine towns are not required to prepare comprehensive growth management plans. See 30-A M.RS.A. §4323 (1996). However, municipalities that choose to engage in a growth management program must adopt both a comprehensive plan and an implementation strategy, and any municipality that

enacts a zoning ordinance is required to have, as a prerequisite, a comprehensive plan.

* 30-A M.R.S.A. §4326 has been rewritten since 1994 but for purposes of this case, no material changes have been made in that section. Citations in this decision will therefore be to the current version of the statute, 30-A M.R.S.A. §4326 (Supp. 2004). See Bragdon v. Town of Vassalboro, 2001 ME 137 {7, 780 A.2d 299, 301.

In compliance with § 4326(1), Scarborough’s 1994 Comprehensive Plan included, in chapters 4-14, an inventory and analysis of the Towns relevant economic data, its natural resources, its transportation systems, its housing stock, its land use patterns, and an assessment of capital facilities and public services necessary to support growth and development. As required by § 4326(2), chapters 15 and 16 the Town’s 1994 Comprehensive Plan outlined the policies that the Town would follow to promote various specified state goals and regional and local issues that the Town considered important. Section 4326(3-A)° sets out a number of specified guidelines for the development of those policies, including a requirement that each municipality, with certain exceptions not relevant here, shall identify and designate certain areas within the municipality as growth areas and other areas as rural areas.

Finally, as required by § 4326(3), chapter 17 of the Scarborough Comprehensive Plan set forth the Town's strategy for implementing the Plan, including a specific schedule of tasks to be undertaken in the short term (two years from July 1994), in the middle term (3 to 5 years), and in the long term (5 to 10 years).

Specifically relevant here is that with respect to the future pattern of land use, the 1994 Comprehensive Plan identified several specific state goals, including the encouragement of orderly growth and development while protecting the state’s rural character and “preventing development sprawl.” Comprehensive Plan at 15-15. This goal is derived directly from section 4312 of the State’s Growth Management Act. 30-A M.RS.A. § 4312(3)(A) (Supp. 2004). Among the “local goals” listed were to encourage

the growth of town and neighborhood centers as viable areas that support a mix of

Formerly §4326(3)(A). residential, commercial, and civic uses, and to promote a pattern of land use that respects the remaining working rural lands of the Town. Comprehensive Plan at 15-15.

In furtherance of those goals the Plan provided that the Town should identify in its “Future Land Use Map” (1) areas of the community that should be allowed to evolve as “village compacts” with a viable mix of residential, commercial and civic uses, (2) areas that should be principaliy “suburban residential”, and (3) areas that should be kept rural. Id.

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Related

Bragdon v. Town of Vassalboro
2001 ME 137 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2001)
Adelman v. Town of Baldwin
2000 ME 91 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2000)
City of Old Town v. Dimoulas
2002 ME 133 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2002)

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ALC Dev. Corp. v. Town of Maine, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alc-dev-corp-v-town-of-maine-mesuperct-2005.