Appeal of Woodsville Fire District

CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 24, 2024
Docket2022-0568
StatusUnpublished

This text of Appeal of Woodsville Fire District (Appeal of Woodsville Fire District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of Woodsville Fire District, (N.H. 2024).

Opinion

THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

SUPREME COURT

In Case No. 2022-0568, Appeal of Woodsville Fire District, the court on July 24, 2024, issued the following order:

The court has reviewed the written arguments and the record submitted on appeal, has considered the oral arguments of the parties, and has determined to resolve the case by way of this order. See Sup. Ct. R. 20(2). The petitioner, Woodsville Fire District (the District), challenges decisions of the respondent, New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration (DRA), related to DRA’s disallowance of two warrant articles passed by voters in the Town of Haverhill (the Town) for the purpose of raising and appropriating funds for the District’s fire department and highway department. In her final order, the commissioner of the DRA concluded that the District lacked standing, and that, regardless, the challenge was premature since the tax rate had not been officially set, and thus, the commissioner lacked subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the matter on the merits. We conclude that the commissioner’s determination on standing was erroneous, but dismiss the petition for the reasons stated herein.

The following facts either were found by the commissioner, are undisputed by the parties, or appear in the record. The District is a municipal corporation formed in the 1880s that is located entirely within the boundaries of the Town. Special legislation involving the District has been enacted and amended over the years. See Laws 1887, ch. 204; Laws 1899, ch. 196; Laws 1990, ch. 37; Laws 2009, 147:1; Laws 2021, ch. 124. In particular, as amended in 2021, the special legislation provided, in pertinent part: “Highway block grant funds shall be distributed in accordance with the department of transportation formula. Any appropriations to the Woodsville fire district shall be as directed by warrant articles duly voted by the voters present and voting at each annual Haverhill town meeting.” Laws 2021, 124:1 (bolding omitted).

In March 2022, voters at the Town’s annual town meeting passed two warrant articles appropriating funds to the District. Article 27, as amended, appropriated $298,630 to fund the 2022 operating budget of the District’s highway department. Article 28, passed as warned, appropriated $146,974 to fund the 2022 operating budget of the District’s fire department.

In May, a municipal accounts advisor in DRA’s municipal and property division (the division) notified the Haverhill town manager that warrant articles 27 and 28 would “be deleted pursuant to RSA 21-J:35, III, because they are not consistent with statute.” See RSA 21-J:35, III (2020). The letter explained:

Specifically, RSA 31:4 permits the voters to appropriate money for purposes not prohibited by law. Under applicable New Hampshire judicial precedent one municipal entity cannot make an appropriation for another unless special legislation so provides.

With respect to Article 27, the special legislation, N.H. Laws, 124:1 (2021), does not authorize the Town to appropriate money for Woodsville fire district’s highway department.

With respect to Article 28, the special legislation of the Woodsville fire district does not authorize funding Woodsville’s fire department because we have not seen any evidence that the Woodsville fire district properly organized a fire department consistent with New Hampshire law. See N.H. Gen Laws, 107:1 (1878). Funding an ultra vires activity cannot be considered a lawful purpose. That said, if the Town or the Woodsville fire district can produce evidence showing that a village fire district was formed in conformity with the requirements of law then extant, we will reconsider the deletion of Article 28.

The District contacted the division and, “in the interest of efficiency,” sought reconsideration of the division’s decision prior to the setting of the tax rate. Following a hearing, the commissioner issued a final order dismissing the case. She first concluded that the District did not have standing to contest a tax rate in this matter. She also found that even if the District had standing to appeal, its request was prematurely filed and, therefore, she lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the matter. Finally, she found “that absent subject matter jurisdiction, any order that [she] would make in this case would be void,” and, therefore, she declined to address the parties’ arguments on the merits. The District filed a motion for reconsideration, which the commissioner denied.

The District then sought review in this court. DRA moved for summary affirmance, which we denied. DRA then informed both the Town and the District that it could not set the tax rates for either the Town or the District while this appeal was pending. The Town requested, then demanded on threat of legal action, that DRA set the Town’s tax rate.

On January 30, 2023, counsel for DRA informed the District that the tax rates had been set with the appropriations in warrant articles 27 and 28 included. DRA counsel opined that “[t]his seems to moot the appeal.” In response, the District’s counsel conveyed her opinion that only a withdrawal of DRA’s position stated in the disallowance letter would moot the appeal: “In

2 short, we need an express acknowledgement from the DRA that its May 4, 2022 disallowance letter is withdrawn, that it does not view Woodsville’s operation of a fire department as ultra vires, and that the funds appropriated through articles 27 and 28 are authorized by Woodsville’s legislation.” The District represents that DRA has not rescinded its position.

Before turning to the merits, we determine our jurisdiction over this matter. The District filed its appeal by petition under RSA 541:6 and Supreme Court Rule 10. However, it also invoked Supreme Court Rule 11 and stated that “if there is no statutory or regulatory avenue for appeal of the DRA’s decisions, on the merits and on the procedure, then [the District] requests that the Court accept this appeal as a request for Writ of Certiorari.”

We first consider whether the District’s claims are appealable to this court under RSA chapter 541. See Petition of Whitman Operating Co., 174 N.H. 453, 457 (2021). “Appeals from administrative proceedings may be taken under RSA chapter 541 only when so authorized by law.” Appeal of Rye Sch. Dist., 173 N.H. 753, 757 (2020) (quotation omitted); see RSA 541:2 (2021).

We have interpreted this clause to mean that the provisions of chapter 541 do not provide an appeal from the determination of every administrative agency in the state. Unless some reference is made to chapter 541 in a given statute, an appeal under the provisions of chapter 541 is not authorized by law.

Appeal of Rye Sch. Dist., 173 N.H. at 757 (quotation omitted).

The District’s appeal concerns DRA’s actions, or failures to take action, in accordance with RSA chapter 21-J (2020 & Supp. 2023). Nowhere does that chapter reference RSA chapter 541. The District fails to cite any law explicitly referencing RSA chapter 541 that would authorize this appeal. Accordingly, we conclude that we do not have RSA chapter 541 jurisdiction.

RSA 21-J:35, the provision primarily at issue here, provides no mechanism for judicial review. See RSA 21-J:35 (2020). Because there is no statutory provision for appellate review of the commissioner’s decision in this case, we do not have RSA chapter 541 jurisdiction, and a petition for a writ of certiorari is the proper vehicle for obtaining review. See Petition of Chase Home for Children, 155 N.H. 528, 532 (2007). Therefore, we treat the petition as one for certiorari review pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 11.

“Certiorari is an extraordinary remedy that is not granted as a matter of right, but rather at the court’s discretion.” Petition of N.H. Div. of State Police, 174 N.H. 176, 180 (2021).

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