Bodack v. Town of Ogunquit

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 11, 2005
DocketYORap-05-019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bodack v. Town of Ogunquit (Bodack v. Town of Ogunquit) 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
Bodack v. Town of Ogunquit, (Me. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE

YORK, ss.

WILLIAM R. BODACK, - - ); ---'.Ib, - SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. AP-05-019

plaidtiff

ORDER AND DECISION

THE TOWN OF OGUNQUIT, et al.,

Defendants

After extensive proceedings which began in 2002, the Ogunquit Planning Board

issued its findings of fact, conclusions and decision on March 14, 2005 approving an

amended subdivision proposal submitted by Ogunquit Village Estates, LLC. The

approved proposal would create a cluster subdivision for adults aged 55 and over on

both sides of Berwick Road containing 35 single-family homes. An appeal has been

taken by William Bodack who owns a nearby home on Berwick Road. The parties have

briefed and argued the appeal.

The plaintiff has challenged portions of the decision of the Planning Board

regarding traffic, a waiver of access requirements, and ownership of open space. The

traffic issues are central to the appeal.

The proposed subdivision would enter Berwick Road which then enters Route 1

in Ogunquit. The additional traffic from the proposed development will not be

extensive but will enter Route 1 at an often very congested point. As part of its review

the Board received and requested traffic studies and approached the proposal with care.

In its conclusions from its decision dated March 14, 2005 the Board found, The General Standards of Article 8 of the OZO have been met. The Board particularly focused on the issue of traffic impacts, particularly the standards of OZO Article 8.13, as well as the OSR, Article 1.1.5 While understanding that the project will cause an increase in traffic congestion, the majority of the Board did not feel this would be an unreasonable impact and acknowledged that the applicant should not be held responsible for the existing problems with Route 1 intersections.

By statute a municipality must consider the following before granting

subdivision approval: "The proposed subdivision will not cause unreasonable hghway

or public road congestion or unsafe conditions with respect to the use of the highways

or public roads existing or proposed." See 30-A M.R.S.A. §4404(5). Additionally,

Article 10 of the Ogunquit Subdivision Review Standards imposes street design and

construction standards. There is substantial evidence in the record to support the

separate finding by the Board that the requirements of Article 10 were met and the

implicit finding that the statutory requirement was met. What is determinative is

whether the conclusion that the requirements of Article 8.13 of the Ogunquit Zoning

Ordinance were met is legally correct.

Article 8.13.A.3states as follows:

Provision shall be made for vehicular access to all development and circulation upon the lot in such a manners as to safeguard against hazards to traffic and pedestrians in the street and within the development, to avoid traffic congestion on any street and to provide safe and convenient circulation on public streets and within the development. More specifically, access and circulation shall also conform to the following standards and the design criteria below. . . . 3. The street giving access to the lot and neighboring streets, which can be expected to carry traffic to and from the development, shall have traffic carrying capacity and be suitably improved to accommodate the amount and types of traffic generated by the proposed use. No development shall increase the vo1ume:capacity ratio of any street above 0.8 nor reduce the street's Level of Service to "D" or below.

There are two questions to be answered. The first question is whether Article

8.13.A.3 applies. It appears that the Board found that it did when it stated that it

"particularly focused on the issue of traffic impacts, particularly the standards of OZO (Ogunquit Zoning Ordinance) Article 8.13." This conclusion, that Article 8.13.A.3

applies, is correct because the Zoning Ordinance states at Article 1.5 that if the Zoning

Ordinance conflicts with any other ordinance "the most restrictive or that imposing the

higher standards shall govern."

The second question is whether the Board was correct when it determined that

the requirements of Article 8.13 were met. Here the board was not. It found, "While

understanding that the project will cause an increase in traffic congestion, the majority

of the Board did not feel this would be an unreasonable impact and acknowledged that

the applicant should not be held responsible for the existing problems with Route 1

intersections." In reaching this conclusion the Board erroneously ignored the specific

requirements of Article 8.13.A.3 and may have incorrectly interpreted one or perhaps

two related decisions of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court.

The evidence before the board indicated that the Route 1 intersection no longer

had full "traffic carrying capacity" and, more importantly, the development, which the

Board correctly found "will cause an increase in traffic congestion," would add to the

congestion where the volume: capacity ratio was already above 0.8 and the Level of

Service was at D or below. Briefly stated, the project would make an unacceptable

situation slightly worse. The Ogunquit ordinance does not allow a subdivision where

substandard traffic conditions already exist and will be made worse.

In Tkacker v. Konover Developlnent Corporation, 2003 ME 30, 818 A.2d 1013 owners

of an existing Arby's restaurant challenged the decision of the Topsham Planning Board

to approve a nearby large commercial subdivision. The Law Court held, at W12, that,

"A reduction in the level of service of Arby's access drive during peak hours does not,

however, constitute, 'unreasonable highway or public road congestion or unsafe

conditions."', quoting from 30-A M.R.S.A. @404(5). The Law Court found that the Board was not in error in concluding that the statutory requirements found at 30-A

M.R.S.A. §4404(5) were met. The current case differs in that Ogunquit has a separate

ordinance at Article 8.13.A.3, which adds specific quantitative requirements to the

general qualitative statutory consideration of "unreasonable" congestion or "unsafe"

conditions. While the Ogunqui t Planning Board could conclude that the statutory

requirements were met, it could not conclude that the separate specific standards

regarding volume: capacity ratios or Level of Service had been met.

In the earlier case of Grant's Farm Associates v. Town of Kittery, 554 A.2d 799 (Me.

1989) a developer appealed from the denial of approval on five grounds, one of which

was traffic conditions. The Law Court, at 801, referred to the then existing codification

of current 30-A M.R.S.A. §4404(5) and upheld the denial of subdivision approval. The

Law Court listed factors that could be considered in malung a determination regarding

whether "reasonableness" was met. The Kittery case did not involve a separate

ordinance like the Ogunquit ordinance that imposed additional quantifiable conditions

beyond those imposed by state law.

The Planning Board was incorrect in considering whether the additional

congestion would be an "unreasonable impact." If only state law and the Thacker and

Grant's Farin cases applied then the Board could have made such a determination. Since

Article 8.13.A.3 exists, the proper question is whether or not the requirement of that

article was met.

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Related

Thacker v. Konover Development Corp.
2003 ME 30 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2003)
Grant's Farm Associates, Inc. v. Town of Kittery
554 A.2d 799 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1989)

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