Brown v. Town of Hudson

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 20, 2009
DocketPENap-06-17
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brown v. Town of Hudson (Brown v. Town of Hudson) 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
Brown v. Town of Hudson, (Me. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT PENOBSCOT, SS. FILED &E-- CIVIL ACTION SUPERIORNJERED OCKET NO AP-P6-17 OURT :;\/~,); - r,?(,I" CHERYL A. BROWN, I FE3 20 2D09 ,', it G~R6REC~ 00.

PEN' . Plaintiff, DeSeor COUNTY oo~~\.O ~·L\~Rfl..R'l '. v. \.;':' TOWN OF HUDSON, SION and ORDER i\i'\' :\\\\~ ..

Defendant.

In this administrative appeal, the plaintiff appeals from the decision of the

Hudson Code Enforcement Officer's decision to issue a stop work order on January 26,

2006. Originally, this 80B appeal sought review of the Board of Appeals' denial of her

administrative appeal of their CEO's issuance of a stop work order, but plaintiff later

filed an amended complaint for review asking the court to vacate the CEO's stop work

order. This judge was assigned this case on October I, 2008.

Plaintiff owns shorefront property located within the shoreland zoning district

on Little Pushaw Pond in Hudson, Maine. In the summer of 2005 she sought approval

to construct a garage on this property behind her home for her disabled son. She

submitted the requisite application to the CEO, Dalton Mullis. Mr. Mullis visited the

property to determine if the proposed construction fell within the 100' setback

provision as provided in the Town's Shoreland Zoning Ordinance. After making certain

measurements, he concluded that the project met the setback requirements, as it was

100' or more from the pond's high water mark. At an August 9,2005 Planning Board

meeting, the members considered plaintiff's Shoreland Zoning Application. In

considering the application, the members considered the following written comment

from CEO Mullis: "Today I made a site visit to the Cheryl Brown property at 248 Hay

Road. The purpose of my visit was to confirm the accuracy of information provided by the applicant. I found the information to be correct. The proposed addition is 100' or

more from the high water line and the total lot coverage is well within the limits of the

Ordinance. In summary, I recommend approval of this application as submitted."

Administrative Record (A.R.), ex. #17. The Board approved Plaintiff's application at

that meeting. A.R. ex. #18.

Plaintiff made several attempts to pick up and pay for the permit that had been

approved, but due to the unavailability of the CEO she was unsuccessful, and

eventually began construction in accordance with the proposed plans without having

the permit. On January 26,2006, the Town's new Code Enforcement Officer, Richard

Fish, issued a stop work order for any further construction. By this time the building

was substantially completed. The basis for the stop work order was not that she was

building without a permit but that a new measurement taken by Mr. Fish in January

indicated that the structure was within 100' of the pond's high water mark. The town

now would not issue the permit that had been authorized earlier. Plaintiff, who was

serving in the military, returned to the area in February of that year and CEO Fish re­

issued the stop work order. He met with the plaintiff, and agreed to re-measure in the

springtime, when there would be no ice to potentially interfere with the measurement.

He then sent a letter to plaintiff, dated July 13, 2008, A.R. ex. #7A, informing her that the

structure is within the 100' setback area, that she had to strictly adhere to the stop work

order, and that she had to move the structure out of the 100' zone pursuant to an

attached consent agreement that she was requested to sign. In this correspondence, he

also indicated that if she did not agree to sign the agreement, she had "the right to

appeal our decision to the Hudson Board of appeals."

On August 10, 2006 plaintiff submitted a completed application requesting a

variance and appeal to the Town of Hudson's Board of Appeals in which she asserted that the original Mullis measurement "should stand", and accompanied the application

with a memorandum from Mr. Mullis indicating his original approval based on his

measurement, and corroboraHng that plaintiff experienced difficulty in picking up and

paying for the permit because he was either too busy or not in the office when she

attempted to do so. A.R. ex. #7. On September II, 2006, the Board of Appeals issued its

decision denying the plaintiff's appeal and variance request and later, on October 15,

2006, denied her request for reconsideration. On October 26, 2006, the plaintiff filed this

appeal.

At no time has there been an allegation that the plaintiff did not build the

structure pursuant to the plan upon which the Mullis measurements were made. The

controversy arose from differing opinions concerning the location of the high water

mark of Little Pushaw Pond.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

In deciding an administrative appeal, ordinarily it is imperative for the Superior

Court to determine whether the decision of a board of appeals or the decision that was

appealed to the board of appeals is the operative decision to be reviewed. If the board of

appeals acted as an appellate body, then the Superior Court reviews the previous

decision, not the decision of the board of appeals. If the board of appeals acted as a

tribunal of original jurisdiction, then its decision is reviewed directly. The court has

reviewed several cases, including Yates v. Southwest Harbor, 2001 ME 2, 110, 763 A.2d

161, 164; Stewart v. Town of Sedgwick, 2000 ME 157, 14, 757 A.2d 773,776; and Gensheimer

v. Town of Phippsburg, 2005 ME 22, 17,868 A.2d 161,164; and concludes that a decision

on whether a board of appeals is authorized to act in an appellate or original capacity

depends on which portions of the relevant enabling ordinances are stressed. Although

the Hudson Board of Appeals Ordinance resembles in relevant areas the Southwest Harbor ordinance that has been determined to authorize that Board of Appeals to act in

an appellate capacity, Yates, supra, at 113, it is not necessary for the court to decide in

which capacity the Hudson Board must act because the rationale for the court's decision

in this case applies to both the action of the Board of Appeals as well as the action of

CEO Fish, which that board reviewed. In other words, this Court's decision is the same

whether it is reviewing the Board's decision or the CEO's decision. For the same reason,

it doesn't matter whether the court is proceeding on the original complaint, appealing

the Board's decision, or the amended complaint, appealing the CEO's decision.

MOTION TO DISMISS

In this motion, the town asserts that the court does not have subject mater

jurisdiction to hear this appeal, arguing that the plaintiff filed the administrative appeal

of the stop work order with the Hudson Board of Appeals 152 days after the CEO

reissued the stop work order on January 26, 2006. The court denies this motion.

Al though the stop work order issued on that date, the plaintiff and CEO were working

together to resolve the measurement issue and had to wait until the ice left the pond

and the waters receded to an acceptable level so that the CEO could review his

measurement. After reviewing the measurement, he concluded his initial conclusions

were correct and notified the plaintiff of the result in the July 13, 2006 letter to Ms.

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Related

Juliano v. Town of Poland
1999 ME 42 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1999)
Tharp v. State
763 A.2d 151 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2000)
Yates v. Town of Southwest Harbor
2001 ME 2 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2001)
Stewart v. Town of Sedgwick
2000 ME 157 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2000)
Tarason v. Town of South Berwick
2005 ME 30 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2005)
Gensheimer v. Town of Phippsburg
2005 ME 22 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2005)

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