Charlton v. Smith

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 25, 2000
DocketOXFap-98-10
StatusUnpublished

This text of Charlton v. Smith (Charlton v. Smith) 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
Charlton v. Smith, (Me. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

_ STATE OF MAINE * OXFORD, ss.

Docket No. G3-99-G2- WILLIAM & BARBARA CHARLTO

Plaintiffs, v. RODNEY SMITH in his capacity as

Code Enforcement Officer for the Town of Oxford, INHABITANTS OF THE TOWN OF OXFORD, OXFORD PLANNING BOARD,

and CARL M. DELEKTO,

Defendants

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On October 13, 1998, William and Barbara Charlton (Charltons) filed suit against Carl M. Delekto, the Town of Oxford, the Oxford Planning Board (Planning Board), and Rodney Smith, Code Enforcement Officer for the Town of Oxford (CEO). In their complaint, the plaintiffs asserted that the court had jurisdiction pursuant to MLR. Civ. P. 80B (a), 30-A M.R.S.A. § 2691(3)(G), 4 M.R.S.A. § 105, and 14 M.RS.A. § 5953. Count I requested a review of the actions taken by the Zoning Board of Appeals for the Town of Oxford (ZBA). Count II alleged that Mr. Delekto’s house was a nuisance. Count III requested that the court determine that the Planning Board had acted beyond its legal authority in granting Mr. Delekto his permit, and that an order that the structure and the site be brought into compliance with all applicable land use statutes and ordinances be issued. Count IV requested that the court determine that Mr. Delekto was in violation of his permit and in

violation of State and municipal statutes and ordinances, and issue an order that he be required to take all actions necessary to bring the structure and the site into compliance with all applicable land use statutes and ordinances.

The first amended complaint was filed on November 2, 1998. That complaint added Count V, a claim of negligence against Mr. Delekto. The second amended

-complaint, filed on January 19, 1999, became the operative complaint. Count I still

contained the Rule 80B appeal. Count II alleged that Mr. Delekto had caused a nuisance pursuant to 30-A M.RS.A. § 4302 and requested injunctive relief. Count III requested a declaratory judgment against the Planning Board and Mr. Delekto. Count IV requested a declaratory judgment against Mr. Delekto. Count V alleged negligence against Mr. Delekto. Count VI demanded damages from Mr. Delekto for nuisance, pursuant to 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4302 and common law.

Over the course of the next eighteen months, the parties completed discovery and submitted various motions for decision. These included a Motion to Dismiss Count V, and a Motion for Summary Judgment both brought by Mr. Delekto. He prevailed only on the motion to dismiss Count V. In addition, the court denied the plaintiffs’ M.R. Civ. P. 80B appeal in November of 1999.

The case was tried on May 15, 16, and 17, 2000. Before any testimony was taken, the parties, their attorneys, and the court took a view of both properties. In addition to the information gathered during that view, the court has considered the testimony of the various witnesses presented at trial, as well as the documents, photographs, maps, and drawings placed into evidence. The Planning Board made

an oral Motion to Dismiss Count III on the first morning of trial. Mr. Delekto made a Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law at the close of the plaintiffs’ case. The court took both motions under advisement. FINDINGS OF FACT

In 1982, the Charltons purchased a cottage on Thompson Lake in the town of Oxford. At the time of purchase, the property was significantly rundown, and was known as the neighborhood’s “haunted house.” However, the plaintiffs looked past the condition of the house and saw the privacy created by the surrounding woods, and the safety presented by a private cove. In order to enjoy their purchase, plaintiffs undertook significant improvements both to the site and to the house. Between 1982 and 1998, they replaced windows, updated the electrical system, installed a new foundation, finished the interior, installed water and septic systems, and built a driveway that included drainage culverts. During those sixteen years, the plaintiffs, their children, grandchildren, and guests used the property throughout each late spring, summer, and early fall. In 1997, the Charltons placed the property into a trust for their children and grandchildren.

Mr. Delekto purchased the abutting parcel of lake front property in 1994. At the time of purchase, a small camp was located at the water’s edge on the side of the property away from the Charlton camp. As a result, the two cottages were not generally visible to each other. Between 1994 and 1997, the plaintiffs and Mr. Delekto lived side-by-side without dispute, and almost without contact. During the summer of 1997, Mr. Delekto asked Mr. Charlton for permission to go onto their

land to take some measurements because he was “seeing what he could do with [his] land.” Mr. Charlton granted him permission, and the two men then had a very brief and general conversation about some birch trees that were overhanging the Charlton property, and some occasional water run off from across Mr. Delekto’s property.

On August 28, 1997, Mr. Delekto submitted a Shoreland Zoning Application to the Town. On the same day, the Planning Board approved that application. A building permit based upon the approved application was issued on October 1, 1997. Sometime after that date, Mr. Delekto began constructing a year-round home on his land. During the late fall of 1997, he cleared a construction site, built a large drainage ditch directly next to his boundary with the Charltons, used a portion of the ditch as a retaining wall, and poured foundations for a house, a breezeway, and an attached garage.

The Charltons had returned to Massachusetts for the winter in mid- September of 1997, so they were completely unaware of any of Mr. Delekto’s actions. In February of 1998, the Charltons returned to Maine to see if their property had sustained any damage from an ice storm that had occurred one month earlier. For the first time, they saw the work Mr. Delekto had done, and were alarmed by its scope. They spoke with Mr. Smith, Oxford’s CEO, told him of their concerns over the number of trees cut, and asked him to look into it. He agreed that he would investigate and get back to them. He did not, and the Charltons did not

immediately follow up on their inquiry. The Charltons returned to Maine two months later, and again spoke to Mr. Smith about the project. Again he promised to investigate and get back to them, and again he did not.

In June of 1998, tiring of the lack of response from Mr. Smith, the Charltons contacted Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). During that conversation, the Charltons learned, for the first time, that in order to build his house, Mr. Delekto must have received a permit from the Town, that the Town was required to have an ordinance controlling shoreline use, and that the terms of the permit had to comply with the Town’s ordinance. Armed with that information, the Charltons went to the Town office and obtained copies of Mr. Delekto’s application, the permit granted to him, and the Oxford Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance). Based upon their review of these documents, the Charltons believed that the Planning Board had not complied with the Ordinance.

On August 5, 1998, the Charltons filed an appeal with the ZBA, challenging the permit granted to Delekto nearly one year earlier. A hearing on the appeal was scheduled for August 27, 1998. On the same date, the ZBA determined that the Charltons’ appeal was untimely, and dismissed it. In doing so, the ZBA determined that there was not good cause to extend the thirty-day appeal period. Ordinance § 19(G)(4)(a)(1).

As noted above, the Charltons appealed the ZBA’s decision to the Superior

Court in their complaint filed October 13, 1998. No objection was made concerning the timeliness of that appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
Charlton v. Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charlton-v-smith-mesuperct-2000.