DHB, Inc. v. Town of Pembroke

876 A.2d 206, 152 N.H. 314, 2005 N.H. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 14, 2005
DocketNo. 2004-397
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 876 A.2d 206 (DHB, Inc. v. Town of Pembroke) 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
DHB, Inc. v. Town of Pembroke, 876 A.2d 206, 152 N.H. 314, 2005 N.H. LEXIS 99 (N.H. 2005).

Opinion

DALIANIS, J.

The plaintiff, DHB, Inc., appeals an order of the Superior Court {Lewis, J.) affirming defendant Town of Pembroke Planning Board’s denial of its subdivision application. We affirm.

The record and trial court order reflect the following facts. The plaintiff is the owner or option holder of an approximately 128-acre tract of land in Pembroke. The plaintiff engaged an engineering firm, Sublime Civil Consultants, Inc. (Sublime), to help prepare a subdivision plan to develop its land. On June 28, 2003, after several preliminary meetings and interactions, the plaintiff submitted a formal application for acceptance to the Town of Pembroke Planning Board (Board) for a subdivision to be known as Pembroke Meadows. According to the plan, the subdivision would consist of 120 single-family building lots.

The plaintiff’s application included a subdivision checklist containing twenty-five items, which each applicant was required to complete. On July 15, 2003, while the application was pending, Sublime met with Kerne Diers, the Town of Pembroke’s Director of Planning and Development, to discuss whether the application was complete. Diers opined that the application was incomplete because it failed to meet all of the requirements of the checklist. The plaintiff thereafter requested that the Board postpone consideration of the application until its August 26, 2003 meeting. The plaintiff did utilize the Board’s July 22 meeting, however, to engage in a “conceptual discussion” of the project and obtained some specific feedback from the Board.

On August 25, 2003, the plaintiff submitted a new application and on August 26, 2003, withdrew its old application. The new application added a forty-eight unit condominium for the elderly, in addition to the 120 single-[316]*316family building lots. It was scheduled to be reviewed at the Board’s September 23,2003 meeting.

On September 9, 2003, Town counsel informed the Board that a growth management ordinance (GMO) would be posted on November 10, 2003. Any plan accepted prior to the posting of the GMO would be exempt from its requirements.

On September 18, Walter Norris, the Town’s Director of Public Works, who had recently assumed engineering review responsibilities, wrote a four-page memorandum to Diers commenting upon deficiencies in the plaintiff’s new application. On September 22,2003, Sublime met with Diers and Norris, at which time Diers indicated that because of the addition of the housing for the elderly, the plaintiff would have to meet the requirements of the site plan checklist in addition to the requirements of the subdivision checklist. Diers advised the plaintiff that the application was incomplete because it failed to meet all of the requirements of the subdivision checklist and failed to meet the requirements of the site plan checklist. As a result of the meeting, the plaintiff requested that the Board continue review of its application acceptance from the September 23, 2003 meeting until the October 28, 2003 meeting, the last meeting scheduled prior to the posting of the GMO.

On October 7, 2003, the plaintiff submitted a third set of plans for 120 single-family lots, forty-eight units of housing for the elderly, the consolidation of two parcels with abutting property, and four parcels left for future development. On October 22, 2003, Norris wrote Diers another four-page memorandum detailing deficiencies in the plaintiff’s application. Norris noted that the “memo is almost identical to my September 18, 2003 review of this project.” On October 22,2003, Sublime met again with Diers and Norris to discuss whether the new application met the requirements of a completed application. Both Diers and Norris expressed the view that the application was still incomplete because it failed to meet the requirements of the checklists.

During the October 28, 2003 meeting, the Board reviewed the recommendations of Diers and Norris not to accept the application, and it discussed the application with Diers. Although the Board had in the past permitted applicants to speak, the Board declined to permit the plaintiff to speak at the meeting. One Board member commented that in his seven years on the Board he could “not recall a time when the applicant had been denied the opportunity to speak.” Another member stated that allowing the plaintiff to speak would be “a waste of time.” The plaintiff’s counsel characterized the Board’s position as a “bad faith” move to rid itself of the plaintiff’s subdivision plan, improperly influenced by the upcoming [317]*317expected posting of the GMO, because the plaintiff’s plan would likely not be feasible under the GMO.

Nonetheless, the Board voted 6-0 not to accept the plaintiff’s application for review because the plaintiff’s plan “[did] not conform to the Subdivision Checklist Requirements and Site Plan Checklist Requirements____[particularly as discussed by Kerrie Diers and Walter Norris.” The GMO was posted on November 10, 2003, and was adopted in March 2004.

The plaintiff appealed the Board’s determination to the trial court pursuant to RSA 677:15 (Supp. 2004). The trial court upheld the Board’s determination. This appeal followed.

The plaintiff argues that the Board: (1) improperly refused to allow it an opportunity to speak in support of its application at the October 28, 2003 meeting; (2) incorrectly determined that its application was incomplete; (3) improperly delegated the duty of determining the information required for a complete application; and (4) acted in bad faith in refusing to accept its application. Defendant Town of Pembroke (Town) argues that it is unnecessary to reach the merits of the plaintiff’s arguments because the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear the case.

We first address the Town’s argument that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear the plaintiff’s case under RSA 677:15. We are the final arbiter of the legislature’s intent as expressed in the words of the statute as a whole. We ascribe to statutory words and phrases their usual and common meaning, unless the statute itself suggests otherwise. In the Matter of Angley-Cook & Cook, 151 N.H. 257, 258 (2004).

RSA 677:15,1, provides: “Any person aggrieved by any decision of the planning board concerning a plat or subdivision may present to the superior court a petition____Such petition shall be presented to the court within 30 days after the date upon which the board voted to approve or disapprove the application.” (Emphasis added.) The Town argues that the Board’s vote not to accept the plaintiff’s application is statutorily defined in RSA 676:4, 1(c)(1) (Supp. 2004) as a “determination,” and not a “decision.” Thus, the Town contends that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to hear an appeal of a “determination.” The plaintiff responds that the two terms are equivalent, and that the trial court had jurisdiction under RSA 677:15.

We need not decide whether “determination” and “decision” are equivalent because the plain language of RSA 677:15,1, demonstrates that the plaintiff’s petition is not governed by the statute. Both parties fail to notice the second sentence of RSA 677:15, I, which states that a petition “shall be presented to the court within 30 days after the date upon which [318]*318the board voted to approve or disapprove the application.” (Emphasis added.) Thus, RSA 677:15, I, requires that a petition be presented only after the planning board has considered whether to approve an application.

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Bluebook (online)
876 A.2d 206, 152 N.H. 314, 2005 N.H. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dhb-inc-v-town-of-pembroke-nh-2005.