Fitzgerald v. Baxter State Park Authority

385 A.2d 189, 11 ERC 1513, 11 ERC (BNA) 1513, 1978 Me. LEXIS 865
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 6, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 385 A.2d 189 (Fitzgerald v. Baxter State Park Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgerald v. Baxter State Park Authority, 385 A.2d 189, 11 ERC 1513, 11 ERC (BNA) 1513, 1978 Me. LEXIS 865 (Me. 1978).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

The plaintiffs, all being Maine citizens and users of Baxter State Park, brought this suit in the Superior Court seeking to restrain the Baxter State Park Authority from carrying out a program for cleaning and restoring certain areas of timber blow-down that occurred in late November 1974. After extensive hearings, the Superior Court entered, on August 24, 1976, its injunction as follows:

“Defendants are prohibited from continuing to harvest blow-down in the manner in which the present operation is being conducted, to wit: with the use of heavy equipment. Further clearance may continue, but without the use of heavy equipment, and in such a manner as will not unduly disturb the terrain and natural environment. The Baxter State Park Authority may, however, proceed to develop, and contract, plans for clearance of blow-down, which would more closely follow the terms of the trust deeds as they have been herein interpreted by the Court.”

From that injunctive order the plaintiffs appealed, and the defendants 1 cross-appealed. 2 Finding no error of law in the Superi- or Court’s decision, we deny both appeals and affirm the judgment below.

Among the many public-spirited benefactors with whom the State of Maine has been blessed, Percival Proctor Baxter 3 stands preeminent. In its combination of size, uniqueness, permanence, and vision, his gift of Baxter State Park to the people of Maine has no equal. 4 Over a period of 31 years, former Governor Baxter deeded to the State of Maine in trust a total of 201,-018 acres of land, principally in Piscataquis County, for the establishment of Baxter State Park. His first gift in 1931 of about 6,000 acres, encompassing the higher areas of Mt. Katahdin and the slopes on all four sides, set a pattern that he was to follow in his succession of gifts completed in 1962. In each case he transmitted to the current *192 governor his deed of trust which was then duly submitted to the legislature for acceptance by private and special act. 5 In Governor Baxter’s transmittal letters to the successive governors, 6 he set forth his grand design for a state park around Maine’s highest mountain. 7 In addition to the conveyances of land, Governor Baxter in 1961 and 1965 gave the State sums in excess of $1.5 million for the care, operation, and maintenance of the Park. R.& S.L.1961, ch. 21; P.& S.L.1965, ch. 30.

By his deeds of trust Governor Baxter conveyed the lands to the State of Maine as trustee to hold in trust for the benefit of the people of Maine, subject to certain conditions for the use of the land. This case raises issues as to the application of those conditions. For the purposes of the present ease, the condition of the deed of trust accepted by chapter 1 of the 1945 Private & Special Acts is typical: 8

“TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the above described premises with all the privileges and appurtenances thereto to the State of Maine as Trustee to be forever held in Trust for the People of Maine upon the following conditions,
*193 “(1) that the premises HEREIN donated and conveyed to the State of Maine together with all the lands HERETOFORE donated and conveyed to said State ... by the grantor herein, forever shall be kept for and as a State forest and public park and for public recreational purposes;
“(2) that the said WITHIN donated and conveyed premises and also the said premises HERETOFORE donated and conveyed forever shall be kept in their natural wild state and as a sanctuary for wild beasts and birds, . . . ” (Emphasis added)

Also involved in our present case is chapter 2 of the Private & Special Laws of 1955, which we will sometimes refer to as the “1955 interpretation act,” in which the State of Maine formally joined in a declaration by Governor Baxter interpreting the terms “natural wild state” and “sanctuary for wild beasts and birds” as those terms were used by the parties in the deeds of trust. That act, by its terms, purported to authorize the State of Maine to clean, protect, and restore blowdown areas and to set priorities as among the “forever wild” and other objectives of the donor.

The State of Maine, as the trustee of Baxter State Park, has designated the Baxter State Park Authority as its agent “to satisfy the terms of the Trust." 12 M.R. S.A. § 900 (1964). The Authority is given “full power in the control and management” of the Park, including the authority to receive and expend for the maintenance, operation, and expansion of the Park moneys from the trust fund established for those purposes by Governor Baxter. 12 M.R.S.A. § 901 (1964). The Authority, established early in Governor Baxter’s program of gifts to the State, 1933 Laws, ch. 281, is now comprised of the Attorney General, the Director of the Bureau of Forestry, and the Commissioner of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. See State v. Fin & Feather Club, Me., 316 A.2d 351 (1974). The Authority exercises police supervision over the Park, 12 M.R.S.A. § 905 (1964), and employs a Director for the Park and other personnel appropriate to carry out its statutory responsibilities, 12 M.R.S.A. § 904 (1964).

In late November 1974 an aggregate of some 3,300 acres in the southwest portion of the Park suffered a severe blowdown apparently caused by a combination of natural conditions, including extreme saturation of the grounds, very heavy, wet snows, and extraordinarily high winds. After receiving the report of a professional aerial survey of the affected areas and after discussion among the Authority members and with members of the Baxter Park Advisory Committee, including Governor Baxter’s nearest living relative, the Authority hired a consulting forester, Vladek Kolman, 9 to evaluate the blowdown damage and prepare a cleanup program for the affected areas. Mr. Kolman’s report followed his observation, on foot and from the air, of the areas affected by the blowdown, and for reasons that he stated in the report and expanded upon in testimony before the court below, he recommended the removal of the blow-down from all but some 300 acres. His reasons for this cleanup program included the necessity of restoring the forest soil in the blowdown areas to its original horizontal position in order to enhance the regeneration of the blowdown stands, avoidance of insect infestation, reduction of fire danger, and protection of water quality and fish life. After published notice, the Authority held a public hearing at Kidney Pond Camps in Baxter State Park on September 9, 1975, following which the Authority voted unanimously to proceed with the cleanup operations recommended by Mr. Kolman. The Authority then proceeded to solicit bids for the removal of dead and dying trees in areas designated by the Kolman report.

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Bluebook (online)
385 A.2d 189, 11 ERC 1513, 11 ERC (BNA) 1513, 1978 Me. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-baxter-state-park-authority-me-1978.