Gagne v. Lewiston Crushed Stone Company, Inc.

367 A.2d 613, 1976 Me. LEXIS 332
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 10, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 367 A.2d 613 (Gagne v. Lewiston Crushed Stone Company, Inc.) 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
Gagne v. Lewiston Crushed Stone Company, Inc., 367 A.2d 613, 1976 Me. LEXIS 332 (Me. 1976).

Opinion

WERNICK, Justice.

This case, a sequel to our decision in Gagne v. Inhabitants of City of Lewiston, Me., 281 A.2d 579 (1971), requires that, in light of our intervening decision in Keating v. Zoning Board of Appeals of the City of Saco, Me., 325 A.2d 521 (1974), we further develop principles governing the manner and scope of the judicial review of the decisions of administrative officials concerned with zoning.

Defendant Lewiston Crushed Stone Company, Inc. (defendant company) has appealed from a summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs Cecile C. Gagne and Victoria A. Bouffard. The judgment entered in the Superior Court (Androscoggin County) (1) revoked a building permit which was issued, on November 20, 1972, to defendant company by the Lewiston building inspector and (2) required defendant company to remove a portion of the building constructed pursuant to said permit.

Plaintiffs have filed a cross-appeal asserting that the remedy given them was too narrow because removal of the entire *615 building, rather than only part of it, should have been ordered.

We sustain the appeal of defendant company. We thus do not reach the cross-appeal of plaintiffs and dismiss it.

1.

On July 26, 1973 plaintiffs instituted a civil action in the Superior Court (Andros-coggin County) invoking that Court’s jurisdiction in equity. Sued as defendants were the defendant company, the Inhabitants of the City of Lewiston and the Lew-iston building inspector, Charles Buteau. As ultimately amended, 1 the complaint of plaintiffs alleged that on November 20, 1972 the building inspector had issued defendant company a building permit pursuant to which, in 1973, construction was commenced. Plaintiffs claimed that these acts violated the Lewiston Zoning Ordinance, as in effect when the building permit was issued, 2 and sought declaratory and injunctive relief, including revocation of the allegedly illegal building permit and removal of any building constructed under it.

Defendant company answered by admitting issuance of the permit, and construction pursuant to it, but denied violation of the ordinance. Defendant company also raised several affirmative defenses, one of which we find basically dispositive of this appeal: — that plaintiffs had failed to appeal the decision of the building inspector to the zoning board of appeals, as the initial step necessary to achieve a direct judicial review, first, in the Superior Court (under Rule 80B M.R.C.P.) and thereafter in this Court, and, therefore, plaintiffs are barred from collateral judicial review of the merits of their substantive claims of administrative violation of the Lewiston Zoning Ordinance.

2.

It has been factually established that plaintiffs failed to appeal to the zoning board of appeals from the building inspector’s issuance of a building permit to defendant company. Plaintiffs contend that, despite this failure, they are entitled to the collateral judicial review they now seek because: (1) the Lewiston Zoning Ordinance, although mentioning a right of appeal to the zoning board of appeals, was silent concerning the time for such appeal and, hence, in practical terms, plaintiffs should not be held at fault for failing to resort to the direct course of administrative and judicial review; (2) even if direct appeal proceedings had been pragmatically available to them, plaintiffs were unable to “bifurcate” their claims into the appropriate administrative and judicial channels; (3) in any event, the zoning board of appeals lacked power to stop, pending appeal, the construction which had already been commenced by defendant company; (4) the building inspector’s issuance of the building permit was void and, therefore, may be declared a nullity in a collateral judicial attack; and (5) general principles acknowledged by this Court, in particular in Stanton v. Trustees of St. Joseph’s College, Me., 233 A.2d 718 (1967) and Summit Realty, Inc. v. Gipe, Me., 315 A.2d 428 (1974), authorize the full-scale collateral judicial review here sought.

The Superior Court Justice allowed plaintiffs collateral judicial review of the substantive merits of their claims on the grounds that: (1) here, plaintiffs had no timely notice that the building inspector had issued the permit to defendant company and thus were deprived of a practically meaningful opportunity to appeal to the zoning board of appeals as a preliminary to seeking, if necessary, a direct judicial review and (2) since it appears as a matter *616 of law that defendant company was not entitled to the building permit issued to it, the collateral judicial review sought by plaintiffs should be allowed.

We decide that, in so ruling, the presiding Justice committed error, and the appeal of defendant company must be sustained.

3.

To afford better understanding of the reasons for our decision we advert briefly to the facts of the controversy.

Still before us, as facts undisputed, are the events involved in our decision in Gagne v. Inhabitants of City of Lewiston, supra.

In 1969 defendant company had determined to replace its wood frame garage on a so-called “split lot” in the City of Lewis-ton. That lot, and the then existing garage, were bisected by the boundary between the “Residential A” and “Industrial” Zones. 3 Since the portion of the garage in the Industrial Zone constituted a “permitted use” in that zone, demolition and new construction as to it appeared to be matters of right, upon compliance with applicable set-back and building code provisions. The portion jutting into the Residential A Zone, however, because in existence on the effective date of the zoning ordinance, persisted as a “non-conforming use.”

Since defendant company’s project of complete replacement would have effects upon a non-conforming use, Section lO.b of the Lewiston Zoning Ordinance came into play. That section required the approval of the zoning board of appeals where a non-conforming use was to be “enlarged or altered.” Accordingly, defendant company obtained the requisite approval.

On the appeal by abutting property owners to this Court, we held that the “demolition of an existing building and the erection of an entirely new one” was not authorized by the concepts, “enlarged”, “altered” or “erection of additional buildings”, as contained in Section lO.b of the Lewiston Zoning Ordinance. Gagne v. Inhabitants of City of Lewiston, supra, p. 582.

The parties do not fully agree as to the events transpiring after . the Gagne decision. 4

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367 A.2d 613, 1976 Me. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gagne-v-lewiston-crushed-stone-company-inc-me-1976.