Grimmel Indus., Inc. v. Inh. of the Town of Topsham

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMay 14, 2013
DocketSAGap-08-04
StatusUnpublished

This text of Grimmel Indus., Inc. v. Inh. of the Town of Topsham (Grimmel Indus., Inc. v. Inh. of the Town of Topsham) 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
Grimmel Indus., Inc. v. Inh. of the Town of Topsham, (Me. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT SAGADAHOC, ss. CIVIL APPEAL DOCKET N9. AP-OS-04 / /__

GRIMMEL INDUSTRIES, INC., f. ~'fllfi Ml~ - St'-1(·--~1 ..;F)/ J ·'"-;/IfU/cl_0!.3 I -L

Plaintiff

V.

INHABITANTS OF THE TOWN OF TOPSHAM,

Defendant

ORDER ON MOTIONS

In this case, Grimmel Industries, Inc. (Grimmel) has filed a Complaint for Declaratory

Judgment And Alternatively For Review of Governmental Action Under Me. R. Civ. P. soB.

Pursuant to Rule soB of the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure, Grimmel has also filed a Motion

for Trial of Facts and a Motion To Specify Future Course ofProceedings. The Town has filed

a Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs Declaratory Judgment Claims. The parties have also filed a

Joint Record Submission regarding the proceedings before the Topsham Zoning Board of

Appeals.

Oral argument was held May 7, 201.'3.

Based on the filings and oral argument, the court finds and concludes as follows:

Background

For purposes of the present motions only, the background facts may be summarized as

follows:

Since 1992, Grimmel has owned and operated a scrap metal recycling facility at the

former Pejepscot Mill in the Town ofTopsham. Grimmel's facility began operating after

receiving site plan approval for its operation from the Topsham Planning Board. The Planning

Board written approval is dated August 14, 1992. In 1995, several structures on Grimmel's property were destroyed by fire and were not

rebuilt.

In 2008 the Town code enforcement officer (CEO) notified Grimmel that it was in

violation of a site plan approval condition limiting after-hours trucking activity into or out of

the facility to "incidental" trips and imposed a limit of one after-hours truck entry or exit per

week. Grimme} appealed the CEO's action to the Topsham Board of Appeals and thereafter to

this court. See Grimmel Industries, Inc. v. Inhabitants of the Town ofTopsham, Me. Super. Ct., Sag.

Cty, Docket No BATSC-AP-08-04. In a written decision dated May 26, 2009, this court

vacated the Town's action against Grimmel, essentially because a flat limit of one entry or exit

per week was an unreasonable interpretation of the term "incidental." The ruling became final

by virtue of the expiration of the appeal period.

In a letter to Grimmel dated December 28, 2011, the Town CEO (not the same holder

of that office who had acted in 2008) notified Grimmel that, by conducting recycling operations

outside, Grimmel was in violation of the 1992 site plan approval conditions, and would need

either to cease outside operations or seek amendment of the site plan approval. The letter also

notified Grimmel that, if it proposed to keep scrap materials outside, it would need a new

permit to operate a "junkyard," as defined by state statute. See 30-A M.R.S. § 37 52-53

(definition of"junkyard"; requirement ofpermit from municipality).

Grimme} appealed the December 28, 2011 notice of violation to the Topsham Board of

Appeals. The Board of Appeals held a hearing December 17, 2012, and voted to deny

Grimmel's appeal. A stipulated transcript of the hearing has been filed as part of the Joint

Record Submission by Plaintiff and Defendant. In a letter to Grimmel dated December 18,

2012, the Board of Appeals chair notified Grimmel that the Board of Appeals appeal of the

2 CEO's determination and upheld the CEO's action. Grimmel then filed an appeal under Rule

SOB, adding a declaratory judgment count to its appeal.

Discussion

Under Rule SOB(i), the filing of Plaintiffs Motion To Specify Future Course of

Proceedings operated to suspend the running of the Rule SOB time periods. The parties'

respective motions, as well as the Joint Record Submission, raise questions about the scope and

direction of this proceeding. This Order is intended to address at least the questions that are

ready to address, and to define a procedure for those that are not ready.

The court has jurisdiction under Rule soB, as the Town acknowledged at oral

argument. Moreover, because Rule soB explicitly permits joinder of independent claims,

Grimmel' s assertion of a declaratory judgment count cannot be said to be facially insufficient as

a matter oflaw.

The Town's Motion To Dismiss appears to be premised on the assumption that

Grimmel's declaratory judgment claim is intended to raise an equitable estoppel issue that, as

the Town points out, can only be raised as a defense. See Tarason v. Town cif South Berwick,

2005 ME SO,~ 16, 868 A.2d 230; Buker v. Town cif Sweden, 644 A.2d 1042, 1044 (Me. 1994).

However, Grimmel's complaint does not explicitly limit its request for declaratory relief to

equitable estoppel issues. At this stage of the case, the court cannot say that Grimmel has no

basis on which to seek declaratory relief, so the Town's motion will be denied without

prejudice. However, as just noted, the court agrees with the Town that equitable estoppel is

not in the case, so if there proves hereafter to be no other basis for declaratory relief, the Town

may revive the same issue in a future motion.

On the other hand, as noted at oral argument, Grimmel also argues that this court's

prior decision on "incidental" truck trips precludes the Town from issuing the notice of

3 violation. The elements of res judicata and collateral estoppel (or claim preclusion and issue

preclusion, as they are sometimes called) are different than the elements of equitable estoppel,

although all three doctrines are usually characterized as defenses rather than as grounds for

affirmative relief

Thus, two issues oflaw appear to be presented by Grimmel's position on the effect of

this court's 2009 ruling: First, can Grimmel raise res judicata or collateral estoppel in this case

or must those issues be deferred along with equitable estoppel? Second, if those issues are

cognizable in this appeal, is the Town barred by either preclusive doctrine from issuing the

notice of violation?

A third issue raised by Grimmel's Motion for Trial ofFacts is whether any proceeding

in the nature of a trial is necessary to enable the court to consider the preclusion issues to the

extent they are even ripe for consideration. Plaintiffs Motion for a Trial of Facts includes a

three-paragraph offer ofproofthat appears to be focused on Grimmel's claim that the Town is

estopped or otherwise precluded from taking the positions articulated in the CEO's December

28, 2011 notice ofviolation letter.

As an aside, the court also invites the parties to consider whether the Board of Appeals

decision is ripe for judicial review. The Board of Appeals notice of decision letter dated

December 18,2012, notes that Grimmel raised three issues: "(1) Is the facility a junk yard

which requires a permit? (2) Is the applicant required to update the site plan approval, based on

the fact that the original facility was required to be located inside a building which burned

down in 1995, and S) due to lack of action by the Town for 16 years, does the CEO still have a

right to issue a notice ofviolation for the listed issues?" The three votes enumerated in the

notice of decision letter seem intended to address the first two listed issues, but there is nothing

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Related

Buker v. Town of Sweden
644 A.2d 1042 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1994)
Tarason v. Town of South Berwick
2005 ME 30 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2005)

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