Griswold v. State of Maine, Dep't of Healt and Human Servs.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 19, 2006
DocketKENap-06-03
StatusUnpublished

This text of Griswold v. State of Maine, Dep't of Healt and Human Servs. (Griswold v. State of Maine, Dep't of Healt and Human Servs.) 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
Griswold v. State of Maine, Dep't of Healt and Human Servs., (Me. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION KENNEBEC, ss. DOCKET NO. AP-06-03 - 5 KS K E N- /u//?'2Wb

STEPHEN GRISWOLD,

Petitioner DECISION ON APPEAL

STATE OF MAINE, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Respondent

and

POLAND SPRING BOTTLING CO.,

Party-in-Interest

T h s matter comes before the court on appeal pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 80C and a

separate request for declaratory judgment.

Background

T h s appeal (count I) and separate claim (count 11) arise from a decision by the

Commissioner of the Department of Health and Human Services ("DHHS") concerning

the bulk transport of water. Concerned about the potential adverse effects of

transportation of large quantities of water away from its natural location for commercial

purposes, in 1987 the Maine Legislature enacted the "Transport of Water Act."

22 M.R.S.A. 5s 2660 and 2660-A. According to the legislative scheme, such transport of

water, with limited exceptions, would be forbidden unless DHHS grants an "appeal" of

the prohibition.

Poland Spring Bottling.Co. ("Poland Spring") is one of the leading bottlers of spring water using water from sources w i h n the State of Maine. In mid-2005, Poland Spring applied for a permit to extract water from a site in Denmark, Maine, under a

Town ordinance which generally mirrors the State statute. At the same time that h s

application was made to the Town of Denmark, Poland Spring also requested an appeal

pursuant to section 2660-A(3) to allow that extracted water to be transported to bottling

plants elsewhere in Maine and Massachusetts. Petitioner Griswold, who owns property

abutting the extraction site, participated in both of these parallel proceedings.

Poland Spri'ng's application to the Town of Denmark was approved by the Board

of Selectmen. That decision to grant the extraction permit was appealed by Griswold to

the Superior Court, which affirmed the town's decision.' Similarly, DHHS found that

Poland Spring had met the requirements of the statute and issued a permit for bulk

water transport. From this decision, Griswold took the present appeal.

Discussion In order to be successful in obtaining a transport permit from DHHS, an

applicant must convince the Commissioner of four basic findings. Of those four, the

three of potential importance in the present appeal are findings that:

A. Transport of the water will not constitute a threat to public health, safety

or welfare;

B. Water is not available naturally in the location to which it will be

transported;

C. Failure to authorize transfer of the water would create a substantial

hardship to the potential recipient of the water.

Griswold argues that the evidence of record was insufficient to support the findings with regard to B and C above.

Griswold v. Inhabitants and Board of Selectmen of the Town of Denmark and Poland Spring Bottling Co., Sup. Ct., Oxf. Cty., Dkt. No. AP-05-012, July 27,2006. I. Motion to Dismiss.

Before discussing the Rule 80C appeal, there must be consideration of the motion

by DHHS to dismiss count I1 of the petition. Count I1 seeks a declaratory judgment that

Poland Spring's allegations are inadequate as a matter of law to show "substantial

hardship" as required in paragraph C above.

Petitioners seeking review of governmental action pursuant to Rule 80B are

permitted to join with the appeal any "independent basis for relief from governmental

action." M.R. Civ. P. 80B(i). Such independent claims might consist of challenges to

constitutionality of the underlying statute, violations of civil rights, etc., in other words,

claims arising out of the same general factual situation which could be brought by a

separate independent complaint. However, in the present case, it is clear that the

petitioner's count I1 merely asks the court to make its own decision with regard to an

integral part of the underlying decision by DHHS whch forms the basis for the Rule

80C appeal. The necessary factual development of the issue should have occurred as

this matter proceeded through DHHS and there is nothing independent about this

claim. See Adelman v. Town of Baldwin, 2000 ME 91, 750 A.2d 577, 581. Thus, count I1 is

duplicative of the Rule 80C appeal and Griswold's motion to dismiss will be granted.

11. Res Judicata.

A second preliminary issue for consideration concerns the argument by Poland

Spring that the decision of the Superior Court, Oxford County, upholding the appeal of

the decision of the Denmark Board of Selectmen should act as res judicata with regard

to the issues presented in the present appeal. Griswold objects that res judicata is an

affirmative defense whch must be pled or at least raised in some other fashon before

one gets to final argument. The court agrees that the issue was not timely raised, but

also concludes that the decision of the court in Oxford County would not act as res judicata even if it had been timely raised. The problem with the argument is that it

compares apples and oranges. The parties were the same in both actions, the issues

were the same, and the town ordinance was patterned after the State statute. However,

despite t h ~ ssimilarity, the forum considering the issues - Board of Selectmen versus

State Executive Branch Department Commissioner - are quite different. In other words,

it would not seem appropriate as a matter of res judicata to hold that the decision of one

Superior Court reviewing a prior decision from the town should legally bind another

Superior Court reviewing a decision on the same or similar issues but by an entirely

different decision maker. Tlus distinction becomes especially important where, as will

be seen, one of the initial decision makers has made a fundamental error. Therefore, the

court conldudes that it is not bound by the decision of the Oxford Superior Court.

111. MERITS

As noted above, one of the key fndings wluch must be made by DHHS prior to

granting a transport license is that a failure to issue the authorization would create a

"substantial hardshp" to the potential recipient. The leading, and perhaps only, case

on point is Centamore v. Dep't ofHuman Services, 664 A.2d 369 (Me. 1995). In this case, a

landowner applied to the Department for a transportation permit under the statute, and

the Commissioner found that the necessary criteria had been met. On appeal to the

Law Court, it was held that there was no error in concluding that the statute did not

completely eliminate the transportation of water for commercial purposes and in

finding that there was no public health threat. However, the Court found that the

"substantial hardship" finding was unsupported in the record. The Department

decision stated, "The standard requires an ar~umentfrom the applicant that a hardship

would result if the bottled water was not available to the 'potential recipient'

(consumer)." (Emphasis provided) The court's response to t h ~ was s a pithy, "Argument is not evidence." Unfortunately, now ten years after Centamore, a different

commissioner in the same position acting on a similar application has fallen into the

same trap. Among the Commissioner's conclusions it is stated:

3.

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Related

Adelman v. Town of Baldwin
2000 ME 91 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2000)
Centamore v. Department of Human Services
664 A.2d 369 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1995)

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