Haines v. Great Northern Paper, Inc.

2002 ME 157, 808 A.2d 1246, 2002 Me. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 11, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2002 ME 157 (Haines v. Great Northern Paper, 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
Haines v. Great Northern Paper, Inc., 2002 ME 157, 808 A.2d 1246, 2002 Me. LEXIS 180 (Me. 2002).

Opinion

ALEXANDER, J.

[¶ 1] Vernon Haines, for himself and on behalf of the Millinocket Fin & Feather Club, appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court (Penobscot County, Hjelm, J.) denying Haines’s motion for summary judgment, granting the defendants’ motions for summary judgment on Haines’s complaint, and entering summary judgment in favor of Rich Timber Holdings and Great Northern Paper (GNP) on their counterclaims. Haines contends the Superior Court erred in: (1) granting Rich Timber Holdings’s and GNP’s motion to strike Haines’s statement of material facts; (2) denying Haines’s motion to amend his defective statement of material facts; and (3) entering summary judgment in favor of the defendants and the parties-in-interest. We affirm the judgments.

I. CASE HISTORY

[¶ 2] In 1993, GNP and the Millinocket Fin & Feather Club signed an agreement by which the club agreed to withdraw opposition to the issuance of certain licenses by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). In return for their withdrawal of opposition, GNP agreed that:

it will eliminate current, and not impose future, access fees on non-commercial, day use by Maine residents of its forest lands within the company’s gate system in the State of Maine, provided however, that the F & F Club recognizes that Great Northern is entitled to have recreational users of its land share in the cost of maintaining that land for such use; and, provided further, that Great Northern has the right to limit the total number of users of its land, but not to less than 1993 levels, if in its sole judgment, Great Northern determines that increased user levels have adversely impacted or pose a threat of adversely impacting safety, recreational use, ecological resources, or Great Northern’s ability to properly manage its forest lands for timber harvesting purposes.

This agreement took effect upon the issuance of the FERC licenses in 1996 for a term to coincide with the thirty-year term of the licenses. Pursuant to the 1993 agreement, GNP then ceased charging day use fees for Maine residents’ access to GNP lands within its gate system.

[¶ 3] In October 1998, GNP and its parent corporation, Bowater, Inc. agreed to sell to McDonald Investment Co. (McDonald) approximately 671,000 acres of GNP’s Maine timberland. A significant portion of the GNP lands that had been subject to the agreement with the Fin & Feather Club was included in this sale. Exempt from this sale were lands “used [for] and necessary” to the operation of thirteen storage dams, six hydroelectric generating stations, one pumping station and associate transmission lines, towers, conduits, etc., plus other land “within F.E.R.C. project boundaries, including all recreational facilities and shoreline buffers and reservations of utility and transportation easements with respect to the so-called ‘Golden Road.’ ”

[¶ 4] In preparation for closing of the transaction, in late March 1999, GNP created two limited liability corporations, Rich Timber Holdings, LLC and Great North-woods, LLC. The timberlands that GNP had agreed to sell were transferred to these two limited liability corporations. GNP’s shareholder interests in Great Northwoods, LLC and Rich Timber Holdings, LLC were then transferred to McDonald and its subsidiary McDonald Northwoods, LLC to complete the agreed *1248 purchase of timberland by McDonald. All of these corporate creations and transactions occurred within approximately a three week period. After completion of the sale, but by prearrangement with McDonald, management responsibility for the acquired lands was transferred to Wagner Forest Management, LTD. Wagner then agreed with Great Northwoods and Rich, both owned by McDonald, to impose day use access fees on the lands owned by Rich and Great Northwoods within the gate system controlled by Wagner. No day use or access fees have been charged to Maine residents to pass through any gates that continue to be controlled by GNP or to access land that GNP continued to own after this transaction.

[¶ 5] On June 30, 1999, Vernon Haines, a member of the Millinocket Fin & Feather Club, presented himself at the “Caribou checkpoint” maintained by Wagner stating that he was seeking access to lands covered by the agreement without payment of the requisite day use fee. Haines was denied access to the lands and was arrested and charged with theft of services and criminal trespass.

[¶ 6] Haines then filed a complaint for himself and on behalf of the Club against GNP, Great Northwoods, Rich Timber Holdings, McDonald, Wagner, and North Maine Woods, Inc., (NMWI), the entity that manages the gate and fee collection system for various timber holding companies. The claims against Wagner and NMWI were later dismissed. The complaint asserted breach of the 1993 agreement by imposition of access fees. GNP and Rich Timber Holdings counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that the 1993 agreement did not bind any party other than GNP and that GNP and Rich were not liable for access fees imposed after the 1999 sale to McDonald.

[¶ 7] In June 2001, Haines filed a motion for summary judgment. Haines’s motion was supported by a statement of material facts. M.R. Civ. P. 56(h). However, Haines’s statement of material facts failed to include the required record citations to support its statements, M.R. Civ. P. 56(h)(1), 2 although such record citations had been required by the rules governing summary judgment practice since 1990. See M.R. Civ. P. 7(d), adopted January 23, 1990 and effective July 1,1990. 3

[¶ 8] The defendants then filed a motion for summary judgment -and an opposition to Haines’s motion for summary judgment, seeking to strike Haines’s motion for its failure to provide the requisite record citations. Haines filed a motion to amend his defective statement of material facts and an opposition to the defendants’ motions for summary judgment. Later, Haines filed the required opposing statement of material facts, twenty-three days after expiration of the time permitted for filing that opposition. M.R. Civ. P. 7(c)(2).

[¶ 9] After a hearing, the court denied Haines’s motion to amend the statement of material facts to include the proper record citations, and the court dismissed and denied Haines’s motion for summary judgment because it was improperly supported. The court then granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment *1249 on the complaint and the counterclaim. In its judgment, the court stated that the 1998 agreement did not bind any parties to the actions other than GNP and did not “have binding effect on lands not owned by Great Northern.” It also determined that the 1993 agreement “does not require Great Northern to impose the obligations under the agreement on any purchaser from Great Northern and is not binding on any entity that has purchased land from Great Northern.” Haines and the Fin & Feather Club filed this appeal.

II. DISCUSSION

[¶ 10] The procedural deficiencies in Haines’s original statement of material facts and the delay in Haines’s opposing statement of material facts were subject to considerable attention in the trial court. The court did not abuse its discretion by denying Haines’s motion to amend.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 ME 157, 808 A.2d 1246, 2002 Me. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-v-great-northern-paper-inc-me-2002.