Inhabs. of the Town of Smithfield v. Cloud

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 6, 2000
DocketSOMap-99-016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Inhabs. of the Town of Smithfield v. Cloud (Inhabs. of the Town of Smithfield v. Cloud) 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
Inhabs. of the Town of Smithfield v. Cloud, (Me. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT SOMERSET, ss. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. AP-99-016

EAGs- Soi - 2/2 fed Lae INHABITANTS OF THE TOWN OF 7 SMITHFIELD,

Plaintiffs, Vv. ORDER ROBERT CLOUD and SHARON CLOUD. — Defendants. PROCEDURAL HISTORY In an application dated July 8, 1998, Robert Cloud requested a building permit

"from the Town of Smithfield. In the application, Mr. Cloud said that he wished to build an additional deck and ramp on property owned by Wayne and Betty Barr. The Town's Planning Board discussed Mr. Cloud's application at a meeting held

July 15, 1998. Mr. Cloud was not present at that meeting, apparently due to some

health problems. The Planning Board tabled the application because Mr. Cloud did not own the property.’

Sometime after July 15, 1998, some friends of Mr. Cloud constructed a deck and ramp on the land. Neither the Clouds nor the Barrs had obtained a permit to

build the deck or the ramp. The land in question is within 100 feet of a great pond,

1Although Mr. Cloud argued that he was never notified that the permit request had been tabled, the Application itself states that: "Applicant or a representative should be present during planning board meeting to answer any questions pertaining to this application. If the applicant or a representative is not present and the board is unable to make a clear determination, the application may be tabled until the next meeting.” In addition, Mr. Cloud acknowledged during the July 26, 1999 Appeals Board meeting that he had been given oral notice that the application had been tabled because he was not the owner. R. 5, p. 3. so its use is governed by the Town's Shoreland Zoning Ordinance. That Ordinance mandates that no building or rebuilding within the Shoreline Zone be done without a permit from the Planning Board.

When the Town's Code Enforcement Officer, Kenneth Hogate, learned of the deck in the fall of 1998, he sent a letter to Mr. and Mrs. Cloud. In that letter, Mr. Hogate ordered the Clouds to remove the portions of the deck between the camp and the water, and either get a permit for the rest of the deck or remove that, also. Mr. Hogate warned the Clouds that, if compliance had not occurred by October 20,

..1998, he would take further enforcement action. Mr. Cloud responded by writing to

“the Town Selectmen, and asking for additional time to deal with the issue. The Selectmen responded that he would have to deal directly with Mr. Hogate.

The following June, the Clouds requested that the Town's Board of Appeals ("BOA") "review" Mr. Hogate's order, and also requested they be granted a variance. The BOA granted an after-the-fact variance after its meeting on July 26, 1999, and instructed the Clouds to apply for a permit. The BOA refused to rescind that ruling, despite a request from the Planning Board and the Selectmen.

On August 4, 1999, the Clouds filed an application for an after-the-fact permit for the deck and ramp. The Planning Board denied that application on August 11, 1999. The Clouds appealed that denial to the BOA and, on August 31, 1999, the BOA

again granted the variance.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

1. The BOA erred when it granted a variance on July 26, 1999 for two reasons:

2 > A.) As the Planning Board had never acted upon Mr. Cloud’s request for a permit, the Clouds’ request for a variance was premature, and the BOA had no authority to take action; and,

B) The Clouds failed to prove that, absent a variance, the land could not yield a reasonable return.

As mentioned above, construction within 100 feet of great ponds is regulated throughout the State of Maine. State law requires municipalities to adopt zoning and land use control ordinances that meet minimum guidelines set by the Board of Environmental Protection for the protection and preservation of shoreland areas. 38

_.M.RS.A. §§ 435 & 438-A. The town of Smithfield apparently met that requirement

“when it adopted the Ordinance mentioned above. Although the entire Ordinance

has not been made part of the record, all parties seem to agree that, in order to > legally build a deck, the Clouds needed to obtain a building permit from the Planning Board. Because the Planning Board never had an opportunity to act on Mr. Cloud’s request for a permit after he acquired ownership of the property, the BOA’s action in granting a permit was premature and ultra vires.

Even if the BOA had jurisdiction to act on the variance request, however, it erred, as a matter of law, when it granted the Clouds a variance in July 1999. The Appeals section of the Ordinance is found at pages 25 through 28. Section G(2)(c) states that:

The Board shall not grant a variance unless it finds that:

2 Even if the court assumes, for the sake of argument, that Mr. Hogate's letter was a denial of a permit and that, therefore, the Clouds had standing to appeal to the BOA, their appeal was not filed within thirty (30) days after the "denial."

D (1) The proposed use would meet the provisions of Section 15 except for the specific provision which has created the non- conformity and from which relief is sought; and

(2) The strict application of the terms of this Ordinance would result in undue hardship. The term “undue hardship” shall mean:

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

The Law Court has consistently applied the language of these ordinances very strictly. In order to grant a variance, the Town authority must be prepared to find

that compliance with the Ordinance would result in the “practical loss of substantial

That the land in question cannot yield a reasonable return unless the variance is granted;

That the need for a variance is due to the unique circumstances of the property and not to the general conditions in the neighborhood;

That the granting of a variance will not alter the essential character of the locality;

That the hardship is not the result of action taken by the applicant or a prior owner. . |

beneficial use of the land.” Leadbetter v. Ferris, 485 A. 2d 225, 228 (Me. 1984)

During the meeting in July, one of the members of the BOA (Mr. Downing) stated that, while he recognized that state law did not support the granting of a variance, it was “the right thing to do.”R.5, p.5. The discussion held among the other members demonstrates that all of them were aware that the reasonable return

criterion had not been established by the Clouds. Despite their clear understanding

of the law, the BOA granted a variance after the July meeting.

2. The BOA erred when it granted a variance on August 31, 1999 because

4 there was no showing that the land could not yield a reasonable return unless a variance was granted.

In its Notice of Variance Decision dated September 1, 1999, the BOA determined that the reasonable return criterion was not applicable to the request for -a variance. This determination is clear error, and mandates a finding that the variance is invalid. . _ While the Ordinance appears to be a well-crafted attempt to meet all of the purposes espoused by Title 38, it can only be effective when it is applied logically and

consistently. All of the persons charged with the interpretation and enforcement of

. the Ordinance, except the CEO, are volunteers. The members of the Planning Board

and the members of the Board of Appeals are elected or appointed public servants who are not paid for their services. Given the complexity of zoning and land use laws, it must be expected that, despite their best intentions, public servants will make errors in interpretation or application. However, that does not include ignoring the Ordinance or holding that portions of it do not apply.

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Related

Leadbetter v. Ferris
485 A.2d 225 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1984)

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