Lentine v. Town of St. George

599 A.2d 76, 1991 Me. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 14, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 599 A.2d 76 (Lentine v. Town of St. George) 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
Lentine v. Town of St. George, 599 A.2d 76, 1991 Me. LEXIS 255 (Me. 1991).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

Plaintiffs Sal and Helen Lentine appeal from the affirmance by the Superior Court (Knox County, Kravchuk, J.) of the decision of the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Town of St. George, which denied their application to build a wharf because their proposal did not meet the requirements of the Town’s Shoreland Zoning Ordinance (“Ordinance”). We also find no reversible error in the Board of Appeals’ decision.

As trustees of the Frances S. Lentine Trust, the Lentines own a summer home on a shorefront lot on Teel Cove in Port Clyde Harbor in St. George. On March 19, 1990, the Lentines filed with the St. George Planning Board an application for a permit to build a wharf on their waterfront. The wharf was proposed to be a permanent, pile-supported timber structure, 6 feet wide and 190 feet long, with a 32-foot-long ramp and a 20-by-16-foot floating dock attached to the wharf on a seasonal basis. With the proposed ramp and floating dock, the entire structure would extend a total of about 236 feet. 1 The purpose of the wharf was to provide a deep-water dock for the Lentines’ pleasure boat.

In considering the Lentines’ application, the Planning Board had the following evidence before it. The Lentines’ boat draws three feet of water; because at low tide the water level at the end of the proposed float would be only six inches, their boat could be docked there for about 5 hours out of each 12-hour tidal cycle. Various neighbors expressed concern over the length of the wharf and the adverse effect it would have on the activity in the cove. One neighbor’s lobster boat is bigger than the Lentines’ pleasure craft and yet it can be tied at his nearby 70-foot wharf for about 8 hours of each cycle. Another neighbor opposed the wharf on the ground that it would interfere with the flow of ice and thereby threaten his nearby lobster pound; it was estimated that such an ice “pile-up could happen once in four years and cost thousands of dollars.” A third neighbor asserted that if the proposed wharf were swung slightly to the northeast its length could be reduced by 50 to 140 feet, although in response the Lentines’ surveyor expressed fears that a relocated wharf would encroach on tidal rights of others.

In April of 1990 the Planning Board denied the Lentines’ application. It found that the proposed wharf was “larger in dimension than necessary to carry on the activity and be consistent with existing conditions, use, and character of the area”; thus the Lentines’ proposal did not meet the requirements of section 13(F)(4) of the Ordinance. 2 The Planning Board also *78 found that the information submitted by the Lentines was “not adequate to allow the Board to make a determination that the facility will be located so as to minimize adverse effects on fisheries,” and so the Lentines also failed to meet their burden of proof with respect to section 13(F)(3) of the Ordinance.

On the Lentines’ appeal of the Planning Board’s decision, the Zoning Board of Appeals affirmed the denial of the Lentines’ wharf application. Pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 80B, the Lentines then sought judicial review in the Superior Court, naming as defendants the Town of St. George and its code enforcement officer. 3 Because the Lentines challenged the constitutionality of the St. George Ordinance, which was closely modeled on the State of Maine Guidelines for Municipal Shoreland Zoning Ordinances issued by the Board of Environmental Protection, the Attorney Genera] of the State of Maine intervened as a defendant. The Superior Court affirmed the Board of Appeals’ decision on the ground of the Lentines' noncompliance with section 13(F)(4), and hence did not reach the question whether they had complied with section 13(F)(3). 4

Before us the Lentines’ appeal presents two issues: (1) whether section 13(F)(4) is on its face unconstitutionally vague and (2) whether the Board of Appeals erred in finding that the Lentines failed to sustain their burden of proof relative to section 13(F)(4). We answer both questions in the negative.

I.

Constitutionality of Section 13(F)(4)

The Lentines contend that section 13(F)(4) of the St. George Ordinance is unconstitutionally vague. They urge us to read the last half of that section to impose an overall requirement that their proposed wharf “be consistent with existing conditions, use, and character of the area” and, on the basis of that broad reading, they contend that the Ordinance’s lack of any definition of the word “area” and the lack of any standards for applying the consistency test render the section unconstitutional on its face. The Lentines correctly , note that we have held ordinances void for vagueness because they failed “to furnish a guide which will enable those to whom the law is to be applied to reasonably determine their rights thereunder, and [which will assure] that the determination of those rights will not be left to the purely arbitrary discretion of the administrative agency]”. Stucki v. Plavin, 291 A.2d 508, 510 (Me.1972). We, however, do not agree with the reading the Lentines urge us to give to section 13(F)(4) of the Ordinance. Properly construed, that section does not run afoul of the vagueness doctrine.

By a well established principle of statutory construction, any ambiguity in the St. George Ordinance must be resolved to pre *79 serve its constitutionality. See State v. Horton, 561 A.2d 488, 490 (Me.1989). Section 13(F)(4) reads in full as follows:

The facility shall be no larger in dimension than necessary to carry on the activity and be consistent with existing conditions, use, and character of the area.

That section readily lends itself to an interpretation that avoids any question of unconstitutional vagueness. By that reasonable construction, the last half of the section imposes merely a second criterion for judging the allowable size of a proposed wharf. In other words, as applied here, section 13(F)(4) provides that the Lentines’ wharf may not be either (1) “larger in dimension than necessary to carry on the activity” of deep water access for the Len-tines’ pleasure boat, or (2) “larger in dimension than ... [will] be consistent with existing conditions, use, and character of the area.” Further, we construe the adjective “consistent” as the word is used in the context of section 13(F)(4) to mean “not conflicting or interfering with,” so that the second dimensional requirement of the section is that the proposed wharf may not be so large that it conflicts or interferes with existing conditions, use, and character of the area that would be affected by the wharf. With that limiting construction of the section, the Lentines and other applicants for wharf permits are able reasonably to determine their rights thereunder, and the determination of those rights is not left to the purely arbitrary discretion of the Town’s zoning boards. Rather, section 13(F)(4) spells out constitutionally adequate standards to guide the zoning boards in their decisions on applications for wharf permits.

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Bluebook (online)
599 A.2d 76, 1991 Me. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lentine-v-town-of-st-george-me-1991.