Life of the Land, Inc. v. West Beach Development Corp.

631 P.2d 588, 63 Haw. 529, 1981 Haw. LEXIS 116
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1981
DocketNO. 6905; CIVIL NO. 52646
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 631 P.2d 588 (Life of the Land, Inc. v. West Beach Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Life of the Land, Inc. v. West Beach Development Corp., 631 P.2d 588, 63 Haw. 529, 1981 Haw. LEXIS 116 (haw 1981).

Opinion

*530 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LUM, J.

In these cross-appeals, we review a circuit court summary judgment granted to the Land Use Commission (Commission) against Life of the Land (LOL) upholding a decision of the Commission denying LOL intervention in a Commission hearing to consider a petition of West Beach Development Corporation (West Beach). West Beach had petitioned the Commission to reclassify the district boundary of lands belonging to West Beach in Ewa, Oahu, from agricultural to urban.

We also review the court’s denial of a motion by West Beach to dismiss LOL’s appeal to the circuit court on the ground that the appeal was not timely filed. We conclude that the motion for summary judgment was erroneously granted but conclude otherwise as to the motion to dismiss.

Accordingly, we reverse in part and affirm in part.

I.

On November 3, 1976, West Beach filed a petition with the Commission to reclassify West Beach’s lands from agricultural to urban in accordance with the Land Use Commission Act, chapter 205, Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS).

The Commission published a notice setting February 2, 1977 as the date of the hearing to consider the petition. This notice was published in a newspaper and was in full compliance with the Commission rules.

The record is undisputed that LOL did not file a petition of intervention within 15 days 1 after the notice. However, after publication, the Department of Planning and Economic Development requested additional time to prepare for the hearing. The Commission cancelled the February 2 hearing date and postponed it indefinitely.

The Commission thereafter decided on a new hearing date; it published a second public notice setting the new hearing date for April 12, some two months later. The second notice was silent *531 concerning the right to intervene and the right to have counsel present and, therefore, was not in full compliance with Commission’s Rule (LUC) 6-6(3).

On March 28, within fifteen days of publication of the second notice, LOL filed its petition to intervene. The Commission orally denied the petition as untimely because it was not filed within fifteen days of the first notice. It wasn’t until after the hearings on the West Beach application were completed that the Commission on August 16, 1977 filed a written order denying intervention.

On September 23,1977, LOL filed its appeal to the circuit court. The court’s decision thereafter became the basis for these cross-appeals in which two issues are framed: Whether LOL timely filed for intervention under LUC Rule 6-7(2) and whether LOL timely filed its appeal to the circuit court.

II.

Chapter 205, HRS, establishes the Land Use Commission and defines its substantive and procedural authority. The Commission, like other agencies in government, must comply with the Hawaii Administrative Procedure Act (HAPA), as enacted in HRS chapter 91. Town v. Land Use Commission, 55 Haw. 538, 545, 524 P.2d 84, 89 (1974).

Rules and procedures adopted by the Commission under its rule-making authority must ineluctably comport with the requirements of HAPA and chapter 205. In judging the validity of these rules and regulations, the only concern of the court is to ascertain whether the will of the legislature has been obeyed, Yakus v. United States, 321 U.S. 414, 425 (1943); such rules and regulations are subject to the same principles of construction as apply to the construction of statutes. Miller v. United States, 294 U.S. 435, 439 (1934), reh. denied, 294 U.S. 734 (1935).

To carry out the intent of the framers of an administrative rule or regulation, the court should harmonize the various provisions of such rule or regulation and give them effect, if possible, provided this may be done without violating constitutional and statutory provisions. Falotico v. Clauson, 192 Misc. 673, 81 N.Y.S.2d 788, 791 (1948).

*532 The position taken by the Commission is that LOL is not entitled to intervene because it failed to file for intervention within fifteen days of the first notice. We believe the answer to this problem can be found only by harmonizing the Commission’s rule with the various provisions of the statutory mandates.

LUC Rule 6-7 requires that a petition for intervention be filed “within fifteen (15) days after the notice of hearing is published in the newspaper” with “leave to intervene [to] be freely granted.”

Rule 3-1 (3) 2 allows a hearing to be postponed or continued after a hearing has begun. Nowhere in the rules is there specific coverage in a case where a hearing is cancelled and postponed indefinitely. In such situation there exists a void in the rules. On the other hand, LUC Rule l-4(l)(a) 3 requires the Commission to give “public notice of the date, time and place” for a regular, special or rescheduled hearing.

The meaning of “rescheduled hearing” under Rule l-4(l)(a) is patently ambiguous when applied to the present facts. Therefore, we need to determine whether a hearing rescheduled because it has been indefinitely postponed is a “rescheduled hearing” within the meaning of LUC Rule l-4(l)(a).

We note that the legislative policy manifested in the pertinent statutory enactments, HAPA and chapter 205, requires a high degree of openness in the conduct of Commission affairs, dictates strict time constraints, encourages broad public participation with intervention to be freely granted, and mandates content requisites and specificity in all notices to the public as to all intended business of the Commission affecting private and public rights. These enactments also exhibit a concern that all procedures for contested hearings be simple and straightforward, free from susceptibility to potential abuse, confusion and misunderstanding. *533 Ergo, we are required to hold that an indefinitely postponed hearing is a “rescheduled hearing” under LUC Rule l-4(l)(a), and, like a regular or special meeting, a “new notice” is required. The new notice must fully comply with LUC Rule 6-6(3). We ascribe to this conclusion as we believe it supports the policy exhorted by the legislature in its statutory enactments, and we also believe it supports LUC Rule 1-1, which requires that the rules be “construed to secure the just ... determination of every proceeding.”

Since we hold that a new notice is required, we obviously conclude that LOL filed within the 15-day requirement for intervention as prescribed by LUC Rule 6-7(2). The fact that LOL failed to file for intervention following the “first notice” is immaterial.

III.

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Bluebook (online)
631 P.2d 588, 63 Haw. 529, 1981 Haw. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/life-of-the-land-inc-v-west-beach-development-corp-haw-1981.