Maine School Administrative District No. 6 v. Inhabitants of the Town of the Frye Island

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedApril 30, 2019
DocketCUMcv-18-008
StatusUnpublished

This text of Maine School Administrative District No. 6 v. Inhabitants of the Town of the Frye Island (Maine School Administrative District No. 6 v. Inhabitants of the Town of the Frye Island) 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
Maine School Administrative District No. 6 v. Inhabitants of the Town of the Frye Island, (Me. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

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STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-18-008

MAINE SCHOOL ADMINISTRATIVE DISTRICT NO. 6,

Plaintiff v. ORDER

i....: ~ .,_= ,_ .. \.. INHABITANTS OF THE TOWN OF FRYE ISLAND,

Defendant

Before the court are cross motions for summary judgment by defendant Town of Frye

Island and plaintiff Maine School Administrative District No. 6. Intervenors James Hodge and Ed

Rogers join in Frye Island's motions. 1

As the court has previously noted, this case involves the latest chapter of a two decades­

long dispute relating to Frye Island's attempt to withdraw from MSAD 6. This dispute was

previously the subject of litigation a decade ago. See Town ofFrye Island v. State, 2008 ME 27,

940 A.2d 1065.

The background to this action, as set forth in the Law Court's 2008 decision, is that Frye

Island is a summer community that shuts down from November through April every year. 2008

ME 27 ,r 2. Although a member of MSAD 6, Frye Island has no school age children who reside on

the island during the school year and no residents of the island have ever attended MSAD 6

1 Frye Island originally filed a motion for summary judgment on counts 1 of its counterclaim. MSAD 6 then filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the two counts in the complaint and on all three counts in Frye Island's counterclaim. In response Frye Island then moved for summary judgment on both counts in the complaint and on the remaining counts in its counterclaim.

Plaintiff-Melissa Hewey, Esq. Defendant and lntervenors-Eric Wycoff, Esq. ,.­ (

schools. Id. As a result, Frye Island is seeking to be relieved from contributing to MSAD 6's

finances.

Factual and Statutory Background

The facts, as derived from Frye Island' s uncontroverted statement of material facts and

from the relevant statutes, are undisputed. 2

Prior to 1997 Frye Island was part of the Town of Standish. In 1997 Frye Island sought to

secede from Standish and become an independent municipality. A memorandum of understanding

was reached between Frye Island and Standish in which Standish agreed to remain neutral

regarding proposed legislation allowing Frye Island to secede so long as, among other conditions,

Frye Island remained part ofMSAD 6 and continued to contribute to its support. The memorandum

provided that the bill of secession adequately addressed this condition. See Frye Island SMF ,r,r 1­

2; Exhibit A to Braun affidavit; 2008 ME 2713.

The Legislature thereafter enacted the bill of secession as private and special legislation.

P. & S. L. 1997, ch. 41 ("Secession Law"). That statute included a provision that Frye Island

"remains in School Administrative District 6 or its successor and pays its proportional share of

costs, unless or until such time as it withdraws from the school administrative district in accordance

with applicable ~tate law." Id. § A-8.

Secession was approved by a majority of Frye Island voters and took effect on July 1, 1998.

Frye Island SMF ,r 3; P & S. L. 1997, ch. 41 § A-3.

2 Both parties have also referred to legislative history, which is a matter of law that can be considered by the court and does not have to be set forth in a statement of material fact. Wawenock LLC v. Department of Transportation, 2018 ME 83 ,r 13 n.7, 187 A.3d 609.

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Thereafter Frye Island adopted a charter effective January 1, 1999 which created and

defined its municipal government. Frye Island SMF ,-r 12. Article IV of the charter contained

language consistent with section A-8 of the Secession Law, stating that Frye Island would remain

in MSAD 6 and pay its proportional share of the costs "unless or until such time as it withdraws

from the school administrative district in accordance with applicable state law." Frye Island SMF

,-r 16; Exhibit B to Braun Affidavit.

In 2000 Frye Island residents voted unanimously to withdraw from MSAD 6 pursuant to

the provisions of then-existing 20-A M.R.S . § 1405. Frye Island SMF ,-r 17.

In response, the Legislature passed, as emergency legislation, "An Act to Clarify the Act

of Separation of Frye Island from the Town of Standish." P & S.L. 2001, ch. 8, alternatively

referred to as L.D. 500. See Town ofFrye Island v. State, 2008 ME 27 ,-r 6.

L.D. 500 amended P.& S.L. 1997, ch. 41 § A-8 by restating that Frye Island would remain

in MSAD 6 and pay its proportional share of costs and deleting the words "unless or until such

time as it withdraws from the school administrative district in accordance with applicable state

law." It further amended P.& S.L. 1997, ch. 41 by adding the following provision:

Authorization required. Notwithstanding any withdrawal proceedings initiated or completed pursuant to the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 20-A, section 1405 prior to the effective date of this section, or any subsequent action taken by the Town of Frye Island, the Town of Frye Island is a part of and may not withdraw from School Administrative District 6 or its successor unless such withdrawal is first authorized by further amendment to this chapter.

P & S.L. 2001, ch. 8 § 2.

In 2004 the Legislature established a new formula for allocating the cost of education

between municipalities according to the percentage of students from each municipality. Under this

formula Frye Island's contribution to MSAD 6 would have been reduced to zero. 2008 ME 27 ,-r

3 (

7. In early 2005, however, as part of legislation addressing education financing the Legislature

enacted a provision expressly exempting municipalities in MSAD 6 and MSAD 44 from the new

cost allocation formula. P.L. 2005 ch. 2, § D-69.

In 2005 Frye Island filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of both L. D. 500 and

the legislation exempting MSAD 6 from the new cost allocation formula. The SuperiOr Court

(Delahanty, J.) decided the case on an agreed statement of facts and rejected the various

constitutional challenges raised by Frye Island. Town ofFrye Island v. State, No. CV-05-712, 2007

Me. Super. LEXIS 124 (June 28, 2007).

Frye Island appealed. Because the statute addressing withdrawal from school districts, 20­

A M.R.S. § 1405, had been repealed in the meantime, the Law Court decided that Frye Island's

constitutional challenges to L.D. 500 were moot. At the same time it affirmed the decision below

in rejecting Frye Island's constitutional challenges to the statutory exemption of MSAD 6 from

the new formula for educational cost allocation. Town ofFrye Island v. State, 2007 ME 27 ,r,r 11­

12, 13-17 & n.4.

In 2009 the Legislature enacted a new statutory process for municipalities to withdraw

from school administrative districts. P.L. 2009, ch. 590 § 9, codified at 20-A M.R.S. § 1466.

In October 2017 the residents of Frye Island voted in favor of filing a petition for Frye

Island's withdrawal from MSAD 6 pursuant to 20-A M.R.S. § 1466. Frye Island SMF ,r 17. In

January 2018 the municipal officers of Frye Island ordered a special election on a proposed

amendment to Article IV of Frye Island's charter. Frye Island SMF ,r 22. That amendment passed

on February 24, 2018. Frye Island SMF ,r,r 28-19.

As amended on February 24, 2018, Frye Island's charter now reads in pertinent part:

Preamble to Article IV. This Article addresses the circumstances of Frye Island's students. It is impractical to send those students to

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