McBreairty v. Town of Greenville

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJune 20, 2000
DocketPISap-99-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of McBreairty v. Town of Greenville (McBreairty v. Town of Greenville) 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
McBreairty v. Town of Greenville, (Me. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

> STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

PISCATAQUIS, SS. ons Docket No. AP-99-8 , BONEL LBL CARGRECHT JLH-Pis- b [pelscee . : LAY RAR ay Niles McBreairty et al., *) - Plaintiffs *) UN 23 000 ) ) Vv i). ORDER ON APPEAL (Count 1) ) ) Town of Greenville, ) Defendant )

Pending before the court is the plaintiffs' appeal, pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 80B, of the defendant's denial of their application to eliminate a requirement that a portion of a subdivision road be paved. The plaintiffs’ complaint sets out other claims for relief against the defendant. Those

> claims are subject to a separate scheduling order and are not addressed here.

In 1989, the plaintiffs. sought approval from the Greenville Planning Board ("the board") for creation of a subdivision. The proposed plan expressly provided that the main road through the development would be "28' WIDE (INCLUDING SHOULDERS) AND PAVED 1,300' FROM LILY BAY ROAD." The plan also pictorially depicted a "typical roadway cross section," demonstrating the nature of the construction for both paved and gravel sections of road. In March 1989, the board made an endorsement on that written plan, that "the subdivision shown by this plan meets all the criteria set forth and therefore the subdivision is approved." (Emphasis added.) The minutes of the board's March meeting reflect that a board member

moved to "accept plan as filed." (Emphasis added.) That motion was

D RECEIVED & FILED

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PISCATAQUIS COUNTY — Clerk's Office approved unanimously. No appeal was filed from the board's action. It thus became final. See Crosby v. Town of Belgrade, 562 A.2d 1228, 1230 (Me. 1989).

In 1991, the plaintiff appears to have applied for a modification of

the 1989 plan. The proposed modification related only to the location of

the lots and the road that provided access to the lots within the subdivision. The board approved that modification in 1991, although the resulting permit itself may not have been issued until 1993. See R.8. As far as the present record reveals, the application and proposed plan submitted in 1991 or 1993 provide no information about the nature of the road's surface: that material does not provide either a written or schematic description of the road, as is found in the 1989 application. Further, there is nothing in the present record to suggest that the plaintiffs otherwise raised an issue in 1991 or 1993 about the surface of the road.

In 1999, the plaintiffs submitted an application to further "modify" the subdivision plan, to eliminate the condition that a portion of the road be paved. Plaintiffs' counsel noted in a letter to the board that the 1989 application had included a proposal for pavement over a part of the road because of an "oversight" by the plaintiffs’ engineers. At a November 1999 meeting, the board reviewed the application and concluded that the plaintiffs had "offered no new substantial evidence to the Board that convinced the Board that the paving condition should be removed from the approved subdivision.” From this disposition, the plaintiffs filed a timely appeal.

The board's 1989 decision to approve the plaintiffs’ subdivision

application became final when none of the parties pursued an appeal. Thus, the question presented here is whether the board erred, not in its 1989 decision approving the subdivision, but in its 1999 decision that declined to remove the requirement that part of the subdivision road be paved. The plaintiffs contend here that the paving requirement did not constitute a condition of the 1989 subdivision approval and that the board exceeded its powers in imposing such a requirement in 1989.

First, the court concludes that the board in fact approved the subdivision application which included, as one of its elements, a paving condition. It was the plaintiffs themselves who incorporated that paving component into their overall proposal. In two ways, the written plan clearly manifested the plaintiffs’ evident intention to pave a portion of the road: the plan included a conspicuous written description of the location of the paved road, and the plan prominently included a schematic drawing of the construction of a paved roadway. See R.5. The board's notation on the plaintiffs' plan indicates its approval of "the subdivision shown by this plan. . . ." (Emphasis added.) Additionally, the minutes of the 1989 meeting reveal that the board accepted that proposal "as filed." (Emphasis added.) The plaintiffs argue that they are not subject to this requirement because the board did not independently make it an express condition of the approval. However, the board's approved the plan in the form submitted by the plaintiffs. In rendering that approval, the board conditioned its order on the plaintiffs’ compliance with all of the elements of that plan, including a partially paved road.

Further, the absence of any express reference to paving in the board's approval does not remove that requirement from the approved

plan. Here, the board did not impose any express conditions of approval. If the board's failure to make specific note of the paving requirement means that paving is not required, then the same can be said of any other component of the plaintiffs’ plan, and the plan and board's approval are rendered meaningless.

City of Portland v. Grace Baptist Church, 552 A.2d 533 (Me. 1988) does not lead to a different conclusion. There, the city contended that the church exceeded the terms of the plan it had approved when the church cleared a wooded area that the city characterized as "screening." The Court found that the wooded area was not necessarily "screening." Jd. at 535. Here, the pavement proposal was clear and unambiguous. Additionally, in City of Portland, the Law Court found that the plan itself did not clearly designate the location of areas designated for certain purposes. Here, however, the location of the paved road is expressly identified, and the plaintiff's own proposal provides detailed information about how that paved road would be constructed. Thus, the board's action here does not suffer from the lack of clarity noted by the Law Court in City of Portland.!

Thus, the court construes the 1989 subdivision approval as requiring the plaintiffs to comply with the plan as the plaintiffs themselves proposed it, in all respects. The board's approval was conditioned on the

requirement, proposed by the plaintiffs, that a section of the road be

1The terms of the board's approval of the subdivision is not unlike Justice Hornby's prediction that, in light of the majority's opinion in City of Portland, “planning boards will in the future presumably make all elements of a site plan express conditions of their approval.” 522 A.2d at 537 (Hornby, J., dissenting). In

effect, the board did that here: it adopted all of the components of the plan as conditions of approval.

paved.

Finally, because the board's 1989 action became final upon the absence of any appeal, the plaintiffs cannot now argue that the board was without authority to impose a paving requirement as a condition to subdivision approval.?

The entry will be:

Upon entry of a final judgment in this matter, on count 1 of the complaint the appeal is denied.

\ Dated: June 14, 2000 qilhw=

JUSTICE, SUPERIOR COURT

2The modification of the subdivision*plan in 1991 or 1993 cannot be fairly

treated as an elimination of the paving requirement.

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Related

City of Portland v. Grace Baptist Church
552 A.2d 533 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1988)
Crosby v. Town of Belgrade
562 A.2d 1228 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1989)

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