Michaud v. City of Bangor

196 A.2d 106, 159 Me. 491, 1963 Me. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 20, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 196 A.2d 106 (Michaud v. City of Bangor) 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
Michaud v. City of Bangor, 196 A.2d 106, 159 Me. 491, 1963 Me. LEXIS 68 (Me. 1963).

Opinion

Marden, J.

On appeal from judgment entered upon verdict directed for the defendant.

*492 The City of Bangor, a municipal corporation, acting under its building code having to do with unsafe buildings, purported to condemn, as a nuisance, a building belonging to the plaintiffs. The city ordinance incorporates verbatim Sections 25-28, inclusive, of Chapter 141 of the Revised Statutes of 1954, Nuisances. The proceedings were instituted by the introduction of an order at the council meeting of the City of Bang'or held on September 25, 1961 which order called for an adjudication that the building belonging to the plaintiff, Ramie Michaud, “be a nuisance or dangerous and that the same should be demolished.” The order was tabled on September 25, 1961 and a hearing thereon assigned for the council meeting of October 23, 1961. Although the building inspector of the defendant city knew Ramie Michaud’s address by reason of Mr. Michaud’s having previously recorded it when he sought permission to tear down the building in question and although the identification of Delia R. Michaud as a joint owner was determinable by inquiry or examination of the records at the Registry of Deeds, notice of the October 23, 1961 meeting was given only by three successive weekly publications in the local newspaper. On October 23, 1961, no one appearing in opposition thereto, the City Council passed an order “that the building * * * owned by Mr. Ramie Michaud of 105 Pine Street, is adjudged to be a nuisance or dangerous and that the same should be demolished * * A copy of this order was delivered to Ramie Michaud on October 24, 1961, who sought no “appeal” provided for in the ordinance and statute referred to below. On April 4, 1962 the Chief of the Fire Department, who in return had received orders from the Building Inspector, after allegedly removing the contents of the building, burned the building.

Plaintiffs seek compensation for the building, for the destruction of grass and shrubbery incidental to the burning and for the value of personal property claimed to be within the building at the time of its incineration.

*493 At the close of the evidence, upon motion, a verdict was directed for the defendant from which the plaintiffs appeal.

The basis of the action resulting in the intentional destruction by fire of the plaintiffs’ building is the order introduced before the City Council on September 25, 1961, and passed on October 23, 1961 and we are faced first with the question of whether there were a valid determination of the character of the plaintiffs’ building as a nuisance upon which all subsequent action was premised. Section 25 of Chapter 141, R. S., 1954, incorporated in Chapter IX, Art. I, subsection 105 of the building code of the City of Bangor, provides, in its pertinent part, that when the municipal officers of a Town “after personal notice in writing to the owner of any burnt, dilapidated or dangerous building, or by publication in a newspaper in the same county, if any, 3 weeks successively, otherwise in the state paper, and after a hearing of the matter, adjudge the same to be a nuisance or dangerous, they may make and record an order prescribing what disposal shall be made thereof, * *

The sufficiency of the notice to the plaintiff owners by this publication is challenged as being insufficient within the requirements of the “due process” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and Section 6, Article 1, of our State Constitution. The cited section of our State Constitution guarantees to the citizen the right not to be deprived of his property “but by judgment of his peers, or the law of the land.” Bennett v. Davis, 90 Me. 102, 105, 37 A. 864. The terms “law of the land” and “due process of law” are constitutional terms and are identical in meaning. Jordan v. Gaines, 136 Me. 291, 8 A. (2nd) 585. Notice and opportunity for hearing are of the essence of due process of law. Randall v. Patch, 118 Me. 303, 305, 108 A. 97. Did the terms of Section 25, Chapter 141, R. S., 1954, which upon its face offers alternatively personal notice in writing to the owner of the building, or *494 notice by publication, meet in its publication provisions, the constitutional test of “due process”? The notice to which one is entitled under “the law of the land” as expressed in the Maine Constitution, and to constitute “due process” under the federal Constitution is notice that “is reasonably calculated to give him actual notice of the proceedings and an opportunity to be heard.” Milliken v. Meyer, 61 S. Ct. 339, 343 (under headnotes 6-10), rehearing denied, 61 S. Ct. 548; Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 70 S. Ct. 652, 657 (under headnote 8) ; Schroeder v. City of New York, 83 S. Ct. 279, 282 (under headnotes 2-4).

“The general rule that emerges from the Mullane case is that notice by publication is not enough with respect to a person whose name and address are known or very easily ascertainable and whose legally protected interests are directly affected by the proceedings in question.” Schroeder, supra.

The notice in the present case purporting to inform Ramie Michaud and Delia R. Michaud that one of their buildings was charged with being a nuisance and subject to demolition did not satisfy constitutional requirements and the determination of nuisance and danger attributable to the reference building, and that the same should be “demolished,” was a legal nullity. The reference ordinance of the City of Bangor and the statute incorporated therein (Sections 25-28, Chapter 141, R. S., 1954) must be read as requiring, within the circumstances of this case, personal notice to the building owners.

We have at this point a vote by the City Council of Bangor to do an illegal act, which act was executed by the city building inspector and the city fire department.

The act of demolition, properly premised, was within the ordinant power of the city and was, therefore, not ultra vires, McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, 2nd Ed. 1947, Vol. 6, § 2808, Bator et al. v. Ford Motor Co., 257 N. W. 906, *495 913 (under headnotes 6, 7) (Mich. 1934), Hathaway v. Osborne, 55 A. 700 (R. I., 1903), — with resultant non-liability. Seele v. Deering, 79 Me. 343, 347, 10 A. 45, and Wilde v. Madison, 145 Me. 83, 91, 72 A. (2nd) 635.

What, then, of the relation, under these circumstances, of the building inspector, personnel of the fire department, and the City of Bangor? The participation by the building inspector and members of the fire department, upon the record before us (absent the City Charter), was not within the scope of their duties as public officers in their respective capacities.

The provisions of the statute (Sections 10-19, inclusive, Chapter 97, R.

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Bluebook (online)
196 A.2d 106, 159 Me. 491, 1963 Me. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michaud-v-city-of-bangor-me-1963.