Murphy v. Town of Cape Elizabeth

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 3, 2014
DocketCUMap-13-67
StatusUnpublished

This text of Murphy v. Town of Cape Elizabeth (Murphy v. Town of Cape Elizabeth) 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
Murphy v. Town of Cape Elizabeth, (Me. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

EN IE RED AUG o 6 2914

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. AP-13-67 1D w-cum- 0'1-'0 2:J-l4- MAYNARD MURPHY, et al,

Plaintiffs

v. ORDER

STATE oF MAINE TOWN OF CAPE ELIZABETH, et al, Cumberland. ~.Clerk's Office Defendants JUL 0 0 2014

Before the court is an appeal by Maynard and Debor~,Q,~J~Ptwo September 24, 2013 decisions of the Cape Elizabeth Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA).

Before the ZBA the Murphys were seeking to challenge the issuance of a building

permit issued to Marshall Goldman and Pilot Point LLC for the construction of an

accessory structure consisting of ornamental outdoor granite steps on property owned

by Pilot Point LLC at 27 Pilot Point Road in Cape Elizabeth. 1 The Murphys were also

seeking to challenge a determination by the Code Enforcement Officer with respect to

the location of the boundary of the Shoreland Zoning District as it related to 27 Pilot

Point Road.

The two challenges are related because the Murphys' objection to the granite

steps is based on the theory that the addition of those steps results in a greater amount

of impervious surface than allowed under Shoreland Zoning. If the boundary as

determined by the Code Enforcement Officer is correct, however, it appears that this

challenge would fail.

The record indicates that Marshall Goldman owns Pilot Point LLC, which is the record owner of the property at 27 Pilot Point Road where Goldman resides. The Goldman property faces the ocean, and a paper street runs along the seaward boundary of the Goldman property. This is the second appeal brought by the Murphys. On the first appeal, the court

remanded for a de novo hearing. Murphy v. Goldman, AP-12-60 (order issued May 10,

2013). On the first appeal, the ZBA found that the Murphys had standing. ZBA Decision

of November 8, 2012 at 1.2

On remand the ZBA addressed the Murphys' appeals at a meeting on September

24, 2013. At that meeting the ZBA voted 3-3 on whether the Murphys had standing to

challenge the issuance of the building permit. Because the Murphys had the burden of

demonstrating standing, Nergaard v. Town of Westport Island, 2009 ME 56 <[ 14, 973 A.2d

735, the tie vote resulted in a finding against them on that issue. The ZBA then

unanimously voted that the Murphys did not have standing to challenge the

determination by the Code Enforcement Officer as to the boundary of the Shoreland

Zoning District.

Written notice as to both of those decisions was issued on October 22, 2013.

Standing

The Murphys' claim that they have standing as abutters who have made "a

reasonable allegation of a potential for particularized injury." Brooks v. Cumberland

Farms Inc., 1997 ME 203 <[ 10, 703 A.2d 844. The record reflects that the Murphy

property is diagonally across Pilot Point Road from the Goldman property, which is

probably sufficient for them to qualify as abutters for purposes of standing. See

2 The November 8, 2012 decision of the ZBA is contained in the record on the prior appeal. The record in the current appeal incorporates the prior record in AP-12-60 by reference. However, the clerk's office had not retained the record in AP-12-60 and once the absence of that record was noted, it took a considerable time for the parties to submit the missing material.

2 Harrington v. City of Biddeford, 583 A.2d 695, 696 (Me. 1990). The record reflects that the ZBA considered them to be abutters. R. Tab A.

As abutters - or as property owners in the immediate vicinity - the Murphys are

not required to show a high degree of proof of particularized injury. Forester v. City of

Westbrook, 604 A.2d 31, 32 (Me. 1992). A relatively minor adverse consequence is sufficient. Id. There is, however, considerable room to dispute that the Murphys have

made even "a reasonable allegation of a potential for particularized injury" or have

potentially shown even a relatively minor adverse consequence in this case.

While the Murphys contend that the granite steps have resulted in both an

aesthetic injury and a decrease in the value of their property, the record demonstrates

that the Murphys cannot see the granite steps from their property. R. Tab I, Tr. 24.3 The

Murphys' standing therefore depends on their claim of particularized injury with

respect to an easement arising from a deeded right of way that they possess "in

common with others" over the paper street that passes immediately in front of the

portion of the Goldman property where the granite steps are located.4

The right of way involves only access. The Murphys do not have a view

easement on the right of way. The granite steps do not impede access. As a result, the

Murphys' subjective claims that the granite steps adjacent to the right of way cause

aesthetic harm or somehow decrease the value of their property are not reasonable

allegations of particularized injury. However, as noted above, the Murphys also

contend that the impervious surface created by the granite steps, combined with other

:!. A photo of the granite steps that the Murphys are challenging, taken from the vicinity of the paper street, is included in the record at R. Tab 4. 4 The court assumes the existence of that right of way for purposes of this appeal but is not determining the respective rights of any party with respect to the right of way and is not determining the status of the paper street.

3 impervious surfaces on the Goldman property, exceed the permitted limit under

Shoreland Zoning. The Murphys' deeded right of way is downslope of the ornamental

steps. The potential for some environmental harm in _the vicinity of the right of way,

however slight, is sufficient to give the Murphys standing. See Sproul v. Town of Boothbay

Harbor, 2000 ME 30

Harrington v. City of Biddeford, 583 A.2d at 696.

It can be argued that since the Murphys' right of access over the undeveloped

paper street appears to be shared by all the other property owners in the subdivision,

the Murphys have no greater rights than any members of the public. If so, the Murphys

would lack standing under Nergaard v. Town of Westport Island, 2009 ME 56

However, the Murphys- albeit along with other property owners in the subdivision-

have rights that are distinct from those of the general public, and this appears to be

sufficient for purposes of standing. See id.

Pilot Point LLC argues that even if the Murphys have standing to challenge the

building permit, they do not have standing to challenge the Code Enforcement Officer's

boundary determination because the Zoning Ordinance provides that the "property

owner" may appeal a determination by the Code Enforcement Officer with respect to

the location of a zoning district boundary. Ordinance§ 19-2-4. However, the ordinance

does not say that only the property owner may appeal such a determination, and

section 19-5-3 of the ordinance allows an appeal by "any person" aggrieved by a

decision of the Code Enforcement Officer. As a result, the Murphys may challenge both

the building permit and the boundary determination. 5

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Related

Forester v. City of Westbrook
604 A.2d 31 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1992)
Harrington v. City of Biddeford
583 A.2d 695 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1990)
Brooks v. Cumberland Farms, Inc.
1997 ME 203 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1997)
Sproul v. Town of Boothbay Harbor
2000 ME 30 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2000)
Nergaard v. Town of Westport Island
2009 ME 56 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2009)

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