Novak v. Department of Environmental Protection

4 Mass. L. Rptr. 452
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1995
DocketNo. 942511
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Mass. L. Rptr. 452 (Novak v. Department of Environmental Protection) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Novak v. Department of Environmental Protection, 4 Mass. L. Rptr. 452 (Mass. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Sosman, J.

Plaintiffs Eugene Novak and Christine Florio brought the present action complaining of the decision of the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to reinstate the previously dismissed appeal of an Order of Conditions granted to the plaintiffs by the Conservation Commission of Newbury. DEP has moved to dismiss the action for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. For the reasons set forth below, the motion is denied, and plaintiffs are entitled to judgment in their favor declaring that the actions of DEP in continuing to process the appeal of the Novak/Florio project are beyond DEP’s authority.

Background

In April 1993, Novak and Florio sought approval from the Conservation Commission of Newbury to construct a residential dwelling at 58 Northern Boulevard on Plum Island. The residence was intended to be Novak’s and Florio’s home. As the project potentially affected a protected wetland resource, the Conservation Commission was either to issue an Order of Conditions ensuring compliance with DEP standards [453]*453or to prohibit the project altogether. On July 27, 1993, the Conservation Commission issued an Order of Conditions, which allowed Novak and Florio to proceed with the construction of their home with certain specified conditions.

Under its regulations, DEP has the authority, on its own initiative, to review the issuance of any Order of Conditions. DEP took no such action, thus signifying (albeit passively) that it was satisfied that the Order of Conditions as issued by the Conservation Commission satisfied DEP’s standards.

Edwin Furman, a neighbor who claims that the Novak/Florio home may adversely affect the dunes and expose his own beachfront property to storm damage, filed a Request for Superseding Order of Conditions with DEP on or about July 31, 1993. DEP regulations require that anyone seeking such review by DEP must send the applicant a copy of the Request (either by certified mail or by hand delivery) within ten days of the issuance of the Order of Conditions. 310 CMR lO.OS^Hd).1 Furman did not deliver or send a copy of his Request to Novak and Florio as required under the regulations, nor did he give them any notice that he had sought DEP review of their project.

Since 1988, DEP has had a written policy (Wetlands Protection Program Policy 88-4) under which failure to serve the applicant within the required time results in dismissal of the Request for Superseding Order. The reason for that policy was explained as follows:

At times, DEQE’s Regional Offices receive Requests for Superseding Orders of Conditions or Superseding Determinations of Applicability which contain no proof of service ... Of particular concern to the Department is the lack of notice to the applicant who, under 310 CMR 10.05(7)(k), may properly rely on the closure of the ten day regulatoiy appeal period as a signal to begin work in accordance with the Order of Conditions.
Confusion results when Requests for the Departmental action are filed, no notice is given to the applicant, and the applicant, in reliance on the finality of the Order of Conditions, goes forward. Heretofore, the Department’s Legal Office required a showing of harm on the applicant’s part before dismissing an appeal filed without the proper notice. When requested, this showing of prejudice has been uniformly provided by applicants.

Accordingly, the policy went on to provide:

The Legal Office will now presume that applicants have been prejudiced by the lack of notice. Requests for Superseding Orders or Superseding Determinations filed with the Regional Offices, and Requests for Adjudicatory Hearings filed with the Legal Office, submitted without proper service to the applicant, will now be dismissed for this procedural violation.

By statute and by regulation, DEP is to issue its Superseding Order, if any, within 70 days after the Request for Superseding Order is filed. G.L.c.131, §40; 310 CMR 10.05(7)(f). As of 70 days after the filing of Furman’s Request, Novak and Florio had still not been notified of the filing of Furman’s Request for Superseding Order.

In late November 1993, almost four months after Furman’s Request had been filed, Michael Turgeon of DEP’s Regional Office contacted the attorney for Novak and Florio by telephone and asked him if the applicants had ever received any notice of a Request for Superseding Order of Conditions on their project. Turgeon was advised that the applicants had not been served with any Request. This telephone inquiry in late November 1993 was the first time Novak and Florio had heard that any such Request for review of their project had been filed with DEP. In that same telephone conversation, Turgeon went on to explain DEP’s policy to dismiss any Request that had not been timely served on the applicant. Thus, simultaneous with the first notice to Novak/Florio of the filing of Furman’s Request for DEP review of their project came the information that Furman’s Request would be dismissed for lack of timely service.

On January 11, 1994, DEP sent a letter to Furman, with copy to Novak and Florio. That letter advised Fur-man that DEP had learned of his failure to serve the applicants in accordance with the regulations. It then went on to explain the consequences of failure to make timely service: “Unless it can be proven that a copy of your request was sent to the Department and the Applicant by certified mail within 10 business days of the issuance of the Order of Conditions the Department must dismiss your appeal." Furman was given until February 1, 1994 to “provide the Department with proof that your appeal was received by the Applicant within the timeframes described above.” In the absence of a response by February 1, “this letter will serve as notification that your appeal has been dismissed.”

On January 13, 1994, Furman wrote to DEP, with a copy to Novak and Florio. In that letter, Furman conceded that he had not sent the applicants any copy of his Request for Superseding Order. He contended, however, that he had not done so because DEP had failed to explain the requirement to him. Arguing that the failure to effect service was “not through negligence or neglect on my part but through a lack of explanation by the Department of Environmental Protection,” Furman asked that his Request for Superseding Order be reopened. He also enclosed with his letter a $100 check for the adjudicatory appeal filing fee.

On March 16, 1994, Mr. Turgeon of the DEP again contacted Novak and Florio’s attorney advising him that there was not yet any resolution of Furman’s January 13, 1994 request for an adjudicatory hearing and that, until there was a resolution, Novak and Florio were to cease work on the project. On March 22, 1994, DEP sent Novak and Florio a letter confirming in writing that they were to stop work on the project [454]*454pending resolution of Furman’s request for hearing. This contact from DEP in March 1994 was the first time Novak and Florio had been told that Furman’s appeal was still open and the first time they had been told that, due to his open appeal, they could not proceed with work on their house.2

On March 24, 1994, Novak and Florio filed an emergency motion to dismiss Furman’s appeal. That motion was followed by a letter, dated March 31, 1994, in which Novak and Florio advised DEP that the (unanticipated) imposition of the stop work order was a hardship on them, as work was already underway at the site.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Mass. L. Rptr. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novak-v-department-of-environmental-protection-masssuperct-1995.