Pfeiffer v. Inh. Town of Old Orchard Beach
This text of Pfeiffer v. Inh. Town of Old Orchard Beach (Pfeiffer v. Inh. Town of Old Orchard Beach) 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.
Opinion
STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION YORK, ss. DOCKET NO. AP-12-0]2 "'lf' ,Joo ·. ··.'- ,.. :"' - /'' '" ~ ' - j' '-.
EILEEN PFEIFFER,
Plaintiff
v. ORDER
INH. TOWN OF OLD ORCHARD BEACH
and
THOMAS HICKEY,
Defendants
Eileen Pfeiffer is the owner of the 8,524 square feet Lot 2 in the Ocean Fairways
subdivision in Old Orchard Beach. The defendant Thomas Hickey is the owner of
abutting Lot 8. Mr. Hickey applied for variance from the Old Orchard Beach Zoning
Board of Appeals seeking "reinstatement of buildable status of lot." After a hearing
his request was granted. Ms. Pfeiffer has appealed that decision to this Court. The
appeal has been briefed and argued.
Mr. Hickey acquired his lot in October of 2007, see Book 15288, Page 678. The
lot is listed as having an area of 13,328 square feet, which is below the required
minimum lot size of 20,000 square feet for the R2 zone where the property is located.
Pursuant to state law a zoning board of appeals " ... may grant a variance only
when strict application of the ordinance to the petitioner and the petitioner's property
would cause undue hardship. The term 'undue hardship' as used in this subsection
means: A. The land in question can not yield a reasonable return unless a variance is granted;
B. The need for a variance is due to the unique circumstances of the property and not to the general conditions in the neighborhood;
C. The granting of a variance will not alter the essential character of the locality; and
D. The hardship is not the result of action taken by the applicant or a prior owner."
See 30-A M.R.S.A. §4353(4). Also see Section 78.1 of the Old Orchard Beach Zoning
Ordinance.
In this case there is no dispute that the first three requirements have been met.
The issue on appeal is whether Mr. Hickey, as the applicant for the variance, has met
the fourth requirement.
Old Orchard Beach, like many municipalities, has a merger provision in its land
use or zoning ordinance, see Section 78-145 of the Zoning Ordinance which acts to
merge substandard lots in common ownership to produce a lot or lots that meet the
Town's requirements. This case involves the intersection of the merger provision with
the variance requirement that the hardship, of a too small lot, not be the result of action
taken by the applicant or a prior owner.
In 1986 the Old Orchard Beach Planning Board granted subdivision approval.
The lots were of modest size. In June of 1987 what is now the plaintiff's lot (Lot 2) was
conveyed from the developer to Gerald Nadeau and Elizabeth Nadeau. In August of
1994 the Nadeaus purchased what is now the defendant's lot (Lot 8). However
effective in September of 2001 the Town of Old Orchard Beach revised its zoning
ordinance by adding Section 78-145 entitled merger of lots. That amendment required
lots 2 and 8 to be combined into one lot to meet the lot area requirements of the zone.
Lot 2 already had a year round home while Lot 8 was and remains unimproved. The
2 ordinance stated that, II • • • no portion of the lots so merged which does not meet the lot
area and lot frontage requirements of this chapter may be built upon or may be sold if
such sale would result in separate ownership of the nonconforming portion."
Despite the merger provisions the estate of Elizabeth Nadeau separately sold
Lots 2 and 8. Lot 8 was sold in June of 2007 to a Thomas Groves who in tum sold it to
Thomas Hickey in October of 2007. Those sales should not have taken place. The
question is whether a variance should have been granted when the hardship was
created by the actions of prior owners selling a lot that could not and should not have
been sold.
In Twigg v. Town of Kennebunk, 662 A.2d 914 (Me. 1995) the Law Court
comprehensively examined the law concerning self-created hardships in the context of a
request for a variance. The Law Court held, at 918, II • • • that actual or constructive
knowledge of the zoning ordinances prior to purchase of the property may be
considered by the Board as a factor in evaluating self-created hardship, but is not
determinative of such hardship." Also see Rochelau v. Town of Greene, 1998 ME 59, 708 A.2d 660,2 (Me. 1998). Here Mr. Hickey had no actual knowledge of the merger provision or the impropriety of the sales of a portion of a merged lot. He had even received indirectly incorrect advice from a town official that his lot was buildable. Twigg and Rocheleau are clear that a person is not precluded from seeking a variance just by purchasing a substandard lot where the person has actual or constructive knowledge that a variance is needed. Mr. Hickey's case is different though. The town ordinance effectively took two lots, both of which were too small, and created one which had sufficient lot size. The ordinance prohibited the separation of and resale of the merged lots. It is the sales, by prior owners, which created the 3 hardshlp. A person cannot defeat the merger provisions by ignoring them and selling a portion of a merger parcel. The hardshlp was created, not by the purchase of a substandard lot, whlch needed a variance, but rather by the sale of a portion of a merged lot. The Zoning Board of Appeals was understandably sympathetic to Mr. Hickey who spent some $75,000 buying what he thought was a buildable lot. A purpose of the zoning laws and the purpose of the merger provision is to bring non-conforming lots into conformity. A variance in thls case defeats that goal. The Zoning Board of Appeals was in error in granting the variance. It is correct that Ms. Pfeiffer is a successor in interest to the entity that created the hardship. She, however, did not create the hardshlp by selling the unimproved merged portions of the lot and has the right to bring thls suit. The entry is: Decision of the Town of Old Orchard Beach Zoning Board of Appeals granting a variance to Thomas Hickey is reversed. Dated: July 5, 2012 Paul A. Fritzsche Justice, Superior Court Plaintiff's Attorney Attorney for Old Orchard Beach ALAN E. SHEPARD, ESQ. PHILIP SAUCIER SHEPARD & READ ROBERT CRAWFORD 93 MAIN S'FREET BERNSTEIN SHUR KENNEBUNK ME 04043 PO BOX 9729 PORTLAND ME 04104-5029 DAVID J JONES ESQ:for Thomas Hickey JENSEN BAIRD GARDNER & HENRY 11 MAIN ST SUITE 4 KENNEBUNK ME 04043
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