Planning Bd. of Town of Naples v. Michaud

444 A.2d 40, 1982 Me. LEXIS 647
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 15, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 444 A.2d 40 (Planning Bd. of Town of Naples v. Michaud) 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
Planning Bd. of Town of Naples v. Michaud, 444 A.2d 40, 1982 Me. LEXIS 647 (Me. 1982).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

In the Superior Court (Cumberland County) the Planning Board of the Town of Naples has obtained a permanent injunction prohibiting defendant Michaud from selling any more fee simple interests in his campground, the Birch Point Colony Club, until he complies with the requirements of the subdivision statute, 30 M.R.S.A. § 4956 (1978 & Supp.1980). Michaud appeals, arguing that his plan of selling interests in his campground is not a subdivision within the meaning of the statute; and that if it is a subdivision, it is exempt from regulation by the operation of the “grandfather clause,” 30 M.R.S.A. § 4956(5). We deny the appeal.

The Superior Court based its decision that Michaud’s plan of selling interests in his campground was a subdivision on a set of stipulated facts and on the testimony of Michaud’s agent, Wayne D. Wilkinson. The Birch Point camping area, located on Long Lake in Naples, has been operated since about 1964 as a seasonal campground. Occupying about 8.5 acres, it was and is licensed by the Maine Department of Human Services for 80 campsites. The campground consists of common areas — roads, restrooms, a lodge, etc. — and a number of campsites, at present fewer than 80. Each campsite has hookup facilities for water, sewage, and electricity, and is identified by a small numbered sign on a tree near those facilities. There are no marked divisions or defined boundaries between the campsites. Although a map of the campground prepared by its previous owners does show boundaries between the campsites, this map does not purport to be to scale, and it is not claimed that the boundaries shown on it correspond to any physical boundaries on the face of the earth.

On the record, it is not clear how the campground was operated by its former owners, but the parties assume, as do we, that it was operated in the same manner as the campground at issue in Town of Arundel v. Swain, Me., 374 A.2d 317 (1977): For a fee, a camper would occupy a campsite for “a period of one day, several days or a longer period.” Id. at 318. According to Michaud’s agent Wilkinson, the Birch Point camping area under the previous administration was open approximately from May 15 to October 15.

Defendant Michaud acquired the Birch Point campground in 1979 and has been selling interests in it as part of a scheme that he analogizes to a condominium conversion. Each interest is described as a common and undivided l/80th interest in the campground with a right to use the facilities at a particular designated campsite. The fee simple deeds conveying these interests are by their express terms made subject to a Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions, which states among other things: “The general location of camping facilities will be from time to time designated by the Declarant [Michaud] but there shall be no specific boundaries.” Wilkinson testified that the purchaser of an interest in the campground chooses his campsite at the time of purchase and that the campsites vary in price from $7,900 to $17,900, with the most expensive being those on the lake. The covenants and restrictions require that purchasers maintain a permanent residence elsewhere, that they keep at the campsite only a recreational vehicle (in mobile condition) with accessory tents and other paraphernalia, and" that they erect no permanent structures other than a tent pad, fireplace, and the like. Michaud has sold eight fee simple interests and has ten more buyers lined up. He has not, however, applied for approval under the subdivision law.

*42 The Superior Court found that purchasers acquired the perpetual right to exclusive use of particular campsites and were therefore persons whom the subdivision law was meant to protect; that since the use was not necessarily seasonal, the Town of Naples had an interest in planned community growth; and that the boundaries of the campsites were judicially ascertainable. The Superior Court concluded that Mi-chaud’s scheme to sell interests in the Birch Point campground constituted a subdivision within the meaning of 30 M.R.S.A. § 4956.

I.

The statute defines a subdivision as “the division of a tract or parcel of land into 3 or more lots within any 5-year period . . . whether accomplished by sale, lease, development, buildings or otherwise .... ” 30 M.R.S.A. § 4956(1).. We hold, as did the Superior Court, that Michaud, by selling more than two undivided interests in his Birch Point Colony Club along with exclusive rights to identified campsites, made a “division of a tract or parcel of land into 3 or more lots within [a] 5-year period” and became subject to the requirements of the subdivision law for municipal approval. Id., § 4956(4).

Both parties agree that the critical case on the issue of whether the Birch Point Colony Club is a subdivision is Town of Arundel v. Swain, supra, in which we held that a campground physically similar to Mi-chaud’s was not a subdivision within the meaning of the statute. We interpreted the subdivision statute as being activated only by the splitting off of a real estate interest of greater dignity than the interest a transient camper has in his campsite. We said:

[I]t is our judgment that when the statute speaks of a “division,” it contemplates the splitting off of an interest in land and the creation, by means of one of the various disposition modes recited in § 4956 [“sale, lease, development, buildings or otherwise”], of an interest in another. This does not happen when a camper temporarily occupies a campsite.
Here, a single tract of land is involved, whether before or after its use as a campground. The situation is akin to the renting or occupying of space in an exhibition hall, a parking lot, or a drive-in theater. Of course, in all of these situations, land is somewhat parceled off, each customer being given a certain space to occupy for a certain period of time. But in our opinion this is not the type of “division” into “lots” which the legislature intended to regulate when it enacted § 4956.

374 A.2d at 320 (emphasis in original).

Plainly the key fact in Swain was the tenuous connection between the campers and the campsites they occupied. The facts of the case at bar are much different, and the reasoning of Swain leads us to the opposite conclusion. Purchasers of interests in the Birch Point Colony Club make a substantial investment and acquire a fee simple interest of perpetual duration. Although the Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions is drafted to suggest that Mi-chaud may from time to time move his purchasers from one campsite to another— so he now argues to us — the evidence supports the Superior Court’s finding that in reality a purchaser acquires an indefinite interest in a particular campsite: The purchaser chooses his campsite at the time of purchase and pays a price for it that varies by as much as $10,000 depending on the campsite’s location. Further, although the stipulation of facts says only that the purchaser receives the right to exclusive use of the “facilities” at his campsite (a term that, as used in the stipulation, apparently refers only to the campsite hookups for water, sewage, and electricity), it is plain that the purchaser receives exclusive use of a broader area surrounding the facilities as well.

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Bluebook (online)
444 A.2d 40, 1982 Me. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planning-bd-of-town-of-naples-v-michaud-me-1982.