Plourde v. Valley Sno-Riders, Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 18, 2002
DocketAROcv-02-007
StatusUnpublished

This text of Plourde v. Valley Sno-Riders, Inc. (Plourde v. Valley Sno-Riders, Inc.) 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
Plourde v. Valley Sno-Riders, Inc., (Me. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE AROOSTOOK,SS

ROBERT J. PLOURDE and CANDYCE C. PLOURDE Of Fort Kent PLAINTIFFS

VS.

VALLEY SNO-RIDERS, INC. A Maine corporation having an Office and place of business in Fort Kent.

DEFENDANT AND

FORT KENT SNOWMOBILE ASSOC. An unincorporated association in Fort Kent

GARY DUMOND and PAULINE DUMOND Of Fort Kent

DEFENDANTS AND

INHABITANTS OF THE TOWN OF FORT KENT, A municipal corporation Having an office and place of business In Fort Kent

STATE OF MAINE, DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION, An agency of the

State of Maine with an office and place of

Business in Augusta.

PARTIES IN INTEREST

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SUPERIOR COURT DOCKET NO. CARSC-CV-02-007 PR PISS / 2002

ORDER ON APPLICATION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION Pending before the court is the Plaintiffs Robert and Candyce Plourde’s application fora preliminary injunction pursuant to M.R.Civ. P. 65.' The Plourdes allege that the four named Defendants, jointly and severally, have created an intolerable nuisance in their neighborhood and they want it stopped. Specifically, the Plourdes allege that the Defendants (in particular Gary Dumond) have placed a variety of advertising and travel direction signs on the nearby snowmobile trail, known as the Heritage Trail. The signs invite snowmobilers using this major snowmobile trail to exit the trail and travel several hundred yards into downtown Fort Kent via St. Joseph St. to patronize local businesses. The Plourdes complain that these signs have promoted and encouraged a high volume of snowmobile traffic in this area and have effectivel y converted St. Joseph St. into the principal snowmobile access trail leading to downtown Fort Kent’. The Plourdes complain that by their actions, the Defendants have contributed to a seemingly endless stream of snowmobilers traveling back and forth in front of their home at all hours of the day and ni ght, creating loud noise, significant air pollution, and safety hazards.

The Plourdes reside at the northeast corner of St. Joseph St. in Fort Kent. The Defendants Gary and Pauline Dumond reside directly across the street at the northwest corner of St. Joseph St. The Dumonds own and operate a snowmobile sales and service

business at their home on St. Joseph St. This is a “grand fathered” commercial use in

"The Plaintiff and Defendants Valley Sno-Riders, Inc., and Gary Dumond and Pauline Dumond have also presented to the court their positions regarding the Plaintiffs request for a declaratory judgment interpreting 12 M.R.S.A.§ 7827 (23)(D) (1) and accordingly the court will deem count III of the complaint to have been tried to the court with the consent of the parties. The court’s judgment on this count is set forth herein.

* The Plaintiffs are particularly upset by this development because the Town of Fort Kent has recently considered exercising its authority to designate St. Joseph St. as a snowmobile access route pursuant to 12 M.R.S.A. § 7827 (23)(D)(7) and they declined to do so. what is otherwise a residential zone. The Dumonds also own the lot that abuts the Heritage Trail. Snowmobilers exiting the Heritage Trail at this point, do so by leaving the trail and going directly onto the Dumonds’ property. From there, they travel across the Dumonds’ parking lot; cross Pearl St and then proceed northerly down St.Joseph St.

The Plourdes argue that snowmobilers using St. Joseph St. in this fashion are not only creating a nuisance, they are violating 12 M.R.S.A.§7827 (23)(D)(1). The Dumonds (who took the lead in this litigation) contend that the statute permits the current snowmobile traffic on St. Joseph St. The statutory section at issue provides:

Properly registered snowmobiles may operate on a public way only the distance

necessary, but in no case to exceed 300 yards, on the extreme right of the traveled

way for the purpose of crossing, as directly as possible, a public way, sidewalk, or

culvert. 12 M.R.S.A. § 7827 (23)(D)(1)

The Dumonds argue that the court should be guided by past enforcement practices and construe the statute to allow snowmobile traffic on a public street from one point of lawful operation to another point of lawful operation, no more than 300 yards away. This construction would effectively legitimize all of the snowmobile traffic that lies at the heart of this dispute.

The Dumonds contend that there has been snowmobile traffic in this area and in particular over the northerly end of St. Joseph St. for nearly 25 years and certainly since Plourdes moved into their home in 1985. While the Dumonds dispute the Plourdes’ estimate of hundreds (and occasionally thousands) of snowmobiles using St. Joseph St., they do not dispute that over time, there has been a significant increase in the volume of

snowmobile traffic in the area in general including traffic on St. Joseph St. The Dumonds maintain that neither the noise nor the fumes are as offensive as described by the

Plourdes and that any safety hazards can be addressed by the exercise of ordinary care.

DISCUSSION: PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

The court must consider an application for a preliminary injunction according to

the provisions of M.R.Civ. P. 65 and according to established principles of law. At the

outset,

“it may be said that the attitude of our Maine court upon the subject of injunction is conservative. The writ of injunction is declared to be an extraordinary remedy only to be granted with utmost caution when justice urgently demands it and the remedies at law fail to meet the requirements of the case.” Bar Harbor Banking & Trust, Co, v. Alexander 411 A.2d 74 (Me 1980).

The Law Court has set forth the governing principles in Ingraham y. Univ. of Maine at

Qrono, 441 A.2d 691 (Me 1982) as follows:

Before granting a preliminary or permanent injunction, the court must find that four criteria are met:

1.

2.

That plaintiff will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted,

That such injury outweighs any harm which granting the injunctive relief would inflict on the defendant,

That plaintiff has exhibited a likelihood of success on the merits (at most, a probability; at least, a substantial possibility),

that the public interest will not be adversely affected by granting the injunction.

The Law Court has instructed that in cases where the requested preliminary

injunction has mandatory aspects, (i.e. requires a party to take affirmative steps such as in

the request now before the court) the moving party has a heightened burden of showing

“a clear likelihood of success on the merits not just a reasonable likelihood.” Dept.of

Env. Protection vs. Emerson 563 A.2d 762, 768 (Me 1989) In addition, the Law Court

t has said that these criteria are to be considered together rather than woodenly and in

isolation from one another. Id. 768.

The first of the four criteria requires a plaintiff to demonstrate “irreparable harm”. This can be achieved by demonstrating that the claimed injury is one for which there is no adequate remedy at law. Bar Harbor Banking at 79. Irreparable injury can be

demonstrated where the plaintiff is subject to repeated trespasses, to a continuing

nuisance or where he faces the prospect of a multiplicity of law suits in order to obtain

relief. Wilson v. Harrisburg et al. 107 Me 207,218 (1910).

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