Tremblay v. Land Use Regulation Commission

2005 ME 110, 883 A.2d 901, 2005 Me. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 13, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2005 ME 110 (Tremblay v. Land Use Regulation Commission) 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
Tremblay v. Land Use Regulation Commission, 2005 ME 110, 883 A.2d 901, 2005 Me. LEXIS 119 (Me. 2005).

Opinion

SAUFLEY, C.J.

[¶ 1] Gabriel and Katherine Tremblay appeal from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (Kennebec County, Studstrup, J.) in which the court affirmed the decision of the Land Use Regulation Commission approving a six-lot subdivision on land owned by John Hofmann. The Tremblays, whose land abuts the Hofmann land, argue, inter alia, that LURC erred in approving the subdivision without considering the alleged earlier illegal subdivision of John Hofmann’s land. We affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] In May 2003, LURC granted John Hofinann’s application for subdivision ap *903 proval regarding land abutting Cupsuptic Lake in Oxford County. That approval followed almost twenty years of Hofmann’s ownership and transfers of land near and abutting the lake, primarily among family members.

[¶ 3] In 1984, Hofmann purchased a roughly seventeen-acre parcel of land (Parcel A) from the Oxford Paper Company on the southern tip of Pleasant Island Peninsula abutting Cupsuptic Lake. In 1985, he applied for and received LURC’s approval for an eleven-lot subdivision of that land. In February 1987, Hofmann purchased an eighty-two acre tract (Parcel B) abutting Parcel A, again from the Oxford Paper Company. The paper company also sold several lots on the peninsula to other people around this same time, including the Tremblays.

[¶ 4] In 1988 and 1989, LURC denied Hofmann’s applications for a zone change and a twenty-six-lot residential subdivision of Parcel B. LURC determined that the subdivision would have violated the zoning laws in effect at the time, and that Hof-mann had not adequately demonstrated a need for rezoning the parcel. Hofmann did not appeal from that denial.

[¶ 5] Hofmann made no further effort to obtain approval of the twenty-six-lot subdivision, but instead, in June 1989, he divided Parcel B into six separate lots, retaining one for himself, giving two to his wife, and giving one each to his three sons. In 1991, Hofmann conveyed a fifty-foot-wide road from Parcel B to the Pleasant Island Estates Association to be used as access to the Parcel A lots. When the road was challenged, LURC explicitly concluded that although the road cut through Parcel B, Hofmann had not illegally subdivided his land on Parcel B through that transaction.

[¶ 6] In March 1994, Hofmann purchased another eighty-four acres immediately north of Parcel B (Parcel C). In 1995, LURC approved his request to build another road, this time on Parcel C. In September 1997, Hofmann deeded over thirty acres of Parcel C to his wife. Around this time, Hofmann’s wife and sons began dividing their land into building lots and selling them, so that by 2000, at least fourteen separate parcels had been carved out of Parcels B and C.

[¶ 7] In 2001, LURC reclassified Hof-mann’s Cupsuptic Lake property from a Great Pond Protection Subdistrict and General Management Subdistrict to a Residential Recreation Development Subdis-trict as part of the “Rangeley Plan.” This plan made significant zoning changes in anticipation of increased residential growth in the Rangeley area. The zoning change reclassified the Hofmann property as falling within a zone where subdivisions are allowed, “reflecting its suitability [for] residential development.”

[¶ 8] In 2002, Hofmann’s wife received an advisory ruling from LURC regarding plans to develop her portion of Parcel C as well as the one in her name within Parcel B. This LURC ruling stated that she could legally subdivide both lots without LURC subdivision review and approval.

[¶ 9] Hofmann applied for the subdivision permit at issue here in 2002. In the application, he requested permission to subdivide approximately fifty-six acres of his property — the part of Parcel B still in his name and a portion of Parcel C that his wife deeded back to him — into a six-lot residential subdivision, with three lots in the Parcel B section and three in Parcel C. A seventh lot was to be retained by Hof-mann and an eighth lot was designated to remain as open space.

[¶10] LURC approved Hofmann’s subdivision application in May 2003. The abutters challenged the approval in part *904 based on their allegations of prior illegal land transactions by Hofmann. LURC’s fifteen-page decision addressed the allegations as follows:

The Commission makes note of the arguments of opponents to this project to the effect that some of the applicant’s prior land transactions in this area may have occurred in violation of the intent, if not the letter, of applicable subdivision requirements. On this issue, the Commission recognizes what is an ambiguous factual and legal history. However, what is clear is that this agency has been aware of this history for more than 10 years and has never taken a position that these prior transactions required a subdivision permit. To the contrary, this agency has taken actions in the past that implicitly acknowledge that it views these transactions as not creating a subdivision. It is also clear that an appropriate remedy for an unapproved subdivision, if any existed with regard to the property in question, would be for the owner to seek subdivision review and approval, and that is exactly what the applicant has done here.

(Emphasis added.)

[¶ 11] The Tremblays appealed from LURC’s decision to the Superior Court pursuant to 12 M.R.S.A. § 689 (2005) and M.R. Civ. P. 80C, primarily arguing that Hofmann’s prior intra-family transfers created an illegal subdivision that precluded LURC from approving the further subdivision of Hofmann’s land. The Tremblays also stated independent causes of action alleging public and private nuisance and seeking a declaratory judgment. The court affirmed the LURC decision and dismissed the Tremblays’ three independent causes of action. 1 This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

[¶ 12] The first question before us is whether LURC erred in rejecting the Tremblays’ factual assertions that the pri- or transfers of Hofmann’s land created one or more illegal subdivisions. Only if we conclude that LURC erred in that factual finding would we address the Tremblays’ second argument that the existence of a prior illegal subdivision of land prohibits, as a matter of law, the approval of a subsequent and otherwise valid subdivision application involving some of the same land. The Superior Court found no error in LURC’s factual finding that the prior transfers did not create any illegal subdivisions. We agree and thus do not reach the second issue.

[¶ 13] “When the Superior Court acts in an intermediate appellate capacity pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 80C, we review [the administrative] agency’s decision directly.” S.D. Warren Co. v. Bd. of Envtl. Prot., 2005 ME 27, ¶ 4, 868 A.2d 210, 213. We review the agency’s decision for legal errors, an unsustainable exercise of discretion, or unsupported findings of fact. Id.

[¶ 14] The Tremblays urged LURC to preclude Hofmann from receiving approval for his current subdivision application because, the Tremblays argued, the previous Hofmann transfers were undertaken to avoid subdivision review.

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Bluebook (online)
2005 ME 110, 883 A.2d 901, 2005 Me. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tremblay-v-land-use-regulation-commission-me-2005.