Woodward v. Town of Newfield
This text of 634 A.2d 1315 (Woodward v. Town of Newfield) 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.
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Douglas R. Woodward appeals from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (York County, Brennan, J.) affirming the decision of the Planning Board of the Town of Newfield (the “Board) denying his application for a conditional use permit pursuant to the Newfield Land Use and Zoning Ordinance (the “Ordinance”) to build and operate a gravel pit on his property. Because Woodward’s appeal from the Board’s decision was untimely, we vacate the judgment and remand with instructions to dismiss the appeal.
Woodward owns 300 acres of wooded land in the southeastern portion of Newfield. Approximately 140 acres of the parcel is within the “farm and forest” district of the Ordinance and is also part of a 2,500-acre pitch pine and scrub oak barren, an ecological community known as the Waterboro Barren, that environmentalists have described as the rarest and most threatened forest ecosystem in New England.
In October 1990 Woodward applied for a conditional use permit to construct and operate a gravel pit on five acres of land in the barren. On May 30, 1991, the Board held a public hearing at which Woodward presented evidence and materials in support of his application and various environmental groups offered testimony in opposition. On June 4, 1991, at a continuation of the public hearing and with Woodward’s attorney in attendance, the Board voted to deny the conditional use permit. On June 19, 1991, the Board issued its written decision which included findings of fact. On July 17, 1991, Woodward filed his appeal with the Superior Court.
Article VIII, § 2(C)(2) of the Ordinance provides that “an appeal may be taken within thirty (30) days after a decision is rendered.” 1 Woodward contends that the Board rendered its decision on June 19, when it issued its written notice of the decision and findings of fact. The Board maintains that the thirty-day appeal period commenced with the public vote on June 4.
[1317]*1317The Court has previously addressed this question in Vachon v. Town of Kennebunk, 499 A.2d 140 (Me.1985). Because we conclude that the Board rendered its decision when it cast its public vote on June 4, Woodward’s appeal, coming forty-three days later, is untimely. The Superior Court erred in entertaining his appeal on the merits.
The facts of Vachon parallel the facts here. At a public hearing on January 17, after hearing argument from Vachon’s attorney and others, the zoning board voted to revoke a land use permit previously issued to Va-chon. Vachon received written notice of the decision on January 24, and filed his appeal on February 23. The controlling statute in that case required that any appeal be taken within “30 days after the decision is rendered.” 30 M.R.S.A. § 2411(3)(F) (1978) (now 30-A M.R.S.A. § 2691(3)(G) (Pamph. 1992)).2 In vacating the judgment of the Superior Court, which had entertained Va-chon’s case on the merits, we held that the board “rendered” its decision within the meaning of § 2411(3)(F) when it east its public vote at its meeting on January 17,” and therefore Vachon’s appeal was untimely. Vachon, 499 A.2d at 141. We rejected Va-chon’s contention that the receipt of the notice of the decision triggered the start of the thirty-day period. In our opinion, we stated clearly:
The word “rendered” carries a facial connotation inconsistent with the passive receipt of notice of the decision by some unidentified third party. If the legislature indeed had intended to delay the start of the appeal period until the potential appellant had received notice of the zoning board’s decision, it almost certainly would not have picked the word “rendered.” Instead, it could very easily have said exactly what it meant by choosing the language it used for appeals from decisions of state administrative agencies: “within 30 days after receipt of notice” by the appealing party.
Id.
Woodward argues that the Ordinance’s requirement of written findings of fact makes Vachon inapposite. We disagree. Not only did the statute in Vachon require findings, neither that statute nor this Ordinance require that the findings be included in the written notice of decision.
Woodward also argues that Vachon is not controlling because the decisionmaker in that ease was a zoning board, not a planning board as here. We decline to cut such a nice distinction. The language is plain and our reasoning clear. The thirty-day appeal period commences when the Board takes its public vote “because that time is easily determined and precisely fixed and because all parties to the public proceeding will ordinarily know of the Board’s public vote at the time it is taken.” Vachon, 499 A.2d at 142.
Finally, Woodward argues that the time limit set forth in the Newfield ordinance is inapplicable because it is not a “time limit ... specified by statute” as required by Rule 80B(b). Woodward is mistaken. Section 4353(1) of Title 30-A provides for direct appeals from planning boards to the Superior Court as “provided by municipal ordinance.” 30-A M.R.S.A. 4353(1) (Pamph.1992). Therefore, the “time limit ... specified by statute” is the time limit set forth in the Newfield ordinance. Even if the statute did not incorporate the ordinance, the “notice” that starts the thirty-day limit within which an appeal pursuant to Rule 80B must be [1318]*1318taken need not be in writing. See Caron v. City of Auburn, 567 A.2d 66, 67 (Me.1989).
The entry is:
Judgment vacated. Remanded to the Superior Court with instructions to dismiss the appeal.
WATHEN, C.J., and ROBERTS, GLASSMAN and RUDMAN, JJ., concurring.
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634 A.2d 1315, 1993 Me. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-town-of-newfield-me-1993.