Allmaras v. The Board of Adjustment of Sussex County, Delaware ( 2019 )


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  • IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    Janice Allmaras,
    Joseph J. Rolla,
    Robert Viscount, > C.A. No. SI9A-06-001 CAK
    Petitioners,
    Vv.
    THE BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
    OF SUSSEX COUNTY, DELAWARE,
    Respondent.
    Submitted: October 23, 2019
    Decided: November 12, 2019
    Upon Motion to Dismiss
    GRANTED
    Upon Motion to Amend
    DENIED AS MOOT
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
    Joseph J. Rolla, self represented, 16863 N. Hunters Run, Lewes, DE 19958,
    Janice Allmaras, self represented, 33665 E. Hunters Run, Lewes, DE 1995 8,
    Robert Viscount, self represented, 33697 E. Hunters Run, Lewes, DE 19958,
    Petitioners.
    James P. Sharp, Esquire, Moore & Rutt, P.A., 122 W. Market Street, P.O. Box
    554, Georgetown, DE 19947, Attorney for Respondent.
    KARSNITZ, J.
    Respondent’s Motion to Dismiss and Petitioners’ Motion to Amend which
    are before me illustrate the tension between deciding cases on the merits, on the
    one hand, and strict adherence to what appear to be inviolable rules governing
    timing of appeals on the other hand. Self-represented Petitioners seek review of a
    decision of Respondent granting a Special Use Exception for a neighboring
    landowner (“Landowner”), allowing Landowner to operate a convalescent home.
    After a few false starts,' Appellants filed a petition for Writ of Certiorari
    naming only the Sussex County Board of Adjustment (the “Board”) as Respondent.
    The failure to name Landowner as an additional Respondent flies in the face of
    longstanding precedent requiring the landowner to be a party to the appeal. My
    view of Delaware black letter law as it has existed for years would require
    dismissal of an appeal if Landowner is not named as a party within thirty (30) days
    'On March 8, 2019, Petitioners filed a Petition for Writ of Certiorari, which was granted by this
    Court, but upon motion by Respondent, the appeal was denied without prejudice on May 17, 2019 as
    premature, since Petitioners had not exhausted their administrative remedies before the Board. On
    April 26, 2019, Petitioners filed a second Petition for Writ of Certiorari, which was granted by this
    Court, but the parties stipulated to a dismissal without prejudice on May 20, 2019, and this Court so
    ordered on May 21, 2019.
    * Hackett v. Board of Adjustment of the City of Rehoboth Beach, 
    794 A.2d 596
     (Del. 2002); Covey v.
    Board of Adjustment of Sussex County, 
    2002 WL 970469
     (Del. Super. May 7, 2002) (“It is well settled
    that all parties to an appeal who would be directly affected by an appellate ruling should be made
    parties to the review proceeding.... The rule is ‘a fundamental question of jurisdiction. which cannot
    be waived by the parties or disregarded by the appellate court, and the latter has no power to hear and
    determine a case unless all the parties directly affected by the judgment ... are brought before it.’ ””);
    CCS Investors, LLC v. Brown, 
    997 A.2d 301
     (Del. 2009): Schlosser & Dennis, LLC v, City of Newark
    Board of Adjustment, 
    2016 WL 2766119
     (Del. Super. May 9, 2016); see also Sussex Medical
    Investors, LP. y. Delaware Health Res. Bd., 
    19997 WL 524065
     (Del. Super. April 8. 1997).
    1
    of the Board's decision.’ But, as one Delaware Court has recently said, "not so
    fast".4
    Resourceful parties caught in this procedural pinch have resorted to Superior
    Court Civil Rule 15(c) to resuscitate an otherwise lifeless case. Anyone with a
    passing familiarity with Rule 15 knows that under appropriate circumstances it
    may be used to amend a pleading and have it "relate back" to the original filing
    date. The Rule has often been invoked to save claims from the fate of dismissal for
    failing to meet a statute of limitations time requirement.
    In DiFebo v. Board of Adjustment of New Castle County,’ our Supreme
    Court invited an examination of Rule 15's savings provisions in the very context
    at issue here.” To me, Rule 15 was designed with the typical civil lawsuit
    pleadings in mind. Nevertheless, on its face Rule 15 applies to all civil
    proceedings, including this appeal. Rule 15 has a number of requirements which
    I address in this opinion. To see if Rule 15 allows for the amendment to
    Petitioners’ petition, and if that amendment relates back to the initial filing which
    was within the statutorily mandated thirty days, read on.
    The facts pertinent to these motions are undisputed. Respondent granted
    3 Jd.. see 9 Del. C. §6918(a).
    * With thanks to Vice Chancellor Slights in PPL Corporation v. Riverstone Holdings, LLC, 
    2019 WL 5423306
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 23, 2019), and with apologies to Coach Lee Corso.
    °
    132 A. 3d 1154
     (Del. 2016).
    2
    the application for a special exception to allow operation of a convalescent
    home, nursing home, and/or home for the aged by decision dated February 5,
    2019. On February 11, 2019, Petitioners filed a request for re-hearing before
    the Board. On June 4, 2019, Respondent issued its Findings of Fact in support
    of its denial of Petitioners’ request for re-hearing. At that point, all proceedings
    before the Board had ended. On June 24, 2019, Petitioners filed the pending
    Petition for Writ of Certiorari (the “Petition’”) naming only the Board as a party
    Respondent. The Board responded by moving to dismiss that Petition.
    Petitioners initially argued they did not need to name Landowner as a party
    respondent because their complaints were with the Board's decision. They have
    now abandoned that position, and agree Landowner must be a party respondent.
    Observing Landowner’s due process rights requires its participation.
    Thus the sole issue is: can Petitioners now amend their Petition to add
    Landowner as a party, and have that amendment relate back to the time of their
    initial filing so as not to run afoul of the thirty-day period to file their appeal?
    9 Del. C. §6918(a) governs the filing of appeals from the Board, and
    reads in full:
    "Any persons jointly or severally aggrieved by
    a decision of the Board of Adjustment or any
    taxpayer or any officer, department, board or
    bureau of the County may present to the
    3
    Superior Court in and for Sussex County, a
    petition duly verified, setting forth that such
    decision is illegal in whole or in_ part,
    specifying the grounds of the illegality. The
    petition shall be presented to the Court within
    30 days after the filing of the decision in the
    office of the Board."
    Simply put, a person aggrieved by a decision of the Board has thirty days to
    perfect an appeal. All parties affected by the Board's ruling, including the
    landowner, must be a party to the appeal.® Delaware courts routinely held that
    the failure to timely join the landowner is a fatal jurisdiction defect.’
    Superior Court Civil Rule 15(c)(3) reads:
    "The amendment changes the party or
    the naming of the party against whom a
    claim is asserted if the foregoing
    provision (2) is satisfied and, within the
    period provided by statute or these Rules
    for service of the summons and
    complaint, the party to be brought in by
    amendment (A) has received such notice
    of the institution of the action that the
    party will not be prejudiced in
    maintaining a defense on the merits, and
    (B) knew or should have known that, but
    for a mistake concerning the identity of
    the proper party, the action would
    have been brought against the party.”
    [Emphasis supplied. ]
    °CCS Investors, LLC v. Brown, 
    977 A.2d 301
     (Del. 2009).
    ” Schlosser and Dennis, LLC v. Citv of Newark, 
    2016 WL 2766119
    . at *4 (Del. Super. May 9,
    2016).
    The three requirements of the Rule can be summarized as follows:
    (1) Theclaim asserted must arise from the same
    transaction; and,
    (2) Within in the period provided by statute or
    these Rules for service of the summons and
    complaint; and,
    (3) The party sought to be brought in
    (A) has received notice of the action and
    will not be prejudiced in maintaining
    a defense on the merits, and
    (B) knows or should know that, but for a
    mistake concerning the identity of
    the proper party, the action would
    have been brought against the party.
    The first requirement is obviously met. In my opinion, the second
    requirement has also been met. On this issue, Respondent argues that the Rule
    requires the unnamed party to be made a party within the thirty-day appeal period.
    However, the Rule has a conjunctive "or", and therefore includes either the
    statutory period (thirty days), or the period set forth in the Superior Court Civil
    Rules for service of the summons and complaint.* Superior Court Civil Rule A(j)
    ® See Generally Superior Court Civil Rule 4, and specifically Superior Court Civil Rule 4(j).
    5
    requires a complaint to be served within 120 days of filing. Here, Petitioners filed
    their Motion to Amend and gave Landowner actual notice within the 120-day
    period.
    With respect to the third requirement, Landowner received notice of the
    action, and apparently’ Landowner will not be prejudiced in maintaining a defense
    to the claim. However, I am left with the question of whether Landowner “knew
    or should have known” that it would have been named as a party. This first part of
    the third requirement is a virtual tautology -- Landowner actually knew of the
    appeal, and therefore must have known that it was a proper party to the appeal.
    Our Rule, however, requires more: that the unnamed party knew or should
    have known, but for a mistake concerning the identity of the proper party, it would
    have been named. If one looks at the issue of whether the unnamed party knew of
    the mistake from an objective viewpoint, it is also a tautology. Since Landowner
    actually knew of the appeal, Landowner should have known Petitioners made a
    mistake.
    But the Rule does not countenance just any mistake, but only a mistake
    concerning the identity of the proper party. This distinction lies at the heart of
    ” I describe the prejudice point in this way because I do not have Landowner before me to
    assert its position.
    6
    DiFebo;"° i.e., it is the type of mistake that governs whether Rule 15 affords relief.
    In DiFebo our Supreme Court acknowledged the longstanding Delaware precedent
    that in order to qualify for Rule 15(c) treatment:
    “{Delaware] courts generally decline to find a mistake
    when the plaintiff cannot demonstrate an intent to
    include the unnamed party before the limitations period
    expired but will find a mistake if the plaintiff intended to
    sue certain parties but was misled as to the identity of
    those parties. [Emphasis supplied.]!!
    Had the Court in DiFebo ended there, the decision here would be controlled
    by settled law. But in DiFebo the Court continued on to discuss Krupski v. Costa
    Crociere S. P.A.,'° in which the United States Supreme Court reviewed Federal Rule
    of Civil Procedure 15(c), which is identical to our Rule. DiFebo quoted the
    following language found in Krupski:
    "The reasonableness of the mistake is not
    itself at issue....[A] plaintiff might know
    that the prospective defendant exits but
    nonetheless harbor a misunderstanding
    about his status or role in the events
    giving rise to the claim at issue, and she
    may mistakenly choose to sue a different
    defendant based on that misimpression.
    That kind of deliberate but mistaken
    choice does not foreclose a finding that
    [Federal] Rule 15(c)(1)(C)(ii) has been
    
    19132 A.3d 1154
     (Del. 2016).
    
    132 A.3d 1154
    , at 1158 (Del. 2016).
    '2 
    560 U.S. 538
     (2010).
    satisfied."!5
    The Delaware Supreme Court in DiFebo ultimately determined that the
    "mistake" issue had not been raised at the Superior Court level, nor was it
    properly brieted in the Supreme Court, and thus "should not be decided in a case
    without fair presentation to the trial court.”'* The issue has been fairly presented
    to me.
    The answer lies as it always does within the express language of the Rule. It
    is not any mistake which warrants Rule 15(c) relief, but only a mistake concerming
    the identity of the proper party. I agree with and defer to the United States Supreme
    Court that the reasonableness of the mistake is not the issue. However, for me, and
    giving the language of the Rule a fair reading, a party seeking Rule 15(c) relief
    must still show a mistake as to the identity of the unnamed party. Here, there was
    not a mistake as to the identity of Landowner. Rather, Petitioners made a mistake
    as to whether or not the clearly identified Landowner had to be named as a party
    in the first instance. The issue was addressed in Vondrasek v. Board of Adjustment
    of the City of Wilmington.'? Ultimately, the Court in Vondrasék determined that
    DiFebo did not change Delaware law, and dismissed an appeal for failure to name
    '3 
    560 U.S. 538
    . at 549 (2010).
    \4 DiFebo, at 1159.
    'S 
    2017 WL 1735402
     (Del. Super., May 1. 2017).
    8
    the landowner as a party.
    In my opinion, Petitioners claims are not enough under Rule 15. I believe
    my decision squares with well-settled Delaware law, and is consistent with the
    Krupski view. 1 am also concerned that a contrary position would do violence to
    the legislative dictates of 9 De/. C. §6318.
    I am granting Respondent’s Motion to Dismiss and therefore denying
    Petitioners’ Motion to Amend as moot.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    2 sade
    ~ Sa Karsnitz ane
    cc: Prothonotary’s Office
    Self Represented Litigants
    James P. Sharp, Esquire
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S19A-06-001 CAK

Judges: Karsnitz J.

Filed Date: 11/12/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/12/2019