James Blanchard v. Town of Bar Harbor , 2019 ME 168 ( 2019 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                 Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2019 ME 168
    Docket:   BCD-19-12
    Argued:   October 7, 2019
    Decided:  December 19, 2019
    Panel:          SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.
    JAMES BLANCHARD et al.
    v.
    TOWN OF BAR HARBOR
    MEAD, J.
    [¶1]     James Blanchard and a number of other individuals1 whose
    properties have views overlooking the waters adjacent to the Town of
    Bar Harbor’s Ferry Terminal Property appeal from a judgment of the Business
    and Consumer Docket (Murphy, J.) in favor of the Town on appellants’
    complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that the Town’s Zoning Ordinance
    Amendment is invalid. Because we conclude that the property owners have
    failed to demonstrate a particularized injury and have commenced this action
    prematurely, we vacate the judgment on standing and ripeness grounds and
    1 William B. Ruger, Jr., Trustee of the 1999 William B. Ruger, Jr. Revocable Trust; Jonathan Eno
    and Karen Gilfillan; Arnold and Margaret Amstutz; Mark Brady; Douglas Denny-Brown and Andrea
    Denny-Brown; William and Weslie Janeway; Pamela McCullough; James Paterson and Patrice
    McCullough; Lawrence and Susan Stahlberg; William Clendaniel; Harold Clark; Wendy Gamble;
    Oakley and Frances Johnson; and Robert Worrell.
    2
    remand for dismissal without prejudice. As such, we do not reach the merits of
    the property owners’ claims that the Amendment is inconsistent with state law
    and that the court erred in deferring to the Department of Environmental
    Protection’s order approving the Amendment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] We draw the following facts from the parties’ stipulated record. See
    BCN Telecom, Inc. v. State Tax Assessor, 
    2016 ME 165
    , ¶ 3, 
    151 A.3d 497
    .
    [¶3] Pursuant to the Bar Harbor Town Charter, the Town Council placed
    a warrant article on a referendum ballot containing the Zoning Amendment
    (Article 12) and a competing measure (Article 13) to be addressed at a Town
    meeting on June 13, 2017. At that Town meeting, residents voted to pass the
    Zoning Amendment (Article 12) and rejected the competing measure
    (Article 13).
    [¶4] The Amendment changed the Town’s Land Use Ordinance in three
    ways: (1) it created a new “Shoreland Maritime Activities District” that would
    apply to the Ferry Terminal Property (Tax Map 231, Lot 004), (2) it added
    definitions for “passenger terminal” and “parking deck,” and (3) it amended the
    zoning map by applying the Shoreland Maritime Activities District to the Ferry
    Terminal Property. See Bar Harbor, Me., Land Use Ordinance §§ 129-49.3,
    3
    125-109 (June 13, 2017). The parties agree that the intent underlying the
    Amendment was to allow substantially larger cruise ships to use the
    Ferry Terminal Property.
    [¶5] On July 18, 2017, the Department of Environmental Protection
    (DEP) issued an order approving the Amendment.2 The property owners, who
    own real property in Bar Harbor, Sorrento, and Hancock, subsequently filed a
    complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that the Amendment was invalid.
    See 14 M.R.S. § 5954 (2018). The parties submitted the matter to the Business
    and Consumer Docket on agreed statements of fact. The BCD entered judgment
    for the Town, concluding that (1) the property owners’ declaratory judgment
    request presented “a genuine controversy ripe for judicial review,” (2) only the
    Bar Harbor property owners had standing to challenge the Amendment, (3) the
    Amendment was in harmony with the Town’s comprehensive plan, (4) the DEP
    order was entitled to “considerable deference,” and (5) the Amendment was
    not inconsistent with DEP regulations.
    [¶6] The property owners raise two arguments on appeal, see 14 M.R.S.
    § 5959 (2018): (1) the court erred in deferring to the DEP’s order, and (2) the
    2  Amendments to municipal ordinances are not effective unless they are approved by the DEP.
    See 38 M.R.S. § 438-A(3) (2018).
    4
    Amendment is inconsistent with state statutes and regulations. We conclude
    that the property owners lack standing to challenge the Town’s amendment of
    its Land Use Ordinance and that their claim is not ripe. Thus, we do not reach
    their substantive arguments. We vacate the court’s judgment and remand for
    entry of an order of dismissal without prejudice.
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶7] Our analysis begins by considering the threshold issues of standing
    and ripeness. Each presents a potential bar to action by us.
    A.    Standing
    [¶8] We review standing de novo as a question of law. JPMorgan Chase
    Bank v. Harp, 
    2011 ME 5
    , ¶ 7, 
    10 A.3d 718
    . In the trial court, the Town argued
    that the property owners in towns other than Bar Harbor lacked standing, and
    the court agreed. The trial court stopped short of denying standing to the
    Bar Harbor landowners, stating that the “Town implicitly concedes that this [is]
    a sufficient injury to confer standing on the four Plaintiffs who own property in
    Bar Harbor under Buck [v. Town of Yarmouth, 
    402 A.2d 860
    (Me. 1979)].”
    Because we may raise the issue of standing sua sponte, Collins v. State,
    
    2000 ME 85
    , ¶ 5, 
    750 A.2d 1257
    , we are not bound by the court’s conclusion
    5
    that the Town “implicitly concede[d]” that the Bar Harbor property owners
    have standing.
    [¶9] Our cases have allowed anticipatory declaratory judgment actions
    brought by “those persons engaged in a business directly affected by a statute.”
    James v. Inhabitants of the Town of W. Bath, 
    437 A.2d 863
    , 865 (Me. 1981)
    (emphasis added) (quotation marks omitted); see also Annable v. Bd. of Envtl.
    Prot., 
    507 A.2d 592
    , 593, 596 (Me. 1986) (concluding that, although there was
    not yet a “formal invocation of the licensing process . . . [nor] enforcement
    action,” the plaintiff, who had sought and received approval from the Town for
    multiple subdivision plans, was seeking a declaration of his own legal rights to
    build, “which [were] directly affected by [the statute]”).
    [¶10] Here, the property owners face no similar immediate threat to
    their own property or business interests, nor are their alleged interests
    captured under a different exception allowing anticipatory challenges. See, e.g.,
    
    James, 437 A.2d at 865
    (“[W]hen declaratory relief is available as a procedural
    matter, a person whose activities are regulated with the imposition of criminal
    penalties for failure to comply has standing to challenge such regulation and
    need not undergo a criminal prosecution before being able to seek relief.”
    6
    (emphasis added) (citing Planned Parenthood of Cent. Mo. v. Danforth,
    
    428 U.S. 52
    , 62 (1976); Doe v. Bolton, 
    410 U.S. 179
    , 188 (1973))).
    [¶11]     The property owners cite a number of other cases for the
    proposition that we allow challenges to a municipal ordinance even before the
    claimants have suffered harm, but in those cases, plaintiffs alleged a tangible
    and inevitable harm. In Ace Tire Co. v. Mun. Officers of City of Waterville, the
    plaintiff had paid the challenged annual license fees to the City under protest
    for years. 
    302 A.2d 90
    , 94 (Me. 1973). In Delogu v. City of Portland, the
    property-owning plaintiffs had standing as taxpayers to challenge a municipal
    property tax change. 
    2004 ME 18
    , ¶¶ 1, 8, 
    843 A.2d 33
    .
    [¶12]         The      property       owners        also     invoke       our     long-held
    preventive-remedial doctrine of standing to argue that their action is
    preventive in nature and thus they do not need to demonstrate a particularized
    injury.3     The preventive-remedial doctrine allows a plaintiff to sue a
    3At the outset, we note that standing and ripeness may be inextricably intertwined in this context.
    As we observed in Lehigh v. Pittston Co., tension exists between the preventive-remedial doctrine of
    standing, which encourages anticipatory challenges, and the doctrine of ripeness, “which mandates
    restraint.” 
    456 A.2d 355
    , 358 n.11 (Me. 1983). We have questioned the continuing validity of the
    preventive-remedial doctrine. See 
    id. However, we
    have continued to apply the doctrine in recent
    decisions, see Petrin v. Town of Scarborough, 
    2016 ME 136
    , ¶ 20, 
    147 A.3d 842
    , and we do not
    reconsider the doctrine’s viability in this opinion; see McCorkle v. Town of Falmouth, 
    529 A.2d 337
    ,
    338 n.2 (Me. 1987) (“Because we have no difficulty concluding here that the relief sought was
    preventive, we defer to another day acting upon the invitation . . . to reconsider the viability of the
    [doctrine].”).
    7
    municipality “to seek preventive relief against a threatened public wrong”
    without demonstrating a particularized injury. 
    Buck, 402 A.2d at 862
    . Where
    the relief sought is “remedial” rather than “preventive,” however, the plaintiff
    must demonstrate a particularized injury, in other words, an injury that does
    not affect all members of the town equally.          Id.; see Petrin v. Town of
    Scarborough, 
    2016 ME 136
    , ¶¶ 20-21, 
    147 A.3d 842
    ; Lehigh v. Pittston Co.,
    
    456 A.2d 355
    , 358 (Me. 1983). Where a citizen lacks a particularized injury, we
    have concluded that the Attorney General is a proper plaintiff to initiate an
    action against a municipality to remedy a public wrong. 
    Buck, 402 A.2d at 863
    (“Thus, denial of standing to plaintiffs does not leave the voters of the Town of
    Yarmouth without a remedy for a public wrong suffered by all voters equally, if
    any exists.”).
    [¶13] Because the property owners are seeking relief for a “wrong” that
    has already occurred, the enactment of the Amendment, we conclude that this
    case fits squarely within the line of cases in which plaintiffs have requested
    remedial relief. See 
    Lehigh, 456 A.2d at 359
    n.12 (collecting case law for actions
    deemed “remedial”); see also Petrin, 
    2016 ME 136
    , ¶ 20, 
    147 A.3d 842
    (relief
    from past tax assessments deemed “remedial”). Because they seek remedial
    relief, the property owners must show that they suffer a particularized injury.
    8
    [¶14] The property owners have failed to demonstrate a particularized
    injury. Based upon the stipulated record, the only potential injury they allege
    is that they “own and use residentially improved properties” in Bar Harbor,
    Hancock, and Sorrento “with direct views over the inner Bar Harbor ocean
    waters adjacent to the Ferry Terminal Property.” We have applied a “minimal”
    threshold for standing where the challenging party is an abutter. See Roop v.
    City of Belfast, 
    2007 ME 32
    , ¶ 8, 
    915 A.2d 966
    . However, nothing in the
    stipulated record indicates that any of these property owners is an abutter.
    Further, even if the property owners had established themselves as abutters,
    they have not met the minimal standing threshold for abutters upon these facts.
    The stipulated record contains no evidence demonstrating the tangible effect
    on the property owners’ views. This is perhaps unsurprising because detailing
    a negative effect on a view undoubtedly proves challenging when there is not
    yet a concrete proposal threatening that view. See infra ¶¶ 19-22.
    [¶15] In Harrington v. Inhabitants of Town of Kennebunk, we concluded
    that “the potential for obstruction of view is an improper subject for judicial
    notice” as a matter of “evidentiary propriety” because whether a structure will
    obstruct a view “is clearly neither a matter of uncontested common knowledge
    nor capable of certain verification.” 
    459 A.2d 557
    , 560 (Me. 1983). Thus, we
    9
    indicated that evidence of a blocked view is necessary to demonstrate a
    particularized injury that is based on views. See 
    id. Accordingly, because
    the
    property owners have failed to demonstrate particularized injuries in their
    request for remedial relief, we vacate the judgment issued by the BCD and
    remand for entry of dismissal without prejudice.
    B.    Ripeness
    [¶16]   Although the property owners lack standing to pursue this
    challenge to the changes to the Land Use Ordinance upon this record, we
    address also the issue of ripeness for the benefit of the parties and the court in
    the event that a subsequent challenge to the ordinance is tendered.
    [¶17] We review ripeness de novo as a question of law. Johnson v. City of
    Augusta, 
    2006 ME 92
    , ¶ 7, 
    902 A.2d 855
    . The doctrine of ripeness prevents
    “judicial entanglement in abstract disputes, avoid[s] premature adjudication,
    and protect[s] agencies from judicial interference until a decision with concrete
    effects has been made.” 
    Id. [¶18] The
    BCD judgment cited Sold, Inc. v. Town of Gorham, which states,
    “The declaratory judgment law does permit anticipatory challenges to a
    regulation or ordinance to resolve a dispute regarding a planned action, before
    the matter actually proceeds and the challenged ordinance is applied to the
    10
    detriment of the plaintiffs.” 
    2005 ME 24
    , ¶ 14, 
    868 A.2d 172
    . The Declaratory
    Judgments Act (DJA) provides,
    Any person interested under a deed, will, written contract or other
    writings constituting a contract, or whose rights, status or other
    legal relations are affected by a statute, municipal ordinance,
    contract or franchise may have determined any question of
    construction or validity arising under the instrument, statute,
    ordinance, contract or franchise and obtain a declaration of rights,
    status or other legal relations thereunder.
    14 M.R.S. § 5954.
    [¶19] The DJA gives plaintiffs whose rights are affected the right to bring
    declaratory action. Here, the property owners’ “rights, status or other legal
    relations” are not yet affected. As we have noted above, although the Land Use
    Ordinance has been modified, and the parties agree that the changes were
    intended to improve the ferry terminal to accommodate cruise ships, there is
    no currently planned action for construction or development in the
    Ferry Terminal Property.
    [¶20] In our case of first impression examining the DJA, we observed that
    the purpose of the DJA is “not to enlarge the jurisdiction of the courts . . . but to
    provide a more adequate and flexible remedy in cases where jurisdiction
    already exists.” Me. Broad. Co. v. E. Tr. & Banking Co., 
    142 Me. 220
    , 223,
    
    49 A.2d 224
    (1946). Since then, we have maintained that the DJA “may be
    11
    invoked only where there is a genuine controversy.” Patrons Oxford Mut. Ins.
    Co. v. Garcia, 
    1998 ME 38
    , ¶ 4, 
    707 A.2d 384
    . “A genuine controversy exists if a
    case is ripe for judicial consideration and action.” 
    Id. Ripeness is
    a two-prong
    analysis: (1) the issues must be fit for judicial review, and (2) hardship to the
    parties will result if the court withholds review. 
    Id. We conclude
    that the
    property owners’ claim is not ripe.
    [¶21] The property owners fail each ripeness prong. First, in order to be
    fit for review, the controversy must pose a “concrete, certain, or immediate
    legal problem.” Johnson v. Crane, 
    2017 ME 113
    , ¶ 10, 
    163 A.3d 832
    (quotation
    marks omitted). Here, all that has taken place is the passage of the Amendment.
    The record is devoid of any suggestion that the Town has addressed or
    approved any application for a permit for construction or development at the
    Ferry Terminal Property. Any challenge that the property owners make at this
    point is necessarily speculative as to the extent of development, improvement,
    or construction that might occur, and thus the sort of injury they might suffer.
    The mere fact that the Amendment allows accessory uses—subject to review
    by the Town permitting authority—in the new Shoreland Maritime Activities
    District, including a bank, farmers’ market, hotel, multifamily dwelling, or
    restaurant, among other possibilities, does not ripen appellants’ challenge
    12
    against any conjectural future development.                         See Bar Harbor, Me.,
    Land Use Ordinance § 125-49.3(C)(2).
    [¶22] Second, like the fitness prong, the hardship prong “requires
    adverse effects on the plaintiff, . . . and speculative hardships do not suffice to
    meet [the] requirement.”            Johnson v. City of Augusta, 
    2006 ME 92
    , ¶ 8,
    
    902 A.2d 855
    (citations omitted); see Clark v. Hancock Cty. Comm’rs,
    
    2014 ME 33
    , ¶ 20, 
    87 A.3d 712
    . Because no building or development permits
    have been sought, the property owners’ injury is purely speculative at this
    point. In simple terms, the property owners’ situation before and after our
    review would remain the same, thus rendering this challenge to the ordinance
    not ripe for judicial review.4
    The entry is:
    Judgment vacated. Remanded for the entry of
    judgment of dismissal without prejudice.
    4 During oral argument, the Town agreed that the property owners, if they are able to demonstrate
    appropriate standing, would have the ability to challenge the enactment of the Land Use Ordinance
    in later proceedings relating to applications for permits for construction or development on the
    Ferry Terminal Property.
    13
    William H. Dale, Esq. (orally), Mark A. Bower, Esq., and Benjamin T. McCall, Esq.,
    Jensen Baird Gardner & Henry, Portland, for appellants James Blanchard et al.
    Edmond J. Bearor, Esq., Joshua A. Randlett, Esq., and Jonathan P. Hunter, Esq.
    (orally), Rudman Winchell, Bangor, for appellee Town of Bar Harbor
    Business and Consumer Docket docket number CV-2017-52
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY