Title: 29 McKown LLC v. Town of Boothbay Harbor

State: maine

Issuer: Maine Supreme Court

Document:

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2022 ME 38 
Docket: 
Lin-21-306 
Argued: 
May 9, 2022 
Decided: 
June 28, 2022 
 
Panel: 
STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD, HORTON, CONNORS, and LAWRENCE, JJ.* 
 
 
29 MCKOWN LLC et al. 
 
v. 
 
TOWN OF BOOTHBAY HARBOR et al. 
 
 
MEAD, J. 
[¶1]  This case concerns a real estate office building constructed by 
party-in-interest Harbor Crossing, LLC, in Boothbay Harbor.  The project is 
being challenged by two abutters, 29 McKown LLC and Chandler Wright 
(collectively 29 McKown).  After the Town’s Board of Appeals (BOA) denied 
29 McKown’s administrative appeal from the Code Enforcement Officer’s 
(CEO’s) decision to lift a stop work order he had issued to Harbor Crossing 
during the building’s construction, 29 McKown sought review of the BOA’s 
decision in the Superior Court pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 80B.  29 McKown now 
appeals from a judgment of the court (Lincoln County, Billings, J.) affirming the 
 
*  Although Justice Humphrey participated in the appeal, he retired before this opinion was 
certified. 
 
 
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BOA’s decision.  We vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings 
before the CEO. 
I.  BACKGROUND 
 
[¶2]  The factual background is drawn from the undisputed facts and the 
procedural record.  See LaMarre v. Town of China, 2021 ME 45, ¶ 1 n.1, 
259 A.3d 764.  The following timeline traces Harbor Crossing’s project: 
• March 2020:  Harbor Crossing purchased the property. 
• March 26, 2020:  Harbor Crossing applied for a building permit to 
renovate the existing building with a “new roof, exterior doors, siding, 
trim, new flooring, interior doors, paint, [and a] heat pump” and 
concurrently applied to the Planning Board for permission to operate a 
branch real estate office in the renovated building. 
   
• May 13, 2020:  The Planning Board approved Harbor Crossing’s 
application. 
 
• June 2, 2020:  The CEO issued building permit #20-37 to Harbor 
Crossing. 
 
• June 5, 2020:  Harbor Crossing advised the CEO that it had discovered 
that the existing building was in “very poor condition” and asked whether 
a new building permit would be required to demolish and rebuild the 
building with a two-foot extension of one wall.  The CEO responded that 
a new building permit would be required for that project. 
 
Harbor Crossing submitted a new application seeking to demolish the 
existing building; pour a new foundation; expand the main portion of the 
building from 20’x22’ to 22’x22’; change the roof pitch; and change the 
height of the building to 16’. 
 
 
 
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• June 8, 2020:  The CEO issued building permit #20-41 to Harbor 
Crossing.  No notice was published or given to the abutters. 
 
• September 17, 2020:  After receiving a complaint,1 the CEO issued a stop 
work order to Harbor Crossing, citing “a deviation from the building 
design permitted by this office on June 8, 2020, under building 
permit 20-41.”  The order stated that it would remain in effect until 
Harbor Crossing “provide[d] the [CEO with] a revised plan.”  By email, the 
CEO advised Harbor Crossing that the building actually being constructed 
“may have triggered a reason for you to have to go before the Planning 
Board for approval.” 
 
• September 25, 2020:  After Harbor Crossing submitted new building 
plans, the CEO lifted the stop work order; he did not issue a new building 
permit.  The notification lifting the stop work order said only that the CEO 
had “received the information requested” and that “[t]he information 
satisfies this office.” 
 
• October 22, 2020: Contending that Harbor Crossing’s new building 
required Planning Board approval pursuant to the Town’s Land Use 
Ordinance, 29 McKown appealed to the BOA from the CEO’s action lifting 
the stop work order.  See Boothbay Harbor, Me., Land Use Ordinance 
§ 170-61(A)-(B) (May 8, 2010). 
 
• November 24, 2020:  Following a hearing on November 19, 2020, the 
BOA denied the appeal in a written decision that summarized the parties’ 
arguments and the CEO’s explanation of his findings.  In reaching its 
decision, the BOA “relied upon the CEO’s statements” at the hearing. 
 
 
[¶3]  On December 11, 2020, 29 McKown appealed the BOA’s decision to 
the Superior Court pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 80B.  Its complaint asserted that in 
lifting the stop work order, the CEO effectively issued a new building permit 
 
1  Although the Superior Court found that 29 McKown complained, Harbor Crossing asserts there 
is no record evidence of that. 
 
 
 
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without Planning Board approval as required by the Land Use Ordinance.2  See 
Boothbay Harbor, Me., Land Use Ordinance §§ 170-11 (May 3, 2013), 170-61 
(May 8, 2010).  On August 30, 2021, the court affirmed the BOA’s decision.  
Harbor Crossing timely appealed from the Superior Court’s judgment.  See M.R. 
App. P. 2B(c)(1); M.R. Civ. P. 80B(n). 
II.  DISCUSSION 
 
[¶4]  “When the Superior Court has acted in its intermediate appellate 
capacity to adjudicate an appeal from a municipal zoning board decision, we 
review the operative decision of the municipality directly.”  Zappia v. Town of 
Old Orchard Beach, 2022 ME 15, ¶ 5, 271 A.3d 753.  In identifying the operative 
decision to be reviewed, if “the ordinance explicitly calls for the [BOA’s] review 
to be appellate, the operative decision is that of the CEO.”  Id.; see LaMarre, 
2021 ME 45, ¶ 4, 259 A.3d 764 (“[I]f . . . the scope of the Board’s review is 
appellate, we review the CEO’s decision directly.”); 30-A M.R.S. § 2691(3)(C) 
(2022) (“If a[n] . . . ordinance establishes an appellate review process for the 
board [of appeals], the board shall limit its review on appeal to the record 
established by the board or official whose decision is the subject of the appeal 
 
2  The complaint also requested declaratory judgment relief; that count was dismissed by the court 
as duplicative. 
 
 
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and to the arguments of the parties” and “may not accept new evidence as part 
of an appellate review.”). 
[¶5]  The Boothbay Harbor Ordinance governing the BOA explicitly 
provides that 
[a]dministrative appeals shall be an appellate hearing.  If new facts 
or evidence are available, the matter shall be referred back to the 
Planning Board or Code Enforcement Officer for a new decision 
based on the additional information. 
 
Boothbay Harbor, Me., Land Use Ordinance § 170-108(D)(2)(a) (May 3, 2008).  
The BOA recognized that it had only appellate jurisdiction.  Accordingly, we will 
review the decision of the CEO and not that of the BOA or the Superior Court.  
See Zappia, 2022 ME 15, ¶ 5, 271 A.3d 753; LaMarre, 2021 ME 45, ¶¶ 4-5, 
259 A.3d 764. 
 
[¶6]  In LaMarre, we cautioned municipalities about the frequently 
occurring pitfalls of an ordinance that, like Boothbay Harbor’s, provides for 
appellate review by a board of appeals.  2021 ME 45, ¶¶ 11-15, 259 A.3d 764.  
The inherent problems of appellate-only review identified in LaMarre are 
present here, and they lead to the same result.  For that reason, we again 
“strongly urge municipalities to provide for de novo review of CEO decisions by 
boards of appeals.”  Id. ¶ 15. 
 
 
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[¶7]  First, because there is no evidence in the record that any notice of 
the June 8, 2020, demolish-and-rebuild permit was published as required by 
the Ordinance,3 by the time 29 McKown learned of the extent of the project “the 
decision [to grant the permit had] already been made by the CEO based on 
whatever information [Harbor Crossing] submitted.”  Id. ¶ 13.  The failure to 
give the required notice, coupled with the absence of de novo review by the 
BOA, meant that 29 McKown could not submit opposing evidence it may have 
wished to present to the Town at any point in Harbor Crossing’s construction 
process, thus “depriv[ing] [29 McKown] of a critical component of 
administrative due process.”4  Id.; see Zappia, 2022 ME 15, ¶ 7, 271 A.3d 753 
 
3  Boothbay Harbor, Me., Land Use Ordinance § 170-11(A)(6) (May 5, 2003) (“All applications for 
building permits must be advertised by the Code Enforcement Officer for seven days in the local 
newspaper to allow for public comment.”).  Harbor Crossing argues that 29 McKown had notice of 
the Planning Board proceeding that resulted in the approval of its building for use as a real estate 
office, but that process concerned only the building’s prospective use, not changes to its design, and 
it preceded the building permits issued by the CEO. 
 
4  The BOA found that 29 McKown’s appeal from the CEO’s decision to lift the stop work order on 
September 25, 2020, was timely.  To the extent that Harbor Crossing contends that 29 McKown’s 
appeal is not properly before us because it was not taken from the CEO’s issuance of the June 8, 2020, 
building permit that was the subject of the stop work order, we have held that a regulatory decision 
finding that original permitting standards were not violated is itself an enforcement action that is 
judicially reviewable.  See Fox Islands Wind Neighbors v. Dep’t of Env’t Prot., 2015 ME 53, ¶¶ 5, 17, 
19-20, 116 A.3d 940. 
 
In any event, were it necessary for 29 McKown to take a late appeal from the original building 
permit, the CEO’s failure to give notice of the permit as required by the Ordinance would likely call 
for application of a good cause exception to the Ordinance’s deadlines.  See supra n.3; Viles v. Town of 
Embden, 2006 ME 107, ¶¶ 12-13, 905 A.2d 298 (“The need for a good cause exception primarily stems 
from the lack of notice of the issuance of the building permit to abutting landowners or other persons 
who may be aggrieved by its issuance. . . . The good cause exception was designed because the lack of 
a notice requirement may mean that an abutting landowner does not learn of a permit until the time 
 
 
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(stating that when the BOA is limited to appellate review, it is “preclud[ed] . . . 
from taking additional evidence or adopting its own findings of fact”). 
 
[¶8]  The second problem identified by LaMarre is that  
adjudication is not a usual CEO task.  Unsurprisingly, when an 
objection by an interested person comes to the attention of a CEO 
during the permitting process, the CEO is unfamiliar with the 
minimum requirements of due process and the prerequisites for 
preparing a record and a decision sufficient for meaningful 
appellate review. 
 
2021 ME 45, ¶ 14, 259 A.3d 764. 
 
[¶9]  As LaMarre anticipated, the factual record created by the CEO in this 
case is sparse.  Both the original renovation permit and the demolish-and-
rebuild permit were issued to Harbor Crossing with no remarks by the CEO.  
When the CEO issued the stop work order some three months later, he cited 
“a deviation from the building design permitted by this office on June 8, 2020, 
under building permit 20-41.”  The order made no finding reviewable on appeal 
identifying the nature of the deviation or what corrections would be necessary, 
saying only that Harbor Crossing was required to submit “a revised plan” 
showing the building’s specifications. 
 
period for appeal has expired.”); Brackett v. Town of Rangeley, 2003 ME 109, ¶ 24, 831 A.2d 422 
(“When a town violates its own ordinance as to process and on the merits, equity will infer a good 
cause exception to an ordinance that requires a party to appeal within thirty days of the issuance of 
a building permit.”); Boothbay Harbor, Me., Land Use Ordinance § 170-109(A)(1) (May 3, 1999) 
(requiring that decisions of the CEO be appealed “within 30 days of the action complained of”). 
 
 
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[¶10]  Private email correspondence from the CEO to Harbor Crossing 
was somewhat more detailed in identifying the problem, but neither it nor 
Harbor Crossing’s private response by email was readily available to 
29 McKown or any other potential objector.  When the CEO lifted the stop work 
order, his decision officially found only that the information he had received 
from Harbor Crossing “satisfies this office.”  Precisely what led to the stop work 
order and how the “deviation” had been remedied was again left unspecified, 
and there is no indication that the CEO invited input from 29 McKown or 
anyone else before lifting the order. 
 
[¶11]  The CEO’s reviewable record leading to 29 McKown’s appeal to the 
BOA consists of nothing more than the barebones entries noted above.  
Although the Board’s written order denying 29 McKown’s appeal provided a 
summary of the CEO’s recitation at the hearing of his factual findings that led to 
the stop work order being lifted, because the BOA did not have de novo 
jurisdiction we are limited to reviewing the CEO’s findings directly.5  LaMarre, 
2021 ME 45, ¶ 4, 259 A.3d 764. 
 
[¶12]  For a CEO’s decision to be judicially reviewable, the CEO must 
render a decision “based on substantial evidence in the record” that “contain[s] 
 
5  At oral argument, Harbor Crossing agreed that we cannot review the record before the BOA. 
 
 
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findings of fact sufficient to apprise the reviewing court of the decision’s basis.”  
Id. ¶ 6.  The mere issuance of a building permit—or the lifting of a stop work 
order concerning that permit based only on unspecified “information [that] 
satisfies [the CEO’s] office”—is, absent findings of fact or conclusions of law, 
“insufficient to allow for meaningful appellate review.”  Id. ¶ 7 (quotation marks 
omitted); see id. ¶ 9 (“There is no identification of what [the potentially 
relevant] ‘new information’ was, or what other material the CEO reviewed in 
his investigation of the facts.  This is not sufficient to provide a record for 
appellate review.”). 
 
[¶13]  For the reasons we have discussed, we conclude that 29 McKown 
was deprived of administrative due process and that the CEO did not issue a 
judicially reviewable decision in lifting the stop work order.  Accordingly, we 
reach the same result as we did in LaMarre and 
remand for the CEO to issue a reviewable decision.  The evidence 
upon which the CEO makes his decision must be identified and 
contained in the record.  [The parties] must be permitted to submit 
their evidence and rebut each other’s evidence, no substantive 
ex parte communications with the CEO should take place, and the 
CEO’s decision must include findings of fact and conclusions of law 
sufficient to understand the basis for that decision. 
 
Id. ¶ 15 (citations omitted). 
 
 
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The entry is: 
 
Judgment vacated.  Remanded to the Superior 
Court with instructions to remand the matter to 
the Board of Appeals with instructions to 
remand to the Code Enforcement Officer for 
proceedings consistent with this opinion. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Kristin M. Collins, Esq. (orally), and Stephen E.F. Langsdorf, Esq., Preti Flaherty 
Beliveau & Pachios LLP, Augusta, for appellants 29 McKown LLC and Chandler 
Wright 
 
Scott D. Anderson, Esq. (orally), Verrill Dana, LLP, Portland, for appellee Harbor 
Crossing, LLC 
 
John A. Cunningham, Esq., Eaton Peabody, Brunswick, for appellee Town of 
Boothbay Harbor 
 
 
Lincoln County Superior Court docket number AP-2020-06 
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY