Court Opinion

ID: 3172169
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-01-26 16:04:50.221654+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:59:47.447262
License: Public Domain

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                        Reporter of Decisions
Decision: 2016 ME 20
Docket:   Was-15-6
Argued:   November 4, 2015
Decided:  January 26, 2016

Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.

                            PHYLLIS BRADBURY et al.

                                          v.

                             CITY OF EASTPORT et al.

PER CURIAM

         [¶1] In this appeal, we are asked to consider whether the City of Eastport’s

sale of seventeen acres of publicly owned oceanfront property was “advertised”

within the meaning of the Eastport City Charter then in effect. See Eastport, Me.,

City Charter art. III, § 3.04(12) (attested by City Clerk Oct. 17, 2011). Phyllis

Bradbury and David Gholson appeal from a final judgment entered on motions for

summary judgment in the Superior Court (Washington County, R. Murray, J.)

declining to provide declaratory or equitable relief that would prevent the sale of

City property to First Perry Realty, LLC, and CPM Constructors.

         [¶2] Assuming that the complaint can be construed to seek rescission of the

agreements entered into by the City Manager, and therefore that it continues to

state a claim upon which relief can be granted, we conclude that the record

presented on summary judgment demonstrates that the actions taken by the City
2

Council sufficiently “advertised” the sale within the meaning of the Eastport City

Charter then in effect. See Eastport, Me., City Charter art. III, § 3.04(12); see also

McGettigan v. Town of Freeport, 2012 ME 28, ¶ 13, 39 A.3d 48. We therefore

affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

                                      I. SALE PROCESS

        [¶3] As it existed at the time of the sale at issue here, the City Charter

authorized the City Manager to “conduct all sales of property belonging to the City

which is unfit or unnecessary for the City’s use but only after such sale has been

authorized and advertised by the City Council.”1 Eastport, Me., City Charter art.

III, § 3.04(12) (emphasis added). The summary judgment record demonstrates that

the City learned late in 2010 that Husson University would no longer lease the

oceanfront property to operate a boat school program after the 2011-2012 school

year. During the first half of 2011, the City entered into negotiations with Marlow

Yachts to sell Marlow the seventeen acres, plus an additional twenty-three acres of

city-owned property, for $850,000. In July 2011, however, Marlow informed the

City that it was no longer interested in purchasing the property.                       All of this

information was publicized in articles in Boston, Portland, Bangor, and local

    1
     The Charter appears to have been amended in 2014 with respect to the sale of city-owned property.
See Eastport, Me., Notice of April 9, 2014, Public Hearing (listing proposed amendments to the City
Charter); Eastport, Me., Results of the Special Municipal Election of June 10, 2014 (attested by City
Clerk June 11, 2014). The parties have not supplemented the record with an amended Charter.
                                                                                                   3

newspapers, as well as in trade, yachting, and specialty publications. Thus, the

summary judgment record demonstrates that the public was made aware of the

nature and location of the property, and of the City’s plan to sell it, by the summer

of 2011.

       [¶4] On August 10, 2011, at a regular meeting of the City Council attended

by the public, Friends of the Boat School Marine Trades Development

Corporation2 offered to purchase the property for a nominal amount of money and

continue the boatbuilding and school operations. After providing notice for public

attendance, the City Council held a workshop at which Friends of the Boat School

reiterated its offer, and Perry Marine and Construction, LLC, offered to purchase

the property for $300,000. The City made no decision but encouraged Friends of

the Boat School and Perry Marine to discuss possibly working together on an

agreement.

       [¶5] On September 1, 2011, after again providing proper notice for public

attendance, the City Council held a special council meeting. Perry Marine and

Friends of the Boat School presented a proposal for affiliates of Perry Marine—

First Perry Realty, LLC, and CPM Constructors—to purchase the property for

$300,000; to give approximately one half of the property to Friends of the Boat

   2
      The party named in the complaint is Friends of the Boat School Marine Services Development
Corp., but the name of the entity, as expressed in the statements of material facts and the pertinent
contract and deed, is Friends of the Boat School Marine Trades Development Corp.
4

School; to give other, separate land to the City to relocate public access to the

ocean; and to donate $75,000 to the City to develop the new public access. At the

end of the meeting, after lengthy public comment, the City Council voted to accept

the offer to purchase. The City Council authorized the City Manager to execute a

purchase and sale agreement, and later voted to authorize the City Manager to

execute the necessary documents to sell the property to First Perry and CPM. On

November 17 and 20, 2011, as required by the Charter, the City had notices of the

sale placed in the Bangor Daily News. See Eastport, Me., City Charter art. III,

§ 3.04(12) (authorizing the City Manager to effectuate a sale of City property

“only after such sale has been authorized and advertised by the City Council”).

The City then conveyed the property to First Perry on December 1, 2011.

                              II. LEGAL DISCUSSION

      [¶6] The term “advertise” was not defined in the City Charter. We construe

the term based on its ordinary meaning unless to do so would be illogical or

nonsensical. McGettigan, 2012 ME 28, ¶ 13, 39 A.3d 48. The ordinary definition

of “advertise” is, in relevant part, as follows:

      to make known to (someone) : give notice to : INFORM, NOTIFY
      . . . to make generally known : call attention to : give notice of . . . to
      give publicity to . . . to give public notice of : announce publicly esp.
      by a printed notice or through a radio or television broadcast . . . to
      call public attention to esp. by emphasizing desirable qualities so as to
      arouse a desire to buy or patronize . . . .
                                                                                 5

Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged 31

(2002). Because the City conducted its dealings openly at public meetings and in

the media, resulting in both publicity and public participation, the City’s actions

were sufficient to avoid a circumstance in which the City Manager effectuated a

sale of City property without the input or involvement of the public. Based on the

ordinary meaning of “advertise,” as generally providing notice, see McGettigan,

2012 ME 28, ¶ 13, 39 A.3d 48, and taking into account that the Charter must be

liberally construed in favor of the City, see Eastport, Me., City Charter art. I,

§ 1.02, we conclude that the record on summary judgment establishes that the City

Council took adequate measures to publicly advertise both its authorization of the

City Manager to execute documents and the sale of the property itself.

      The entry is:

                      Judgment affirmed.

On the briefs:

      Kristin M. Collins, Esq., Kelly & Collins, LLC, Belfast, for
      appellants Phyllis Bradbury and David Gholson

      Paul M. Koziell, Esq., Julia G. Pitney, Esq., and Michael T.
      Devine, Esq., Drummond & Drummond, LLP, Portland, for
      appellees First Perry Realty, LLC, and CPM Constructors

      Dennis L. Mahar, Esq., Fletcher, Mahar & Clark, Calais, for
      appellees City of Eastport et al.
6

At oral argument:

        Kristin M. Collins, Esq., for appellants Phyllis Bradbury and
        David Gholson

        Paul M. Koziell, Esq., for appellees First Perry Realty, LLC,
        and CPM Constructors

        Dennis L. Mahar, Esq., for appellees City of Eastport et al.

Washington County Superior Court docket number CV-2011-39
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY