Margaret Anderson and the twenty-seven other individual plaintiffs are property owners in the vicinity of a 37-unit condominium project proposed to be built on Alfred Street in South Portland by the New England Herald Development Group (the developer). On plaintiffs’ complaint filed pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 80B, the Superior Court (Cumberland County) affirmed the decision of the South Portland Zoning Board of Appeals upholding the Planning Board’s approval of the project. Plaintiffs’ principal contention is that the South Portland Planning Board violated their right to procedural due process when it voted on June 11,1985, to reconsider at a later meeting its previous denial of the project; plaintiffs contend that the Planning Board could not constitutionally decide to reopen the matter without first giving them notice of and an opportunity to be heard on that procedural question. We find that contention utterly lacking in merit.
The due process requirements of notice and an opportunity to be heard are triggered only where governmental action has resulted in “a deprivation of an individual’s life, liberty or property interests.” Jackson v. Town of Searsport,
The absence of any detriment to plaintiffs from not attending the June 11 meeting necessarily dooms their back-up argument that the Planning Board was es-topped from voting to reconsider because in not attending the June 11 meeting plaintiffs had allegedly relied on a statement by an unidentified city employee in answer to a telephone inquiry that no item concerning the developer’s proposal was on the June 11 agenda. “It is ... an essential ingredient of [equitable estoppel] that the induced reliance causes actual detriment or prejudice to the party induced.” Martin v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
Protective as we are of the constitutional right to due process, which ensures fairness in the government’s dealings with citizens, we simply cannot find any possible support for plaintiffs’ appeal. The absence of any conceivable prejudice to them by virtue of the Planning Board’s procedural decision of June 11, 1985, coupled with the absence of any argument whatever that the Planning Board’s ultimate decision to approve the project was in any respect wrong on the merits, emphasize the frivolous nature of plaintiffs’ appeal and compel us to impose sanctions pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 76(f). Since defendants have not requested sanctions, we limit sanctions to treble costs.
The entry is:
All concurring.
