Benjamin Jeffries appeals from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (Hancock County, Mills, J.) vacating the decision of the Stonington Board of Appeals that affirmed the issuance of his building permit. He argues that the board correctly concluded that a prior conveyance of his property, which at the time was the middle portion of a larger parcel of land, did not create an illegal three-lot subdivision. We agree, and vacate the judgment.
The lot that now belongs to Jeffries was originally acquired by Ralph Connor in 1970 as the southern half of a larger parcel of land (Lot 1). Shortly thereafter, Connor also acquired a second parcel (Lot 2), which abutted twenty feet along the southeast corner of Lot 1. Thus, Jeffries’ lot, the southern half of Lot 1, became the middle portion of combined Lots 1 and 2. See Appendix. In 1975, Connor sold the Jeffries lot, retaining the northern half of Lot 1 and all of Lot 2. Later that year, he sold the northern half of Lot 1, and in 1976 sold Lot 2 to Ronald Bakala. At no time did Connor seek or obtain subdivision approval.
Jeffries obtained his lot from Connor’s successor in 1992. In March of that year, he applied for and received a permit to build an art studio on the southeasterly portion of his lot, near the boundary with Bakala. Bakala appealed, claiming that Connor’s conveyance of the Jeffries lot created an illegal subdivision, thereby prohibiting the issuance of a permit to Jeffries. The zoning board upheld the permit, finding that even though Connor owned abutting Lots 1 and 2 simultaneously, they remained separate pieces of property. Accordingly, the conveyance of the Jeffries lot did not create a three-lot subdivision, but merely divided Lot 1 into two parts.
Bakala then appealed to the Superior Court. The court found that an amendment to the subdivision law established that Lots 1 and 2 were a single parcel for purposes of that law. The court concluded that the conveyance of the Jeffries lot therefore created an illegal three-lot subdivision, and vacated the board’s decision. This timely appeal followed.
I.
On appeal from a judicial review of action taken by a zoning board, we review the record before the board directly for abuse of discretion, errors of law, or findings unsupported by substantial evidence.
Boisvert v. King,
The version of the subdivision law in effect at the time Connor conveyed the Jeffries lot was silent as to what made up a single tract of land, and provided little guidance whether a particular division of a tract would create a subdivision. See 30 M.R.S.A. § 4956(1) (Supp.1974), repealed by P.L.1975, ch. 475. The 1975 amendment to section 4956(1) attempted to clarify those points by *87 providing definitions of a tract of land, as well as a subdivision. P.L.1975, ch. 475.
Statutory interpretation is a question for the court, the purpose of which is to discern the legislative intent behind the statute.
Maine Beer & Wine Wholesalers Ass’n v. State,
The purpose of P.L.1975, ch. 475 was “to clarify the meaning” of certain disputed points of municipal law. L.D. 1518, Statement of Fact (107th Legis.1975). The Legislature specifically noted that the bill did not create new exemptions or remove existing ones, but merely clarified “what is a subdivision in the first instance and when certain exemptions apply and when they do not.”
Id.
In these circumstances, we find it appropriate to apply the clarifications in P.L.1975, ch. 475 to the conveyance of the Jeffries lot.
See Mundy,
II.
Section 4956(1) defines a tract or parcel of land as “all contiguous land in the same ownership.” Because Lots 1 and 2 shared in part a common boundary, we conclude that they constituted a single tract of land at the time Connor sold the Jeffries lot. Given that conclusion, the next question is whether that conveyance resulted in an illegal subdivision, since Connor failed to obtain municipal approval as required by 30 M.R.S.A. § 4956(2) (1978), replaced by 30-A M.R.SA. § 4403 (Supp.1993).
Section 4956(1) also provides that “[a] subdivision is the division of a tract or parcel of land into 3 or more lots within any 5-year period.” In determining whether a tract of land has been divided into three lots, “the first dividing ... shall be considered to create the first 2 lots and the next dividing of either of said first 2 lots, by whomever accomplished ... shall be considered to create a 3rd lot.” Id. Jeffries argues that Connor’s conveyance of his lot was “the first dividing” and therefore created only “the first 2 lots,” even though the property remaining in Con-nor’s possession was in two separate pieces. We agree.
In construing a statute, we look first to its words, giving them their plain meaning.
Estate of Stone v. Hanson,
Our interpretation of the subdivision law does not contravene its purposes of inhibiting uncontrolled land development and promoting planned growth.
See Town of Arundel v. Swain,
The 1975 conveyance of Jeffries’ lot did not create an illegal three-lot subdivision.
III.
Bakala contends that the board erred in failing to consider the effect of the building permit on his water line easement. We need not address that contention, because it comes too late; the record reveals that he did not raise that issue before the board.
See Morris v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
The entry is:
Judgment vacated.
Remanded with direction to affirm the decision of the Stonington Board of Appeals.
All concurring.
*89 APPENDIX
PROPERTY OF RALPH CONNOR Stonington 1974 (not to scale)
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