Retired:
The Capitol Hill Restoration Society, petitioner, challenges the grant of a permit to The Heritage Foundation, intervenor, to add an additional floor to a building on the 200 block of Pennsylvania Avenue, S.E. The District of Columbia Mayor’s Agent for Historic Preservation (the “Mayor’s Agent”) approved the permit in an order issued on September 4, 2009 (the “Order”). Petitioner filed a petition for review on October 15, 2009. On October 22, 2009, this court ordered petitioner to show cause why its petition should not be dismissed as untimely; the court subsequently discharged that order without prejudice on November 19, 2009, and directed the parties to address the timeliness of the petition in their briefs on the merits. Having reviewed the briefs of the parties and considered their oral arguments, we now dismiss the petition as untimely.
Pursuant to D.C. Court of Appeals Rule 15 (“Rule 15”), “[ujnless an applicable statute provides a different time frame, the petition for review [of an agency decision] must be filed within thirty days after notice is given, in conformance with the rules or regulations of the agency, of the order or decision sought to be reviewed.” D.C.App. R. 15(a)(2). The Mayor’s Agent issued the Order on September 4, 2009, and transmitted copies to the parties via email and U.S. Mail that same day. Because the Order was made outside of the presence of the parties, petitioner had the usual thirty days to file a petition for review, plus an additional five days. Id. (“If the order or decision is made out of the presence of the parties and notice thereof is by mail, the petitioner will have five additional days from the date of mailing”). 1 Thirty-five days from September 4, 2009 was October 10, 2009 — a Saturday. The following Monday happened to fall on Columbus Day, a legal holiday, and so the last day a petition for review could be filed was Tuesday, October 13, 2009. See id.; D.C.App. R. 26(a)(2) & (4). Petitioner filed its petition for review on October 15, two days later. Thus, by application of the general thirty-plus-five-day time frame provided in Rule 15, the petition was untimely.
However, as noted above, the usual time period for filing a petition for review from date of notice does not govern if “an applicable statute provides a different time frame.” D.CApp. R. 15(a)(2). Petitioner argues that D.C.Code § 6-1112(a) did just this. That section provides that “[i]n any case of demolition, alteration, subdivision, or new construction in which a hearing was held, the Mayor’s decision on such application
shall not become final
until 15 days after issuance.” D.C.Code § 6-1112(a)
We are not persuaded by this argument. Finality and appealability are two distinct concepts that this court has had occasion to address in the context of various agency rules:
As we have repeatedly held, “what matters here is not when the order became ‘final’ under the Board’s rules, but when it became reviewable.” Jackson v. District of Columbia Emps.’ Comp. Appeals Bd.,537 A.2d 576 , 577 (D.C.1988) (holding that the time for filing a petition for review starts to run when the order is served on the parties, not thirty days later when the order became “final” under the Board’s rules); accord North Cleveland Park Citizens Ass’n v. District of Columbia Bd. of Zoning Adjustment,541 A.2d 912 (D.C.1988) (per cu-riam) (holding that the time for filing a petition for review starts to run when the order is served on the parties, not when the order becomes effective, which according to the Board’s rules occurs ten days after the order is issued); Glenwood Cemetery v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm’n,448 A.2d 241 (D.C.1982) (per curiam) (holding that the time for filing a petition for review starts to run when the order is served on the parties, not when the order is published in the D.C. Register and thereby becomes final and effective pursuant to the Zoning Commission’s rules).
York Apartments Tenants Ass’n v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm’n,
Despite this longstanding recognition by our cases of the distinction between finality and the time for filing a petition for review, petitioner argues that § 6-1112(a)’s postponement of finality altered the time for filing of its petition for review. The issue is one of statutory interpretation. Where the terms the legislature has used, viewed in their surrounding statutory context, are clear and unambiguous, a court’s analysis generally goes no further.
See Parrish v. District of Columbia,
Our opinion in
Glenwood Cemetery
is particularly instructive. In that case, the petitioners had received an order of the Zoning Commission via U.S. Mail; a week
D.CApp. R. 15[ ] provides that the period for filing a petition for review begins on the date that the party receives “formal notice,” [ 2 ] not on the date on which the order is effective. There is no contention here that the [agencyj’s action was nonfinal in the sense that there was any further consideration to be given the matter by the [agency] before finality would attach. The challenged order was a complete disposition of the case.
Id. Therefore, the regulation’s delay of the finality and effectiveness of the order had no bearing on the timeliness of the petition for judicial review, and the court dismissed it for lack of jurisdiction.
As in
Glenwood Cemetery,
there was no higher administrative body to which the Order of the Mayor’s Agent could have been appealed — the only possible review was by petition directly to this court. No further action by the Mayor’s Agent, or any other administrative body, was contemplated.
3
The order in
Glenwood Cemetery
was required to be published in the D.C. Register before it would become “final,” just as the Order here would not become “final” until the passage of fifteen days. But in neither case does this delay in finality have any effect on the date by which a petition for review before this court must be filed.
Glenwood,
Having determined that the meaning of § 6-1112 is clear, we would ordinarily end our discussion.
See Parrish,
Subsection (a) [of § 6-1112] provides that in the case of demolition, alteration or new construction in which a hearing was held, the Mayor’s decision as to the permit application shall not become final until fifteen days after issuance. This would delay the commencement of the thirty-day period in which a[n] appeal from a final order must be taken pursuant to the D.C. Administrative Procedure[ ] Act.
Committee on Housing and Urban Development, Report on Bill 2-367 “The Historic Landmark and Historic District Protection Act of 1978” at 14 (Oct. 5, 1978) (emphasis added). The comment in the Committee Report is not persuasive to us because it was made with reference to a predecessor provision that contained additional language that no longer appears in the statute today. Section 6-1112, as it was originally enacted in 1978, contained a second sentence in subsection (b), so that the subsection, in its entirety, read as follows:
All proceedings pursuant to this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with the applicable provisions of [the Administrative Procedure Act]. Any final order of the Mayor under this chapter shall be reviewable in the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
D.C.Code § 5-832(b) (1979 Supp.) (emphasis added),
amended and recodified at
D.C.Code § 6-1112(b) (2008 Repl.). A fifteen-day delay in finality, read together with the sentence providing that only “final” orders of the Mayor are reviewable by this court, indeed suggest that § 6-1112 was originally enacted with the intention of delaying the time period for filing a
All proceedings pursuant to this sub-chapter shall be conducted in accordance with the applicable provisions of [the Administrative Procedure Act]. The hearing by the Review Board upon the filing of an application to designate a histone landmark shall be conducted under the contested case procedures contained in [the Administrative Procedure Act], Any final order of the Mayor under this subchapter and any final order of the Review Board regarding the designation of a historic landmark shall be reviewable in the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
D.C.Code § 5-1012(b) (1998 Supp.) (emphasis added), amended and recodified at D.C.Code § 6-1112(b) (2008 Repl.). This amendment also made specific reference to review by the court of “final” orders. The statute was then further amended in 2000. This amendment eliminated both the second and third sentences of subsection (b) (■i.e., all of the italicized language above).
As a result of this most recent amendment, there is no longer any indication in the statutory language that it is only “final” orders of the Mayor that are reviewa-ee by this court. Between the time the act was originally enacted in 1978 and the time that the statute was most recently amended in 2000, this court had made clear in decisions such as
Glenwood Cemetery
(1982) that finality and appealability are two distinct concepts. We assume that the legislature was aware of these holdings.
See Marshall v. District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n,
In the alternative, petitioner argues, even if Rule 15’s thirty-day period normally applies to appeals of an order of the Mayor’s Agent, that time period should not be strictly applied in this case because the Order itself contained a notation indicating that “pursuant to D.C.Code § 6-1112(a), this Order shall take effect fifteen days after issuance.” Petitioner contends that this notation was misleading and created
There is some question whether the court may consider petitioner’s argument in this statutory context. Because the applicable provision of the APA incorporated into D.C. § 6-1112(a) provides that “[a] petition for review
shall
be filed in such Court within such time as such Court may by rule prescribe,” D.C.Code § 2-510(a) (emphasis added), the time for appeal provided in Rule 15 acquires the force of a statutory jurisdictional mandate. Thus, this is not a case where the requirement of Rule 15 may be relaxed, at the court’s discretion, as a court-created “claim-processing rule.”
Smith v. United States,
However, even assuming we have authority to look past an untimely filing to take into account the particulars of the notice provided to petitioner, we would not exercise it in this case. In those cases where we have applied the principle of construing ambiguity against the agency, the ambiguity has been of a different character than the one in the case at hand, in that it has been attributable to some action on the part of the agency that misled the appellant. In
Asian,
for example, the agency’s rule provided that an agency decision automatically became final if the agency did not act within fifteen days of receiving a motion for reconsideration.
Similarly, in
In re D.R.,
a mother had executed a form in which she voluntarily relinquished her parental rights over her son.
In both
Askin
and
D.R.,
the ambiguity arose because the agency had delivered some form of notice that contained a misleading statement or omitted a material provision of applicable law. In other cases in which ambiguities were resolved in favor of petitioners, the uncertainty also occurred as a result of some improper representation on the part of the government.
See, e.g., Ploufe v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Emp’t Servs.,
In this case, on the other hand, the Mayor’s Agent committed no error when she included a notation in the Order indicating that it “shall not take effect” until fifteen days after its issuance. This was an accurate statement of law. D.C.Code § 6-1112(a). Under The Historic Landmark and Historic District Protection Act of 1978, D.C.Code § 6-1101 et seq., the Mayor’s Agent is vested with authority to approve permits for, inter alia, alterations and demolitions of historic landmarks and buildings in historic districts. See D.C.Code §§ 6-1104 & -1105 (2008 Repl.). In those cases where the Mayor’s Agent has approved a permit which would result in the demolition or permanent alteration of a property, knowing that there is a fifteen-day delay in the finality of the order would be useful information for a party that, for example, desired to seek injunc-tive relief before the party who obtained the order could act on it. That petitioner apparently misunderstood this notation to mean that it had an additional fifteen days for filing a petition for judicial review of the Order is not the kind of “ambiguity,” caused by the agency, that this court has recognized as allowing an exception to the time period prescribed in Rule 15.
Accordingly, because the petition for review was untimely filed, it is dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
So ordered.
Notes
. Because the result is the same whether we consider the mailed or emailed notice, we will assume, without deciding, that the provision of D.C. Court of Appeals Rule 26 providing that "a paper that is served electronically is not treated as delivered on the date of service stated in the proof of service,” D.C.App. R. 26(c), should apply to the agency's notice as well. We caution that this provision does not appear in Rule 15.
. At the time, Rule 15 provided that the thirty-day time period began to run when "formal notice” was received by the parties. D.C.App. R. 15(b) (1981) (emphasis added). The absence of the word "formal” in the current Rule 15 has no effect on our analysis.
. We' disagree with petitioner's contention that its situation is analogous to the one considered by the court in
Stone v. District of Columbia Dep't of Emp't Servs.,
. Petitioner also suggests that this court would be without jurisdiction to review a nonfinal order.
See
D.C.Code § 11-722 (2001) (“The District of Columbia Court of Appeals has jurisdiction ... to review
orders
and decisions of the Commissioner [Mayor] of the District of Columbia ... in accordance with the District of Columbia Administrative Procedure Act.”) (emphasis added): D.C.Code § 2-502(11) (2010 Supp.) (defining "order” to mean, in relevant part, a
"final
disposition
. Whether the language that the legislature used would have accomplished this intention is another matter. We note that the executive branch's interpretation of § 6-1112, to which we ordinarily defer,
see Majerle Mgmt. Inc. v. District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm'n,
