Henry TARBOX et al. v. ZONING BOARD OF REVIEW OF the TOWN OF JAMESTOWN.
Nos. 2014-188-Appeal, 2014-189-Appeal.
Supreme Court of Rhode Island.
March 15, 2016.
191
Peter J. Brockmann, Esq., Jamestown, Frank F. Sallee, Esq., for Plaintiffs. Wyatt A. Brochu, Esq., for Defendant. Present: SUTTELL, C.J., GOLDBERG, ROBINSON, and INDEGLIA, JJ.
OPINION
Justice GOLDBERG, for the Court.
This case came before the Supreme Court on October 28, 2015, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this consolidated appeal should not be summarily decided. The plaintiffs, Henry and Mary Tarbox (plaintiffs), have appealed from a Superior Court decision that denied their request for reasonable litigation expenses pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice for Small Businesses and Individuals Act (act), see
Facts and Travel
The plaintiffs own a single-family home in Jamestown, Rhode Island. In September 2010, plaintiffs desired to construct an addition to their home so that Henry Tarbox‘s mother could live in a small apartment connected to the dwelling; the planned construction would convert the Tarbox home from a single-family home into a duplex—a permitted use in the zoning district. However, the lot size of plaintiffs’ parcel was less than that required by the town‘s zoning ordinance (ordinance) for a duplex in the zoning district, causing plaintiffs to seek dimensional relief from the board. The board held a hearing on the variance application, at which plaintiffs were represented by counsel. Henry Tarbox testified in support of the application, and he and his attorney were peppered with questions from board members.2 Although no objectors appeared to oppose plaintiffs’ variance application and no evidence was taken in opposition, the board members were divided, with three voting in favor of the application and two voting against it. Even though a majority of the board voted in favor of the application, the application was denied because it failed to garner the requisite number of votes, as mandated by the state‘s Zoning Enabling Act. See
Analysis
Procedural Hurdle: Appeal or Certiorari
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the trial justice misinterpreted the act in concluding that the board is not an “agency” and that the hearing on plaintiffs’ variance application was not an “adjudicatory proceeding” under the act. Before tackling the merits of this argument, however, we must first address whether plaintiffs, by filing a notice of appeal rather than a petition for a writ of certiorari, proceeded under the proper procedural vehicle for obtaining this Court‘s review of the denial of their motion for reasonable litigation expenses under the act. This requires us to carefully examine the provisions of the act in light of the parties’ contentions, an exercise that is multifaceted based on the pertinent provisions of the act.
The board claims that plaintiffs were required to petition this Court for a writ of certiorari. To support this argument, the board points to language from the act that declares that the act is intended to supplement the provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act (APA),
Although we reject the board‘s primary argument that the APA controls appellate review in this case, we nonetheless agree, for the reasons explained below, that plaintiffs were required to seek review by petition for a writ of certiorari. Nonetheless, because we have not heretofore addressed this precise procedural issue in a case such as this, we shall treat this appeal as the equivalent of a petition for a writ of certiorari.
Because this case began in Superior Court as an appeal from the decision of a zoning board in accordance with
The plaintiffs dispute this conclusion and point to provisions of the act that they suggest support their contention that an appeal is proper. They first emphasize that their appeal to this Court is not from the decision of the Superior Court reversing the board‘s denial of their variance application but is from only the denial of their motion for reasonable litigation expenses. The plaintiffs also claim that the act contains a provision that explicitly authorizes an appeal to this Court from a Superior Court ruling on a request for reasonable litigation expenses. Finally, plaintiffs note that this Court recently entertained an appeal from the denial of relief under the act in Campbell v. Tiverton Zoning Board, 15 A.3d 1015 (R.I. 2011).8
With respect to the act, plaintiffs argue that an appeal to this Court is authorized by
We reject such a complex construction of the act because a more sensible understanding of
On the other hand,
The plaintiffs’ argument that
Additionally, a trial justice acting under
The plaintiffs’ argument that an appeal is proper because they are not appealing the Superior Court‘s reversal of the board‘s decision, but only the denial of the motion for reasonable litigation expenses under the act, similarly is meritless because any appeal from the grant or denial of a request for reasonable litigation expenses is necessarily intertwined with the agency decision. The act explicitly tethers an award of reasonable litigation expenses to success in challenging the agency‘s position, either at the agency level or before a reviewing court. See
Indeed, this case readily demonstrates why any attempt to separate a request for reasonable litigation expenses under the act from review of the underlying agency decision is wholly artificial. This case was initiated in Superior Court as an appeal from an agency decision when plaintiffs appealed the board‘s decision
For these reasons, we conclude that a litigant seeking this Court‘s review of a Superior Court trial justice‘s ruling on a request for reasonable litigation expenses under the act in a case that is in Superior Court on appeal from the decision of a zoning board under
The Merits
On the merits, plaintiffs argue that, in denying their request for reasonable litigation expenses, the trial justice misinterpreted the act. Questions of statutory interpretation precipitate de novo review in this Court. Hazard, 68 A.3d at 485.
The act “was propounded to mitigate the burden placed upon individuals and small businesses by the arbitrary and capricious decisions of administrative
“It is declared that both the state and its municipalities and their respective various agencies possess a tremendous power in their ability to affect the individuals and businesses they regulate or otherwise affect directly. The legislature further finds that the abilities of agencies to determine benefits, impose fines, suspend or revoke licenses, or to compel or restrict activities imposes a great, and to a certain extent, unfair, burden upon individuals and small businesses in particular. The legislature further finds that this situation often tempts state agencies to proceed against individuals or small businesses which are least able to contest the agency‘s actions, and that often results in actions other than those which are in the best interest of the public.” Section
42-92-1(a) .
The General Assembly has vested state and municipal agencies with immense power, and the potential for abuse of that power is ever present. See, e.g., L.A. Ray Realty v. Town Council of Cumberland, 698 A.2d 202, 205-07, 207, 208, 211, 213 (R.I. 1997) (affirming judgment for the plaintiffs, developers of residential subdivisions, against the town defendants, for intentional interference with prospective economic advantage, which stemmed from an unlawful amendment of the subdivision regulations and zoning ordinances, where the amendment resulted in the denial of the plaintiffs’ then-pending subdivision applications because “[t]he actions of the mayor and the town solicitor demonstrated an obvious intent to interfere with [the] plaintiffs’ legitimate expectancy of developing their property under the regulations in effect when [the] plaintiffs filed their subdivision applications” and amounted to egregious misconduct and a violation of the plaintiffs’ procedural and substantive due process rights); Ratcliffe v. Coastal Resources Management Council, 584 A.2d 1107, 1108-10, 1110 & n. 3, 1111 (R.I. 1991) (Supreme Court declared that landowners “ha[d] waited long enough” where fourteen years had elapsed since the CRMC first challenged the landowners’ right to build on their land and the landowners’ “dream of [building] a retirement retreat * * * bec[a]me mired in a bureaucratic morass“; the Court quashed the conditional assent issued by the CRMC that was impossible for the landowners to satisfy as contrary to the CRMC‘s enabling legislation, regulations, and the APA; and, “[i]n the furtherance of justice,” the Court remanded the matter to the CRMC with directions to allow the landowners to build because “any further delay would be intolerable“). The act is designed to address government abuse and agency decisions made without substantial justification; to that end, the act “encourage[s] individuals and small businesses to contest unjust actions by the state and/or municipal agencies,”
The act provides that a prevailing “[p]arty” (
“any state and/or municipal board, commission, council, department, or officer, other than the legislature or the courts, authorized by law [1] to make rules or to determine contested cases, [2] to bring any action at law or in equity, including, but not limited to, injunctive and other relief, or [3] to initiate criminal proceedings. This shall include contract boards of appeal, tax proceedings, and employment security administrative proceedings.” Section
42-92-2(3) .
Before this Court, the board argues that it is not an agency under the act because plaintiffs’ variance application was not a contested case, the board is not authorized to bring civil actions or initiate criminal proceedings, and it has no power to seek review of a decision of the Superior Court in a zoning appeal reversing a decision of the board. These contentions are unavailing. The board‘s insistence that this hearing was not a contested case overlooks that the act requires only that the entity be “authorized by law * * * to determine contested cases,”
Second, we conclude that the hearing before the board on plaintiffs’ variance application qualified as an adjudicatory proceeding under the act. Section
“any proceeding conducted by or on behalf of the state administratively or quasi-judicially which may result in the loss of benefits, the imposition of a fine, the adjustment of a tax assessment, the denial, suspension, or revocation of a license or permit or which may result in the compulsion or restriction of the activities of a party.” (Emphases added.)
In this case, there is no dispute that the hearing on the variance application, unlike the action of the building official in Campbell which we held did not constitute an adjudicatory proceeding, involved “notice and an opportunity to be heard.” Campbell, 15 A.3d at 1025 (quoting Black‘s Law Dictionary 725 (7th ed. 1999)). The board and plaintiffs were represented by counsel at the hearing, which was transcribed. Both Henry Tarbox and plaintiffs’ attorney were questioned by board members and notice was given to abutters, who could have, but did not, object. Therefore, the hearing unquestionably was a quasi-judicial proceeding before an agency.
The question still remains whether the proceeding in this case was an adjudicatory proceeding under the act. The plaintiffs contend that the denial of their variance application “result[ed] in the * * * restriction of the activities of a party” under
For these reasons, we declare both that the board is an agency and that the hearing on the plaintiffs’ variance application was an adjudicatory proceeding under the act. However, this holding, standing alone, does not entitle the plaintiffs to an award of reasonable litigation expenses. The trial justice did not address the other prerequisites for relief, including whether the plaintiffs are qualifying parties under the act and whether the board‘s position was without substantial justification. Although the plaintiffs urge us to decide these issues, we decline to do so. As we explained in Krikorian, 606 A.2d at 676, “[§]
Conclusion
For the reasons articulated above, we quash the judgment and remand this case to the Superior Court for consideration of the plaintiffs’ motion for reasonable litigation expenses under the act.
Justice FLAHERTY did not participate.
