[¶ 1] The Town of Gouldsboro’s Planning Board denied JPP, LLC’s application to create a subdivision on the shores of Jones Pond, concluding that the proposal did not meet a requirement that applied to deаd-end roads, and that no waiver of that requirement was warranted. The Superi- or Court (Hancock County, Cuddy, J.) af
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] In March of 2007, JPP filed a preliminary application with the Town of Gouldsboro for a fourteen-lot residential subdivision to be called Jones Pond Retreat. The 22.8-acre parcel of land upon which the subdivision would be developed lies at the southern tip of Jones Pond and is situated between Route 195 to the east and Route 186 to the west. To connect Route 186 to Jones Pond Retreat, JPP proposed to construct a road of аpproximately 11,000 feet in length, to be called Rocky Road. At the other side of the subdivision, the access to Route 195 from the parcel would be by a private seasonal road called South End Roаd. Because South End Road is private, some but not all of the fourteen lots in Jones Pond Retreat would have deeded access over it to Route 195. Acknowledging that use of South End Road was limited, JPP also prоposed to construct a gate where Rocky Road and South End Road would connect, thereby restricting access to South End Road to emergency vehicles and those lot owners with deeded access.
[¶ 3] The Gouldsboro Planning Boаrd discussed the proposed Jones Pond Retreat subdivision at numerous meetings held between April and September of 2007. At one of the meetings, JPP submitted a waiver request to the Board, seeking to avoid the apрlication of a 1,000-foot dead-end road length limit, contained in the Town’s Subdivision Ordinance,
[¶ 4] The public hearing on the proposed subdivision was held on August 7, 2007, and concerns regarding use of the South End Road, constructiоn of the new Rocky Road, and the overall environmental impact of the subdivision were discussed. On August 21, 2007, the Board considered the road length waiver request. The Board voted 4-1 against waiving the road length restrictiоn, and then, by a vote of 5-0, denied the subdivision application on the grounds that the application, as submitted, did not meet the requirements of the Subdivision Ordinance.
[¶ 5] The Board ultimately approved findings of fact thаt identified four reasons for the denial of the Jones Pond Retreat subdivision: (1) Rocky Road did not conform with the 1,000-foot road length limitation; (2) all freshwater wetlands within the subdivision had not been identified; (3) the subdivision did not provide fоr ade
[¶ 6] JPP appealed the application denial to the Superior Court pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 80B.
[¶ 7] Based on this conclusion, the court determined that JPP’s claims of error with regard to the other three findings of the Board were moot.
II. DISCUSSION
[¶ 8] The interpretation of a local ordinance by a planning board is a question of law that we review de novо. Bodack v. Town of Ogunquit,
[¶ 9] Here, the relevant Subdivision Ordinance provides: “A dead-end street or cul-de-sac shall not exceed one thousand (1,000) feet in length and shall be provided to a suitable turn-around at the closed end.” Gouldsboro, Me., Subdivision Ordinance art. X, § C(3)(3)(h) (Mar. 5, 1979). The term “dead-end” is not defined within the ordinance, but the definitional section provides that “words and terms used in these standards shall have their customаry dictionary meanings.” Goulds-boro, Me., Subdivision Ordinance art. Ill (Mar. 5,1979).
[¶ 10] The parties do not dispute that South End Road is a “street” under the ordinance.
[¶ 11] Although the term “dead-end” is not specifically defined, the ordinance envisions such a street as terminating at a “closed end.” Gouldsboro, Me., Subdivision Ordinance art. X, § 0(B)(3)(h). The dictionary definition of “dead end” describes “an end (as of a street, pipe, or power line) that has no exit or continuation.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged 579 (2002).
[¶ 12] We considered the meaning of the term “dead-end” with regard to a subdivision ordinance in Springborn v. Town of Falmouth,
[¶ 13] The multiple means of access available in Springbom are not available on the proposed Rocky Road. Applying both the words of the ordinance as well as the dictionary and common sense meanings of the term “dead-end,” Rocky Road falls within the purview of the road-length limitation. Unlike the road discussed in Springbom, Rocky Road fits both the literal and functional “deаd-end” condition contemplated by the Gouldsboro Subdivision Ordinance. The road would be longer than 1,000 feet and would terminate at a “closed end,” specifically a breakaway gate impeding acсess to lot owners who do not have deeded access. Even without a gate, lot owners without deeded access to South End Road would be legally prohibited from using the road. Those owners would have no practical access to Route 195 to the east, and would be limited to a single route of ingress and egress that exceeds the maximum length contained in the ordinance. These restrictions bring Rocky Road directly within any common sense meaning of “dead end.” See Jordan v. City of Ellsworth,
[¶ 14] Accordingly, we discern no error in the Board’s application of the road-length limitation to JPP’s proposed Rocky Road, and we affirm the denial of the subdivision application on that basis.
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. At oral argument, counsel for JPP suggested that the gate could easily bе omitted from its plans.
. The relevant ordinance provides: "A dead-end street or cul-de-sac shall not exceed one thousand (1,000) feet in length and shall be provided to a suitable turn-around at the closеd end. When a turning circle is used, it shall have a minimum outside curb radius of sixty-five (65) feet.” Gouldsboro, Me., Subdivision Ordinance art. X, § C(3)(3)(h) (Mar. 5, 1979).
The Subdivision Ordinance contains an apparent numbering error whereby article X, section C, entitled "Streets,” begins with subsections one through three, and then reverts back to a subsection one. The relevant ordinance dealing with dead-ends is thus contained in the second subsection three contained within article X, section C.
.In addition to its challenge to the Board's interpretation of the applicable dead-end street length limitation, JPP also argues on appeal that there was insufficient evidencе on the record to support the additional findings upon which the application denial was based and that consideration of evidence related to JPP’s plan to address phosphorus contrоl measures violated its due process rights. Because we conclude that the Town did not err in its application of the dead-end road ordinance and affirm on that basis, we do not reach those сhallenges and do not address the Superior Court's conclusions applicable to them.
. The Town’s Subdivision Ordinance provides: "An appeal from a decision of the Planning Board must be submitted to the Hancоck County Superior Court within thirty (30) days from the date of written decision and findings of fact.” Gouldsboro, Me., Subdivision Ordinance art. XIV (Mar. 5, 1979).
. The court nevertheless went on to draw conclusions regarding the other aspects of JPP’s аppeal.
. The term "street” is defined in the ordinance as "[p]ublic and private ways such as alleys, avenues, highways, roads, and other rights-of-way, as well as areas on subdivision plans designated as rights-of-way for vehicu
