The defendant, Rosemary A. Gilroy, appeals the order of the Milford District Court (Moore, J.) that extended the deadline by which she had to either remove a non-conforming shed from her property or bring it intо compliance before being fined $42,350 pursuant to RSA 676:17, I (Supp. 2007). We affirm in part, vacate in part and remand.
The record supports the following facts. The defendant owns property in Amherst. In February 2006, the plaintiff, Town of Amherst (Town), filed a writ against her alleging that she had maintained a non-conforming shed on her property in violation of certain regulations and ordinances. A heаring was scheduled for July 10, 2006, at which the defendant failed to appear. Based upon the evidence presented at the hearing, the court found that, on February 6, 2006, the defendant had received notification that she had violated the Town’s zoning and building ordinances by constructing a shed on her property without the proper site plan review and surveyor certificate. As оf the hearing date, the defendant had not removed the shed. Accordingly, the trial court entered a conditional default judgment against her, imposing a civil penalty of $275 per day for eаch day of violation from February 6, 2006, to July 10, 2006, and awarding attorney’s fees and costs to the Town. See RSA 676:17,1. The total civil penalty imposed was $42,350 ($275 X 154 days). The court ruled, however, that if the defendant either removed the shed or brought it into compliance with the applicable regulations and ordinances by August 15, 2006, the penalty would be stricken.
On July 12, 2006, the defendant filed a motion to vacate the default, alleging that she “had been busy and had neglected to change the June, 2006 page of [her] calendar to July, 2006” and, therefore, “did not
On July 21,2006, the defendant moved for reconsideration of the July 12, 2006 order. On August 16, 2006, the trial court denied the motion, but extended the deadline for payment of attorney’s fees and costs to August 21,2006. The court also extended the deadline by which the defendant had either to remove her shed or bring it into cоmpliance to August 28, 2006. Rather than comply with the trial court’s latest order, the defendant appealed it.
The defendant first argues that the trial court erred by provisionally granting her motion to vacate the conditional default judgment entered against her. “The trial court’s decision whether to strike an entry of default is within its discretion; we will not disturb such a ruling unless the court unsustainably exercised its discretion or erred as a matter of law.”
In the Matter of Maynard & Maynard,
The defendant next asserts that, assuming that the default is not vacated, the $42,350 сivil penalty is unlawful. We agree.
Under RSA 502-A:ll-a, I (1997), the district court has concurrent jurisdiction with the superior court to prosecute any violation of a local ordinance, code or regulation to the extent that the violation is,
inter alia,
punishable by a civil penalty, in which ease the penalty imposed shall not exceed the limits of the district court’s civil damages concurrent jurisdiсtion as set forth in RSA 502-A:14, II (1997). RSA 502-A:14, II provides, in pertinent part, that the district court has concurrent jurisdiction with the superior court “of civil actions for damages in which the damages claimed do not exceed $25,000.” The defendant contends that pursuant to these statutes, the district court lacked jurisdiction to impose a civil penalty in excess of $25,000. While the plaintiff concedes that the рenalty exceeded the jurisdictional limit set forth in RSA 502-A:14, II, it counters that because RSA 676:17, I, subjects a person who violates a zoning ordinance to a civil penalty of $275 for the first offense “for each day that such violation is found to continue,” the court must view the penalty awarded as 154 separate awards in the amount of $275 each.
See Simpson v. Young,
Resolving this issue requires that we engage in statutоry interpretation. In matters of statutory interpretation, we are the final arbiters of the legislature’s intent as expressed in the words of the statute considered as a whole.
We have previously recognized that the district court may, under certain circumstances, retain jurisdiction even though the aggregate amount of damages awarded for individual violations exceeds the jurisdictional limit in RSA 502-A:14, II.
Simpson,
In
Simpson,
we were concerned with damages awarded under RSA 540-A:4 (2007), which governs damages in certain landlord/tenаnt actions.
Simpson,
We relied upon similar statutory language in
Town of Henniker.
The defendants in that case maintained an unlicensed junk yard, in violation of RSA 236:114 (1993), for which the trial court had fined them $10 per day for 606 days of violation, or $6,060.
Town of Henniker,
In this case, the statute under which the defendant was penalized, RSA 676:17, I, unlike the statutes at issue in
Simpson
and
Town of Henniker,
does not provide that each day of violation constitutes a separate offense.
Rather RSA 676:17,1, subjects a person to a “civil penalty of $275 for the first offense and $550 for subsequent offenses for each day that such violation is found to continue.” The Town acknowledges that RSA 676:17,1, differs in this way from the statutes at issue in
Simpson
and
Town of Henniker,
but argues that it is “clear that [RSA 676:17, I] authorizes a
The Town’s insistence that we interpret RSA 676:17,1, to have the same meaning as the statutes at issue in
Simpson
and
Town of Henniker
conflicts with our principles of statutory construction. The legislature is not presumed to waste words or enact redundant provisions and whenever possible, every word of a statute should be given effect.
Marcotte v. Timberlane/Hampstead, School Dist.,
Accordingly, because RSA 676:17,1, does not indicate that eaсh day of violation constitutes a separate offense, and, in fact, indicates that a continuing violation is a single offense, we conclude that the district court lacked authority to impose a civil penalty in excess of $25,000. We therefore vacate the civil penalty and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part; vacated in part; and remanded.
