113 N.H. 169 | N.H. | 1973
The sole question for decision in this case is whether the superior court has jurisdiction under RSA 483-A:4 (Supp. 1972) to entertain the plaintiff’s appeal from a decision of the Special Board and the Governor and Council denying plaintiff’s application for a permit to dredge the natural bed of Lake Umbagog in the town of Errol, New Hampshire. Claiming that the right of appeal established by RSA 483-A:4 (Supp. 1972) is unavailable to an applicant seeking to dredge a lake bed, the Special Board filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. The Superior Court {Perkins, J.), after hearing argument on this issue, denied the motion and reserved and transferred the question to this court.
This case arises out of the confused interrelationship between the various statutes dealing with dredging and filling activities in the State. See RSA 4:40-a to d; RSA 149:8-a (Supp. 1972); RSA 219:19; RSA 482:41-e (Supp. 1972); RSA 482:41-f to -i; RSA ch. 483-A (Supp. 1972); RSA ch. 488-A; Laws 1969, 387:6; Laws 1971, 329:1; Hilton v. Special Board
RSA ch. 488-A, which the Special Board contends is the applicable statute in this case, provides that “[n]o person . . . shall excavate, remove, or dredge any bank, flat, marsh, swamp, or lake bed. .. except as provided in this chapter.” RSA 488-A: 1. Section 2 provides that the Governor and Council may grant to a person the right to dredge public waters for just consideration, upon the recommendation of the board and after a public hearing. The plaintiff’s theory that RSA 483-A:4 (Supp. 1972) authorizes his appeal to superior court necessarily rests upon the premise that the appeal procedure specified therein was intended to be a general administrative appeal statute applicable to all of the dredge and fill laws. This is apparent because Yoffe’s proposal to dredge a lake bed does not fall within the purview of RSA 483-A: 1 which covers only filling and dredging “any bank, flat, marsh, or swamp.” Since RSA 488-A: 1 covers the dredging of identically described areas, to wit, “any bank, flat, marsh, or swamp,” but then adds the phrase “or lake bed,” we must assume that the omission of lake bed dredging in ch. 483-A was intentional. See 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction §§ 4915 & 5201 (3d ed. 1943).
In Hilton v. Special Board supra, we reviewed the history of RSA ch. 483-A. The original regulation of dredging and filling “any bank, flat, marsh, or swamp in and adjacent to tidal waters” (Laws 1967, 215:1) was amended by the substitution of “any waters” for “tidal waters” in July of 1969. Laws 1969, 387:1; RSA 483-A: 1 (Supp. 1972); Hilton v. Special Board supra. In November 1969, this court decided Sibson v. State, 110 N.H. 8, 11, 259 A.2d 397, 400 (1969), in which the constitutionality of regulating inland wetlands was questioned: “If. .. the Legislature intended to regulate all marshlands and wetlands no matter how far removed from the sea, the public purpose, if any, to be accomplished in comparison to the restrictions imposed on the property of such owners would make the statute in this respect of doubtful constitutionality.” The enactment several months later of Laws 1970, ch. 22, amending RSA ch. 483-A in several respects including the addition of the superior court review mechanism in § 4, was an attempt by the legislature to cure whatever constitutional defects may have inhered in the regulation of interior wetlands by RSA ch. 483-A. The Sibson decision “interpreted the dredge and fill laws jurisdiction as being wetlands in and immediately abutting public waters and made apparent some restrictions on the extent the State could regulate privately owned wetlands without providing compensation for the owner.... The purpose [of Laws 1970, ch. 22] was
The superior court method of appellate review established in RSA 483-A:4 (Supp. 1972) by Laws 1970, 22:3, was thus intended to apply only to the regulation of dredge and fill operations in wetlands of the State, such as are defined in RSA 483-AT to include “any bank, flat, marsh, or swamp.” The purpose of the superior court review mechanism was to assure the same availability of judicial scrutiny to wetland dredge and fill regulation as exists with respect to zoning regulation, since regulation in either case can potentially reach a degree of restrictiveness which amounts to a taking of private property for which compensation must be paid. N.H. CONST, pt. I, art. 12; see RSA 483-A:4 (Supp. 1972); RSA 31:74-87; Sibson v. State, 111 N.H. 305, 282 A.2d 664 (1971); Hilton v. Special Board, 111 N.H. 381, 284 A.2d 917 (1971). We can see no reason to extend this judicial protection beyond the “privately owned wetlands” situation to the instant case where the plaintiff has merely applied for and been denied a license to exploit natural resources located on a lake bed belonging to the State. See Note, Coastal Wetlands in New England, 52 B.U.L. Rev. 724, 741-45; compare Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 130, § 105 (1972).
The defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction should be granted.
Exceptions sustained;
appeal dismissed.