DocketNumber: C.A. No. PC 06-1659, Consolidated PC 06-3900
Judges: VOGEL, J.
Filed Date: 2/24/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
-Justice Potter Stewart1
These consolidated administrative appeals are before the Court for decisions. Champlin's Realty Associates ("Champlin's," "Applicant," or "Plaintiff") brings the appeal in PC-06-1659 challenging the denial of its application to Coastal Resources Management Council ("CRMC") to expand its marina.2 Champlin's, a Rhode Island corporation, operates a marina in the Great Salt Pond in New Shoreham, Rhode Island ("New Shoreham" or "Town"). CRMC was created under Chapter 23, Title 46 of the General Laws of Rhode Island to serve as lead agency for the planning and management of the state's coastal regions. Plaintiff brings its complaint against the members of CRMC, 3 the Town, as well as those who intervened before the administrative agency to oppose the application, the Block Island Land Trust, the Conservation Law Foundation, the Committee for the Great Salt Pond, and the Block Island Conservancy.
Champlin's claims that the decision of CRMC, denying its application, was made upon unlawful procedure; in violation of constitutional or statutory procedure; in excess of the statutory authority of the agency; affected by other error of law; clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative and substantial evidence on the whole record; and arbitrary, capricious and characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion, all of which *Page 3 affected the substantial rights of the Plaintiff.
The Rhode Island Administrative Procedures Act ("RIAPA"), G.L. 1956 §
The Town of New Shoreham brings an administrative appeal in PC-06-3900 from the failure of CRMC to approve the Harbor Management Plan New Shoreham initially submitted to the Town Council in 1999 and re-submitted as amended in 2003. The Court finds that the Town's reliance on §
For the reasons stated below, the Court grants Champlin's appeal and dismisses the appeal of the Town. The Court reverses the decisions of CRMC, denying Plaintiff's motion to *Page 4 disqualify CRMC chairperson Tikoian and rejecting the recommendation of the CRMC Subcommittee. Champlin's application shall be granted with this Court's affirming of the decision of the members in support of the Subcommittee Recommendation ("Findings of Fact of CRMC Members in Support of the Subcommittee Recommendation").
Mooring Field E was one of the mooring fields contained in the 1991 plan. (See Town Ex. Y at App. C.) In order to comply with the configuration called for in the 1991 plan, the Town had to reconfigure Mooring Field E. See id. To accomplish this, the Town obtained a permit from the United States Army Corps of Engineers ("ACOE") in 1993. (See CRMC Ex.
Five years lapsed from CRMC's approval of the 1991 plan. In 1999, the Town Council adopted a new Harbor Management Plan ("1999 plan") and submitted it to CRMC for consistency approval. (Town Ex. W at 4.) Despite receiving the plan in 1999, CRMC staff did not review it until 2003. (Subcomm. Hr'g. Tr. at 2123.) As a result of the 2003 review of the 1999 plan, CRMC staff suggested a number of changes to the 1999 plan to bring it into compliance with the CRMP. (Subcomm. Hr'g. Tr. at 2135; Town Ex. W at 5.)
Before adopting the suggested changes, on October 10, 2003, while Champlin's application to expand its marina was pending before CRMC, the Town petitioned the agency for a one-year interim approval of the 1999 plan. (Town Ex. W at 1-2.) At its meeting on November 7, 2003, CRMC consolidated its review of Champlin's application with its consideration of the Town's request for approval of its 1999 plan, a decision on which might impact its ruling on the application to expand the marina. (Subcomm. Hr'g. Tr. at 2136-37.)
On November 19, 2003, the Town Council formally adopted the changes recommended by the CRMC staff review, and the Town resubmitted the plan ("2003 plan") to CRMC for further review. On November 21, 2003, CRMC staff, having concluded that the plan was substantially, although not totally, compliant with the CRMP, recommended approval of the 2003 plan on a one-year interim basis so the Town could resolve a number of remaining deficiencies in its application. (Subcomm. Hr'g. Tr. at 2136-37.)
Despite the staff recommendation in favor of the 2003 plan, when the full Council took up the matter at its November 25, 2003 meeting, CRMC approved, on an interim basis, the 1999 plan, rather than the modified 2003 version. Id. However, CRMC did not address the entire *Page 6 1999 plan and failed to approve the submission as it related to Mooring Field E. The approval was silent as to this mooring field. Id.
Following the November 2003 interim approval, in part, of the 1999 plan, the Town has addressed the deficiencies identified in its 2003 plan and petitioned CRMC for full final approval of the 2003 plan, including Mooring Field E. (Subcomm. Hr'g. Tr. at 2137.)
Based on this procedural history, the Subcommittee Recommendation found that:
44. Regarding the validity of the Towns HMP, CRMP Section 300.15 requires that all municipalities proposing to adopt harbor rules, regulations, or programs shall apply to the Council for a determination of consisitency with the Coastal Resources Management Program.
45. Until such time as a comprehensive harbor management (sic) is prepared and approved by the CRMC, all activities regulated throughout the CRMP, or taking placed (sic) below the MHW mark, must come before the CRMC for review and approval in accordance with the program.
46. The Town's Harbor Management Plan, which was approved in 1991, expired in 1996. The Town did not reapply for a renewal of that plan until at least sometime in 1999. The CRMC does not recognize the validity of the subsequent plan until it is approved by the CRMC." (Subcomm. F.F. 44, 45, 46 at 5, 6.)
The decision of the five members of the full Council, who voted against the Subcommittee Recommendation, reports the same findings in paragraphs 78, 79, and 80, except in paragraph 80, after noting that "The CRMC does not recognize the validity of the subsequent plan until it is approved by the CRMC," the Council continued to find that "However, those CRMC members opposed to the subcommittee recommendation find that the appropriate location and delineation of mooring field E should be that as approved and documented in the 1993 ACOE permit." (Full Council Decision ¶ 80 at 11.) The Court notes that the location and delineation of Mooring Field E, as approved and documented in the 1993 ACOE, permit is that same location and delineation as was approved by CRMC in the 1991 plan and is carried *Page 7 through, without alteration, in the interim 1999 and 2003 plans. (Town Ex. Y at App. C; CRMC Ex. 5-1-4-1 at App. D.)
The Town brings its appeal to challenge the decision of CRMC, finding that there is no active Harbor Management Plan ("HMP") for Great Salt Pond. In support of its appeal, the Town first argues that the 1991 plan has not expired. In the alternative, the Appellant Town contends that the 1999 plan is valid and legally binding. Finally, the Town asks this Court for an order requiring CRMC to approve the 2003 plan.
each agency statement of general applicability that implements, interprets, or prescribes law or policy or describes the organization, procedure, or practice requirements of any agency. The term includes the amendment or repeal of a prior rule, but does not include: (1) statements concerning only the internal management of an agency and not affecting private rights or procedures *Page 8 available to the public, or (2) declaratory rulings issued pursuant to §
42-35-8 , (3) intra-agency memoranda, or (4) an order.
CRMC consolidated the Town's HMP consistency review and Champlin's application to expand its marina for purposes of administrative convenience. However, when CRMC rendered its decision, it did not address the question of the 2003 plan's consistency with the CRMP. In fact, CRMC made no factual findings or conclusions of law respecting the 2003 plan. The mere fact that the consistency review of the Town's HMP was consolidated for hearing with Champlin's application to expand its marina for purposes of administrative convenience and efficiency does not result in an automatic right for the Town to bring an appeal of that decision without satisfying the criteria laid out in §
Under the RIAPA, §
Specifically in the context of CRMC assents, our Supreme Court has declared:
If the decision of the council to permit construction within a municipality is faulty, that decision of necessity aggrieves that municipality and its citizens. What is of ``immediate and potential value to the present and future development of this state' must be of value to that subdivision of the state in which it occurs. If this asset is not protected by the council as the Legislature has mandated it should be, that subdivision has recourse under §
42-35-15 . As we have in the past, we note that government may be aggrieved when the public interest is affected. City of East Providence v. Shell Oil Co.,110 R.I. 138 ,143 ,290 A.2d 915 ,918 (1972); Buffi v. Ferri,106 R.I. 349 ,351 ,259 A.2d 847 ,849 (1969). That the Legislature has designated concern for our coastal resources a matter of great public interest is evident in the legislative findings of s46-23-1 . East Greenwich Yacht Club v. *Page 10 Coastal Resources Management Council,118 R.I. 559 ,376 A.2d 682 (R.I. 1977) (footnotes omitted).
It has, therefore, been long established that local municipalities are permitted to appeal CRMC assents. However, the interest a municipality has in the outcome of a case must still result from the consequences that an adverse decision may bring to the entity's regulatory charge. In other words, to constitute an injury in fact, the governmental entity seeking to assert the injury must be able to point to an actual adverse consequence brought about by the decision. See East Greenwich YachtClub,
Here the Town fails to allege any injury in fact flowing from the decision of CRMC to deny Champlin's application for a marina expansion. In fact, it is the position of the Town that "this Honorable Court should and, respectfully, must affirm that denial." (Town's Brief at 9.) Far from alleging an actual injury in fact, the Town's position argues for the correctness of the Council's decision and forecloses the existence of an actual injury-in-fact stemming from the CRMC's decision and flowing to the Town. Instead of protesting the decision to grant, or not, Champlin's application to expand its Marina, the Town takes issue with the Council's factual findings. In particular, the Town alleges that it
is aggrieved by certain findings set forth in the written decision of July 5, 2006, in particular but not limited to the finding that:
80. The Town's Harbor Management Plan, which was approved in 1991, expired in 1996. The Town did not *Page 11 reapply for a renewal of that plan until at least sometime in 1999. The CRMC does not recognize the validity of the subsequent plan until it is approved by the CRMC. However, those CRMC members opposed to the subcommittee recommendation find that the appropriate location and delineation of mooring field E should be that as approved and documented in the 1993 ACOE permit. (Town's Complaint at 1.) (emphasis added).
That the Town takes issue with the factual findings of CRMC does not confer aggrieved status upon the Town independent of its role as an objector to Champlin's application. As such, this Court concludes that the Town does not qualify as an aggrieved party, and this Court must dismiss its appeal for lack of standing to bring an administrative appeal.
In addition, with respect to the question of the 2003 plan's consistency review, the Court would note that it is apparent that CRMC has yet to render a final decision on that question. While CRMC would have the option to either adopt the HMP through a rule making process or to specifically review the HMP for consistency in an adjudicatory proceeding, neither course has taken place to date. As such, a determination on HMP's approval remains before CRMC. This too weighs in favor of a dismissal of the Town's appeal. The rule that appellate review, with limited exceptions, is limited to final orders in contested cases is consistent with traditional understandings of the appellate function. It serves to ensure efficient allocation of judicial resources by preventing the piecemeal litigation of an action and ease of review by ensuring a complete record exists for the reviewing court to assess.See Industrial National Bank of Providence v. Colt,
Likewise, if CRMC should choose to adopt the 2003 HMP through the rulemaking process, the appropriate channel for review would be to initiate a declaratory judgment action pursuant to §
Rather, those seeking to compel agency action on a particular application should file a §
Therefore, because the Town fails to allege an injury-in-fact and because no final order or rule has been adopted with respect to the 2003 HMP, this Court dismisses PC 2006-3900 for lack *Page 13 of standing. However, while the Town did not have standing to pursue an appeal of its own under RIAPA, it has joined in the objection to Champlin's appeal. As such, to the extent CRMC's decision relies on the CRMC's conclusion that the 1991 and 1999 HMPs had expired, those concerns are more appropriately addressed in the context of Champlin's appeal.
an expansion that would cover an area of approximately four acres. The expansion would require a change in the approved perimeter limit and increase fixed docks by approximately 2990 feet increasing [its] boating capacity by 140 boats. The docks will be built similarly to [its] present docks with 755 feet of floating docks in between the fixed piers in areas indicated by the plans. (Champlin's CRMC Application Package at 3.)
As part of the application process, Champlin's obtained a Water Quality Certificate from the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, certifying that the project would meet the requirements of the State Water Quality Regulations. (Full Council Decision ¶ 41 at 7.)
The Town objected to Champlin's application, as did the aforementioned intervenors. Pursuant to §
For a period of two years, the Subcommittee conducted twenty-three public hearings and considered testimony from a number of lay and expert witnesses. The hearings concluded on September 16, 2005. Thereafter, on October 24, 2005, Lemont, Sahagian, Ricci, and Zarella, the only Subcommittee members who attended all twenty-three hearings, 10 convened in a so-called public workshop ("workshop") to consider the evidence, make findings of fact, and issue its recommendation11 to the full Council.
Between September 16, 2005, the end of the hearings, and October 24, 2005, the date the Subcommittee met to formulate its recommendation, CRMC staff member, Danni Goulet, prepared an alternate plan ("Goulet plan") to share with Subcommittee members, but not with the parties. (Tr. at 42, 3/23; Tr. at 119, 3/22; see Ex. Committee M.) This plan's creation and Lemont and Tikoian's failed efforts to have the Subcommittee consider it, as well as their subsequent advocacy in favor of this plan, will be covered later in the decision.
By a three-to-one vote, the Subcommittee majority voted to recommend that the full Council approve the Champlin's application "as modified" to permit an expansion of 170 feet. On January 10, 2006, the Subcommittee issued its written recommendation (hereinafter "Subcommittee Recommendation") with forty-seven separate findings of fact which correspond *Page 15 to evidence contained in record of the twenty-three Subcommittee hearings. In its Recommendation, the Subcommittee majority acknowledged that "Type 3 Waters permit both marinas and moorings as high priority uses," with the area available for moorings being significantly greater than that for marinas. (Subcommittee Recommendation Findings of Fact (hereinafter Subcomm. F.F.) 24 at 4; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 429, 3/3/04.) Furthermore, "all parties to the proceedings" acknowledged the demand for additional marina space in the GSP [Great Salt Pond] and that there has not been an expansion of marinas in the area for some time. (Subcomm. F.F. 25 at 3; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 155-56, 2/4/04; Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 2621, 7/26/05; Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 833, 4/28/04.) The Subcommittee identified the factors that CRMC must weigh when considering such proposals, to wit: that Type 3 Waters and the adjacent shoreline are utilized intensely for the needs of the recreational boating public and also retain numerous natural assets of special concern to the Council. (Subcomm. F.F. 14 at 2-3; workshop Tr. at 3143, 10/24/05.)
In weighing the evidence before it, the Subcommittee noted that the CRMC staff engineer and staff biologist recommended that the application be denied as filed because expansion would have a negative impact on natural resources. (Subcomm. F.F. 6 at 2; Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 1446, 1/31/05; Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 1343, 1/4/05.) In rejecting such testimony, the Subcommittee majority found that it "was impeached upon cross examination." (Subcomm. F.F. 27 at 4; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 1294-95, 12/7/04; Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 1415, 1/4/05; Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 1756, 5/18/05.) They instead determined that Champlin's evidence, including its DEM Water Quality Certificate, demonstrated that a marina expansion would not negatively impact finfish, shell fish, or submerged aquatic vegetation. (Subcomm. F.F. 26 at 4; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 525, 3/24/04; Subcomm Hr'g Tr. at 1020, 6/11/04.) The *Page 16
Subcommittee majority further found that the evidence presented, along with pump outs which would be installed, and the DEM Water Quality Certificate, ensured that there would be no negative impact on the Great Salt Pond's water quality. (Subcomm. F.F. 28 at 4; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 2784, 7/25/05.) Regarding the Objectors, the Subcommittee majority rejected their contention that no expansion was acceptable after one of the Objectors' experts stated that a 200-foot expansion would be a viable plan. (Subcomm. F.F. 31 at 4; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 2494, 6/29/05; see also Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 1071, 6/11/04.) The Subcommittee then determined that 365 feet existed between the existing dock and existing moorings. (Subcomm. F.F. 32 at 4; workshop Tr. at 3105, 3113, 10/24/05.) Accounting for the 100-foot buffer zone required by the Town's HMP, the Subcommittee majority noted that the 265 feet available for expansion was sufficient room to accommodate expansion of the marina and the needs of the Town's mooring field. (Subcomm. F.F. 33 at 4;see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 2407, 2497, 6/29/05.) The Subcommittee majority found that expansion would not have a negative impact on the Great Salt Pond's ecology, water quality, and navigability. They also determined that it would not have a negative scenic or aesthetic impact, given the existing uses of the Great Salt Pond. (Subcomm. F.F. 38 at 5;see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 452, 3/3/04; Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 470, 3/24/04.) Overall, the Subcommittee majority found that "no reasonable alternatives to Champlin's application were offered by the Objectors." (Subcomm. F.F. 42 at 5; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 2441, 2467, 6/29/05.)
In concluding, the Subcommittee found that as the Town's 1991 plan had expired in 1996 and no subsequent plan had been approved by CRMC, (Subcomm. F.F. 46 at 5-6;. see Subcomm Hr'g Tr. at 2132, 6/7/05), a comprehensive harbor management proposal was required to come *Page 17 before the CRMC for review and approval in accordance with the CRMC program.12 (Subcomm. F.F. 45 at 5; see Subcomm. Hr'g Tr. at 2157-59, 6/7/05.) The majority ultimately recommended that:
[T]he Full Council [should] approve a seaward expansion of the docks 170 feet with a 25 foot marina perimeter limit on the seaward side of that construction. On the sides of the facility the [marina perimeter limit] will be limited to ten feet. The subcommittee recommends denial of any new construction to the west. The [marina perimeter limit] expansion would total 195 feet seaward and be approximately an additional 3.08 acres increase into the GSP. . . . (Subcommittee Recommendation at 6.)13
Lemont dissented. Id. at 7. At the workshop, he had advocated an alternate proposal consistent with the one contained in the Goulet plan, which called for a 100-foot expansion to the west. (Workshop Tr. at 3120-24, 3179, 10/24/05.)
After review of the Subcommittee hearing transcripts, this Court is satisfied that the Subcommittee Recommendation and its findings of fact are supported by the evidence of record.
Several months later, on February 28, 2006, the full Council met pursuant to §
Prior to the meeting of the full Council, Champlin's filed motions to disqualify Tikoian and Abedon from voting on the Subcommittee Recommendation.15 At the meeting, before addressing the Subcommittee Recommendation, CRMC addressed the motions to disqualify and denied them. Thereafter, CRMC members discussed the Subcommittee Recommendation. (Full Council Tr. at 52-96, 2/28/06)
Lemont made comments at the full Council meeting that seemingly invoked the Goulet plan:
As to the issue of the alternative . . . I think the numbers that were presented by Dan [Goulet] on our part were absolutely much more acceptable, and I found that the solution to the problem, rather than expanding out into the pond, was to go to the west, and indeed, part of my recommendation, I believe it was in the subcommittee meeting, was exactly that, expand to the west. Dredge, there was a place to take the spoils. The depth could have been increased. It made, to me, a heck of a lot more sense to reconfigure and utilize that western portion than to go into the uncharted water. And, indeed, many of the things in this subcommittee report I agree with. Yes, there were needs for additional piers in the State of Rhode Island. I have a boat. I know about them. But, the answer was, how much expansion should there have been? What is big enough? What is too big? And, it was very difficult to put that answer and quantify it. That's where we had to utilize the opinions, we had to rest upon the testimony. And, I concluded, Mr. Zarrella, and I think it was done quite well, that the marina could be expanded to the west, that it would suit the need for additional spots that did not interfere further out into the pond that would have an impact on a mooring field, it would have an impact on the fairway and have an impact on safety of all the vehicles through that one area. (Full Council Tr. at 107-09, 2/28/06.)
Later at the full Council meeting, Lemont spoke more about his Subcommittee recommendation: *Page 19
[A]nd, when all was said and done with this process, I really thought, based upon the evidence, based upon everything you've heard, based upon the islanders, based upon the islanders that we've talked to, based upon all of the evidence, based upon the legal requirements, what is the right thing to do, because oftentimes I get to that point in decision making, what is the right thing, and I think here I concluded, as this process went on, that the expansion that was being sought was not justified, that there were other ways of skinning that cat.
I disagree with Mr. Zarrella on the issue of going to the west. It was my recommendation to the subcommittee, which was voted three-to-one, that we go to the west, that, indeed, the area to be dredged, that the rockpile that was there be submerged. I also supported a limited increase out into the pond, based upon the evidence, because I didn't think, and I don't think to this very moment, that no increase is justified. I think if one were to sit through and filter through everything, that it would be fairly easy to conclude that there is something justifiable, but it's absolutely not what the applicant sought. (Full Council Tr. at 188-89, 2/28/06.)
At the meeting, Gray revealed that he had consulted a CRMC staff member off the record on a matter unrelated to the Goulet plan:
Okay. So, really, the distance that we have here to work with is from the end of the existing pier to the edge of that mooring field?Taking that assumption, I asked staff to take a measurement of one of the big plans from the applicant and to measure that out for me, scale it off on the north end of the pier and on the south end of the pier, and the information I got back was that on the north end of the pier there was 340 feet. . . . (Full Council Tr. at 112, 2/28/06.)
Tikoian then requested that Ken Anderson, a CRMC engineer, present the measurement to the full Council:
Anderson: Yes, Mr. chairperson. Based on Applicant's Number 18 full exhibit, the plan scales off from the T-head, is what Mr. Gray said, is 310 feet to a maximum of 340 feet from the dock T-head to the trapezoidal mooring field.*Page 20Tikoian: And in number 32 it says 365. Is that right, Neill? Gray: That's correct, that's correct. (Full Council Tr. at 121-22, 2/28/06.)
CRMC member Abedon briefly mentioned his similar use of the CRMC staff:
The numbers that are involved in this case kind of made my head spin. When it comes to mathematics, it's static in the attic. But, I work [sic] with the staff in a limited process, and started to weigh through the same stuff Neill [Gray] did, and I have to come to the same conclusion, that one of real problems is there is navigational problems, particularly with the size of the boats, and I already expressed this before, that it may be a question of the size of the boats. If you want to have more access for more boaters and average size of boats is not 165 feet, maybe it's 38, but if it's a lot smaller, you can get a lot more boats in that area if you wanted to. (Full Council Tr. at 186, 2/28/06.)
CRMC member Sullivan, who is also the Director of DEM, admitted that he had consulted his staff at DEM, off the record, and had not read the entire Subcommittee record, as mandated by Sec. 5.3(3) of the CRMC Management Procedures, having skipped over the "I object" statements:
I respect all the efforts that have gone into this. I'm not sure if it would be more or less painful to have sat through the hours of oral presentation. I will admit to that I began to skip some of the sections where it said initially I object, and I skipped that. But, I have spent considerable time in the last few months, I have challenged many of my staff to read sections of it, to debate, to discuss, to see if we came up with conclusions, and I must conclude that the public trust is not served by the application before us, it has the potential to diminish the public resource, and I could not be party to support a diminishment of a public resource. (Full Council Tr. at 185, 2/28/06.)
During the meeting, Zarrella expressed his frustration with and hostility toward the Town:
[I] got a little local knowledge, and one of the things that, I want to use my local knowledge of the island, and I'll say that here, is the island has a tendency to say no. They don't understand compromise." (Full Council Tr. at 160, 2/28/06.)The town is going to take some type of responsibility here, and I don't mean the lawyers, I mean the town fathers there. This thing *Page 21 should have never came to this point. But, every time the Town tries to come up with no, they lose, and they get something taken away from them. (Full Council Tr. at 162, 2/28/06.)
But, when [the Town] stood up and said, the town's official position is [no extension]. I said, there they go again. I said, you can change the faces, you can check change [sic] the [Town] Council, but you can't change the attitude. Block Island take responsibility yourself. (Full Council Tr. at 165, 2/28/06.)
Following the contentious meeting, a motion was made and seconded to approve the Subcommittee Recommendation. (Full Council Tr. at 197, 2/28/06.) Zarrella, Shekarchi, Sahagian, Coia, and Ricci voted in the affirmative. Gray, Sullivan, Abedon, Lemont, and Tikoian voted in the negative, resulting in a tie vote. (Full Council Tr. at 200-01, 2/28/06). The CRMC determined that a tie vote resulted in a rejection of the Subcommittee Recommendation. (Full Council Tr. at 198-99, 2/28/06.)16
On July 5, 2006, the full Council, through its members voting against the Subcommittee Recommendation, issued a written decision denying the Champlin's application and rejecting the Subcommittee Recommendation. (Full Council Decision at 12.) In anticipation of this written decision, Champlin's took its appeal. Also on July 5, 2006, the CRMC members voting in favor of the Subcommittee Recommendation issued a written recommendation mirroring the findings of fact and recommendation issued by the Subcommittee. (Findings of Fact of the CRMC Members in Support of the Subcommittee Recommendation at 2-7.)
The full Council's decision rejecting the Subcommittee Recommendation seemingly references the Goulet plan when it mentions alternative expansion to the west:
The evidence is clear that a more efficient utilization of existing facilities is available to the applicant as well as viable alternatives to expand to the west, which outweighs the potential negative impacts associated with a seaward expansion encompassing *Page 22 approximately 3.08 acres. (Full Council Decision ¶ 38 at 6-7.)Regarding the subcommittee majority's finding as to the value of the CRMC staff's reports and testimony, those CRMC members opposed to the subcommittee recommendation do not believe that the CRMC staff's testimony and reports should be entirely discredited. Many of the points made by the staff are valid, particularly relating to the use of alternative designs, more efficient utilization of the existing facilities and area, and the costs for dredging and expansion to the west. (Full Council Decision ¶ 39 at 7.)
The area of the [Great Salt Pond] between the shoreline and the western most extent of the existing docks could be more efficiently utilized for the construction of docks and operation of a marina. (Full Council Decision ¶ 66 at 10.)
The evidence demonstrates that while expansion to the west may not be able to accommodate vessels of 165-feet, the credible evidence demonstrates that it would be able to accommodate more average size yachts which are more likely to be used by the Rhode Island boating public. (Full Council Decision ¶ 67 at 10.)
Additionally, the full Council decision relied on the measurements that Gray had originally obtained by consulting CRMC staff off the record:
The evidence demonstrates that the distance from the edge of the existing facility is between 310-to 340-feet from the edge of the trapezoid shape identified as the Town of New Shoreham's mooring field in the US Army Corp. of Engineers ("ACOE") permit. (Full Council Decision ¶ 51 at 8.)Consequently, the appropriate distance to use in assessing navigational impacts is the 310-foot distance to the mooring field. (Full Council Decision ¶ 52 at 8.)
Therefore, applying appropriate and proper marine design criteria under the existing situation with a 165-foot vessel utilizing Champlin's facility an appropriate channel would be as much as 330-feet, which is more than the 310-feet available under the current configuration. (Full Council Decision ¶ 54 at 8.)
By rejecting the Subcommittee Recommendation on a tie vote, CRMC denied Champlin's application in its entirety, leading to the instant appeal. In count one of its *Page 23 complaint, Champlin's avers that that the decision of CRMC, denying its application, was made upon unlawful procedure; in violation of constitutional or statutory procedure; in excess of the statutory authority of the agency; affected by other error of law; was clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative and substantial evidence on the whole record; and was arbitrary, capricious and characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion, all of which affected the substantial rights of the Plaintiff. (Compl. ¶ 46.)17 In its second count, Champlin's alleges that its rights to procedural and substantive due process under the United States Constitution, the Rhode Island Constitution, and the Management Practices of the CRMC were violated. Specifically, Champlin's asserts that Tikoian and Abedon, despite having publicly expressed disapproval of the Subcommittee Recommendation in violation of their duty to be fair and impartial, refused to disqualify themselves from voting on Champlin's application. (Compl. ¶ 57.) Lastly, in its third count, Champlin's contends that pursuant to an objective standard of impartiality, Tikoian and Abedon should have recused themselves from consideration of Champlin's application. (Compl. ¶ 62-63.) For relief, Champlin's requests that this Court declare the vote of the CRMC on 2/28/06 null and void, remand this cause to the CRMC with directions to approve the recommendation of the Subcommittee, and order Tikoian and Abedon to refrain from any further participation in Champlin's application. (Compl. ¶¶ 47, 57, 63.)
This Court began hearing evidence as part of the evidentiary hearing on March 19, 2007. The evidentiary hearing consisted of sixteen hearing dates, concluding on April 13, 2007.
Pursuant to §
Based upon the credible evidence presented in this Court at the evidentiary hearing, it is clear that CRMC members did not limit their activity on the application to the hearing or meeting rooms. Council members did not appreciate the quasi-judicial nature of their roles or the prohibition against ex parte communications. While the case was unfolding at the Subcommittee hearings, another case was being made in support of or against Champlin's application outside the hearing process and in violation of the letter and spirit of the applicable statutes.
Both Chairperson Tikoian and Subcommittee Chair Lemont opposed the application and made no secret about their feelings. They misinterpreted their role as impartial quasi-judicial officers and spoke freely about their misgivings with the application and later with the Subcommittee Recommendation. Their combined efforts to defeat the application and the Subcommittee Recommendation involved lobbying other members individually, speaking to the media, and communicating with the Governor and his staff. After the hearings ended, but before *Page 25 the Subcommittee workshop was convened, they directed staff to create an alternate plan, which was prepared by a staff member, Goulet, who himself went outside the record to develop it. (Tr. at 111, 3/22; Tr. at 15-16, 3/23; Tr. at 97-99, 102, 3/26; Tr. at 92, 4/2.) The Goulet plan was shared by Tikoian and Lemont with selected individuals, but not with the parties or intervenors. They were never given an opportunity to confront or cross examine Goulet about his proposal.
The Court accepts as credible the testimony and evidence presented in court that Tikoian misconceived his role as Council chairperson as empowering him to influence the recommendation of the Subcommittee members. In a November 29, 2004 article appearing in The ProvidenceJournal, Tikoian told reporter Peter Lord that he suggested a compromisea year ago and planned to reiterate his position with the Subcommittee. (Ex. 2.) (emphasis added).18 Additionally, Zarrella testified, "[Tikoian] said after [the Subcommittee hearings conclude] . . . we'll get together and I'll let you know how I want you guys to handle this. . . . That was probably about maybe about three months into the hearing." (Tr. at 40, 3/19.)19 Zarrella testified further that towards the conclusion of the hearing process, Tikoian made similar comments at the National Hotel on Block Island, "[Tikoian] said he was trying to try to get [the Subcommittee hearings] wrapped up as quick as he could and he was going to get together with us and tell us how to vote." (Tr. at 41, 3/19.) Sahagian echoed Zarrella's testimony, recalling that Tikoian indicated at the National Hotel that when the time came for the Subcommittee to vote, Tikoian would have a plan drawn up for the Subcommittee members to vote on. (Tr. at 72, 4/11; Tr. at 5-6, 4/12.) The Court notes that Ricci, who was also present at the Hotel, denied hearing Tikoian speak these words. (Tr. at 39, 3/20.) For his part, Tikoian denied telling Zarrella that he was *Page 26 going to tell him how to vote. (Tr. at 133-34, 4/9/07.) Tikoian claimed that he did not mention a single thing about Champlin's at the National Hotel and denied that Zarrella was even present. (Tr. at 93-94, 4/5; Tr. at 134, 4/9/07.)
When the Court considers all of the facts and circumstances presented at the hearing, the Court rejects Tikoian's testimony that he never attempted to interfere with the independence of the Subcommittee. On this point, the Court accepts the testimony of Zarella and Sahagian as more reliable accounts of the incident. Although Ricci was a credible witness, the Court cannot reject believable testimony merely because one person present did not hear everything that was said that day. The Court also accepts Sahagian's testimony about a phone call he had with Tikoian after a July Subcommittee meeting, in which Tikoian again promised to have a plan drawn up for the members of the Subcommittee. (Tr. at 87, 4/11; Tr. at 3-4, 4/12.)
The Court is satisfied that the record is devoid of any evidence that Governor Carcieri lobbied Tikoian or any other CRMC member on the issue of Champlin's application with the intent to influence their votes. However, the Court finds that Tikoian utterly failed to appreciate his quasi-judicial position and perceived his role, at least in part, as serving the Governor's interests. Throughout the period that Champlin's application was before CRMC, Chairperson Tikoian served as CRMC's liaison to the Governor's office. He engaged in email communications with Mark Adelman, a member of Governor Carcieri's staff. When Tikoian told Adelman that he had to be cautious because CRMC is quasi-judicial, he acquiesced without further protest to Adelman's demands that he provide the Governor with information on the parties involved and their respective positions. (Ex. 3-A; Tr. at 117, 3/20.) Rather than distance himself from the political process and have Grover Fugate, Executive Director of CRMC, serve as point person with the Governor's office, Tikoian continued to communicate with Adelman *Page 27 and later met with the Governor himself. The Court accepts Adelman's testimony that from November 9, 2004 through the final decision of the CRMC, Tikoian was his point person or liaison with CRMC. (Tr. at 75, 77-78, 3/20.) The Court finds that Tikoian sought the Governor's input and approval of the direction he was taking in reference to the Subcommittee Recommendation. It was incumbent on Tikoian to distance himself from outside influences and to recognize that his responsibility was to the public to ensure the fairness of the application process. He failed to do so.
Tikoian testified that during the Subcommittee hearings, he was unable to accompany the Governor on a dredge tour and asked Lemont to attend in his absence. He asked Lemont to discuss the status of Champlin's application with Governor Carcieri although he denied telling Lemont to address the merits of the proposal with the Governor. (Tr. at 40, 4/5.) Lemont testified that he spoke to the Governor as requested. (Tr. at 69, 4/12.) Lemont remembered telling the Governor the number of hearings that the Subcommittee had already conducted and informing him that CRMC had received hundreds of letters regarding Champlin's application. (Tr. at 70, 4/13.) Lemont further testified that after updating the Governor on the status of Champlin's, he reported to Tikoian that he had given the Governor a "quick rundown." (Tr. at 75, 4/13.)
Lemont and Tikoian also worked together to obtain a compromise plan to present to the Subcommittee after the hearings were concluded. At Lemont's direction, Fugate asked Goulet to draft an alternate plan. (Tr. at 95-96, 3/26.) Lemont claims that he requested the plan after one of the Town's witnesses testified that he or she "could live with a 100-foot increase." (Tr. at 87, 4/13; see also Tr. at 70, 4/12.) Lemont testified that although he did not favor any expansion initially, he later decided to support a compromise to get the matter resolved.Id. Lemont *Page 28 acknowledged that he was being influenced by matters outside the record. He testified that he "saw all of the cumulative things that were going on, the editorials, et cetera, et cetera, I came up with the thought that perhaps we could compromise this, that everybody could get something, and the matter would be resolved." (Tr. at 87, 4/13. Seealso Tr. at 70, 4/12.)
The role of a subcommittee chairperson is akin to that of jury foreperson. Neither the subcommittee chair nor the jury foreperson serves as "super" members of the panel. Each has but one vote. Lemont testified that
I came up with a compromise that I thought would solve the problem, and that's what I wanted to do. I was chairman of the subcommittee. I had heard the testimony. I had heard the comments of the subcommittee. I was looking for something that would be a compromise. There were many people that I heard on Block Island that wanted no expansion. There were later, some of the letters that I did look at, no expansion. I read the editorial in the Block Island paper, the letters to the editor. I listened to your witnesses. I listened to all of the witnesses. And I came up with a conclusion that perhaps there might be a compromise that would settle this matter. (Tr. at 84, 4/13.)
Approximately two to three weeks before the Subcommittee vote, Goulet testified that Fugate asked him to prepare an alternate plan. (Tr. at 109, 111, 3/22.) Goulet's plan provided a 100-foot extension alternative utilizing area to the west of the existing marina. (Tr. at 42, 3/23;see Ex. Committee M.) Goulet stated, "[The end result] was a synopsis of the information20 that was in the record as well as a depiction of what I thought a viable alternative would be that allowed expansion and also answered the question of how the Town's mooring field would be designed." (Tr. at 119, 3/22.)21 *Page 29
Goulet testified that in preparing his plan, he reviewed more than the record of the proceedings before the Subcommittee. He spoke to a staff member of Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) to discuss water quality issues and visited DEM offices, where he reviewed a spreadsheet that was not part of the record. (Tr. at 111, 3/22; Tr. at 15-16, 3/23.) Goulet explained that he relied on the model introduced to him at DEM to determine whether Champlin's applied-for area passed water quality certificate analysis. (Tr. at 102, 3/26.) Goulet also conducted independent research in an effort to find material that would either corroborate or contradict the testimony of the expert witness presented at the Subcommittee hearings. (Tr. at 97-98, 3/26.) Goulet relied on his own professional judgment to draft the Goulet plan. (Tr. at 99, 3/26.)22 Fugate testified that CRMC staff contacted the Army Corps of Engineers, and Goulet also incorporated their input into his plan. (Tr. at 92, 4/2.)
When the Goulet plan was completed, Goulet was instructed to share it with selected individuals designated by Lemont, including Ricci and Sahagian, but not with Zarrella. (Tr. at 75, 4/12.) Lemont explained his reasoning:
I considered [Zarrella] to be a loose cannon. He was a person who had trouble not talking. He talked a mile a minute and I just felt he would take this and run to the press or run somewhere with it so what we wanted to do was to show him at the very end so he wouldn't have a lot of time with it. (Tr. at 75-76, 4/12.)23
The Court finds that Tikoian was actively involved along with Lemont in the decision to have staff create an alternate plan regardless of whether Lemont was the point person with CRMC staff on the plan. The Court is mindful of Tikoian's expanded view of his role as Council *Page 30 Chairperson and his communications with other Council members concerning an alternate plan. Fugate testified: "I told Mr. Tikoian, when we originally started to do this, that it was being developed, and then I don't know if it was Mr. Lemont that informed Mr. Tikoian, but Mr. Tikoian was aware that we had completed our work and we had an alternative." (Tr. at 79, 4/2.) The Court draws the reasonable inference from the established facts that the Goulet plan was developed as a joint decision of both Tikoian and Lemont.
As the CRMC staffers showed the Goulet plan to Ricci and Sahagian, Chairperson Tikoian lobbied the Subcommittee members to support it. Ricci testified that he encountered the Goulet plan after the last Subcommittee hearing but prior to the Subcommittee vote. (Tr. at 47, 4/11.) He recalled that Tikoian stopped by his law office and said he thought a modified, 100-foot plan would be best. (Tr. at 34, 3/20.)24 Ricci recounted, "At the time he indicated to me that if I would agree to support a one-hundred foot plan, the other Subcommittee member, Jerry Sahagian, would also agree to the one-hundred foot modification." (Tr. at 34, 3/20.) Ricci testified that he agreed to give the Goulet plan consideration but could not commit to voting for it. (Tr. at 35, 3/20; Tr. at 58, 4/11.) Goulet testified that he showed Ricci the plan the week before the Subcommittee vote. (Tr. at 30, 37, 3/23; see also Tr. at 115, 3/26.)
After showing the Goulet plan to Ricci, Fugate invited Sahagian to the CRMC office in
Wakefield, Rhode Island to view it. (Tr. at 73, 4/11; Tr. at 13, 4/9/07.) Sahagian testified that he was troubled by their presentation:
[D]an Goulet opened the plan. I said okay, how far out is the extension? Dan looked down and said 100 feet. I said Grover, I've asked important questions on the record. I even made a statement in July. Don't forget this was in September, only two *Page 31 months later. I made a statement in July. The owner's [sic] engineer said 205 feet was viable. DEM gave a water quality certificate for a 240-foot expansion. I said why vote on a 100-foot expansion if the state addressed the biological issue which was a 240 expansion? The objector's own expert said 200 or 205 was viable. I've asked questions on the record and indicated on the record that I was leaning towards 200 feet. Why would I accept a 100-foot?. . .
So I said, Grover, what are we doing? He shrugged his shoulders then when I said, can I take a copy of this plan, he said no.25 Then I left abruptly because I felt that it was way off base, the size and scope of the plan and that if I couldn't take it with me after sitting through 23 long hearings, it was a slap in my face. (Tr. at 96-97, 4/11.)
Tikoian urged Sahagian to support the Goulet plan. The Court accepts as credible Sahagian's testimony that Tikoian called him inviting Sahagian to his home. (Tr. at 76, 4/11.) Sahagian described their October 23, 2005 meeting wherein Tikoian asked him to support the plan:
I said, Mike, I really don't want to — you're not going to like my answer so please don't ask me. He said come on, I want to talk to you. Do the right thing. I said, Mike, you know, we went back and forth. I said, Mike, don't ask me to vote for that 100-foot plan because you won't like my answer. He asked me did the Speaker of the House call you? I said no and then he went through a whole list of people and asked me if they had called me and I didn't give him any answers. I just said, Mike, come on. We have a friendship, don't let this one disagreement sever our relationship. I shook his hand and I left. (Tr. at 77, 4/11.)
Tikoian, claiming that this meeting with Sahagian occurred on October 15, 2005, asserted that Sahagian told him that Sahagian, Ricci, Sullivan, and Coia had been directed by Speaker of the House's staff on how to vote on the Champlin's application. (Tr. at 96, 4/5.) Additionally, Tikoian testified that following this meeting with Sahagian, Ricci told him that the Speaker of *Page 32 the House had called him, and Ricci was committed to the Speaker because the Speaker had obtained a job for Ricci's family member. (Tr. at 107, 4/5.) Ricci categorically denied this allegation and further denied that the Speaker ever obtained a job for any of his family members. (Tr. at 42, 4/11.) Ricci denied that he ever had any direct or indirect contact with the Speaker about the Champlin's application. (Tr. at 49-51, 53-54, 4/11.) The Court accepts Ricci's testimony and rejects Tikoian's testimony as lacking credibility and without any factual basis.
Zarrella testified that although he was not shown the plan, Tikoian called his office and advised him of its existence before the workshop. (Tr. at 44, 3/19.) Tikoian denied discussing the Goulet plan with Zarrella prior to the Subcommittee vote. (Tr. at 15, 4/5.) The Court accepts Zarella's recollection of these events as more credible than Tikoian's. Regardless of whether Tikoian and Lemont decided against showing the plan to Zarella until the very end, they clearly told him about its existence.
According to Zarella, Tikoian told him that Sahagian "was not on board" and was supporting a 200-foot expansion. "He told me Tom Ricci — he talked to Tom. Tom was voting for it and Paul [Lemont] was voting for it and he wanted me to vote for it." (Tr. at 44, 3/19.) Zarrella further testified that Tikoian said that Sahagian was putting the agency at risk, and he was going to the Governor's office to have Sahagian removed. (Tr. at 44, 3/19.) Tikoian denied telling Zarrella that Sahagian was putting the agency at risk and that he was going to go to the Governor's office to ensure that Sahagian was not reappointed. (Tr. at 17, 4/5.)26 Zarella's version of events is more credible than Tikoian's. It is also consistent with Fugate's testimony that Tikoian asked him for information on expiration of CRMC members' terms. *Page 33 Zarrella further testified that he spoke with Lemont, who also tried to obtain Zarrella's support for the Goulet plan. (Tr. at 45-46, 3/19.) Zarrella testified that he was lobbied on the night of October 23, 2005. (Tr. at 61, 3/19.) Although he did not identify Tikoian as the person who called him, the Court finds that the credible evidence suggests that Tikoian was the person who contacted Zarella that evening.
When Zarrella, Sahagian, and Ricci arrived for the workshop, they learned that Lemont intended to have Goulet offer his plan to the Subcommittee. Zarella testified: "We were angry about the telephone calls that we got the night before and we understood as we walked into auditorium Mike [Tikoian] told us there was going to be some slides that were going to be introduced." (Tr. at 61, 3/19.) Zarella again testified: "we didn't like getting telephone calls the night before, and as we walked in Mike told us that there was going to be slides that were going to be entered in." Id. The Court finds that the only persons who were motivated to lobby members of the Subcommittee on the evening before the workshop were Tikoian and Lemont. Although Zarrella did not specifically identify which of the two members contacted him, the Court reasonably infers from the record it was one of them. Regarding these slides, Zarrella ultimately testified that
We told Brian Goldman that we didn't want to see those slides and we didn't want any new plans submitted and then Jerry Sahagian talked to Chairman Lemont. We all talked to Chairman Lemont and voiced our opinions that as far as we were concerned the evidentiary hearing was closed. (Tr. at 61-62, 3/19.)
Clearly, Zarrella and Sahagian objected to the presentation of the slides and told Lemont and CRMC Attorney Brian Goldman that they would walk out if the plan was presented. (Tr. at 50, 59-64, 3/19; Tr. at 28-29, 4/12; Tr. at 81, 4/12; Tr. at 84, 4/2.) Lemont relented.
Although they succeeded in preventing Goulet from presenting slides depicting his plan, *Page 34 his plan was presented indirectly through Lemont. At the workshop, the Subcommittee Chair advocated a compromise that was clearly based upon the Goulet plan. Like the Goulet plan, Lemont suggested a 100-foot seawall plan and spoke of expansion to the west. (Workshop Tr. at 3120-24, 3179, 10/24/05.) Lemont said at the workshop:
I believe that with the proper excavation and disposal, that a hole could be created right there where the rocks could be rolled into and we could provide more than adequate depth for expansion to the west. As to the outward into the pond, I do not support anything more than 100 feet for a very limited area, and that very limited area is the face of the dock. (Workshop Tr. at 3120-24, 10/24/05.)
Later at the workshop Lemont stated:
If I am able to gather what's happening here, the four of us are in agreement on all matters except one, and my recommendation was to expand to the west, and to expand 100 feet in a certain limited area. That I think the total area that I proposed is something like 1.7 acres. . . . (Workshop Tr. at 3179, 10/24/05.)
Goulet admitted that the proposal set forth by Lemont at the workshop sounded very similar to his plan. (Tr. at 47, 3/23.) Fugate concurred with Goulet that the plan Lemont advanced at the workshop was consistent with the Goulet plan. (Tr. at 55, 4/9/07.)
Following the vote, The Providence Journal reported that CRMC Chairperson Tikoian and member David Abedon, neither of whom voted on the Subcommittee, disagreed with the Subcommittee Recommendation. TheJournal reported that Abedon said he "hasn't read the full manuscript, but he favors a smaller expansion." (Ex. 1.) Reporter Lord also wrote, "Seconds after the vote at East Providence City Hall, CRMC Chairperson Michael Tikoian said he was ``totally disappointed' and that when the matter comes to the full Council in another month or so, he would support Lemont's much more limited expansion scheme." (Ex. 1.) Tikoian confirmed that he told Peter Lord that he was disappointed in the Subcommittee and would consider *Page 35 Lemont's proposal, but maintained that he had not formed a conclusion on the application at that time. (Tr. at 19-22, 4/5.) The Court rejects this testimony and accepts the testimony of Lord, who indicated that Tikoian had indeed expressed to him how he intended to vote when the matter went before the full Council. (Tr. at 81-82, 3/22.)
Additionally, in an October 29, 2005 article in the Block IslandTimes, reporter Peter Voskamp writes that "Chair Michael Tikoian also expressed his displeasure. He said he was ``totally disappointed' with the vote, and that he ``[backed] Paul Lemont 100 percent.'" (Ex. 24.)27 Tikoian told Fugate that Lemont presented a good compromise, and Tikoian was going to support it when the full Council met. (Tr. at 37, 3/30.) Fugate testified that Tikoian told him that Tikoian would try to get a full Council vote on the Goulet plan. (Tr. at 48, 3/30; Tr. at 20, 4/2.)
These newspaper articles prompted Champlin's to move to disqualify Tikoian and Abedon from voting on the Subcommittee Recommendation for their alleged lack of impartiality and preconceived prejudice. In denying the motion as it pertained to him, Tikoian asserted:
At no point in my conversation, with Mr. Lord, or with anyone else for that matter, did I indicate that my mind was made up or that I had made any final decision on this matter. . . . Further, as an ex-officio member of the subcommittee, I was entitled to participate in the subcommittee workshop and sit in the same position as subcommittee members in terms of forming an opinion on the evidence presented before a subcommittee. (Full Council Tr. at 17-18, 2/28/06.)
These comments now seem disingenuous in light of the additional evidence which was presented at the evidentiary hearing in this Court, and Tikoian's protest impacts negatively on his overall credibility. Additionally, the Court notes that although he sat as an ex-officio member of the Subcommittee, Tikoian was not entitled to participate along with Lemont, Sahagian, Ricci, *Page 36 and Zarella because he did not attend all of the hearings. See CRMC Management Procedures § 3.
Shortly after the workshop, Tikoian organized a meeting among Goulet, Fugate, and himself with Governor Carcieri and his staff at the Governor's office. In preparation for that meeting, at Tikoian's suggestion, Adelman contacted Goulet and obtained slides depicting his plan. (Tr. at 69, 3/20; Tr. at 67, 4/5; see Ex. 15.) Goulet met with Tikoian the morning of the meeting with the Governor and showed Tikoian his plan. (Tr. at 22, 3/23.) Fugate recounted showing the Goulet plan to Tikoian:
Mr. Tikoian asked us to put a presentation together for the governor's office. He wanted to review it before he went into the governor's office. So, we met with him that morning at his office and went over the presentation for the governor's briefing which also contained an alternative plan that was developed by Dan [Goulet]. (Tr. at 50-51, 3/30.)
Goulet presented the plan to the Governor and his staff. (Tr. at 30, 3/26.) Adelman testified that Tikoian spoke favorably of the Goulet plan at the meeting with the Governor and presented it as a potential compromise position to which the parties could agree. (Tr. at 84-85, 88-89, 3/20.) Adelman also testified that Tikoian predicted that the full Council vote would end in a tie. (Tr. at 91, 3/20; Tr. at 95, 3/21.) The Court rejects Adelman's effort to back away from this statement when questioned by counsel for the Intervenors, "with certainty I can't say whether it was a prediction or whether it was just a comment that there would be a tie." (Tr. at 95, 3/21.) From that same meeting, Adelman testified that he also received the impression that Tikoian would be voting against the Subcommittee Recommendation, though he did not have any specific memory of Tikoian explicitly stating how he would vote. (Tr. at 91-92, 3/20.) In response to whether Tikoian included himself in the side voting against the application, Adelman explained: *Page 37
I think my memory at the time was that it was a tie and that after he had counted off who the names were that voted against the proposal in the subcommittee that it would then result in a tie. I don't specifically remember him saying that he would vote a specific way, but I think when you took everything together as here is the presentation of the alternative plan, here is what we think could be a workable solution, and, then, the only other alternative is the original application, I think that is the assumption that was drawn from that. (Tr. at 91-92, 3/20.)
Adelman was confronted with his previous deposition28 testimony that Tikoian had placed himself on the side in opposition to the Champlin's application. (Tr. at 93, 3/20.)
Adelman acknowledged that the Governor indicated at the meeting that the alternative plan was "a better option than the full plan." (Tr. at 30, 3/21.) After the meeting with the Governor, Tikoian kept the Governor's Chief of Staff informed about when the full Council vote would be held. (Tr. at 11-12, 4/5.) Based on all of the facts and circumstances proven at the evidentiary hearing, the Court finds that Tikoian presented the Goulet plan to the Governor because he wrongfully considered his role as chairperson as serving as a liaison between the Governor's office and CRMC. He not only wanted to keep the Governor informed on the status of the application, but also wanted to obtain the Governor's input and approval of the course he was taking. The Court finds that Tikoian displayed a clear interest in pleasing the Governor on the issue of Champlin's application. As such, Tikoian would have been very interested in learning from the Governor at their meeting that the Governor thought the alternate plan was "a better option than the full plan." (Tr. at 30, 3/21.)29 *Page 38 Prior to the February 28, 2006 meeting of the full Council, Goulet shared his plan with Council member Shekarchi. (Tr. at 1, 3/26; Tr. at 109, 3/26.) He also spoke with member Gray. (Tr. at 2, 3/26.) Abedon visited the CRMC offices before the vote and spoke with CRMC engineer Anderson, Fugate, and Goulet about alternatives that were not in the record. (Tr. at 66-67, 3/26.) The Court finds that Goulet did not act unilaterally, but only showed the proposal to council members because Tikoian and Lemont, directly or indirectly, encouraged or directed him to do so.
The Court accepts Sahagian's testimony that during this period of time, he spoke to Tikoian, who told him that he could not support anyone who was not on his team for reappointment. (Tr. at 79, 4/11.) Sahagian understood this comment as an attempt by Tikoian to influence his vote. (Tr. at 102, 4/11.) Sahagian was not reappointed by the Governor in January of 2007. (Tr. at 70, 4/11.)
At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, the Court issued a briefing schedule, but interrupted that schedule when the Rhode Island Supreme Court issued a decision in the case of Arnold v. Lebel,
The hearing was conducted on April 9, 2008. The Town's first warden, John T. Savoie, testified that Zarella lobbied the Town to enter into mediation or a compromise agreement with Champlin's. According to Savoie, Zarella telephoned him and told him that Joe Grillo, Champlin's principal, "does a nice job down there"30 and "that he had done a lot of good things for the Town and wasn't there anyway to work things out?" (Tr. at 13, 4/9/08.) Savoie testified that later, after one of the Town's alternative plans was presented at a Subcommittee hearing, Zarrella initiated a conversation with Savoie to tell him that the plan was ridiculous. (Tr. at 14, 4/9/08.) In that conversation, Zarrella purportedly criticized the Town's evidence when he said that the Town's witnesses, Barbara McMullen and Douglas Hoyt, "were terrible witnesses and would [sic] take a lot to overcome the damage they had done." (Tr. at 21, 4/9/08.) Savoie acknowledged that Zarrella never told him he intended to vote on the application, nor recommended any specific or general plan to Savoie. (Tr. at 31, 37, 4/9/08.)
Robert Ellis Smith, a Town Council member, testified about a conversation he had with Zarella in the spring of 2005. Smith recalled that Zarella told him:
[T]he island didn't understand Joe Grillo. He had done a great job at Champlin's, that the islanders were kind of naïve about not respecting development and seeing [sic] a good project when they *Page 40 saw it. Here was a man that was interested in commerce and the island was turning a deaf ear toward him and that I should get to know him. (Tr. at 45-46, 4/9/08.)
According to Smith, before he testified before the Subcommittee, Zarella spoke to him in support of the application. (Tr. at 45, 47, 4/9/08.) He urged the "island" to approve the application. He quoted Zarella as stating, "The community should go along with this, that it was a sound plan for the island." (Tr. at 46, 4/9/08.) Also, "I think that [Grillo is] entitled to this. He's entitled to this expansion." (Tr. at 46, 4/9/08.)
Nancy Dodge, the Town Manager, testified that she had a conversation with Zarella after one of the Subcommittee hearings. (Tr. at 64, 4/9/08.) She recalled that Zarella told her ". . . that Joe Grillo was a good guy, that he did a lot for the island, that the application was for a reasonable expansion, that businesses should be allowed expansion." (Tr. at 65, 4/9/08.) Like Savoie, Dodge recalled that Zarrella criticized the testimony of the Town's witnesses and also expressed anger that Savoie had spoken against the application before the Subcommittee. (Tr. at 67-68, 4/9/08.) Dodge further testified regarding a third telephone call from Zarrella, encouraging her to settle with Champlin's. (Tr. at 66, 4/9/08.) Dodge also acknowledged that Zarrella never told her how he would vote, nor stated his position on the application. (Tr. at 72, 4/9/08.)
The Court finds the testimony of these Town officials credible, particularly in light of the aforementioned comments Zarella made at the meeting of the full Council on February 28, 2006. Zarella, like Tikoian and Lemont, failed to appreciate the quasi-judicial nature of his role.
On April 28, 2008, Champlin's moved that Michael Tikoian, Paul Lemont, Neill Gray, *Page 41 Michael Sullivan, Donald Gomez, and Bruce Dawson31 be disqualified from further participation in Champlin's application in the event that the matter is remanded to CRMC. Additionally, it expanded its appeal from the decision of the full Council and moved that the votes of Tikoian, Lemont, Gray, and Sullivan be disqualified from the February 28, 2006 full Council vote.
After the conclusion of all hearings, the parties submitted briefs in support of their respective decisions. While this Court was reviewing those briefs, the Rhode Island Supreme Court issued an advisory opinion that impacts the issues pertinent to this matter. In re Request forAdvisory Opinion from the House of Representatives (Coastal ResourcesManagement Council),
Despite such constitutional infirmities in the proposed legislation, which essentially mirrors the current CRMC statute, however, the Rhode Island Supreme Court clarified that the CRMC's "administrative actions and determinations to this date[] . . . should be accorded de facto validity." Id. at 942 n. 18. Importantly, for purposes of this decision, the Rhode Island Supreme Court explained its reasoning in according suchde facto validity to the CRMC's "past acts," with analogy to the United States Supreme Court, which similarly "declined to invalidate governmental actions presumably taken in good faith prior to judicial resolution of a complex legal question." Id. Of particular relevance to the instant matter, our Supreme Court noted that the United States Supreme Court has "declined to provide retrospective remedies which would substantially disrupt governmental progress and functions."Id. (citations omitted). Thus, the validity of the CRMC's actions thus far in the present matter, which has encompassed numerous hearings and determinations, is clear.
(g) The court shall not substitute its judgment for that of the agency as to the weight of the evidence on questions of fact. The court may affirm the decision of the agency or remand the case for further proceedings, or it may reverse or modify the decision if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because the administrative findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions are:(1) In violation of constitutional or statutory provisions;
(2) In excess of the statutory authority of the agency;
(3) Made upon unlawful procedure;
(4) Affected by other error or law; [sic.]
(5) Clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and *Page 43 substantial evidence on the whole record; or
(6) Arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion." Section
42-35-15 (g).
This Court's review authority granted by §
The scope of review of this Superior Court "is an extension of the administrative process." Durfee,
This Court, like the second-tier decision-maker in the agency process, accords different levels of deference to the decision-maker below. The decision-maker in the CRMC administrative scheme — one that encompasses a hearing officer or subcommittee — is like that of the DEM, which includes a hearing officer that conducts "``adjudicatory proceedings[]' . . . and is clearly charged with a quasi-judicial role." JohnstonAmbulatory Surgical Associates, Ltd.,
"[I]t is also a well-recognized doctrine of administrative law that deference will be accorded to an administrative agency when it interprets a statute whose administration and enforcement have been entrusted to the agency." Pawtucket Power Assocs. Ltd. P'ship v. City ofPawtucket,
Section
(f) The review shall be conducted by the court without a jury and shall be confined to the record. In cases of alleged irregularities in procedure before the agency, not shown in the record, proof thereon may be taken in the court. The court, upon request, shall hear oral argument and receive written briefs. Section*Page 4642-35-15 (f).
In the absence of alleged procedural irregularities, an assertion that the administrative record is incomplete is not a sufficient basis for a hearing pursuant to §
With respect to remedies, this Court
may reverse, modify, or remand the agency's decision if the decision is violative of constitutional or statutory provisions, is in excess of the statutory authority of the agency, is made upon unlawful procedure, is affected by other errors of law, is clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole record, or is arbitrary or capricious and is therefore characterized by an abuse of discretion. Nickerson,853 A.2d at 1205 (quoting Barrington Sch. Comm.,608 A.2d at 1138 (R.I. 1992)).
This Court may not substitute its judgment for the agency's with respect to "credibility of the witnesses or the weight of the evidence concerning questions of fact. However, an administrative decision can be vacated if it is clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, *Page 47
and substantial evidence contained in the whole record." Costa v.Registrar of Motor Vehicles,
The people shall continue to enjoy and freely exercise all the rights of fishery, and the privileges of the shore, to which they have been heretofore entitled under the charter and usages of this state, including but not limited to fishing from the shore, the gathering of seaweed, leaving the shore to swim in the sea and passage along the shore; and they shall be secure in their rights to the use and enjoyment of the natural resources of the state with due regard for the preservation of their values; and it shall be the duty of the general assembly to provide for the conservation of the air, land, water, plant, animal, mineral and other natural resources of the state, and to adopt all means necessary and proper by law to protect the natural environment of the people of the state by *Page 48 providing adequate resource planning for the control and regulation of the use of the natural resources of the state and for the preservation, regeneration and restoration of the natural environment of the state.
In order to ensure these constitutional rights are protected, the legislature created CRMC and charged it with the duty "to preserve, protect, develop and where possible, restore the coastal resources of the state for this and succeeding generations through comprehensive and coordinated long-range planning and management designed to produce the maximum benefit for society from such coastal resources. . . ." Section
CRMC must comply with the terms of its enabling legislation and its regulations. Ratcliffe v. Coastal Resources Management Council,
All contested cases, all contested enforcement proceedings, and all contested administrative fines shall be heard by the administrative hearing officers, or by subcommittees as provided in §46-23-20.1 , pursuant to the regulations promulgated by the council, provided, however, that no proceeding and hearing prior to the appointment of the hearing officers shall be subject to the provisions of this section." Section46-23-20 ; see CRMC Management Procedures § 1.2 (defining contested case as a proceeding in which the legal rights, duties or privileges of a specific party are required to be determined by the Council after an opportunity for hearing).
Because hearing officers have not been appointed, CRMC relies on subcommittees to conduct hearings on contested cases, pursuant to its statutory authority at §
Whenever the chairperson of the coastal resources management council or, in the absence of the chairperson, the commissioner of coastal resources makes a finding that the hearing officers are otherwise engaged and unable to hear a matter in a timely fashion, he or she may appoint a subcommittee which will act as hearing officers in any contested case coming before the council. The subcommittee shall consist of at least one member, provided, however, that in all contested cases an additional member shall be a resident of the coastal community affected. The city or town council of each coastal community shall, at the beginning of its term of office, appoint a resident of that city or town to serve as an alternate member of the aforesaid subcommittee should there be no existing member of the coastal resources management council from that city or town available to serve on the subcommittee. Any member of the subcommittee actively engaged in hearing a case shall continue to hear the case, even though his or her term may have expired, until the case is concluded and a vote taken thereon. Hearings before subcommittees shall be subject to all rules of practice and procedure as govern hearings before hearing officers. Section46-23-20.1 (e).
Section
After the full Council receives the subcommittee's recommendation and the full hearing record, "The council may, in its discretion, adopt, modify, or reject the findings of fact and/or conclusions of law provided, however, that any modification or rejection of the proposed findings of fact or conclusions of law shall be in writing and shall state the rationales therefor." Section
With respect to matters pending before a Hearing Officer (or a subcommittee in lieu thereof), the CRMC enabling statute forbids ex parte communications between council members *Page 51
and hearing officers (or a subcommittee in lieu thereof). Section
Unless required for the disposition of ex parte matters authorized by law, members or employees of an agency assigned to render an order or to make findings of fact and conclusions of law in a contested case shall not, directly or indirectly, in connection with any issue of fact, communicate with any person or party, nor, in connection with any issue of law, with any party or his or her representative, except upon notice and opportunity for all parties to participate; but any agency member:(1) May communicate with other members of the agency, and
(2) May have the aid and advice of one or more personal assistants. Section
42-35-13 .34
The Town argues that no state statute or CRMC regulation provides that HMPs expire, so, despite initial approval of the 1991 plan for a period of five years, the ordinances enacted as a part of the 1991 plan control the permitting for the Great Salt Pond. Alternatively, the Town contends that the 1999 plan was a valid exercise of the Town's independent delegated authority to regulate its harbor and in the absence of CRMC action, the 1999 plan must guide permitting. Rhode Island law does not support the Town's position. *Page 53
In Champlin's Realty Associates, L.P. v. Tillson,
Here it is undisputed that the 1991 plan was approved by the CRMC for a period of five years and that the Town of New Shoreham did not submit a new HMP for Great Salt Pond until 1999. The CRMC, in both the Subcommittee Recommendation and Objectors' Decision, determined that "The Town's Harbor Management Plan, which was approved in 1991, expired in 1996. The Town did not reapply for a renewal of that plan until at least sometime in 1999. The CRMC does not recognize the validity of the subsequent plan until it is approved by the CRMC." (Subcommittee Recommendation at 11; full Council Decision at 5-6.) The Town therefore contends that as an approved HMP, the provisions of the 1991 plan remained effective until a new HMP is approved.
Rhode Island law does not require CRMC approvals to be permanent and unchanging. Rather, CRMC's organic statute requires updates and revisions to its planning programs every five years. Section
Alternatively, the Town urges that the 1999 plan is valid as an exercise of the Town's authority, under §
The case law condemns such ex parte contacts because they (1) violate statutory requirements of public hearings, and concomitant rights of the public to participate in the hearings, (2) may frustrate judicial review of agency decisions, and (3) may violate due process and fundamental fairness rights to a hearing. The impropriety of ex parte contact in administrative adjudication is well established. E E Hauling, Inc. v. Pollution Control Bd.,451 N.E.2d 555 ,571 (Ill.App. 1983).
In Arnold, medical assistance applicants brought an action against the Rhode Island Department of Human Services (DHS), seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent DHS hearing officers from engaging in ex parte, off-the-record communications about their cases which were pending before the DHS hearing officer. Aronld, 941at 816. The Supreme Court ruled that under the RIAPA, hearing officers may not engage in ex parte communications with anyone, including DHS staff, about facts and opinions relating to a pending case. Id. at 821.
With respect to ex parte communications in the administrative context, the Arnold Court decided, "§
[I]n accordance with §42-35-9 (e) and §42-35-10 (4), the hearing officer must provide notice to the parties before a hearing if he or she intends to consult any documentary source or person concerning facts or opinions about the merits of an appeal. In addition, the parties must be afforded an opportunity to contest any such evidence and to cross-examine any people consulted. Id. at 821.
Lastly, the Arnold Court added that all evidence received or considered must be on the administrative record. Id. The Arnold Court summarized as follows:
Unless the parties are given notice and an opportunity to respond on the record, including cross-examination, if appropriate, a DHS hearing officer may not communicate with anyone, including DHS staff members, about contested adjudicatory facts-including, but not limited to, test results, specific diagnostic information, opinions concerning the severity of an applicant's medical conditions, or overall assessment of a client's disabilities or disability status. All facts and opinions, including opinions of agency professionals and staff, as well as information obtained from an outside source, such as medical texts or the Internet, must be included on the record if the hearing officer plans to base his final decision on such facts. In short, no litigious facts should reach the decision-maker off the record in an administrative hearing. Id.
While the Arnold decision clarified illicit ex parte communications in the administrative context in Rhode Island, it did not provide a specific remedy for such improper contact.
Federal courts have expounded on when illicit ex parte communications taint an agency's decision. Various ex parte communications occurred inProfessional Air Traffic Controllers Organizations v. Federal LaborRelations Authority (PATCO),
The PATCO Court laid out a standard for approaching ex parte communications:
[A] court must consider whether, as a result of improper ex parte communications, the agency's decisionmaking process was irrevocably tainted so as to make the ultimate judgment of the agency unfair, either to an innocent party or to the public interest that the agency was obliged to protect. In making this determination, a number of considerations may be relevant: the gravity of the ex parte communications; whether the contacts may have influenced the agency's ultimate decision; whether the party making the improper contacts benefited from the agency's ultimate decision; whether the contents of the communications were unknown to opposing parties, who therefore had no opportunity to respond; and whether vacation of the agency's decision and remand for new proceedings would serve a useful purpose." Id. at 564-65 (footnotes omitted).39
The PATCO Court cautioned, "If the ex parte contacts are of such severity that an agency decision-maker should have disqualified himself, vacation of the agency decision and remand to an impartial tribunal is mandatory." Id. at 565, n. 33 (citing Cinderella Career FinishingSchools v. FTC,
With respect to gravity of the contacts in PATCO, the court noted that the labor leader had not threatened the FLRA member or made any promises. Id. at 571. The PATCO Court *Page 59
also stated that the meeting had no effect on the ultimate decision of the FLRA member or the FLRA as a whole. Id. As a result, no party benefited from the improper contact. Id. at 572. Furthermore, because the labor leader had advocated a favorable position for PATCO, PATCO had not been deprived of an opportunity to refute the ex parte communication. Id. Ultimately, finding none of the ex parte communications had "irrevocably tainted" the FLRA's decision or effected procedural unfairness on any of the parties, the PATCO Court found no reason to vacate the FLRA decision or remand the case. Id. at 573-74, 566. In Power Authority of State of N.Y. v. F.E.R.C.,
Ex parte communications by Congressmen or any one else with a judicial or quasi-judicial body regarding a pending matter are improper and should be discouraged. On the other hand, the mere existence of such communications hardly requires a court or administrative body to disqualify itself. Recusal would be required only if the communications posed a serious likelihood of affecting the agency's ability to act fairly and impartially in the matter before it. In resolving that issue, one must look to the nature of the communications and particularly to whether they contain factual matter or other information outside of the record, which the parties did not have an opportunity to rebut." Power Authority,743 F.2d at 110 (internal citations omitted); see also Southwest Sunsites, Inc. v. F.T.C.,785 F.2d 1431 ,1436 (9th Cir. 1986).
The Power Authority Court ultimately determined that disqualification of the agency was unnecessary because the parties had been informed of agency decision-makers' ex parte communications and had a full opportunity to respond. Power Authority,
Ex parte communications between the decision-maker and staff, this time in the form of charts prepared by a staff specialist who assisted a hearing officer, occurred in Nationwide Mut. *Page 60 Ins. Co. v. Ins. Comm'r,
Ex parte contacts in the context of two layers of agency consideration warranted recusal and transfer to a body uninfected by ex parte communications as an appropriate remedy in Press Broadcasting Co., Inc.v. F.C.C.,
With respect to the Court's imposition of a remedy, "the principal concerns of the court are the integrity of the process and the fairness of the result, mechanical rules have little place in a judicial decision whether to vacate a voidable agency proceeding. Instead, any such decision must of necessity be an exercise of equitable discretion."PATCO,
Again in Eaton v. Rosewood Center,
[w]hen the agency has committed an error of law, i.e., by considering improperly an ex parte communication . . . the court *Page 62 should remand the case to the agency for further proceedings designed to remedy the error. Since the . . . letter was not part of the record . . . it could not be used properly as the basis for a final decision. The trial court correctly observed that appellant's request for a hearing regarding the impact of the letter should have been granted to ensure that the final Order of the [agency] is based only on matters contained in the record. Id. at 809 (internal citation omitted).
Additional state cases offer further examples of remedies for ex parte communications at the administrative level. An Illinois case offers an alternative method of dealing with ex parte communications to the investigational hearing provided for in Portland Audubon Soc'y andEaton. In City of Rockford v. County of Winnebago,
allow the substance of most if not all ex parte contacts, as well as the contact of radio and other ads, to be reviewed on the record. It will give all [WCB] Members a chance to re-evaluate the record and render a decision based solely on that record. The Board notes that the hearing record itself appears to be complete and developed in a fundamentally fair manner. This process should remove the procedural clouds from this proceeding and allow it to proceed on the merits. Id.
Following this order, the local board held two hearings at which at least 18 members of the local board testified as to the scope of their ex parte communications. Id. at 427-28. The *Page 63
reviewing board affirmed the resulting local board decision, determining that the city had not been denied fundamental fairness. Id. at 428. The Appellate Court of Illinois upheld the decision, finding "that the remand and placing of the ex parte contacts on the record removed the danger of prejudice. . . ." Id. at 431. Thus, the Appellate Court of Illinois employed a combination of disqualification and remand as a potential remedy for improper ex parte contacts in agency adjudications.See Press Broadcasting,
Overall, the case law establishes that agency members are prohibited from consulting with agency staff concerning facts or opinions about the merits of a pending case, unless the parties have the opportunity to contest such evidence and cross-examine those consulted.Arnold,
Turning to the workshop, the Court must determine whether exposure to ex parte communications irrevocably tainted the Subcommittee Recommendation. To do so, the Court must address whether the Subcommittee Recommendation was impacted either by the Goulet plan as advanced by Lemont and Tikoian and/or by Zarella's improper ex parte communications.
The Goulet plan clearly falls within the purview of prohibited ex parte communications addressed by the Supreme Court in Arnold v.Lebel, interpreting §
Although Lemont, at the workshop, interjected the Goulet plan by arguing in favor of a proposal that mirrored Goulet's, he failed to muster any support other than his own, and the Subcommittee recommended a 170-foot extension with a 25-foot perimeter by a vote of three-to-one. (Subcommittee Recommendation at 7.) In spite of Zarella's wrongful ex parte communications during the hearing process with New Shoreham officials exhibiting favor toward Champlin's, no evidence exists that Zarrella attempted to influence Subcommittee members against the positions of the Town or intervenors or that either Sahagian or Ricci were influenced by Zarella's bias. (Tr. at 13-14, 21, 45-47, 64-68, 4/9/08); see PATCO,
This Court finds that the Subcommittee Recommendation was supported by the record evidence. As this Court has earlier noted, supra at 17, the Subcommittee made forty-seven findings of fact. This Court, after thoroughly reviewing the Subcommittee record, is satisfied that *Page 66 those findings and the ultimate Recommendation are supported by the evidence.
Members received the Goulet plan in a number of different ways. Lemont subtly introduced the Goulet plan under the guise of his independent ingenuity at the full Council meeting, thereby exposing each member of CRMC to Goulet's proposal. (Full Council Tr. at 107-109, 188-89, 2/28/06.) As described above, Lemont and Tikoian directed the Goulet plan's development. (Supra at 29; Tr. at 95-96, 3/26; Tr. at 84, 87, 4/13; Tr. at 70, 4/12.) Ricci and Sahagian saw the plan before the workshop, and Tikoian and Lemont spoke to Zarella about it. *Page 67 (Tr. at 30, 37, 3/23; Tr. at 115, 3/26; Tr. at 96-97, 4/11; Tr. at 44-46, 3/19.) As the Court noted earlier, supra at 29, Tikoian acted jointly with Lemont to have the plan prepared and selectively shared with council members. Shekarchi viewed the plan prior to the full Council vote. (Tr. at 1, 3/26; Tr. at 109, 3/26.) Also, Goulet admitted to discussing various alternatives with Gray and Abedon prior to the full Council vote. (Tr. at 2, 3/26; Tr. at 66-67, 3/26.)
As expressed earlier, there is no question that Lemont and Tikoian shared responsibility for directing staff to develop the plan and served as its chief advocates with other members. The Court finds that Tikoian shared the Goulet plan with the Governor under his mistaken belief that he had a personal obligation to keep the Governor advised of the status of the case and his own need to obtain the Governor's approval of his efforts. This Court finds that Tikoian's contact with the Subcommittee members violates §
Unlike the meeting in PATCO, which did not "irrevocably taint" the agency decision, the Goulet plan's stain seeps through the full Council's written decision rejecting the Subcommittee Recommendation, in paragraphs that lament Champlin's failure to seek westward expansion and praising the staff's alternative designs. (Full Council Decision, ¶¶ 38, 39, 66, 67, at 6-10; see PATCO,
Recalling that Arnold regards §
Arnold dictates that in accordance with §
Rhode Island case law is sparse regarding disqualification for an agency violation of the prohibition against ex parte contacts. The Court does not order disqualification lightly. In Davis v. Wood,
[A] hearing officer must be impartial and must not attempt to establish proof to support the position of any party to the controversy. Once he does so, he becomes an advocate or participant, thus ceasing to function as an impartial trier of fact. Such a transformation gives rise to a lack of the fundamental fairness required by due process. Davis,427 A.2d at 337 (citations *Page 72 omitted).
The Supreme Court restated these principles in Kent County Water Auth.v. State Dept. of Health,
Although Rhode Island lacks case law specifically addressing disqualification for an agency's ex parte communications, its standard for disqualification based on bias or prejudice is well-settled. Recently, in Ryan v. Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence,
"Obviously, the Due Process Clause of theFourteenth Amendment guarantees that a person shall not be tried before an administrative tribunal that is biased or otherwise indisposed from rendering a fair and impartial decision. Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc.,446 U.S. 238 , —,100 S.Ct. 1610 ,1613 ,64 L.Ed.2d 182 ,188 (1980); Tumey v. Ohio,273 U.S. 510 ,47 S.Ct. 437 , 71 L.Ed. 749 (1927). Fundamental fairness includes the right not to be judged by one's party opponent." La Petite Auberge, Inc.,419 A.2d at 283-84 (citations omitted).
Federal courts have frequently addressed issues of bias or prejudice in the administrative context. For example, in ATX, Inc. v. U.S. Dept.of Transp.,
Importantly, the D.C. Circuit Court laid out the test for bias or prejudice: "The test is whether ``extraneous factors intruded into thecalculus of consideration' of the individual decisionmaker." PeterKiewit Sons' Co. v. United States Army Corps of Eng'rs,
Applying this test, the ATX Court found that the effect of the two bills introduced in the House of Representatives was insignificant because they were not addressed directly to the decision-makers.Id. at 1528. The circuit court further found that the Congressional letters did not influence the final decision-maker because he had insulated his decision-making process and had issued a lengthy opinion based entirely on and supported by the record. Id. Lastly, the circuit court found, with respect to the congressman's testimony to the ALJ:
[T]he testimony here falls short of creating a fatal appearance of bias as it was based almost entirely on information already available to the ALJ, was void of threats and was not relied on in any of the decisions, which were accompanied by extensive findings and reasons. In context, the omission of any reference to the testimony seems to represent a recognition that it was, in the end, irrelevant. Id. at 1529.
The ATX Court concluded that political influence did not enter the decision-maker's "calculus of *Page 75 consideration." Id. at 1530.
In addition to bias resulting from political influence, federal courts have addressed bias resulting from personal friendships. In Cheney v.U.S. Dist. Court for D.C.,
In addition to bias resulting from political influence and personal friendship, federal courts have addressed agency prejudgment of adjudicative facts. In Cinderella Career Finishing Schools, Inc. v.F.T.C.,
Applying its test to the FTC's chairperson's comments, the circuit court determined, "Conduct such as this may have the effect of entrenching a Commissioner in a position which he has publicly stated, making it difficult, if not impossible, for him to reach a different conclusion in the event he deems it necessary to do so after consideration of the record." Id. at 590. The circuit court stated that the chairperson's comment "[gave] the appearance that he [had] already prejudged the case and that the ultimate determination of the merits [would] move in predestined grooves." Id.
Generally, courts have distinguished among prejudging law, policy, legislative fact, and adjudicatory fact. "A previously announced position on a disputed issue of law, policy, or legislative fact does not disqualify a decisionmaker." II Richard J. Pierce, Jr.,Administrative Law Treatise, § 9.8 at 669 (4th ed. 2002 and Cum. Supp.). For example, in F.T.C v. Cement Institute,
With these standards in mind, the Court will review the conduct of the individual CRMC members to determine whether they should have been disqualified from participating in either the Subcommittee workshop and Subcommittee Recommendation or the meeting and vote of the full Council.
While the Subcommittee hearings were occurring, Tikoian promised Subcommittee members Zarrella and Sahagian at the National Hotel on Block Island that he would develop a compromise for them to approve. (Tr. at 40-41 3/19; Tr. at 72, 4/11; Tr. at 5-6, 4/12.) The Court concludes that Tikoian was instrumental in having staff prepare the Goulet plan and lobbied members of the Subcommittee in favor of that proposal at a time when contact with them on the subject was prohibited by law. Later, Tikoian even threatened Sahagian with the loss of his seat on CRMC unless Sahagian agreed to support the Goulet plan. (Tr. at 79, 4/11.) Tikoian *Page 78 misunderstood his role as chairperson as empowering him to influence the Subcommittee members and attempted to exert such influence.
The Court finds that his contacts with the Governor's office intruded into Tikoian's "calculus of consideration" of Champlin's application.See Kent County Water Auth. v. State Dept. of Health,
There is no question that extraneous factors intruded into his consideration of the application, and he failed to insulate his decision-making process from these outside influences. See ATX,
Tikoian's comments to The Providence Journal and Block IslandTimes, proclaiming his commitment to Lemont's version of the Goulet plan, further demonstrate the degree of his prejudgment. (Ex. 1; Ex. 24.) Like the FTC chairperson's comments in Cinderella, Tikoian's public comments entrenched him in a position opposed to both Champlin's application and the Subcommittee Recommendation, destroying his ability to approach with an open mind the deliberation process at the meeting of the full Council. His public comments gave him a vested interest in achieving an outcome consistent with his statements. Cinderella Career Finishing Schools, Inc.,
For the foregoing reasons, this Court finds that Michael Tikoian should have been disqualified from participating in the decision of the full Council.
When Goulet completed his alternative plan, Lemont instructed Goulet to show it to designated individuals. (Tr. at 75, 4/12.) Lemont also spoke with Zarrella on the telephone prior to the workshop to advocate for the Goulet plan. (Tr. at 45-46, 3/19.) When Sahagian and Ricci persuaded Lemont that Goulet should not be invited to present slides of his plan at the workshop, Lemont was not deterred. At the workshop and later before the full Council, Lamont argued for a compromise position which contained elements of the Goulet plan, thereby attempting to infect both proceedings with matters outside the record. (Workshop Tr. at 3120-24, 3179, 10/24/05; full Council Tr. at 107-09, 188-89, 2/28/06.)
Like Tikoian, Lemont lost his presumption of honesty and integrity as an agency adjudicator and became an advocate. See Davis,
Although Zarrella did not succumb to the pressure of Tikoian and Lemont, he exhibited prejudice against the Town and bias toward Champlin's. Three Town officials testified about Zarrella's ex parte communications with them. During the Subcommittee hearing process, Zarrella praised Champlin's principal, Grillo, to Town representatives, Savoie, Smith, and Dodge, complimenting the work Grillo does at Champlin's and seeking a compromise or concession from New Shoreham. (Tr. at 13, 45-46, 65, 4/9/08.) He told Smith that Grillo was "entitled to this expansion." (Tr. at 46, 4/9/08.) Zarella further told Smith that the
islanders were kind of naïve about not respecting development and seeing [sic] a good project when they saw it. Here was a man that was interested in commerce and the island was turning a deaf ear toward him and that I should get to know him. (Tr. at 45-46, 4/9/08.)*Page 82
The fact that Zarella may be prone to favor development is not in and of itself grounds for disqualification. He enjoys a presumption of honesty and integrity as a hearing officer. However, in this case, that presumption has been rebutted because he demonstrated support for the position of one party. Once he did that, Zarella became an advocate or a participant, ceasing the ability to function as an impartial trier of fact. That transformation gave rise to the lack of fundamental fairness required by due process. See Davis,
Furthermore, after one of the hearings, Zarella told Savoie that the Town's alternate plan was ridiculous and that the Town's witnesses were terrible and it "would [sic] take a lot to overcome the damage they had done." (Tr. at 14, 21, 4/9/08.) Such comments communicated a message to the Town that he was biased in favor of Champlin's and was serving as the applicant's advocate and negotiator rather than as an impartial trier of fact.
In addition to complimenting the work Grillo was doing at Champlin's, Zarrella told Dodge after one of the Subcommittee hearings that Grillo was a "good guy." (Tr. at 65, 4/9/08.) Zarrella was familiar with Grillo's operation at Champlin's because at certain times prior to the Subcommittee hearings, he had kept his boat at Champlin's. (Tr. at 12-13, 3/20.) This Court finds that Zarrella's ex parte comments, which favored Champlin's position in the contested case over that of the Town, give rise to the appearance of personal bias or prejudice which would impair his impartiality. See Ryan,
Gray consulted with CRMC staff on two occasions in violation of §
Sullivan indicated that he had consulted with his staff at DEM, off the record, and had not read the entire Subcommittee record, in violation of CRMC Management Procedures § 5.3(3). (Full Council Tr. at 185, 2/28/06.) Sullivan's consultation with his staff was a violation of §
Champlin's moved to disqualify Abedon based upon a report in TheProvidence Journal following the Subcommittee workshop, that Abedon, though not having read the entire record, favored a smaller expansion. (Ex. 1.) The article reads, "Another council member who observed the meeting, David Abedon, said he hasn't read the full manuscript, but he favors a smaller expansion. (Ex. 1.) Abedon violated the prohibition against ex parte communications when he spoke to the press. His comments to the media are indeed troubling and should be discouraged. The Court recognizes that these comments were imprudent and risked giving the impression that *Page 85 Abedon had a preconceived notion as to the facts of the case that might affect his ability to act fairly and impartially at the meeting of the full Council.
However, disqualification is a severe sanction, and the Court is reluctant to order disqualification based upon a single incident of improper ex parte communication. Abedon is entitled to a presumption of honesty and integrity because he did not participate in building an adversarial case against either party nor do his ex parte communications render the risk of unfairness intolerably high. See Kent County WaterAuth.,
Although no party has moved to disqualify either Sahagian or Ricci from participating in the application process, the Court feels it necessary to comment on the innuendo suggesting that they may have been biased. This Court found no evidence whatsoever to rebut the presumption of honesty and integrity on their part. No party presented any credible evidence suggesting that either of them had a "personal bias or prejudice by reason of a preconceived or settled opinion of a character calculated to impair his . . . impartiality seriously and to sway his . . . judgment." Ryan,
The Court "may affirm the decision of the [CRMC] or remand the case for further proceedings, or it may reverse or modify the decision." Section
As noted above, the Rhode Island Supreme Court issued a decision that impacts on the issues pertinent to this matter. In re Request forAdvisory Opinion from the House of Representatives (Coastal ResourcesManagement Council),
[T]he constitutional impropriety of CRMC in exercising certain powers because of the method by which its members have been selected since 2004 should not affect the validity of CRMC's administrative actions and determinations to this date. The past acts of CRMC should be accorded de facto validity. Id. at 942 n. 18.
Our Supreme Court noted that the United States Supreme Court has declined "to provide retrospective remedies which would substantially disrupt governmental programs and functions." Id. (citing Lemon v.Kurtzman,
This Court recognizes that the General Assembly will have to pass legislation to accommodate our Supreme Court's recent ruling. The legislative process could further delay a final decision on Champlin's application. Even once new legislation is in place, the Governor will have to appoint new members to CRMC, and they will have to obtain the advice and consent of the Senate. The appointment process clearly would further delay a final decision on Champlin's application and might call into question the twenty-three hearings, the validity of which has not been challenged. Unlike the circuit court in Antoniu, this Court is not inclined to remand this case to CRMC with instructions that Tikoian, Lemont, and Zarrella should be disqualified from further participation, with CRMC considering the application de novo. See Antoniu, 877 F.2d at 726. To do so would cause an unreasonable burden for the applicant who has already incurred enormous expense and who has encountered substantial delay in having its application determined.
The Court is guided by Sakonnet Rogers, Inc. v. Coastal ResourcesManagement Bd.,
To delay the administrative process further by remanding the case to CRMC for additional consideration of a petition filed seven years ago would prejudice the right of the petitioner to a final adjudication of his petition within a reasonable period. It is clear to us that since CRMC failed to deny the petition on the basis of any of the [regulatory] criteria, the petitioner is entitled to a *Page 88 judgment in the Superior Court reversing CRMC's decision on its application." Id at 897; see also Ratcliffe v. Coastal Resources Management Council,584 A.2d 1107 , at1111 (refusing to remand case for further consideration because right of property owners to a final adjudication within a reasonable period would be prejudiced).
The Court also finds Acierno v. Folsom,
Like our Supreme Court in Sakonnet Rogers, Inc., this Court finds that remanding Champlin's application to CRMC would "prejudice the right of [Champlin's] to a final adjudication of [its] petition within a reasonable period." Sakonnet Rogers, Inc.,
This Court finds that like Acierno, the votes of those who should have been disqualified from participating in the full Council vote — Tikoian, Lemont, and Zarrella — must be subtracted from the final vote.Acierno,
Seven votes remain, which is sufficient for a quorum.42 The Court upholds the decision of the full Council members supporting the Subcommittee Recommendation by a 4-3 vote. (See Findings of Fact of CRMC Members in Support of the Subcommittee Recommendation.) Sahagian, Ricci, Coia, and Shekarchi voted in the affirmative. (Findings of Fact of CRMC Members in Support of the Subcommittee Recommendation at 7; full Council Tr. at 200-01, 2/28/06.) Sullivan, Abedon, and Gray voted in the negative. (Full Council Decision at 13; full Council Tr. at 200-01, 2/28/06.) The decision of the full Council members supporting the Subcommittee Recommendation is supported by the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence of record.
The appeal of Champlin's Realty Associates is granted. . The decision of those members of the full Council voting against the Subcommittee Recommendation was made in violation of constitutional and statutory provisions, upon unlawful procedure, in excess of CRMC's statutory authority, and was not based on the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence in the Subcommittee record. Champlin's substantial rights have been prejudiced.
Tikoian, Lemont and Zarella engaged in prohibited ex parte communications and ceased *Page 90 to function as impartial triers of fact, rebutting the presumption that a hearing officer acts with honesty and integrity. Champlin's substantial rights were violated because its application was voted on by three partial triers of fact, two of whom — Lemont and Tikoian — were biased and prejudiced against it.
In accordance with the recent Rhode Island Supreme Court decisionIn re Request for Advisory Opinion from the House of Representatives(Coastal Resources Management Council),
After thorough review of the record, the Court finds that Tikoian, Lemont and Zarella should not have participated in the meeting of the full Council. The Court therefore reverses the decision of the full Council and finds that absent the participation of the disqualified members, the remaining members voted four to three in favor of the Subcommittee Recommendation. The *Page 91 Court also finds that the findings of the Subcommittee in making its Recommendation were supported by the record of the twenty-three evidentiary hearings before it. Accordingly, the final CRMC decision — "Findings of Fact of CRMC Members in Support of the Subcommittee Recommendation" — is supported by the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence of record and is affirmed.
Counsel shall submit an appropriate order for entry.
upon approval of the plan, any official of the state, municipality or any other political subdivision making regulatory decisions or undertaking or sponsoring development affecting the area within the jurisdiction of the plan shall, to the maximum extent practicable or allowable by law, make such decisions or conduct such activities consistently with the recommendations and requirements of the plan, unless such official shows cause to the CRMC why a different action should be taken, or that there exists an overriding public interest in pursuing such decisions or activity. Section (IV)(B) of Guidelines.
Finally, the Guidelines provide that "[a]ll Final Harbor Management Plans shall be reviewed by the CRMC every 5 years" and that "[a]ll changes to approved Final Harbor Management Plans, or elements thereof, shall be submitted to the CRMC for review and approval."Id.
It is wrong in theory, though it may not be too far off the mark as a practical matter, to suggest, as many opinions have, that ``extrajudicial source' is the only basis for establishing disqualifying bias or prejudice. It is the only common basis, but not the exclusive one, since it is not the exclusive reason a predisposition can be wrongful or inappropriate. A favorable or unfavorable predisposition can also deserve to be characterized as ``bias' or ``prejudice' because, even though it springs from the facts adduced or the events occurring at trial, it is so extreme as to display clear inability to render fair judgment. Ryan,941 A.2d at 185 , n. 21 (quoting Liteky v. U.S.,510 U.S. 540 ,551 (1994)).
City of Rockford v. County of Winnebago , 186 Ill. App. 3d 303 ( 1989 )
southwest-sunsites-inc-green-valley-acres-inc-a-texas-corporation , 785 F.2d 1431 ( 1986 )
Rhode Island Public Telecommunications Authority v. Rhode ... , 1994 R.I. LEXIS 265 ( 1994 )
Sartor v. Coastal Resources Management Council , 1988 R.I. LEXIS 60 ( 1988 )
Cavanagh v. Cavanagh , 118 R.I. 608 ( 1977 )
Hortonville Joint School District No. 1 v. Hortonville ... , 96 S. Ct. 2308 ( 1976 )
Renza v. Murray , 1987 R.I. LEXIS 479 ( 1987 )
Woodbury v. Zoning Board of Warwick , 78 R.I. 319 ( 1951 )
Sciacca v. Caruso , 2001 R.I. LEXIS 90 ( 2001 )
Sakonnet Rogers, Inc. v. Coastal Resources Management ... , 1988 R.I. LEXIS 12 ( 1988 )
Birchwood Realty, Inc. v. Grant , 1993 R.I. LEXIS 175 ( 1993 )
Champlin's Realty Associates, L.P. v. Tillson , 2003 R.I. LEXIS 165 ( 2003 )
Union Station Associates v. Rossi , 2004 R.I. LEXIS 184 ( 2004 )
Town of Richmond v. Wawaloam Reservation, Inc. , 2004 R.I. LEXIS 98 ( 2004 )
Buffi v. Ferri , 106 R.I. 349 ( 1969 )
North Fulton &C. Hosp. v. STATE HEALTH &C. , 168 Ga. App. 801 ( 1983 )
State Ex Rel. Town of Westerly v. Bradley , 2005 R.I. LEXIS 126 ( 2005 )
Schweiker v. McClure , 102 S. Ct. 1665 ( 1982 )
Matunuck Beach Hotel, Inc. v. Sheldon , 121 R.I. 386 ( 1979 )
City of East Providence v. Shell Oil Co. , 110 R.I. 138 ( 1972 )