The Legislature recently highlighted this issue when it added language to the Board of Appeals statute, 30-A M.R.S. § 2691, which reads as follows:
Absent an express provision in a charter or ordinance that certain decisions of its code enforcement officer or board of appeals are only advisory or may not be appealed, a notice of violation or an enforcement order by a code enforcement officer under a land use ordinance is reviewable on appeal by the board of appeals and in turn by the Superior Court under the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 80B.
It is now clear that by default, enforcement orders may be appealed. If that is not your municipality’s intention, ordinances should be amended ASAP to clearly state that there is no jurisdiction to allow such appeals.
One positive thing to note is that at least one court has refused to read the new language so broadly as to allow appeal of a CEO’s failure to find a violation. In Rappos v. Town of York, AP-16-34, abutters submitted a complaint against their neighbor and then appealed the CEO’s decision not to take action on that complaint. The Court held that neither the Zoning Board of Appeals nor the Court had jurisdiction to issue a binding order on the appeal.