Circuit Court for Talbot County
Case No. 20-C-13-008528
REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 1852
September Term, 2014
DAVIS H. WOOD
v.
JAMES VALLIANT
Meredith,
Arthur,
Sharer, J. Frederick
(Senior Judge, specially assigned),
JJ.
Opinion by Meredith, J.
Filed: February 28, 2017
In 2002, Davis Wood, appellant, obtained a building permit from the Town of St.
Michaels and began constructing an addition to a residential structure at 203 Green Street.
After the addition was substantially completed in 2004, one of Mr. Wood’s neighbors
complained to the Town’s Zoning Inspector that the addition appeared to violate the rear
setback restriction line. At the time, James Valliant, appellee, held a life estate interest in
the property at 205 Green Street. For reasons we will explain in more detail later in this
opinion, the Town never initiated a zoning enforcement action against Mr. Wood. Instead,
the building passed its final inspection in 2006, and the Zoning Inspector issued Mr. Wood
a temporary occupancy permit. In 2010, the Zoning Inspector determined that it would
impose an undue hardship if she required the removal of the encroaching structure, and she
issued Mr. Wood a final occupancy permit. Some of Mr. Wood’s neighbors, including Mr.
Valliant, appealed the Zoning Inspector’s determination, and the Town’s Board of Zoning
Appeals affirmed the Zoning Inspector’s action in 2013. Mr. Valliant and others then filed
a petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Talbot County. The circuit court’s
ruling in favor of Mr. Valliant and the other petitioners in that proceeding is the subject of
this appeal (although Mr. Valliant alone participated as an appellee in this Court). 1
One of the arguments made by Mr. Wood in opposition to the petition for judicial
review was based upon a statutory time limit that prohibits a person from initiating an
action “arising out of a failure of a building or structure to comply with a setback line
restriction more than 3 years after the date on which the violation first occurred.” Maryland
1
The other petitioners who joined Mr. Valliant in filing the petition for judicial
review in the circuit court were: Wickersham, LLC, and Boat Carpenters, LLC.
Code (1973, 2013 Repl. Vol., 2014 Supp.), Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article
(“CJP”), § 5-114(b)(1). The circuit court concluded that this statute was inapplicable to the
petition seeking judicial review of the ruling of the Town’s Board of Zoning Appeals. But
the circuit court acknowledged that “this action would not exist without the setback
violation on Mr. Wood’s property, which occurred sometime between 2002 and 2004.”
And, indeed, the only ruling as to which Mr. Valliant and the other petitioners sought relief
in this case was the Town’s decision not to require Mr. Wood to remove the structure that
created the setback line violation. Consequently, we conclude that the circuit court erred in
rejecting Mr. Wood’s argument that the petition for judicial review was time-barred by
CJP § 5-114(b), and we will reverse the judgment of the circuit court. 2
2
In addition to raising the issue based upon CJP § 5-114(b), Mr. Wood raised other
issues which we need not address because we conclude that judicial review was time-
barred. Questions presented in his brief included:
1. Do the holdings in Falls Road Community Ass’n, Inc. v. Baltimore
County, 437 Md. 115, 85 A.3d 185 (2014), concerning a local
government’s discretionary authority with respect to enforcement of
zoning violations, preclude a third party property owner from challenging
the Zoning Inspector’s discretionary determination, made for good cause,
not to enforce compliance of a setback violation?
2. Does the holding in Falls Road preclude a circuit court from ordering a
de facto writ of mandamus requiring a Zoning Inspector to enforce
compliance of a setback violation that the Zoning Inspector had
determined for good cause not to enforce?
3. Did the Circuit Court err when it reversed the longstanding interpretation
of the Zoning Inspector and the Board to find that notwithstanding the
provisions of [CJP] § 5-114(b), a building permit cannot be considered to
be a valid building permit when it is later discovered that the permit
issued incorrectly permitted the building to violate a setback restriction?
2
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Davis Wood owns the residential property located at 203 Green Street in St.
Michaels, Maryland. In the fall of 2002, the Town of St. Michaels issued a building permit
for him to renovate the existing structure and construct an addition that extended from the
rear of the house. In 2002, Mr. Valliant was the owner of an interest in the property next
door, at 205 Green Street. 3
In 2003, Mr. Valliant and others complained to the Zoning Inspector that the height
of the foundation on Mr. Wood’s renovated building was not in accordance with the
building permit. But the Zoning Inspector concluded that the elevation of the foundation
was in compliance with the building permit, and that ruling was upheld by the Circuit Court
for Talbot County and this Court.
Construction proceeded. By May of 2004, the footings and foundation for the
addition were placed, and framing had been completed. The renovations to the pre-existing
structure were completed.
But, in May 2004, a new complaint was made to the Zoning Inspector by one of Mr.
Wood’s neighbors, who asserted that the addition appeared to be in violation of the
4. Did the Zoning Inspector properly exercise her discretionary authority
pursuant to Town of St. Michaels Code, § 340-8D and the holding in Falls
Road, when she determined not to enforce compliance of a setback
violation?
3
On June 29, 2016, this Court was notified by Wood’s attorney that Mr. Valliant
died on June 22, 2016. To date, no other party has been substituted in Mr. Valliant’s place
in this appeal. We were advised by counsel for appellant that Mr. Valliant held only a life
estate in the property at 205 Green Street.
3
applicable rear lot line setback restriction. By letter dated May 17, 2004, the Zoning
Inspector advised Mr. Wood that, although the addition was in compliance with his
building permit, the addition did not meet the required 25 foot rear yard setback restriction.
The Zoning Inspector suggested that Mr. Wood apply for a variance. He did so, but he was
notified by letter dated October 6, 2004, that his application for a variance was denied.
Mr. Wood began to explore options for removing the portion of the structure that
violated the 25 foot setback restriction, and he worked with an architect to develop revised
plans for modifying and finishing the house. On August 12, 2006, the construction on Mr.
Wood’s property passed the “final” inspection required by his building permit, but the
setback violation created by the addition remained unabated. On October 24, 2006, the
Zoning Inspector issued Mr. Wood a temporary occupancy permit for the residence at 203
Green Street.
The Zoning Inspector extended the temporary occupancy permit eleven times. After
the eleventh extension of a temporary occupancy permit was granted on April 1, 2010, the
Zoning Inspector conducted a fresh review of the case to see if there was an alternative to
requiring removal of the portion of the structure that violated the 25 foot setback restriction.
Based upon her 2010 review of the records in the file and the Town’s zoning ordinance,
she decided not to require enforcement of the setback restriction. On April 30, 2010, the
Zoning Inspector issued a memorandum ruling in which she found that “an undue hardship,
of the type specifically contemplated by the St. Michael’s Zoning Code, § 340-8.D, would
result if the owner were required to remove the improvements constructed and completed
pursuant to the legally issued building permit.” The memorandum concluded:
4
The improvements may remain as constructed and shall be considered
a legal non-conformity with respect to rear-yard setbacks, front-yard
setbacks and any other matters which now or in the future may be shown to
be non-conforming with respect to the addition as it was lawfully constructed
pursuant to [Building] Permit No. 3225. As a result of the above findings of
this date, and as a result of my determination that all inspections have been
satisfactorily issued, a final occupancy permit has been issued and any now
existing non-conformity resulting from lawful construction pursuant to
Permit No. 3225 shall be deemed a legal non-conformity.
When Mr. Wood’s neighbors, including Mr. Valliant, received notice of this action,
they filed an appeal, asking the Town’s Board of Zoning Appeals to overrule the decision
of the Zoning Inspector. At the hearing before the Board, the Zoning Inspector explained
that the improvements to Mr. Wood’s property had been constructed “in accordance with
the plans and specifications that had been previously submitted and approved by the
different reviewing agencies within the Town, including [her] predecessor in the position
of Zoning Inspector/Code Enforcement Officer.” She noted: “The rear yard setback
requirement violation was not noticed o[r] commented upon until after the improvements
to the Wood house in violation of that requirement were completely constructed.” She
confirmed that, when the application for the building permit was filed, the location of the
addition was clearly shown on the plans, and, despite multiple levels of review by the
zoning office and the Town’s Historic District Commission, no one had ever raised a
concern about the rear yard setback. When the Town had published the required notice of
issuance of the building permit in 2002, no appeal was filed.
The Zoning Inspector noted that, after construction began, the first inspection
required under the building permit was for the footers, which were inspected and approved
on May 29, 2003. The Zoning Inspector commented that, “[i]t is at this stage of
5
construction that compliance with setbacks normally – generally is verified.” But no one
raised any issue about the rear yard setback at that point. Noting that she had been hired as
the Zoning Inspector in July 2003, the Zoning Inspector observed that the next inspection,
addressing the framing, occurred on February 12, 2004, and, again, no one raised any
question about compliance with the rear yard setback.
The Zoning Inspector testified that, when a neighboring property owner notified the
Town on May 3, 2004, that there appeared to be a violation of the rear yard setback
restriction, that was “the first time any issue relative to the rear yard setback is documented
in the project files.” She investigated the complaint, confirmed the setback violation, and
suggested to Mr. Wood that one possible solution would be for him to seek a variance from
the setback restriction. Mr. Wood’s application for a variance was denied.
The Zoning Inspector testified that “the house was substantially completed prior to
the discovery of the rear yard setback issue,” and, after the variance was denied, Mr. Wood
“sought a temporary occupancy permit for that portion of the house not in conflict with the
rear yard setback requirement. That request was granted on October 24, 2006.”
She acknowledged that, in the spring of 2010, “the then Town Manager asked me if
I would be willing to review the Town Zoning Code to see if there were any provisions in
the Code which could have been considered but had not been considered during the initial
process.” But, she insisted, “I reconsidered the matter on my own accord free from any
outside influences.” The Zoning Inspector said she based her decision not to take action
to enforce the 25 foot rear yard setback restriction, and to issue the final occupancy permit,
on several factors. It appeared that the previous zoning inspector had missed the setback
6
problem and had never discussed it with Mr. Wood or his representatives. Moreover, the
Zoning Inspector stated: “I did not believe that [Mr. Wood] or any of the representatives
ever deliberately tried to avoid compliance with the 25-foot rear yard setback requirement.”
Further, “the improvements to the Wood residence were made in substantial compliance
with all approved plans and requirements.” The Zoning Inspector found no evidence that
Mr. Wood “ever tried to avoid compliance through deceit or trickery,” and, during the
seven years this Zoning Inspector had been dealing with this project, “the Woods and their
representative[s] . . . appeared to be straight forward and forthright.”
The Zoning Inspector was also influenced by her discovery that the Town’s Zoning
Code had been amended in September 2003, at which time Ordinance 291 added § 340-
8.D to the Code. This provision, which provided for non-enforcement of provisions of the
Zoning Code under certain circumstances to avoid “undue hardship,” had not been
previously considered. Section 340-8.D of the Town’s Zoning Code provided, in part:
To avoid undue hardship, nothing in this chapter shall be deemed to
require a change in the plans, construction, or designated use of any building
on which actual construction was lawfully begun prior to the effective date
of adoption or amendment of this chapter and upon which actual building
construction has been diligently carried on.
The Zoning Inspector testified: “I deemed that consideration should have been given to
that provision. Clearly construction had begun and diligently been carried on prior to
September 2nd, 2003,” the date on which the Town adopted this amendment to Chapter
340. The Zoning Inspector concluded: “To require the redesign and reconstruction of the
substantially completed house would impose a considerable hardship on the Woods
7
[because] the renovations, as is apparent from the plans and visual examination of the
home, were considerable, extensive and undoubtedly expensive.”
For all those reasons, the Zoning Inspector testified, “I concluded that the Woods
incurred a hardship and I concluded that it had not been brought about through their
actions.” The Zoning Inspector said that, in issuing the final occupancy permit despite the
setback violation, “I have exercised my best efforts to properly consider the various aspects
of this matter in making my decision to issue the occupancy permit,” and “I tried my best
to reconcile the requirements of and the rights granted by the Town Code with the facts as
understood by me in reaching the decision.”
Counsel for the neighbors who appealed the issuance of the final occupancy permit
argued to the Board of Zoning Appeals that the Zoning Inspector did not have the legal
authority to refuse to enforce a violation of the Zoning Code, and further, that § 340-8.D
was not applicable to the circumstances of this case because the 25-foot rear yard setback
restriction was in effect before construction began, and was not amended after construction
commenced on Mr. Wood’s addition.
On September 18, 2013, the Board of Zoning Appeals ruled that “the Zoning
Inspector’s determination, set forth in the April 30, 2010, Memorandum, and her issuance
of the Final Occupancy Permit on May 7, 2010, were not in error and therefore were not
arbitrary, capricious, or illegal.” The Board explained:
The Board finds that in the unique circumstances of this case, and in
light of all the time that passed, it would be unfair and inequitable for the
Town to impose the draconian penalty of requiring Mr. Wood to tear down
the rear of his house. Based on the evidence and arguments presented and
the matters of record of the entire history of the proceedings concerning the
8
Wood property, the Board finds that there was an excessive passage of time
between when the Building Permit was issued in November of 2002, and
when a neighboring property [sic] notified [the Zoning Inspector] of the
encroachment in May of 2004. No one --- not neighbors, not the Town, not
the appellants [including Mr. Valliant] --- raised the issue of the
encroachment into the rear yard setback area until after footings were placed,
the framing was installed, and construction of the renovations was
completed. The Board finds that Mr. Wood substantially completed the
construction of his residence, and that the inspections of the footings,
foundation, and framing were completed and approved before the issue of
the rear yard setback was raised, for the first time, in May of 2004. . . . The
excess passage of time between when the Building Permit was issued and
when the encroachment was discovered, coupled with the totality of
circumstances surrounding the discovery of the encroachment, creates a
uniqueness that causes this case to be more complicated than a simple rear
yard setback violation, and skews the equities in favor of the homeowner,
Mr. Wood.
***
The Board finds that the facts of this case present a narrow set of
circumstances and uniqueness that support the Zoning Inspector’s
determination in her 2010 Memorandum and her issuance of the Final
Occupancy Permit.
On October 15, 2013, Mr. Valliant and two other petitioners jointly filed the petition
for judicial review that is the subject of this appeal. In the supporting memorandum filed
by counsel for Mr. Valliant and his fellow petitioners, they argued that the Board of Zoning
Appeals had erred in affirming the rulings of the Zoning Inspector because the 2010 ruling
was, in effect, a reversal of the Board’s previous denial of the requested variance, and the
Board further erred in accepting the Zoning Inspector’s interpretation of § 340-8.D, and in
ruling that the passage of time and the equities supported the Zoning Inspector’s decision
not to enforce the setback restriction.
9
In opposition to the petition for judicial review, Mr. Wood argued that the Board of
Zoning Appeals had ruled correctly that the Zoning Inspector was empowered to exercise
discretion “not to continue to assert the rear setback as a violation,” and, in making that
decision, the Town, acting through the Zoning Inspector, had properly exercised “its
responsibility to ensure that the Zoning Ordinance is being administered equitably and in
the best interests of the Town.” In a supplemental memorandum answering the petition for
judicial review, Mr. Wood argued that CJP § 5-114(b)(1) bars the petitioners’ action
because this case is, at its core, a challenge to a setback violation that was the subject of a
letter from the Zoning Inspector dated May 17, 2004. Because none of the petitioners had
initiated any action or proceeding against Mr. Wood within three years after that date, the
supplemental memorandum argued that the current complaints relative to the unabated
setback violation were now time-barred.
After conducting a hearing, the Circuit Court for Talbot County issued a written
ruling in favor of the petitioners. The court dismissed Mr. Wood’s argument based upon
the time limit imposed by CJP § 5-114(b) because, the court said, “Petitioners are not
challenging the setback violation.” The court viewed the most recent ruling of the Board
of Zoning Appeals as an impermissible change of mind from the Board’s 2004 denial of a
variance. The circuit court ruled that the Zoning Inspector was required by law to enforce
the provisions of the Town’s Zoning Ordinance, and was without discretion to disregard
the setback violation in this case. The court ruled that the decision of the Board of Zoning
Appeals of September 18, 2013, was reversed, and the case was remanded for further
consideration.
10
Mr. Wood then filed the present appeal. Only Mr. Valliant participated as an
appellee in this appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Whether the neighboring property owners’ petition for judicial review was
precluded by CJP § 5-114 is a question of law that we review de novo. Lewis v. Baltimore
Convention Center, 231 Md. App. 144, 152 (2016). In our analysis, we shall accept all
factual findings made by the Board of Zoning Appeals for which there is substantial
evidence in the record to support the findings. Afshin Attar v. DMS Tollgate, LLC, ___
Md. ___, slip op. at 4 (filed January 23, 2017).
DISCUSSION
We are persuaded that the neighboring property owners’ petition for judicial review
was subject to the time limit that CJP § 5-114(b)(1) imposes upon “an action or proceeding
arising out of a failure of a building or structure to comply with a setback line restriction,”
and it is clear that the petition for judicial review was filed “more than 3 years after the
date on which the violation first occurred.” The action was therefore time-barred and
should have been dismissed by the circuit court, leaving the ruling of the Board of Zoning
Appeals to stand as issued on September 18, 2013.
Section 5-114 of the Courts and Judicial Proceeding Article is captioned “Setback
line restrictions.” Subsection (b) imposes time limits upon the initiation of an action arising
out of the construction of a building or structure that is not in compliance with a setback
line restriction. Subsection (b)(1) imposes a three-year limit within which a person must
initiate an action or proceeding, and that three-year period begins on “the date on which
11
the violation first occurred.” Subsections (b)(2), (b)(3), and (b)(4) impose a three-year
limit within which a governmental entity must initiate an action or proceeding if the
encroaching structure was constructed pursuant to a building permit, and the “otherwise
valid building permit . . . wrongfully permitted the building or structure to violate a setback
line restriction.” Subsection (b)(4) establishes that the time limit for a governmental entity
to initiate an action or proceeding begins on “the date on which the final building inspection
was approved.” 4
4
CJP § 5-114(b) provides:
(b) (1) A person may not initiate an action or proceeding arising out of a
failure of a building or structure to comply with a setback line restriction
more than 3 years after the date on which the violation first occurred.
(2) A governmental entity may not initiate an action or proceeding
arising out of a failure of a building or structure to comply with a setback
line restriction more than 3 years after the date on which the violation first
occurred if the building or structure was constructed or reconstructed:
(i) In compliance with an otherwise valid building permit,
except that the building permit wrongfully permitted the building or
structure to violate a setback line restriction; or
(ii) Under a valid building permit, and the building or structure
failed to comply with a setback line restriction accurately reflected in
the permit.
(3) For purposes of paragraph (2)(i) of this subsection and
notwithstanding any other provision of State or local law to the contrary, a
building permit that was otherwise validly issued, except that the permit
wrongfully permitted the building or structure to violate a setback line
restriction, shall be considered a valid building permit.
(4) For purposes of paragraph (2) of this subsection, the date on which
the violation first occurred shall be deemed to be the date on which the final
building inspection was approved.
CJP § 5-114(d) provides:
12
To this day, neither the Town nor any other governmental entity of which we are
aware has “initiate[d] an action or proceeding arising out of” the failure of Mr. Wood’s
addition to comply with the rear yard setback line restriction. So, in this appeal, we are
primarily concerned with the time limit that was imposed upon Mr. Valliant (and other
persons) by CJP § 5-114(b)(1).
As noted, the time limit for any person (other than a governmental entity) to “initiate
an action or proceeding arising out of a failure of a building or structure to comply with a
setback line restriction” is three years from “the date on which the violation first occurred.”
Although, with respect to actions by governmental entities, CJP § 5-114(b)(4) explicitly
provides that the meaning of the phrase “date on which the violation first occurred” shall
be “deemed to be the date on which the final building inspection was approved,” there is
no comparable statutory definition of the “first occurred” phrase as used in the statutory
time limit applicable to claims by persons, i.e., CJP § 5-114(b)(1). Accordingly, we are left
to interpret that phrase pursuant to ordinary rules of statutory construction. The plain
meaning of the phrase “the date on which the violation first occurred” is the date on which
the owner of the property first performed construction of any component of a building or
structure that encroaches upon the setback line restriction.
In this case, the findings of the Board of Zoning Appeals make it plain that the
setback line restriction that is at the heart of Mr. Valliant’s challenge to the most recent
(d) This section may not be construed to abrogate or affect the defense of
laches or any other defense that a person may have to an action or proceeding
for a violation of a setback line restriction.
13
ruling of the Board first occurred sometime prior to February 12, 2004. That is the date on
which the Town’s building inspectors approved the framing of the structure Mr. Wood was
constructing. If Mr. Valliant or other complaining neighbors had initiated an action or
proceeding relative to the setback line restriction long before they eventually did, we might
have needed a more precise factual finding regarding the date on which the setback
violation “first occurred.” But, in this case, we can assume that the violation had to have
first occurred by the time the structure had progressed to the point that the framing could
pass inspection, and it is clear that no action or proceeding was initiated by Mr. Valliant
(or the other petitioners) within three years after that date.
Indeed, the record reflects that, as of the date the Zoning Inspector issued the final
occupancy permit on May 7, 2010, neither any person nor any governmental entity had
initiated an action or proceeding against Mr. Wood arising out of the rear yard setback
violation. Assuming, without deciding, that, when Mr. Valliant and others filed an
administrative appeal of the Zoning Inspector’s issuance of the final occupancy permit,
that filing constituted the initiation of an action or proceeding as contemplated by CJP § 5-
114(b)(1), that appeal to the Board of Zoning Appeals was not filed until June 21, 2010,
which was well beyond three years after the date the setback violation first occurred.
Counsel for Mr. Valliant argues that CJP § 5-114(b) is not applicable to this case
because the 2010 appeal to the Board of Zoning Appeals does not arise out of a setback
violation, but rather, arises out of the Zoning Inspector’s improper issuance of a final
occupancy permit. This strained argument cannot overcome the fact that the only complaint
that has been asserted regarding the allegedly erroneous issuance of the final occupancy
14
permit is based entirely upon the violation of the rear yard setback line restriction. It would
not be an overstatement to say that, if we remove from this case the neighbors’ complaint
that the addition constructed on Mr. Wood’s property is in violation of the rear yard setback
restriction, there would be nothing remaining to talk about in this case. Clearly, the 2010
appeal to the Board of Zoning Appeals arose out of the setback line violation that first
occurred more than three years earlier, and the same holds true for the circuit court
proceeding seeking judicial review of the Board’s 2010 ruling.
In light of this, we need not address Mr. Wood’s argument that the time limit
imposed by CJP § 5-114(b)(1) is a statute of repose. In Anderson v. United States, 427 Md.
99, 117 (2012), the Court of Appeals quoted this definition of a statute of repose from
BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1546 (9th ed. 2009): “A statute of repose is defined as a
‘statute barring any suit that is brought after a specified time since the defendant acted
(such as by designing or manufacturing a product), even if this period ends before the
plaintiff has suffered a resulting injury.’” (Footnote omitted.) Section 5-114(b)(1) appears
to fit this description; the statute bars any action or proceeding from being initiated more
than three years after the defendant caused a setback violation to occur, without regard to
whether that violation has caused any identifiable injury. In CJP § 5-114(b)(1), the
triggering event that starts the three year time limit for initiating an action is defined, as in
other statutes of repose --- see, e.g., CJP § 5-108(a); CJP § 5-108(b); and CJP § 5-112 ---
as an event (namely, “the date on which the violation first occurred”) that is “unrelated to
when the [claimant’s] injury or discovery of the injury occurs.” Anderson, 427 Md. at 118.
In Anderson, Judge Harrell wrote for the Court of Appeals and explained: “In common
15
parlance, statutes of limitation and statutes of repose are differentiated consistently and
confidently by whether the triggering event is an injury or an unrelated event; the latter
applying to a statute of repose.” Id. at 119. The Anderson Court further explained that “[t]he
purpose of a statute of repose is to provide an absolute bar to an action or to provide a grant
of immunity to a class of potential defendants after a designated time period.” Id. at 118.
And, because the legislative purpose of a statute of repose is to provide an absolute bar to
claims after a designated time, issues concerning discovery of the injury and tolling of the
time limit are not pertinent to the application of a statute of repose. Id. at 121.
But, regardless of whether the time limit imposed by CJP § 5-114(b)(1) is a statute
of repose or a statute of limitation, when a building or an addition to a building is
constructed in violation of a setback restriction, any person who wishes to pursue an action
or proceeding arising from that setback violation must act within three years after the
violation first occurred. In this case, no person initiated a timely action or proceeding.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR TALBOT COUNTY REVERSED, AND
THIS CASE IS REMANDED TO THAT
COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO
DISMISS THE PETITION FOR JUDICIAL
REVIEW. COSTS TO BE PAID BY
APPELLEE.
16