RENDERED: JANUARY 8, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2019-CA-1885-MR
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT
CABINET, DIVISION OF OIL AND
GAS APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM CUMBERLAND CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE DAVID L. WILLIAMS, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 14-CI-00051
BOBBY D. SEVERE APPELLEE
OPINION
REVERSING AND REMANDING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: CALDWELL, GOODWINE, AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.
CALDWELL, JUDGE: The Energy and Environment Cabinet, Division of Oil and
Gas (“Cabinet”) appeals from a final and appealable order of the Cumberland
Circuit Court denying its motion to dismiss Bobby D. Severe’s (“Severe”) petition
for judicial review of orders of forfeiture, setting aside orders of forfeiture entered
against Severe, and reinstating Severe’s bonds on well permits. We reverse.
On June 3, 2014, Severe filed a petition for review of four orders of
forfeiture of blanket security bonds. The orders of forfeiture were attached as an
exhibit to his petition. Each order was dated March 19, 2014 and referred to
notices of violations dated May 1, 2012. Each order advised Severe that if he
disagreed with it, he had the right to seek court review in Cumberland or Franklin
Circuit Court within thirty days of the order’s date as then allowed by Kentucky
Revised Statutes (KRS) 353.700. Also, each order stated, “Failure to file such a
request for review within thirty (30) days shall result in the order of forfeiture
becoming final and non-appealable.” Severe alleged in his petition that the orders
of forfeiture were delivered to his wife, who has Alzheimer’s disease, so he did not
discover them until early May 2014.
The Cabinet filed a motion to dismiss shortly after the petition was
filed. The Cabinet argued in its motion that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to
review the forfeiture orders because Severe failed to comply with the thirty-day
time limit to seek review of the forfeiture orders in KRS 353.700(2). The Cabinet
also attached to its motion certified mail receipts showing that Severe had signed
for the four forfeiture orders sent via two certified letters on March 24, 2014.
Severe made several arguments to the trial court why the action
should not be dismissed despite his failure to file the action within thirty days of
the forfeiture orders. For instance, he argued that no notice occurred because
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documents were not sent to counsel and because the May 1, 2012 notices of
noncompliance were delivered to his ill wife. He also argued that the notices and
forfeiture orders were void or ineffective because of a May 25, 2012 agreed order
in another court case in which the Cabinet rescinded prior orders of forfeiture
(dated December 22, 2011) concerning the same well permits. And he claimed
that the trial court also had jurisdiction under KRS 353.710 based on the Cabinet
allegedly committing various statutory violations.
The Cabinet argued that the March 19, 2014 orders of forfeiture were
now final and that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over the case. But after
extensive briefing and hearings, the trial court entered findings of fact, conclusions
of law, and an order setting aside the March 19, 2014 orders of forfeiture,
reinstating Severe’s bonds, and denying the Cabinet’s motion to dismiss.
The trial court found the Cabinet issued the orders of forfeiture on
March 19, 2014 and that Severe filed the action on June 3, 2014, and it noted the
Cabinet’s argument that the action was time-barred under KRS 353.700(2). The
trial court also found that the orders of forfeiture were based on notice of violation
letters dated May 1, 2012, which pre-dated an agreed order of dismissal (AOD)
entered May 25, 2012 in a different court case regarding the same well permits
which had been pending when the notices were sent out.
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The court then determined in its conclusions of law that Severe had
not received sufficient notices of noncompliance, so he was not required to file his
petition for review within thirty days of the 2014 forfeiture orders. It rejected the
Cabinet’s contention that it complied with statutory requirements for notices of
noncompliance without specifically discussing why in the written order. (The trial
judge orally indicated at the hearing this was because of the Cabinet’s failure to
issue later notices of noncompliance to clear up any confusion after entry of the
late May 2012 AOD in the other case.) Thus, the trial court ordered that the orders
of forfeiture be set aside, that the bonds be reinstated, and that the Cabinet’s
motion to dismiss be denied.
The Cabinet then filed a timely appeal. It argues on appeal that the
trial court lacked jurisdiction to hear the action under KRS 353.700. It also argues
that the trial court erred in determining that its May 1, 2012 notices of
noncompliance were statutorily deficient.
Severe counters with several arguments for upholding the trial court’s
decision in his brief. But as we conclude that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to
hear the case due to Severe’s failure to file his petition within statutory time limits,
it is unnecessary for us to reach most of these arguments.
The issues we do reach concern the validity of the trial court’s rulings
on questions of law rather than factual findings or evidentiary rulings. Such trial
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court rulings on questions of law, particularly statutory construction, are subject to
a de novo standard of review. Pearce v. University of Louisville, by and through
its Board of Trustees, 448 S.W.3d 746, 749 (Ky. 2014).
Despite Severe’s arguments that the trial court had jurisdiction to
more generally determine if the Cabinet had acted arbitrarily or in violation of
governing statutes, what he specifically asked the trial court to do in his petition
was to review and set aside the Cabinet’s orders of forfeiture. And such attempts
to obtain review of Cabinet orders in this context are not governed by KRS
353.710 or by case law about reviewing administrative actions in the absence of
statutes specifically governing appeals of those particular administrative actions.
Instead, obtaining court review of a Cabinet order in this context was specifically
governed by a prior version of KRS 353.700.
The trial court’s conclusions of law quoted the now-current version of
KRS 353.700(2) which became effective July 14, 2018. But that version of KRS
353.700(2) was not in effect in 2014 when the orders of forfeiture at issue were
entered and when the petition was filed.1 The current version of KRS 353.700(2)
1
Severe filed a motion for leave to amend his petition in November 2018, but the trial court did
not explicitly rule on this motion from our review. Furthermore, the trial court did not explicitly
discuss any additional factual allegations or requests for relief from the motion or tendered
amended petition in its written order. Instead, it simply granted the relief requested in the
original petition (setting aside the 2014 orders of forfeiture and reinstating the bonds) after
discussing in its factual findings the events of 2012 and 2014. But it did not discuss allegations
about 2018 events in the tendered amended petition or Severe’s requests for additional relief
therein. Although Severe at times has referred to or asked the trial court to set aside alleged
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does not even provide for court review; instead, it provides for review through
administrative hearings if a hearing is demanded within thirty days of actual or
constructive notice of the order to be reviewed.2
The version of KRS 353.700 in effect in 2014 provided for a thirty-
day time limit to seek court review after certain Cabinet orders were issued:
(1) Any person aggrieved by any order issued by the
department or by the commission under KRS
353.500 to 353.720 shall have the right to bring a civil
action for review of the order by filing a complaint in the
Circuit Court of the county in which the premises or any
portion thereof affected by the order is located, or in the
Franklin Circuit Court.
(2) The suit shall be brought within thirty (30) days after
the order is issued, and in event no suit is filed within the
thirty (30) day period, the order shall be final.
orders of forfeiture issued September 2018, it appears he was referring to letters about the
Cabinet’s attempts to collect on the bonds subject to the 2014 forfeiture orders and there are no
orders of forfeiture issued in 2018 within the record provided to us.
2
The version of KRS 353.700(1) and (2) effective as of July 14, 2018 provides:
(1) Any person aggrieved by any final determination made or order
issued by the department under this chapter, except any orders of
the commission, may file with the Energy and Environment
Cabinet’s Office of Administrative Hearings a petition alleging
that the determination is contrary to law or fact and is injurious to
the petitioner, alleging the grounds and reasons therefor, and
demanding a hearing. . . .
(2) The right to demand a hearing pursuant to this section shall be
limited to a period of thirty (30) days after the petitioner has had
actual notice of the final determination or order complained of, or
could reasonably have had notice.”
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KRS 353.700(1)-(2) (effective June 21, 1974 through July 13, 2018).
As the orders of forfeiture were issued March 19, 2014 and served
upon Severe by certified mail a few days later,3 the trial court lacked jurisdiction to
hear Severe’s petition for review filed June 3, 2014. Our precedent clearly states,
“Where a statute prescribes the method for taking an appeal from an administrative
action and the time in which the appeal must be taken, these requirements are
mandatory and must be met in order for the circuit court to obtain jurisdiction to
hear the case.” Frisby v. Board of Educ. of Boyle County, 707 S.W.2d 359, 361
(Ky. App. 1986) (citing Board of Adjustments of the City of Richmond v. Flood,
581 S.W.2d 1 (Ky. 1978)). When determining if such requirements (including
time limits for seeking review) are met, a strict compliance standard applies. Id.
And the Kentucky Supreme Court has clearly stated that where a trial court lacks
jurisdiction to review an administrative action due to failure to strictly comply with
statutory requirements for obtaining court review, the trial court “has no right to
decide the controversy.” Flood, 581 S.W.2d at 2 (citation omitted).
As the trial court lacked jurisdiction to review the March 19, 2014
orders of forfeiture, the trial court should have granted the Cabinet’s motion to
3
Although Severe again alleges in his appellee’s brief that the orders of forfeiture must have
been received by his wife and that he did not become aware of them until May 2014, Severe has
never denied that the signatures on the certified mail receipts for the orders of forfeiture were his.
Nor did the trial court make an explicit finding that the orders of forfeiture were not delivered to
Severe in contravention of the certified mail receipts.
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dismiss on that basis alone and should not have even considered further arguments
such as whether the May 1, 2012 notices of noncompliance were sufficient. We
also agree with the Cabinet that the trial court erred in determining that the Cabinet
did not provide sufficient notice of noncompliance to Severe. From our review of
the May 1, 2012 notices of noncompliance in the record, these comply with KRS
353.590’s requirements that such notice specify how the operator had violated
statutes or regulations and be sent by certified mail to the operator at the permanent
address listed on the application.
The trial court concluded that the Cabinet failed to provide sufficient
notice of noncompliance under KRS 353.590(26) in its September 2019 order—
apparently referring to the version of KRS 353.590 in effect from July 14, 2018 to
June 26, 2019 which addressed notices of noncompliance at KRS 353.590(26).4
When the notices of noncompliance were issued in 2012 and when the petition was
filed in 2014, the version of KRS 353.590 then in effect addressed notices of
noncompliance at KRS 353.590(22) (effective July 15, 2010 through June 23,
2015).
Despite the renumbering, the provisions in KRS 353.590 about
notices of noncompliance remained substantially the same. Both required that the
4
After further re-numbering, provisions about notices of noncompliance may be found in the
current version at KRS 353.590(24) (effective June 27, 2019).
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“notice shall specify in what respects the operator has failed to comply with this
chapter or the administrative regulations of the department” and that it “be served
upon the operator by certified mail, addressed to the permanent address shown on
the application for a permit.”
In short, under either version the Cabinet was only required to send by
certified mail to the operator’s permanent address a notice specifying how the
operator failed to comply with the law. The Cabinet did so—as the notices of
violation were sent to Severe’s permanent address and briefly stated that an
inspector found a violation of KRS 353.550 for “Improperly abandoned (Not
producing or plugged)” wells.
While the trial court understandably believed some confusion was
created by the May 1, 2012 notices of noncompliance being sent out before the
May 25, 2012 AOD in a different case about the same well permits, the May 1,
2012 notices still complied with the requirements of KRS 353.590. The statute did
not require a notice of perfect clarity which eliminated all possible confusion, but
simply a notice sent to the operator’s permanent address specifying how he/she had
allegedly violated applicable statutes or regulations. The Cabinet identified the
type of statutory violation alleged in the notices of noncompliance, which were
sent to Severe’s permanent address via certified mail, so it complied with statutory
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requirements. Thus, the trial court erred in determining that the notices of
noncompliance were statutorily deficient.
Furthermore, KRS 353.590 did not specifically require that such
notices be served on any counsel retained by operators, and we are unaware of any
other authority requiring service of this particular administrative notice on counsel,
especially as such a notice is not a pleading filed in court which would be subject
to Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 5.02. Similarly, we are unaware of any
authority requiring that administrative orders of bond forfeiture in this context
must be served on counsel—again, this is not specifically required by KRS
353.590, and these administrative orders are not court orders subject to CR 5.02.
Although Severe cites the pre-July 14, 2018 version of KRS 353.700(5) providing
that “[t]he practice, pleading and proceedings in the suit shall be in accordance
with the Rules of Civil Procedure[,]” the notices of noncompliance and orders of
forfeiture were not part of the practice, pleading, and proceedings in a court
lawsuit. Similarly, his citation to a repealed regulation about serving attorneys
with documents relating to surface coal mining “proceedings” fails. See 405
Kentucky Administrative Regulations (KAR) 7:091 (repealed effective August 4,
2017).
More importantly, even disregarding any problems with the content or
service of the May 1, 2012 notices of noncompliance, Severe accepted delivery of
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the Cabinet’s orders of forfeiture of the blanket security bonds on March 24, 2014.
And these orders of forfeiture informed him that he had a right to seek court review
within thirty days, but that these orders would become final thirty days after their
issuance if he did not file an action for review. Regardless of whether he was
confused by the forfeiture orders’ reference to the May 1, 2012 notices of
noncompliance due to the May 25, 2012 AOD, he had received notification that he
had only thirty days to challenge the orders of forfeiture before they became final.
Thus, he was “obligated to bestir [him]self to take some action” and cannot prevail
on an argument that no time limit applied. Frisby, 707 S.W.2d at 361.
As Severe failed to strictly comply with the statutory requirement that
he commence court action for review of the orders of forfeiture within thirty days,
the trial court erred in denying the Cabinet’s motion to dismiss. Id. at 360-61.
(Despite any failure by the school board to comply with statutory procedures or
due process requirements, the thirty-day time limit to file an action seeking court
review of the board’s action began running when the board sent a
teacher/administrator written notice of her demotion and the trial court properly
dismissed an action not filed within the thirty-day time limit.).
While requiring strict compliance with short statutory time limits for
seeking court review may seem harsh in some situations, the legislature clearly
intended for the Cabinet to be able to take quick action to address problems such as
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improperly abandoned oil and gas wells to protect public safety and conserve
precious resources. See generally KRS 353.500; KRS 353.590. Thus, as with
other administrative actions, strict compliance with statutory requirements for
obtaining court review of administrative actions is required and failure to timely
file an action for court review within statutory time limits requires dismissal of the
action for court review. Frisby, 707 S.W.2d at 361.
Having concluded that the trial court erred in not dismissing the action
and lacked authority to decide the matter, we need not specifically discuss other
arguments raised by the parties—particularly those about the merits of the action.
We specifically decline to discuss Severe’s contention that KRS 353.590(26) is
unconstitutional—especially as there is no indication that the Attorney General
was notified. See KRS 418.075; CR 24.03. See also Maney v. Mary Chiles
Hospital, 785 S.W.2d 480, 482 (Ky. 1990) (“[W]e are of the opinion the intent of
the Legislature in its enactment of KRS 418.075 is clear that no judgment shall be
entered which decides the constitutionality of a statute until the Attorney General
is given notice and an opportunity to be heard.”). And other arguments not
specifically discussed in this Opinion are rejected as irrelevant or without merit.
Our task is not to weigh in on the wisdom or effectiveness of the
administrative agency’s actions per se, but to review the trial court’s decision on
Severe’s petition for review of the orders of forfeiture. As the trial court lacked the
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authority to review the orders of forfeiture, it erred in not dismissing the action and
its order setting aside these orders of forfeiture and reinstating Severe’s bonds
cannot stand.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Cumberland Circuit
Court is reversed and remanded with directions to dismiss the action and to
reinstate the Cabinet’s March 19, 2014 orders of bond forfeiture.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
Lance C. Huffman Wanda A. White
Frankfort, Kentucky Albany, Kentucky
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