What do you call an appeal in which the Supreme Court doesn’t address any of your five questions presented?
If you are the petitioner’s attorneys in Save Diamond Head Waters LLC v. Hans Hedemann Surf, Inc., No. 27804 (July 13, 2009), you’d call it “victory.”
In that case — which was being considered by the Hawaii Supreme Court on secondary cert review — the petitioners asserted the Intermediate Court of Appeals “gravely erred” (see Haw. Rev. Stat. § 602-59(b)(1)) when it held the Director of the Honolulu Department of Planning and Permitting was within his authority when he concluded a surf school’s use of a space in a hotel lobby would be a valid nonconforming use if the school adhered to certain conditions imposed by the Director.
Usually, cases about nonconforming uses aren’t exactly the most interesting to read. Commonly known as “grandfathering,” and
Continue Reading HAWSCT On Nonconforming Uses: You Can’t Change What You Didn’t Establish