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County, developers ordered <br />to pay $18,694 <br />February 28, 2009 - By LILA FU3IMO70, Staff Writer <br />Save I 0 SHARE f'1 ?a_ <br />WAILUKU - Maul County and developers have been ordered to pay <br />nearly $19,000 in costs to attomeys for residents who sued to <br />enforce current building height limits in Maui Lani subdivisions. <br />But 2nd Circuit Judge Joel August denied a request Tuesday for <br />about $200,000 in legal fees sought by the attomeys, who <br />haven't been paid while representing more than two dozen <br />homeowners for the past two years. <br />While acknowledging that the residents acted when it appeared <br />the govemment would not, August said it wasn't clear that the <br />number of people who benefited from the injunction justified the <br />awarding of legal fees. <br />"The court does not wish to discount the significance of the <br />lawsuit which was brought by the plaintiffs," he said. "Clearly, the <br />financial burden of bringing those claims has been tremendous. It <br />Is clear that private enforcement was necessary. <br />"We are supposed to be a govemment of laws, not of persons. <br />This case has shown the community what happens when we <br />become a government of persons and not a govemment of laws, <br />and that's terribly significant." <br />Many of the residents who sued live along Palama Drive, which is <br />adjacent to the Fairways at Maui Lani project In Kahului. <br />Thousands of tons of dirt were trucked in to tum a gulch into a hill, <br />raising the elevation of the 13.5 -acre property so the fill dirt rises <br />above some rooftops along Palama Drive. <br />Developers cited an "administrative decision" by former Mayor Alan <br />Arakawa to exempt the projects from current building height limits. <br />In December, August ruled that Arakawa didn't have the authority <br />to grant an exemption and that the residential height restriction <br />enacted by the Maui County Council In 1991 applies to the Maul <br />Lani project district. The height restriction limits building heights to <br />30 feet from the natural grade. <br />The judge's order prohibits the county from taking any actions, <br />including issuing building permits, that conflict with the height <br />restriction in the Fairways and New Sand Hills projects. <br />The decision has been stayed while the county appeals. <br />The ruling denying legal fees also will be appealed, said Lance <br />Collins, one of three attorneys who represented residents In the <br />lawsuit. <br />it has a major chilling effect on the ability of people to have <br />access to justice," Collins said. <br />Attorney David Glertach, also representing residents, argued that <br />the judge's ruling on the height restriction had widespread impact <br />for all of Maul County. <br />"The failure to grant fees Is going to have a real chilling effect on <br />people like me who will not be willing to take on the county in the <br />r- -developers-... <br />County, developers ordered to pay $18,... <br />ww�t, VltltO JI aaiu. <br />He said lawyers didn't charge residents, who couldn't afford to pay <br />legal fees. <br />The $18,694 In costs awarded will be shared by the county and <br />developers, who had intervened In the lawsuit and filed motions In <br />the case until withdrawing shortly before the judge's ruling. <br />* Lila Fujimoto can be reached at Ifujirnoto ®mauinews.com. <br />TMie• AP, r,hrnmc <br />Subscribe to The Maui News <br />Save <br />