Utah Admin. Code R850-8-1000 - Appeal of Final Agency Action
1. The Trust Lands Administration may by rule
specifically designate certain categories of Trust Lands Administration actions
that are not subject to appeal.
2.
Except where no appeal is available pursuant to statute or rule, an appeal may
be initiated only by a party to a contract that is the subject of a final
agency action, or whose legal interests are directly determined by the final
agency action. A written petition must be filed within 14 days of the mailing
date of the final agency action requesting an adjudicative proceeding, unless a
longer date is specified in writing in the final agency action or required by
statute, rule, or contract. In the event an appeal is not filed in the
applicable time period, the final Trust Lands Administration action shall
become unappealable. The petition for an adjudicative proceeding shall be filed
according to the following requirements:
(a)
the petition shall be filed at the office of the director pursuant to
R850-8-800.
(b) the petition shall state:
i) all facts upon which the petition is
based;
ii) any statute, rule,
contract provision, or board policy which the final agency action is alleged to
violate;
iii) the nature of the
violation of the final agency action with the statute, rule, contractual
provision or board policy, and the injury that is specific to the petitioner
arising from the final agency action. If the injury identified by the petition
is not peculiar to the petitioner as a result of the action, the board will
decline to hear the appeal; and
iv)
the relief requested.
3. Upon receipt of a petition, the director
shall initially stay any further actions with respect to the matter for which
the adjudicative proceeding is being sought by the petitioner. The board, in
its discretion, may lift such suspension or condition the continuation of the
stay upon filing of a surety, in an amount specified by the board, sufficient
to protect the interests of the beneficiaries.
4. Upon receipt the director shall promptly
mail the petition to the board.
5.
When the date of mailing is at least ten days prior to a regularly scheduled
board meeting, the board may consider the petition at that meeting. In the
event that the date of mailing is within ten days of a regularly scheduled
board meeting, the petition will be considered at the next succeeding board
meeting.
6. In its initial
consideration of any petition, the board may schedule the petition for hearing
at a future date, make determinations concerning whether the adjudicative
proceeding will be formal or informal, address procedural matters such as
stays, discovery, etc., or hear the matter on the merits.
7. The board may decline to conduct
adjudicative proceedings in response to a petition, in which case the
petitioner shall be entitled to judicial review pursuant to Section
63G-4-402.
Notes
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