STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
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In re: Chandler repair and home industry }
application } Docket No. 79-4-07 Vtec
(Appeal of Charles Chandler) }
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Decision and Order on Pending Motions
Appellant Charles Chandler appealed from a March 19, 2007 decision of the
Development Review Board (DRB) of the Town of Newfane, denying his appeal of the
Zoning Administrator’s denial of his permit application to repair his home, to build or
finish a shed, and to operate a home occupation at the property. Appellant has appeared
and represents himself; the Town is represented by Samuel H. Angell, Esq.
The remaining motions requiring a ruling are the Town’s Motion for Declaratory
Judgment filed December 31, 2007, Appellant’s Motion for Sanctions filed January 10, 2008,
and the Town’s Motion for Legal Fees filed January 16, 2008.
Town’s Motion for Declaratory Judgment on Jurisdiction over Subsequent Applications
As described in the Court’s December 18, 2007 ruling on earlier motions, in the
application that is the subject of this appeal, Appellant applied for a zoning permit to
“rebuild single family home located at above address, finish 12 x 60 shed and use or
continue to use this location as a home industry. . . . I will be using the majority of this
location as my residence and my business as a secondary use.”
The application at issue in the present appeal was filed on December 10, 2006 and
was treated as complete on January 8, 2007. The Zoning Administrator denied the
application. The DRB convened a hearing on Appellant’s appeal of that denial on April 10,
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2007, but did not reach the merits of the application. Rather, it denied the appeal on the
basis that it had “determined that a Site Visit was necessary to identify and understand the
facts related to the appeal,” that Appellant “chose not to consent to the DRB coming onto
his property to conduct the site visit,” and that, “[i]n the absence of a Site Visit the DRB had
no basis for reversing the decision of the Zoning Administrator.”
In its December 18, 2007 ruling on cross-motions for summary judgment filed in this
matter, the Court had ruled that the DRB was within its authority to require a new site visit
before proceeding to take further evidence on the application. In that decision, the Court
noted that in general it is the better practice for the DRB to rule on the merits of an
application in the first instance. The December 18, 2007 decision confirmed that “the Court
will address the merits of the application if the case remains before the Court,” but
explained in response to Appellant’s own motion to stay proceedings in this Court (to
arrange for the new site visit) that a remand would be required to do so, and explained the
procedure as follows:
Appellant may at any time offer the opportunity for a site visit related
to the merits of the application. However, the jurisdiction of Appellant’s
application is now before the Court. If Appellant and the Town now want
to arrange for a site visit for the DRB, so that it may proceed to rule on
Appellant’s application, they may agree to (or the DRB may request) a
remand under V.R.E.C.P. 5(i) to allow it to reach the merits of the application
after the site visit. If a remand is ordered; the Court would waive the filing
fee for a future appeal on the merits of the application.
Neither party has requested a remand to return jurisdiction of the application to the DRB,
nor has either party responded to the Court’s observation in the December 18, 2007
decision that:
Any request for an order governing a site visit by the parties, such as the one
issued in 2005, to enable the site visit to be conducted in an orderly fashion,
may be made to the Court in connection with any motion for or agreement
to remand.
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From the sequence of filings described in the Town’s Motion for Declaratory
Judgment, it appears that, in late December of 2007, Appellant filed or attempted to file
with the Zoning Administrator a new application to rebuild the house and finish the
storage shed, with associated filing fees and prospective notices of appeal. The cover letter
to the DRB states: “should you require a site visit before you deny or approve this
application please contact me at the above address and phone number.” This attempted
application appears to cover only the residential aspects of Appellant’s application. That
is, it appears to be Appellant’s attempt to obtain a separate ruling from the DRB on the
residential repair and construction portions of the application, while this Court proceeds
with the ruling on the home occupation. The Court only received photocopies of this new
application; the Town asserts that no original application or original signature was filed
with the Court.
The Town is correct that all three aspects of the application are before the Court in
this appeal. However, the Town has not suggested any reason why it would not make
sense to ‘decouple’ the residential repair and personal storage shed application from the
home occupation application, so that the DRB could rule on the residential aspects of the
application separately from the home occupation application. If the residential repair
and/or the personal storage shed application are approved, it would eliminate an
unnecessary appeal in this Court and would allow work to proceed on the residential
aspects of the application in the coming construction season. If either the residential repair
or the personal storage shed application is denied, a new but separate appeal could be
consolidated with the present appeal on the home occupation application, assuming that
the home occupation appeal will remain on appeal in this Court.
Further, as the Court noted in its December 18, 2007 decision, now that Appellant
appears to be willing to allow an appropriate site visit, it may make the most sense for the
home occupation application also to be remanded to the DRB, so that the DRB can rule on
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the merits of the application after its site visit. That way, if the application is denied on its
merits any appeal will include all the issues relating to the home occupation application,
and if it is granted an appeal by Appellant will not be necessary. The Court remains
willing, as stated in the December 18, 2007 decision, to waive the filing fee for such a later
appeal after remand. If the home occupation application were also to be remanded, the
DRB would be able to act on its merits (in a separate decision from its decision on the
residential repair and personal storage shed application). Any resulting appeals can be
consolidated in this Court; there is still enough time for them to be prepared and heard on
the May 7, 2008 trial date.
Accordingly, under the authority of V.R.E.C.P. 2(b) and 5(i), Appellant’s applications
for home repair and personal storage shed construction are HEREBY REMANDED to the
DRB so that it may consider the merits of the new December 2007 application (or may
require a newer original application with original signature), for just the home repair and
personal storage shed construction proposals. The remand of the home repair and
personal storage shed construction applications DOES NOT NOW REMAND the home
occupation application which REMAINS ON APPEAL in this Court, until further order of
the Court.
On or before March 7, 2008, each party shall file with the Court a statement as to
whether the home occupation application should also be separately remanded, as discussed
above, so that the DRB can take its site visit and rule on the merits of that application. The
trial date scheduled for May 7, 2008 will continue to be reserved in the Court’s calendar,
so that it may be used for the trial of the home occupation application if it is not remanded,
and/or so that it may be used for the trial of any new appeals after remand.
If the home occupation application is not also remanded, we will hold a telephone
conference to be scheduled later in March, at which the parties should be prepared to
discuss whether any evidence to be presented in regard to the home occupation application
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depends on the completion of the work on the house and personal storage shed.
Appellant’s Motion for Sanctions; Town’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees
Appellant has filed a new request for sanctions against Attorney Angell relating to
the Declaratory Judgment motion and assertions as to the dates of filing certain documents
made in that motion. Neither the filing of the motion nor the asserted dates warrant
sanctions under V.R.C.P. 11, as the assertions regarding the dates were corrected or further
reasonably explained in paragraphs 1-3 of the Town’s memorandum filed January 16, 2008,
copies of the dated documents were attached to the motion, and there is no indication that
the purpose of filing the motion was to cause delay. See V.R.C.P. 11(c)(1)(A). Indeed, as
the trial date remains set for May 7, 2008, no delay has been caused; the remand may
instead speed up the consideration of Appellant’s home repair and personal storage shed
construction applications, separately from the home occupation application.
The Town has requested its attorney’s fees for responding to Appellant’s “recent
filings” relating to Appellant’s new December 2007 application and to the Town’s motion
for declaratory judgment and associated responses. No such attorney’s fees are warranted,
as Appellant’s actions were reasonable in seeking to file a separate application for the
residential-related repairs and construction, separate from the home occupation
application.
Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that
the Town’s Motion for Declaratory Judgment is GRANTED in Part as discussed above, in
that the DRB appropriately declined to proceed with the new December 2007 application
limited to the home repair and personal storage shed construction, in the absence of a
remand. The Town’s Motion is DENIED in Part, as discussed above, in that the home
repair and personal storage shed construction applications should be addressed in the first
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instance by the DRB, separately from the issue of home occupation. The home repair and
personal storage shed construction applications are therefore HEREBY REMANDED to the
DRB so that it may consider the merits of those applications as attempted to be filed in
December 2007 application (or may require a new original application with original
signature). The remand of the home repair and personal storage shed construction
applications does not now remand the home occupation application which REMAINS ON
APPEAL in this Court.
The motions for sanctions, costs and attorney’s fees are DENIED, as discussed
above.
On or before March 7, 2008, each party shall file with the Court a statement as to
whether the home occupation application should also be separately remanded, as discussed
above, to allow the DRB to take its site visit and proceed to rule on the merits of that
application. The trial date scheduled for May 7, 2008 will continue to be reserved in the
Court’s calendar, so that it may be used for the trial of the home occupation application if
it is not remanded, and/or so that it may be used for the trial of any new appeals after
remand.
Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 19th day of February, 2008.
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Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
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