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 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. Appellant has appeared and represents himself; the Town
is represented by Samuel H. Angell, Esq.
Appeal Caption and Applicable Rules
First, the parties are requested to use the Court’s caption for this matter, or to
request any alteration in the Court’s caption. Although both parties have made reference
to V.R.E.C.P. 3, this appeal does not fall within any of the listed categories of cases that are
filed by summons and complaint to which that rule pertains. Rather, it is an appeal from
a decision of the DRB, and falls within the provisions of V.R.E.C.P. 5.
Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
The parties have each moved for summary judgment. The following facts are
undisputed unless otherwise noted.
In the application that is the subject of this appeal, on December 10, 2006, 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
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the majority of this location as my residence and my business as a secondary use.” It was
treated as a complete application on January 8, 2007.
The Zoning Administrator denied the application on January 17, 2007, stating in the
section entitled “explanation” as follows:
Your application was denied for the following: 4411 - lot coverage, 4410,
home occupation 6100, site plan review, 7120 non conforming uses, 4330,
sewage facilities - no health permit for establishment of a residential use has
been issued and is prerequisite for issuance of a zoning permit1
Appellant appealed to DRB which convened a hearing on the appeal on April 10, 2007. Its
decision denying the appeal stated the following reasons:
1. The [DRB] determined that a Site Visit was necessary to
identify and understand the facts related to the appeal.
2. The Appellant chose not to consent to the DRB coming onto his
property to conduct the site visit.
3. In the absence of a Site Visit the DRB had no basis for reversing
the decision of the Zoning Administrator.
The DRB did not reach the merits of the application; the present appeal followed.
In the fall of 2005, Mr. John Feifel, who was then the Assistant Zoning Administrator
and Health Officer for the Town, was authorized under an order from this Court to enter
upon Mr. Chandler’s property for the purpose of conducting an examination of the
construction projects and improvements on the property. He conducted the site visit and
prepared a sketch map and a report about the construction of the shed and about various
dimensional measurements of and between the buildings. This report, initialed by
Appellant and by Mr. Feifel, was entered in evidence in Docket No. 25-2-06 Vtec. While
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Although in previous appeals involving this property the Court had copies of the
Zoning Bylaws including amendments through December of 2005, in the present case the
Court has not so far been provided with the current bylaws and has not been informed as
to whether or not they have been amended since that date.
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the measurements taken during that site visit may still be accurate, because an application
for a home industry on the property was not at issue at the time of that site visit, and
because conditions on the property could have changed in the intervening two years, the
DRB was entitled under 24 V.S.A. §4461(b) to require another site visit before ruling on an
application that depends on the percentage use of the various buildings and the
observation of the exterior conditions of the property, including any outside storage
connected with the home industry. Accordingly, the DRB was within its authority to
require a new site visit before proceeding to take further evidence on the application.
However, the fact that the DRB was within its authority to require a new site visit
does not mean that Appellant’s application should be automatically disapproved in this
Court. Of course, it would be better practice for the DRB to rule on the merits of the
application in the first instance, see, e.g., In re Maple Tree Place, 156 Vt. 494, 498–501 (1991);
In re Jolley Associates, 2006 VT 132, ¶ 13, as Appellant may now be willing to arrange for
the new site visit. Nevertheless, Appellant’s appeal places his application before the Court
de novo, and the Court will address the merits of the application if the case remains before
the Court.
In addition, nothing presented to date in this appeal amounts to a showing of
unlawful discrimination on the part of the Town with regard to the present application.
See In re Letourneau, 168 Vt. 539, 548–50 (1998).
Motions to Stay Proceedings, regarding Discovery and to Clarify and to Quash Subpoena
On November 16, 2007, Appellant moved to stay the proceedings for thirty days so
that he could offer the Town “another opportunity to view or photograph this property for
the second time,” and so that he could obtain discovery and depose the Zoning
Administrator, the DRB members, and the clerk.
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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.
On the other hand, to the extent that either party now wishes to pursue discovery
related to the merits of this appeal before this Court, including any site visit, they must first
discuss such discovery with each other (see V.R.C.P. 26 (h)), before bringing any requests
to the attention of the Court. 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.
It is important that the parties understand that if the appeal remains with this Court,
any site visit to be conducted by the Court will be scheduled at the same time as the trial
on the merits of the application.
Motion for Contempt, Sanctions and Costs
Appellant also seeks an order to hold the Zoning Administrator, the DRB members
and the clerk in contempt and, in an affidavit, requests the Court to impose personal
monetary sanctions and prohibit them from holding town office. However, none of the
alleged statements or actions represents a violation of an order of this Court, for which this
Court would have the authority to impose contempt or other sanctions; rather such claims
are beyond the jurisdiction of this Court. Accordingly, Appellant’s motions for contempt,
sanctions, and costs must be DENIED.
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Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that
the Town’s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED in Part as discussed above, in that
the DRB had authority to decline to proceed with the application in the absence of a site
visit; however, it is otherwise DENIED as that fact does not result in the denial of the
application before the Court. Rather, as the application is de novo before the Court, we
must proceed to consider the application on its merits, or consider any request to remand.
The motions to stay proceedings, quash the subpoena, and for contempt, sanctions,
and costs, are DENIED either as moot or as beyond the jurisdiction of this Court, as
discussed above. A telephone conference has been scheduled (see enclosed notice) to
determine whether and when to set this matter for a hearing or whether the parties agree
or the DRB requests a remand to take the site visit and rule on the merits of the application
in the first instance.
Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 18th day of December, 2007.
_________________________________________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
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