STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
}
Town of Richmond, }
Plaintiff, }
}
v. } Docket No. 102-5-02 Vtec
}
Isaac Cowan, }
Defendant. }
}
Decision and Order on Pending Motions and Penalty
This is an enforcement case related to the placement of a retaining wall on the
property of Defendant Isaac Cowan. In its Decision and Order of February 13, 2007,1 the
Court resolved the timing and conditions of the order for injunctive relief, but required
additional memoranda relating the bills submitted in evidence to the specific components
of the parties’ arguments relating to the penalty amount. The Town of Richmond is
represented by Mark L. Sperry, Esq. and Defendant is represented by John W. O’Donnell,
Esq. Intervenors Erica Ell and Edward Gaston are represented by David L. Grayck, Esq.,
but have not taken an active role in the arguments relating to the penalty phase of this
enforcement case.
To assess an appropriate penalty, it is necessary to understand the timeline of all the
related litigation. The beginning date for the violation is September 1, 2001, after the
expiration of the period to cure the violation given in the August 23, 2001 Notice of
1
The Town moved to correct the date of issuance of the decision found on page 8 of the
decision to conform to the actual date of issuance (as stamped on the first page of the
decision) of February 13, 2007; that correction has been made.
1
Violation.
The issue of whether there was a violation was concluded by this Court’s decision
and order of June 9, 2003 (issued in this case, in Docket No. 73-3-02 Vtec, and in a related
superior court case, Docket No. S145-03 CnC), slip op. at p. 7:
In Docket No. 102-5-02 Vtec, the Town requests injunctive relief and
a monetary penalty in an enforcement action against Appellant for the
construction of the existing retaining wall. Appellant failed to appeal the
August 23, 2001 Notice of Violation and therefore cannot contest the
violation. If Appellant intends to remove the existing retaining wall when
and if the house is built, that may go to the appropriateness or timing of the
injunctive relief, but not to the existence of the violation. Appellant’s motion
for summary judgment must be DENIED and summary judgment
GRANTED to the Town on the issue the existence of the violation as to the
existing retaining wall.
That decision, as altered by the motion to alter granted at a conference held on July 1, 2003,
concluded Docket No. 73-3-02 Vtec. However, the parties proceeded over the summer of
2003 to prepare for a consolidated trial both in this enforcement case and in the related
superior court case (regarding approval of the proposed septic system). Although the trial
was originally scheduled for October of 2003, the parties informed the Court at a
conference held on September 2, 2003 that two new applications were being filed that
should be coordinated with these matters, one regarding the installation of rip-rap and the
other regarding the placement of the house location on the property. At a follow-up
conference on September 29, 2003, the trial was postponed (initially to January of 2004).
The February 13, 2007 order stated that the Court anticipated setting a penalty that
would exclude costs accrued during the period from June 9, 2003 through December 13,
2005. However, the Town is correct in its argument that the June 9, 2003 order should not
be used as the suspension date for the parties’ expenses in the enforcement case. Rather,
the parties’ work on the motion to alter and on trial preparation continued towards the
expected use of the scheduled October 2003 and January 2004 trial dates for the
2
enforcement case. A review of the docket entries in all of the related cases reflects that the
remedy and penalty issues in the enforcement case were being prepared for an October
2003 trial through the summer of 2003. At an October 10, 2003 conference they were
rescheduled for a January 28, 2004 hearing, so that two new applications filed at the DRB
on the installation of rip-rap and the placement of the house could be heard with it.
In December of 2003, Defendant appealed the denial of the house location (Docket
No. 222-12-03 Vtec) and initially the parties hoped to include that appeal in the already-
scheduled trial. However, also in late 2003 the Town adopted new septic regulations,
under which Defendant filed a new application for septic system approval. The parties
agreed that if it were granted it would conclude the superior court case, that the January
trial date also could not be used, and that trial on the Environmental Court cases should
be further postponed, and trial dates were again reserved for May and June of 2004.
On January 14, 2004 Defendant had also applied to the Zoning Administrator (and
later appealed to the DRB) for a determination that the actual on-the-ground or surveyed
boundary of the flood hazard district was different from that shown on the maps defining
the district. Defendant appealed the DRB’s March 31, 2004 decision (which had declined
to make such a determination) to this Court in Docket No. 60-4-04 Vtec on April 6, 2004.
Because both other pending cases (the above-captioned enforcement case and Docket No.
122-12-03 Vtec) depended on the location of the flood hazard district boundary, the parties
and the Court agreed that the May and June hearing dates, including any hearing on
injunctive relief and the appropriateness or components of a monetary penalty, should be
postponed until the resolution of Docket No. 60-4-04 Vtec. The enforcement case was
therefore suspended as of April 6, 2004. The period of violation from September 1, 2001
through April 6, 2004 was 948 days.
For the purposes of assessing the parties’ costs of preparing evidence for the
redetermination proceeding, we must use the date on which the Supreme Court upheld
3
this Court’s decision and remanded the matter for the DRB to proceed with the merits of
the floodplain redetermination. On the other hand, for the purposes of assessing the total
number of days of violation, and the avoided-cost time period during which Defendant
avoided having to remove the retaining wall, we must use the date on which the DRB ruled
on the merits of that proceeding, that is, on which the DRB first determined that the
retaining wall was in the surveyed floodplain (as well as in the mapped floodplain): April
20, 2006.
The DRB’s decision was appealed in Docket No. 105-5-06 Vtec. At the August 2,
2006 hearing,2 Defendant conceded that the entire retaining wall could be treated as being
within the flood plain for the purposes of this enforcement action, and Docket No. 105-5-06
Vtec was concluded as withdrawn at the hearing, without the presentation of evidence.
The hearing proceeded with the presentation of evidence only on the issue of an
appropriate penalty for the violation in the enforcement case, as the Court granted
injunctive relief at that hearing and required the parties to file a stipulation as to the
methodology involved with the removal of the retaining wall. After the parties filed their
memoranda of law and that stipulation, the Court’s Decision and Order issued February
13, 2007, imposed the agreed remedial order, but requested further memoranda separating
and analyzing the various components of the parties’ evidence and arguments as to the
appropriate penalty amount, the last of which was filed on March 23, 2007. The period
from April 20, 2006 through March 23, 2007, is 337 days, making the total period of
violation 1,285 days.
2
Docket No. 222-12-03 Vtec was placed on inactive status at the end of May of 2006 and
was dismissed as moot in November of 2006 after a superseding application for
construction of the house had been granted and its appeal had been withdrawn.
4
Stipulation to Amendment of Date for Removal of Wall to be Complete
As stipulated by the parties on March 20, 2007, the remedial order entered by the
Court on February 13, 2007, is HEREBY AMENDED to redesignate its paragraph “E” as
paragraph “F” and to add the following paragraph “E:”
E. Defendant shall remove the retaining wall and complete the remedial
work required herein no later than September 1, 2007.
Decision on Penalty Amount
The parties dispute which of the Town’s expenses over the period since the August
23, 2001 Notice of Violation in this and in the other docket numbers should be considered3
in setting the penalty amount.
Avoided costs of removal of the retaining wall
The avoided cost due to Defendant’s failure to remove the retaining wall should be
calculated as the time value of the money involved in the estimated cost of removal of the
retaining wall, including remediation of the soil contours, seeding and mulching. That cost
was estimated at trial by the Town’s own engineering expert to be $2,500 to $5,000, we will
therefore use $3,750 in these calculations. The parties disagree both as to the appropriate
time period and as to an appropriate interest rate or calculation method to use in this
3
As laid out in the February 13, 2007 decision, the monetary penalties provided in the
zoning enabling statute, now codified at 24 V.S.A. §4451, are civil and remedial in nature,
Town of Hinesburg v. Dunkling, 167 Vt. 514, 524 (1998), so that the Court must link the
penalty to the harm caused by or the benefit obtained by the violation. See also State
Agency of Natural Res. v. Riendeau, 157 Vt. 615, 622–23 (1991), applying the factors to be
considered under 10 V.S.A. §8010(b) to an enforcement case brought under different
statutory authority.
5
calculation. The Court concludes from the sequence of events in this matter that the
appropriate time period consists of the period from September 1, 2001 (seven days after the
Notice of Violation) through April 6, 2004 (when this enforcement case was placed in
inactive status due to the filing of the floodplain redetermination litigation); plus the period
from the DRB’s April 20, 2006 decision (after the Supreme Court’s remand) that the
retaining wall was within the surveyed flood plain, to the last memorandum filed in this
matter on March 23, 2007; for a total of 1,285 days. As evidence was not presented at trial
as to the commercial interest rates in effect during this time period, nor as to an appropriate
compounding method to recognize the full time value of that unexpended money, we
conclude that it is fairest to apply the statutory interest rate of 12% per year to the average
estimated cost of $3,750, which results in an avoided cost of $1,588.60.
We must examine the remainder of the costs of this enforcement litigation in terms
of three components, during each of the relevant time periods: engineering fees and costs,
legal fees and costs, and town administration costs.
2001 Notice of Violation through June 9, 2003 order:
The parties agree that the component of the penalty amount accounting for the
Town’s legal fees and costs for obtaining the June 9, 2003 order is $3,268. The Town does
not claim any engineering costs during this time period, but has presented some 58½ hours
of the Town Administrator’s time spent between the issuance of the 2001 Notice of
Violation and June 9, 2003. At $32.864 per hour, the Town Administrator’s costs in that time
4
The Town Administrator testified at trial that in 2006 his hourly salary was $36, and
that it was approximately 3% less each year prior to 2006. The Court has used the 2003
calculated rate of pay in the absence of any specific information as to how many hours were
expended in each year.
6
period totaled $1,922.31. The engineering fees during this period were $440. The Town’s
costs leading to the June 2003 order concluding that there was a violation therefore totaled
$5,630.31.
June 9, 2003 order to April 6, 2004 suspension of enforcement litigation
The Town argues that some of its litigation costs after the June 9, 2003 order reflected
bills incurred prior to the June 9, 2003 order or in clarifying the June 9, 2003 order, or in
litigating matters related to this enforcement action. As we have determined that trial
preparation legitimately continued until the April 6, 2004 filing of the floodplain appeal,
we will consider these legal fees and costs, exclusive of those related to settlement
discussions among the parties, for a total of 8¼ hours or $1,113.75.
April 6, 2004 through December 13, 2005 Supreme Court remand order
The Town also continues to claim that its litigation costs in Docket No. 64-4-04 Vtec
and its appeal to the Supreme Court leading to the December 13, 2005 remand decision of
the Supreme Court should be considered in the monetary penalty to be imposed in this
enforcement action, arguing that the Supreme Court decision also resolved an issue in
favor of the Town: that the existence of the violation could not be contested. However, as
quoted on page 2 above, the June 9, 2003 decision and order had clearly established that
issue in favor of the Town: that Defendant had failed to appeal the August 23, 2001 Notice
of Violation and therefore could not contest the violation. Therefore, as stated in the
February 13, 2007 Decision and Order, none of the Town’s litigation expenses in the
floodplain redetermination case from the filing of its appeal to this Court on April 6, 2004
to the Supreme Court’s remand order on December 13, 2005 will be considered in
calculating an appropriate penalty amount.
7
After December 13, 2005
This Court’s February 2007 decision and order distinguished between that legal
issue (of whether Defendant was entitled to a determination of whether the retaining wall
was in the actual surveyed floodplain) and the factual or engineering determination of
whether the retaining wall was in the actual surveyed floodplain. As explained in that
decision, that factual or engineering determination was relevant to the appropriate
injunctive relief in this enforcement action; that is, it was relevant to whether all or some
part of the retaining wall should have been ordered to be removed. That issue of the
appropriate remedy in the enforcement litigation was still being contested between the
December 13, 2005 Supreme Court remand order and the August 2, 2006 trial date at which
Defendant conceded that the entire retaining wall was in the surveyed floodplain for the
purposes of this enforcement action. Therefore we will consider the Town’s reasonable
engineering costs in making its own engineering determination, in analyzing Defendant’s
engineering evidence, and in preparing for the DRB hearing and for trial in this Court.
Defendant argues that the engineering fees are excessive and suggests that the
floodplain determination could or should have been done by asking the Federal Emergency
Management Agency for a Letter of Map Amendment. The parties did not present this
evidence at the hearing or by agreement after the hearing; moreover, Defendant has not
show why he could not himself have asked FEMA for such a Letter of Map Amendment.
44 C.F.R. §70.3(a). Accordingly, we have no basis to conclude that any of the Town’s
engineering costs were unnecessary, either to prepare to counter Defendant’s experts at the
DRB hearing or the Court hearing, to prepare the Town’s own floodplain determination,
or to enable the DRB to rule on the newest house proposal then pending before it.
Nevertheless, those engineering costs were applied to three then-pending
proceedings: 222-12-03 Vtec (and its continuation in the house application that was
ultimately granted, superseding it in November of 2006); 64-4-06 Vtec (the floodplain
8
redetermination proceeding); and this enforcement proceeding. That is, to the extent that
the engineering costs were necessary, they were necessary to determine the floodplain
location for the purpose of ruling on the permit applications for the house, as well as to
determine the floodplain location for the purpose of determining the appropriate remedy
in the enforcement proceeding. Accordingly, the Court concludes that the fairest allocation
of the $18,536.405 in engineering costs for this period is to allocate half of them to the
enforcement proceeding, resulting in engineering costs for this period of the enforcement
proceeding, in the amount of $9,268.20.
The legal fees and costs for this period of time total $7,560, all of which is attributable
to the development of the enforcement case and the merits of floodplain determination, as
the permit proceedings were not at that time being litigated, but were instead in the
municipal application process. The Town Administrator’s time spent during this period
was 17¾ hours6 at a rate of $36/hour, for a total of $639.
Based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that a penalty is
hereby imposed under 24 V.S.A.§4451 in favor of the Town in the amount of $25,800,7
5
The Court has deducted four hours from the eight-hour anticipated trial time as the
trial was shorter than anticipated, after Defendant had conceded that almost all of the
retaining wall was within the flood hazard district.
6
The Court has deducted a total of ¾ hour attributed to a discussion of settlement
negotiations on March 9, 2006, and attributed to the composition of a letter to the Town
Administrator on December 28, 2005.
7
The total of $1,588.60 in avoided costs; $5,630.31 in legal, engineering and town
administrative fees and costs for the period before June 9, 2003; $1,113.75 in legal fees and
costs for the period between June 9, 2003 and April 6, 2004; and $17,467.20 in legal,
engineering and town administrative fees and costs for the period after December 13, 2005;
total equals $25,799.86.
9
which may be calculated as $20.078 per day for the 1,285 days of violation, concluding this
enforcement case.
Dated at Berlin, Vermont, this 4th day of June, 2007.
______________________________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
10