STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
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Appeal of Wood } Docket Nos. 185‐10‐04 Vtec
} 174‐8‐05 Vtec
}
}
Decision Order on Pending Motions
Marc and Susan Wood (Appellants) initially appealed from the September 8,
2004 decision of the Town of Hartford (Town) Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA),
upholding the Town Zoning Administrative Officer’s (ZAO) determination that
Appellants’ application to amend their previously‐issued zoning permit and site plan
approvals, or alternatively, for a new permit, were incomplete and could not be
approved. This initial appeal is the subject of Docket No. 185‐10‐04 Vtec. In Docket No.
174‐8‐05 Vtec, Appellants appealed from the July 20, 2005 decision of the ZBA, also
upholding a similar determination by the ZAO on Appellants’ subsequent applications.
Appellants represent themselves; the Town is represented by William F. Ellis, Esq.
Preliminary Procedural Issues
There are many motions now pending for the Court’s consideration. The parties’
protracted history of litigation and multiple filings, including motions, memoranda,
complaints and accusations, have caused the parties and the Court to already invest a
considerable amount of time in these two pending appeals, neither of which has yet
gone to trial and both of which represent only the most recent chapters in a multi‐
chapter course of combative litigation. While the Court is not as familiar as the parties
with the facts that have caused such filings to be made, it appears to the Court that
neither party is wholly responsible or innocent. Our intent in this Decision is to address
the relevant material facts and applicable law in a fair and dispassionate manner.
A. Town’s Motion to Dismiss.
The motion most appropriate to first address is the Town’s motion to dismiss
both of the pending appeals because of a lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Such a
motion may be raised at any time under the applicable rules. V.R.C.P. 12(b)(1).
In Docket No. 185‐10‐04 Vtec, Appellants filed their notice of appeal of the ZBA’s
September 8, 2004 decision with the Town on October 6, 2004; the notice of appeal was
received at the Environmental Court on October 13, 2004. Because Appellants filed
their appeal before the February 21, 20051 effective date of this Court’s own procedural
rules, the Vermont Rules for Environmental Court Proceedings (V.R.E.C.P.), the
applicable procedural rules are contained in the Vermont Rules for Civil Procedure
(V.R.C.P.). Pursuant to V.R.C.P. 76(e) and the time provided in V.R.A.P. 4, Appellants
had thirty (30) days from the ZBA’s decision to file their notice of appeal “with the clerk
of the board or commission from which appeal is taken.” V.R.C.P. 76(e)(2) (2004).
Appellants filed their notice of appeal with the town clerk on October 6, 2004, which is
within the thirty day period allowed. Therefore, the Town’s motion to dismiss Docket
No. 185‐10‐04 Vtec for lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter must be DENIED.
The Town also moves to dismiss Docket No. 174‐8‐05 Vtec for lack of jurisdiction
over the subject matter. Appellants filed their notice of appeal of the ZBA’s July 20,
2005 decision with this Court on August 22, 2005. By the time of Appellants’ second
appeal, our own procedural rules were promulgated and therefore apply. V.R.E.C.P.
5(b)(1) requires the notice of appeal to be filed within thirty (30) days of the ZBA
decision appealed from. Appellants’ notice of appeal was filed on August 22, two days
after the thirty day period allowed.
Appellants argue that the provisions of V.R.E.C.P. 5(a)(2), particularly when read
in conjunction with the extra three days allowed by V.R.C.P. 6(e) for service on another
1 The Vermont Supreme Court promulgated Emergency Rules to guide this Court’s operation between
the effective date of the V.R.E.C.P. on February 21, 2005, and the abrogation of V.R.C.P. 76 on January 31,
2005.
2
party by mail, allow thirty‐three days to file a notice of appeal. Appellants offer no
legal precedent for their interpretation of how appeal deadlines are calculated under
our Rules.
Rule 6(e) does not apply here for two reasons. First, the time extension permitted
by V.R.C.P. 6(e) expressly applies only to filings served on another party by mail.
Nothing in Rule 6(e) speaks to filings mailed to a court. Second, V.R.E.C.P. 5(b)(1)
expressly speaks to and modifies the procedure under our Rules for filing a notice of
appeal with this Court. V.R.E.C.P. 5(a)(2) explicitly states that the provisions of the
Vermont Rules of Civil and Appellate Procedure govern all proceedings in this Court,
“[e]xcept as modified” by our Rule 5. Thus if Appellants’ notice of appeal is to be
judged as timely filed, its filing must comply with the specific provisions of our Rules.
V.R.E.C.P. 5(a)(2).
Even if mailed prior to August 20, 2005, Appellants’ notice of appeal was filed
late because a notice of appeal is filed on the date that it is received and not the date it
was mailed. See City Bank & Trust v. Lyndonville Sav. Bank & Trust Co., 157 Vt. 666,
666 (1991); see also In re Appeal of Frederick LeBlanc, Docket No. 2005‐179 (Vt. Sup. Ct.,
Dec. 1, 2005) (unreported mem.). We therefore must conclude that Appellants’ appeal
in Docket No. 174‐8‐05 Vtec was untimely filed. This Court therefore does not have
jurisdiction to hear Appellants second appeal; it is therefore DISMISSED, and the
Town’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is hereby GRANTED.
B. Appellants’ Motion for Protective Order.
Appellants have also recently filed a motion for a protective order to prevent the
Town from harassing and embarrassing Appellants. The relief Appellants seek cannot
be found using a protective order. Protective orders under our Rules are a tool used
during discovery, which “permits the court in its discretion to order that access to
relevant information not be had, or that the discovery may be had only on specified
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terms and conditions, or that its dissemination be limited.” Schmitt v. Lalancette, 2003
VT 24, ¶ 10; V.R.C.P. 26(c). “[P]rotective orders allow courts to limit the broad
discovery rights established under Rule 26(a) and (b) if such rights are being abused to
limit access to particular evidence, testimony, or witnesses.” Schmitt, at ¶ 10.
Appellants are not seeking a protective order for discovery, as no disputes relating to
discovery are referenced by Appellants in their motion. Because it is a discovery tool, a
protective order has no relationship to the type of relief Appellants request. Therefore,
their motion for a protective order is DENIED.2
C. Town’s Motion for Stay of Construction.
We next address the Town’s motion for a stay of all construction work being
conducted at Appellants’ property until Appellants obtain approval for all such work.
The Town asserts that its motion is in the interest of public health and safety.
By an Entry Order on May 2, 2005, this Court stayed the expiration of
Appellants’ Permit #99‐1180, pending Appellants’ submission of zoning permit and site
plan applications, including engineered site and retaining wall plans, to the ZBA and
Planning Commission for the changes to the retaining wall and for any other changes,
including to the concrete slabs, in Appellants’ project from what was approved in
Permit #99‐1180.
While it is somewhat unfair to the Town that Appellants continue working on
their site while their permit’s expiration is stayed, that reality is not dispositive of this
2 If Appellants seek to prevent the Town’s snow plow or other Town vehicles or employees from
trespassing on their property, or if they wish to remedy a problem with a Stop Work Order issued by the
Vermont Department of Labor and Industry, Appellants must bring an action in Superior Court. This
Court’s jurisdiction is limited to matters as articulated in 4 V.S.A. § 1001 (2005) (“Two environmental
judges . . . shall hear matters arising under 10 V.S.A. Chapters 201 and 220 and matters arising under 24
V.S.A. Chapters 201 and 220 and matters arising under 24 V.SA. Chapter 117 and Chapter 61, subchapter
12. In addition, the judges shall have original jurisdiction to revoke permits under 10 V.S.A. Chapter
151.”).
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motion. However, Appellants should not be conducting any site work not approved by
Permit #99‐1180.
To the extent Appellants are performing site work not approved by Permit #99‐
1180, their construction activities are hereby STAYED and the Town’s motion for stay is
GRANTED in that respect. To the extent that Appellants are conducting only work
authorized by Permit #99‐1180, issued on October 16, 1999, Appellants may continue
because the issuance of this Decision and Order lifts the prior stay on the expiration of
Permit #99‐1180, imposed on May 2, 2005, and allows Appellants to continue with their
project as approved in Permit #99‐1180. To the extent the Town seeks to stay
construction activity authorized by the previously‐issued Permit #99‐1180, their motion
is DENIED.
Factual Background
As previously mentioned, Appellants and the Town have a protracted history of
litigation over the subject parcel. While the Court has included all relevant facts in this
opinion, we decline to provide a synopsis of the entire history of the parties’ litigation.
The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted:3
1. Appellants propose to develop their property at 194 Maple Street
(Vermont Route 14) in the Town of Hartford with the construction of a diner, private
club, gas station, and convenience store. The property is located between Maple Street
at a higher elevation and Ferry Boat Crossing (formerly Alber Drive) at a substantially
lower elevation.
2. Because of the difference in elevation, Appellants proposed to create a
thirty‐five‐foot high retaining wall by stacking recycled concrete slabs on the southerly
side of their property adjacent to Ferry Boat Crossing and to place fill behind the
concrete slabs to increase the area of land at the higher elevation and to stabilize the
3 Where facts are disputed, it is noted. When such facts are material to our determination of any motion
filed by either party, such facts are viewed in a light most favorable to the non‐moving party. Toys, Inc.
v. F.M. Burlington Co., 155 Vt. 44, 48 (1990).
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slope and bank. Appellants obtained a zoning permit, Permit #99‐1180, and site plan
approval for the project on October 15, 1999.
3. As noted in earlier litigation, Appellants have proposed two alternative
plans for development that they refer to as “Phase II” and “Phase III.” This
nomenclature is somewhat confusing, as the plans referred to as Phase II and Phase III
are not successive stages of the same development, but rather two alternative proposals
to develop the same parcel of land.
4. The permit for Phase III, #99‐1215, does not appear to be at issue in the
present appeal. Its effective date appears to have been September 2, 1999, so that absent
any extensions it would have expired on September 2, 2001. In Docket No. 37‐2‐00 Vtec,
Appellants appealed from the Planning Commission’s site plan approval for Phase III;
in Docket No. 102‐5‐00 Vtec, Appellants appealed from the ZBA’s decision to uphold
the Zoning Administrator’s denial of a building permit for Phase III. These two appeals
were dismissed as moot in the fall of 2001.
5. The effective date for Permit #99‐1180, for Phase II, was October 16, 1999.
Absent any extensions, it would have expired on October 16, 2001. Among other
requirements, Permit #99‐1180 required Appellants’ engineer to certify that the
retaining wall, made up of recycled concrete slabs, was constructed in accordance with
the approved plans.
6. On June 11, 2001,4 the ZBA granted Appellants a six‐month extension of
the completion date for one of the zoning permits. If this extension were applicable to
Phase II (Permit #99‐1180), its completion date would have expired on April 16, 2002,
4 The parties seem to dispute whether this decision granted an extension to the zoning permit for Phase II
(Permit #99‐1180), or to the zoning permit for Phase III (Permit #99‐1215), and therefore the parties may
dispute whether any extension was granted for the Phase II permit. The 2003 ZBA decision on appeal in
Docket No. 121‐7‐03 Vtec does refer to an extension having been granted for the completion date of the
Phase II project. These disputed facts need not be resolved because Appellants obtained a six‐month
extension of Permit #99‐1180 from the Chair of the Planning Commission on November 11, 2004, to clear
up any confusion about whether a six‐month extension was obtained in 2001.
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absent any stay, due to the pendency of litigation. Regardless of whether this extension
was granted, Appellants received a superseding six‐month extension of Permit #99‐1180
from the Chair of the Planning Commission on November 11, 2004. This 2004 extension
stated that Permit #99‐1180 expired on May 25, 2005, absent any issue regarding it being
stayed due to the pendency of litigation.
7. In early 2000, Appellants began the construction of the retaining wall or at
least the stockpiling of the recycled concrete slabs on the lower portion of the property,
as the slab segments became available from ongoing highway bridge improvement
projects. The Zoning Administrative Officer issued a Notice of Violation on February 4,
2000, alleging that the slabs were not being placed in the location authorized by the
zoning permit and that the placement of the slabs was not in conformance with the
approved Phase II plans.
8. Appellants appealed the Notice of Violation, Docket No. 91‐5‐00 Vtec, and
the Town brought an enforcement action, Docket No. 72‐3‐00 Vtec. These two
Environmental Court cases were consolidated for trial with a related Windsor Superior
Court case, Docket No. 219‐5‐00 Wrcv, in which the Town alleged that Appellants
created a public nuisance by clearing the slope and stacking the recycled slabs on the
property. 5
9. On May 1, 2000, the Environmental Court issued a written order in Docket
Nos. 72‐3‐00 Vtec and 91‐5‐00 Vtec, denying the Town’s request for a preliminary
injunction, without prejudice, and stating the Court’s expectations that the merits of the
litigation would establish the safety and stability of the stacked slabs and the scope and
conditions of the site plan approval of the project. Together with the transfer and
consolidation order, Judge Cheever in Windsor Superior Court issued an order in
Docket No. 219‐5‐00 Wrcv, orally on the record on June 14, 2000, and in writing on June
The Town also had filed a separate Windsor Superior Court case to determine the scope of the easement
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Appellants had over Town property, Docket No. 150‐4‐00 Wrcv.
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16, 2000, requiring Appellants to stabilize the pile of slabs and otherwise to stop
construction until that litigation was completed or until further order of the Court.
10. Those consolidated cases were concluded by a decision in this Court,
issued on September 21, 2001, concluding that the retaining wall on the Town property
did not meet the design specifications as approved in the permit for Phase II because
some concrete slabs did not meet the minimum required thickness, because some slabs
were hammered rather than sawn, and because steel reinforcing bars extended from the
edge of some slabs. The decision allowed Appellants to apply to the ZBA for approval
of their proposal for Phase II, as an amendment to the previously‐approved plans for
that “Phase”. Appellants appealed that decision to the Vermont Supreme Court, which
affirmed it on May 29, 2002. Town of Hartford v. Marc and Susan Wood, Docket No.
2001‐473 (Vt. Supreme Ct., May 29, 2002) (unreported mem.).
11. Appellants’ April 15, 2003 application sought to amend the Phase II
permit (Permit #99‐1180).6 In addition to the changes in the design of the retaining wall,
this application proposed changes to the locations of parking, curb cuts, gas pumps,
and changes to the existing diner building. It also proposed that a building that had
been proposed to be removed under the original Phase II permit would be retained and
changed in use to a retail store.
12. On May 1, 2003, the ZAO declined to accept Defendants’ application to
amend, returning the application as incomplete, and stating that the permit for Phase II
had expired. She also stated that the current application “would not be considered an
amendment” due to the extent of the proposed changes from the original application.
13. On May 19, 2004, in Docket No. 121‐7‐03 Vtec, this Court found that
Appellants’ Permit #99‐1180 had not expired as of their April 15, 2003 application to
amend and that the April 15, 2003 application is governed by the zoning regulations in
6 The application refers to it as an amendment to Phase II, citing Permit #99‐1210, but as noted in this
Court’s decision and order in Docket No. 121‐7‐03, slip op. at 1 n.1, the application is to amend Permit
#99‐1180.
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effect at that time. The Court also found that as of the April 15, 2003 application to
amend Permit #99‐1180, Appellants had used up a total of 542 days (approximately
eighteen months) of that permit. Because Permit #99‐1180 received a six‐month
extension on November 11, 2004, to clear up any confusion as to whether such
extension was granted earlier, Appellants had 371 days remaining on Permit #99‐1180
as of the Court’s May 19, 2004 decision. The Court also found that it made no difference
whether Appellants’ April 15, 2003 application was characterized as a new application
or an application to amend a previously‐issued permit.
14. Pursuant to the Court’s May 19, 2004 decision, Appellants submitted an
application to the ZAO to permit their partially constructed Hartford Diner project on
June 28, 2004. The application was similar to Appellants’ April 15, 2003 application, in
that it proposed similar changes to the retaining wall, the locations of parking, a curb
cut and gas pumps, and changes to the existing diner building. It also proposed to keep
a building that was to be destroyed under Permit #99‐1180 as a retail store. Appellants’
new application differed from their 2003 application in that it included a canopy over
the fuel pumps and redesigned parking spaces. This application also included letters
and a revised retaining wall plan designed by professional engineer John B. Stevens.
15. In their June 28th application, Appellants requested the ZBA’s approval of
their redesigned retaining wall plan and to reset the time to complete their project.
Appellants also requested site plan approval from the Planning Commission and
conditional use approval from the ZBA for their Hartford Diner project, which includes
the diner, a private club, a retail store, and a service station with four gasoline pumps
(eight fueling positions).
16. On July 2, 2004, the ZAO returned Appellants’ June 28th application as
incomplete because Appellants’ application for a redesigned retaining wall needed both
zoning approval from the ZBA and site plan approval from the Planning Commission.
The ZAO also returned Appellants’ application for conditional use and site plan
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approval as incomplete because it did not comply with the Planning Commission’s
“Site Plan Requirements” policy, adopted in June 2003, as amended. Under the “Site
Plan Requirements,” all plans, including site plans, not meeting specific exceptions
must be prepared by a Vermont‐licensed surveyor, engineer, or architect. The Zoning
Administrative Officer found that Appellants’ site plan was not so prepared.
17. On July 12, 2004, Appellants asked the ZAO to approve their retaining
wall plans that were prepared by licensed professional engineer John B. Stevens.
18. On July 15, 2004, the ZAO responded to Appellants’ July 12 request by
refusing to review and approve the submitted plans for the Phase II retaining wall.
Pursuant to a condition in Appellants’ original Phase II approval, Permit #99‐1180, the
ZBA or the Planning Commission must give their written approval for any changes to
or an expansion of Appellants’ project. The ZAO further noted that for a complete
application to be submitted to the Planning Commission or ZBA for review, Appellants
would have to include “an application form, engineered retaining wall plans, a site
plan, a narrative description of the difference between your approved phase #2 plans
and this submittal and the appropriate application fee.” Attach. to Town’s Mot. for
Partial Summ. J., Ex. L, at 1. The ZAO also noted that if Appellants proposed changing
any buildings’ footprints from their approved Phase II site plan, they would need new
site plans prepared by a Vermont‐licensed surveyor, engineer, or architect. Id. at 1‐2.
19. On July 16, 2004, Appellants appealed the ZAO’s July 2 refusal to accept
both applications and the ZAO’s July 15 refusal to forward Appellants’ retaining wall
plans to the ZBA for approval. Appellants requested that the ZBA find their
applications complete and ready for review by the ZBA or Planning Commission.
Appellants also requested that the ZBA direct the ZAO to review Appellants’
engineered Phase II plans for the retaining wall. Lastly, Appellants requested that the
ZBA “have the time tolled” on their Phase I and II permits, and to “toll the time
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between the Judge’s last order and the time this request is ruled on for both Phases I
and II.” Attach. to Town’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J., Ex. M, at 2.
20. On September 8, 2004, the ZBA issued its decision on Appellants’ most
recent applications and appeals by upholding the ZAO’s decisions that Appellants’
applications for approval were not complete because they were not submitted to both
the ZBA and the Planning Commission in the case of the revised retaining wall plan
and because Appellants’ revised site plan, which amended certain building footprints,
needed to be prepared by an engineer in accordance with the Town’s June 2003 “Site
Plan Requirements.”
21. As noted above, Appellants appealed from the ZBA’s September 8, 2004
decisions to this Court in Docket No. 185‐10‐04 Vtec by properly filing a notice of
appeal with the Town on October 6, 2004. The Court took a site visit with the parties on
October 3, 2005.
Discussion
The primary issues Appellants raise in their remaining appeal relate to the
Town’s rejection of their two June 28, 2004 submissions. Both parties have filed cross‐
motions for summary judgment. The Town’s motion relates to whether the Town can
require Appellants to submit an engineered site plan in conjunction with their
applications to amend their Phase II zoning permit and site plan approval, previously
issued under Permit #99‐1180. Appellants move for summary judgment on the issue of
whether Appellants’ applications to amend Permit #99‐1180 should be considered
under the regulations in effect when the application was originally submitted on April
15, 2003.
For purposes of our analysis of each party’s motion, any facts in dispute are
viewed in a light most favorable to the non‐moving party. Toys, Inc. v. F.M. Burlington
Co., 155 Vt. 44, 48 (1990).
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In its May 19, 2004 decision, this Court held that for purposes of determining
which version of the zoning bylaws applies, it made no difference whether Appellants’
April 15, 2003 application was characterized as an application for a permit amendment
or for a new permit. The Court went on to rule that Appellants were then entitled to file
their amendment application for their Phase II permit (#99‐1180), as that permit had not
yet expired as of its submission date of April 15, 2003. Appeal of Marc and Susan
Wood, Docket No. 121‐7‐03 Vtec, slip op. at 7 (Vt. Envtl. Ct., May 19, 2004). This Court
further held that the regulations applicable to Appellants’ application, whether
characterized as one for an amendment or for a new permit, were the regulations in
effect or proposed at the time that the application was filed, or April 15, 2003. Id.
Lastly, as noted above, the Court also found that if Appellants wished to proceed with
Phase II as originally permitted, including a six‐month permit extension, Appellants
had a total of 371 days remaining on Permit #99‐1180 as of the date of the Court’s
decision on May 19, 2004.
Because Appellants’ June 28, 2004 applications were the only applications
submitted to the Town since this Court’s May 19, 2004 decision, we could find that their
applications were submitted pursuant to this Court’s order of the same date. However,
it appears that Appellants’ site plan dated April 14, 2002, submitted with their April 15,
2003 application, is different from the site plan dated “revised 6/21/04,” which was
submitted with their June 28, 2004 application. The changes to the latter site plan
include, among other modifications, a canopy over the fuel pumps, a 500 square‐foot
addition to the proposed restaurant, redesigned parking spaces, and an updated
retaining wall plan. Compare Attach. to Town’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J., Ex. B, with
Attach. to Town’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J., Ex. H.
Because Appellants move for summary judgment on the issue of which
regulations apply to their application, we must construe the facts in a light most
favorable to the Town, the nonmoving party. See Toys, Inc., 155 Vt. at 48. Therefore,
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because Appellants’ June 28, 2004 applications for approval of their site and retaining
wall plans are different than those submitted in April of 2003, the Town may consider
Appellants’ applications under the regulations and policies in effect when the revisions
were filed. Even assuming arguendo that Appellants’ 2003 and 2004 submissions were
identical and that the Town was bound to consider Appellants’ June 28, 2004
applications under the regulations in effect or proposed as of April 15, 2003, our
holding that, pursuant to Zoning Regulations § 4‐1.2, the Town may require Appellants’
site plans to be prepared by a Vermont‐licensed surveyor, engineer, or architect, would
not change. This discretion rested with the Town under the previous zoning
regulations.
The Town’s Zoning Regulations in effect on April 15, 2003 and on June 28, 2004,
explicitly state, “The Planning Commission may require such [site development] plan to
be prepared by a professional architect, landscape architect, engineer, or surveyor.”
Zoning Regulations § 4‐1.2 (amended June 27, 1995). Zoning Regulations § 4‐1.2.3 also
states that the Planning Commission may require “[a] survey of the property or a
portion of the property prepared by a licensed engineer and/or land surveyor . . . .”
Zoning Regulations § 4‐1.2.3. Moreover, nothing could have confirmed the need for
engineered site and retaining wall plans more than this Court’s site visit, which
demonstrated the enormity of Appellants’ project and the threat to public safety that
Appellants’ project presents if it were to proceed without consultation and approval of
a licensed engineer experienced with constructing retaining walls with recycled
concrete slabs. Thus, regardless of which version of the Town’s Zoning Regulations
applies, the Town had the discretionary authority to require Appellants’ site plans to be
prepared by a Vermont‐licensed architect, engineer, or surveyor.
In light of our ruling that the Town’s zoning regulations in effect when
Appellants filed their applications on June 28, 2004, apply, we next reach the issue,
advanced by Appellants, of whether the Town’s June 2003 “Site Plan Requirements”
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comport with the requirements of Zoning Regulations § 4‐1.2, or whether the policy is
unlawful because its requirements are not in conformance with the Zoning Regulations’
site plan review provisions. Appellants also appear to argue in their motion that the
Town is requiring too much information of applicants for site plan review.
Both arguments fail, as the former provision of the Vermont Planning and
Development Act relating to site plan approval specifically allows municipalities to
“impose appropriate conditions and safeguards,” which includes maps, data, and other
information. 24 V.S.A. § 4407(5) (2004) (now codified at 24 V.S.A. § 4416). The Town is
entitled to impose whatever site plan application requirements it deems necessary, as
long as those requirements are consistent with the Zoning Regulations and the
provisions of § 4407(5). From the Court’s review of the Town’s “Site Plan
Requirements,” it appears that they simply re‐state and present the requirements of
Zoning Regulations § 4‐1.2, relating to site plan applications, in a clear, easy‐to‐use,
checklist. Furthermore, the site plan application policy or checklist also does not appear
to include any additional elements not authorized by the Town’s Zoning Regulations or
24 V.S.A. § 4407(5), as the Zoning Regulations include provisions allowing the Planning
Commission to require that plans be prepared by a licensed engineer or surveyor, see
Zoning Regulations §4‐1.2.3. Thus, Appellants’ challenge to the Town’s application
submission policy must fail.
Appellants also request that this Court “toll the time” remaining on their original
zoning permit, Permit #99‐1180. Because Appellants’ June 28, 2004 applications to
amend Permit #99‐1180 are on appeal, and because Permit #99‐1180 had not expired as
of June 28, 2004, the zoning permit has been stayed during the pendency of this
litigation. See Preseault v. Wheel, 132 Vt. 247, 253‐55 (1974). Forty days passed
between this Court’s May 19, 2004 Decision, and Appellants’ June 28, 2004 applications,
when Appellants could have continued construction authorized by Permit #99‐1180. As
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a result, the time remaining on Permit #99‐1180 as of the date of this decision is 331 days
(approximately eleven months).
Appellant also requests that we consider the time lost under Permit #99‐1180
because the Vermont Department of Labor and Industry issued a stop work order for
Appellants’ Hartford Diner project. While it appears that the stop work order covers
much of the time Appellants’ project was stayed due to litigation, this Court cannot
review, enforce, or lift stays as a result of a Department of Labor and Industry stop
work order.
As enumerated in 4 V.S.A. § 1001, our jurisdiction is limited to matters arising
under “10 V.S.A. Chapters 201 and 220 and matters arising under 24 V.S.A. Chapters
201 and 220 and matters arising under 24 V.SA. Chapter 117 and Chapter 61, subchapter
12. In addition, the judges shall have original jurisdiction to revoke permits under 10
V.S.A. Chapter 151.” 4 V.S.A. § 1001 (2005). Therefore, as those provisions do not
pertain to Department of Labor and Industry stop work orders, we do not have
jurisdiction to review or consider any action as a result of a stop work order.
Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED
as follows:
A. The Town’s motion to dismiss in Docket No. 174‐8‐05 Vtec is GRANTED,
and Appellants’ appeal of the Town’s July 20, 2005 decision is
DISMISSED.
B. The Town’s motion to dismiss Appellants’ appeal in Docket No. 185‐10‐04
Vtec is DENIED.
C. The Town’s February 9, 2006 motion for a stay of Appellants’ construction
activities is GRANTED with respect to the construction activities not
authorized by Permit #99‐1180. To the extent the Town requests a stay of
construction activities authorized by Permit #99‐1180, this motion is
DENIED.
D. The stay of Appellants’ Permit #99‐1180 issued by this Court on May 2,
2005 is VACATED as of the date of this Decision and Order, since Permit
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#99‐1180, issued on October 16, 1999 is valid, at least for the 331 days
remaining before that permit expires.
E. Appellants’ motion for a protective order is DENIED.
F. Appellants’ motion for summary judgment is DENIED, as their June 28,
2004 applications for site and retaining wall plan approval, as well as for a
zoning permit, are to be considered under the Zoning Regulations in effect
at the time such applications were filed.
G. The Town’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED in that
Appellants must submit a complete application before approval may be
granted for their site plan, retaining wall plan, and zoning permit. The
Town’s requirement that the site plans and retaining wall drawings
submitted in support of the application be prepared by a Vermont‐
licensed engineer, surveyor, or architect is consistent with Zoning
Regulations § 4‐1.2.
H. Appellants may continue working on their Hartford Diner project, solely
as authorized by Permit #99‐1180, or they may re‐submit their June 28,
2004 application with the appropriate supporting materials.
These determinations result in a dismissal of both appeals now pending before
the Court. A V.R.C.P. 58 Judgment Order accompanies this Decision.
Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 13th day of April, 2006.
Thomas S. Durkin, Environmental Judge
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