STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
Town of Waitsfield, Plaintiff,
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v
} Docket No. 125-8-01 Vtec
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Ira and Martha Jackson,
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Defendants
Decision and Order on Motions to Strike and for Summary Judgment
In Docket No. 125-8-01 Vtec, the Town brought an enforcement action against Defendants
Ira and Martha Jackson. In an earlier case, Docket No. 186-9-00 Vtec, Ira and Martha Jackson
appealed from a decision of the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) of the Town of Waitsfield
upholding the Zoning Administrator= s Notice of Violation and decision disapproving their as-
built application, dismissing their application under ' V(9) of the Zoning Ordinance, and
denying their applications under ' ' IV(4) and (5). The two matters had been consolidated as of
the April 23, 2002 decision on the merits of the appeal, which concluded the appeal in this Court
and remanded1 it to the ZBA to consider the application for amendment to the 1998 stream
setback reduction order for the as-built project, and for the Zoning Administrator thereafter to act
on the application for amendment to the 1998 zoning permit. After the Court issued its April 23,
2002 decision on the merits of the appeal, including the determination that the watercourse was a
stream, the two cases were severed.
The parties have submitted this enforcement case by cross-motions for summary judgment.
Defendants are represented by Carl H. Lisman, Esq., Christina A. Jensen, Esq. and Peter S.
Sidel; the Town is represented by Steven F. Stitzel, Esq. and Amanda S.E. Lafferty, Esq.
Motion to Strike
The Town asks the Court to strike a supplementary affidavit from Peter Jackson, Defendants=
Connecticut-based architect who spoke with the Zoning Administrator by telephone in June of
1999. Defendants filed the affidavit of Peter Jackson after the Town argued correctly that Martha
Jackson= s own affidavit about the conversation between Peter Jackson and the then-Zoning
Administrator Andrew Flagg could not be considered as it was not based on her own personal
knowledge. However, just as the Court may take evidence at a hearing on a motion for summary
judgment, Bingham v. Tenney, 154 Vt. 96 (1990), for the purpose of determining whether a
material fact is disputed, the Court may permit the supplementation of the affidavits for the same
purpose. Therefore, the Town= s Motion to Strike is DENIED; the Court will consider the
affidavit of Peter Jackson as an indication of what he would testify to at trial. After all, the
purpose of summary judgment is to avoid an unnecessary trial; if there is a genuine issue of
material fact a trial is necessary, at least as to that issue.
However, a summary judgment motion is not a trial of the underlying merits of the case on
the basis of conflicting affidavits; nor is it for the trial judge to adjudicate who is more credible
on the basis of affidavits. See, e.g., Pierce v Riggs, 149 Vt. 136 (1987). If the affidavits and other
material in the record establish that facts are disputed only on limited issues in the case, partial
summary judgment is available, V.R.C.P. 56(d), to eliminate those issues dependent only on
undisputed facts, leaving the remaining issues for trial. See, Berlin Development Associates v.
Department of Social Welfare, 142 Vt. 107, 112 (1982). In the present case, we have had a trial
that resolved all of the fact and legal issues in Docket No. 186-9-00 Vtec. That case has been
severed from this one; we turn to the present motions for summary judgment.
Motions for Summary Judgment
The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted, or have been resolved in the
decisions already issued in the consolidated cases.
Defendants own property, including a single-family residence and what was an existing 18' x
30' shed or barn, at 914 Main Street in the Agricultural/Residential zoning district of the Town of
Waitsfield. A watercourse2 traverses the property at a distance of from 12 to 26 feet from the
rear of the then-existing barn.
In August of 1998, Defendants applied to the Town to disassemble the existing barn, to
salvage and reuse its material as much as possible, and to construct a 30' x 30' structure, using
the same rear and side wall locations. The permit application refers to the proposed structure as a
A barn/garage;@ the space on the application for A land or building use@ is filled in as A residential.@
The maximum height of the proposed structure is shown on the application as A 24'.@ The
application included a front elevation and a side elevation of the proposed structure, showing its
height as 24', its footprint as 30' x 30', a roof overhang of 1' on each side, and a 5' x 6' central
shuttered opening in the gable end, with an apparent but unlabeled attic floor line at 9 feet above
the finished floor elevation.
In November of 1998 the ZBA approved Defendants= application to reduce the required
stream setback to that of the existing rear wall of the then-existing barn A as indicated on the
applicant= s plans (September 29, 1998).@ The ZBA specifically issued this approval under the
authority of ' V(9) of the Zoning Ordinance, which allows the ZBA to reduce the required
stream setback upon a finding that the reduced setback would A not adversely affect water quality
or scenic beauty,@ and not under ' IV(4) governing ordinary (24 V.S.A. ' 4468) variances. This
decision was not appealed and became final. Based on it the Zoning Administrator then granted
the zoning permit for the new 30' x 30' barn/garage, with the same rear and side wall locations as
the then-existing barn, in late November of 1998. The zoning permit also was not appealed and
became final.
In its decisions in the consolidated cases, the Court ruled that under the 1998 approvals,
Defendants held a zoning permit for a 24-foot-high structure, on a 30' x 30' footprint, with a one-
foot roof overhang, for use as a barn/garage, in connection with the residential use of the
property.
After obtaining these approvals and before construction, Defendants decided to alter the
design originally proposed. Defendant Ira Jackson= s brother Peter Jackson, a Connecticut
architect, discussed the proposed modifications by telephone with the Zoning Administrator, on
June 9, 1999. The parties dispute the content of that discussion. They dispute the extent to which
those witnesses discussed the addition of plumbing or a toilet to the building, and whether such a
change would be acceptable as long as it was plumbed into the septic system of the house and
did not include a floor drain. They dispute whether the Zoning Administrator orally advised the
architect that the modified building would be approved upon submission of as-built plans and
payment of an additional fee following construction.
That oral discussion was not and could not have been a > permit= superseding the 1998 permit.
However, material facts are in dispute as to Defendants= knowledge and state of mind as of the
summer of 1999, and as to the Town= s imputed knowledge. These disputed facts are material to
Defendants= argument that the Town should be estopped from seeking removal of the as-built
structure to the extent it differs from the 1998 approvals, or from obtaining a penalty for the
construction of the as-built structure. Even in the absence of true estoppel, these disputed facts
are material to the factors the Court must consider in determining the extent of injunctive relief
or the amount of any penalty. In re Jewell, 169 Vt. 604, 606-07 (1999); In re Letourneau,168 Vt.
539 (1998, as corrected 1999); Town of Hinesburg v. Dunkling, 167 Vt. 514 (1998); Town of
Sherburne v. Carpenter, 155 Vt. 126 (1990).
At some time after the June 9, 1999 telephone conversation, Defendants constructed the new
structure in the approved 30' x 30' footprint3, but with two full stories and a balcony, changing
the height to approximately 34 feet 6 inches. Defendants added a bathroom with plumbing but no
floor drain, plumbed into the existing septic system. The construction used all new materials.
The Court has already determined that Defendants built the altered project4 without obtaining
prior approval of the changes in the design from the 1998 approvals; and that they should have
applied for an amendment to their zoning permit (both for the changes in the structure and for
any change in use beyond its use for a garage and storage (even if the changed use is also a
permitted use)); and that they should have applied for an amendment to their ' V(9) stream
setback approval (in which they would have had to show that the larger building in the same
footprint also would A not adversely affect water quality or scenic beauty.@ )
However, the consolidated cases also dealt with the ZBA= s action on Defendants= later-
submitted applications for approval of the as-built construction. Defendants applied in October
of 1999 to the Zoning Administrator for a zoning permit for the as-built structure. Defendants
applied on November 12, 1999, to the ZBA to amend the 1998 stream setback reduction order
under ' V(9) for the as-built structure (as well as appealing to the ZBA the Zoning
Administrator= s denial of the zoning permit and issuance of a notice of violation for the as-built
structure).
This Court has already ruled that the ZBA should have acted on Defendants= application to
amend the 1998 stream setback reduction order under ' V(9)(A), rather than dismissing it. This
Court has already ruled that the Zoning Administrator should have waited for the ZBA= s '
V(9)(A) ruling before acting on Defendants= as-built zoning permit amendment application. This
Court has remanded the matter to the ZBA and Zoning Administrator for those actions to occur;
however, as discussed in footnote 1 above, the remand remains on hold pending the Supreme
Court appeal of that decision.
Everything since the ZBA= s actions on the November 12, 1999 application has been
contested by the parties. The Town= s complaint in the present case requests injunctive relief
requiring Defendants to remove the second story and the balcony of the structure, and to remove
the A portion of the structure that intrudes into the setback of the stream further@ than permitted
by the 1998 approvals, and to A use the structure only in accordance with Town approvals and
permits.@ It also requests substantial penalties to cover its costs and attorneys fees in the
consolidated cases.
In the October 2001 summary judgment order in the consolidated cases, the Court ruled that
material facts then remained in dispute as to whether the Town should be estopped from
enforcement based upon representations of the Zoning Administrator in the period between
issuance of the 1998 approvals and the construction of the changed project. Those material facts
remain in dispute as to the states of mind of Defendants= representative Peter Jackson and the
Town= s representative in the person of the then-Zoning Administrator. Those material facts are
equally material to the determination of any injunctive relief and penalty amount, even in the
absence of estoppel. Summary judgment is generally inappropriate in A cases in which the
resolution of the dispositive issue requires determination of a state of mind,@ as the fact finder
normally should be given the opportunity to observe the demeanor and determine the credibility
of the witnesses whose state of mind is at issue, and the other parties should be allowed to probe
the perceptions and motivations of those witnesses at trial. Barbagallo v. Gregory, 150 Vt. 653
(1988).
More importantly, however, until and unless the Supreme Court appeals are resolved on the
issues of whether the watercourse is a stream and whether a conditional use permit or a 24
V.S.A. ' 4468-type of variance was required for the as-built construction, and until the Zoning
Administrator and ZBA rule on the remanded issues and all appeals of those rulings are resolved,
it is simply premature to address most of the issues in this enforcement action. That is, we will
not be able to tell the duration of any of the violations, or the other factors to be considered in
equitable relief or in assessing a penalty, until those issues are resolved. Certainly it would be
inappropriate to require the structure to be reduced to 24 feet in height, or the balcony or the
plumbing to be removed, if the resolution of the Supreme Court and the remanded issues could
result in approval of the 342 -foot height, approval of the balcony, or approval of the interior
plumbing.
Accordingly, both Motions for Summary Judgment are DENIED at the present time. While
we could determine now that Defendants were in violation for the period from which the taller
structure was built to the dates on which the Town should have ruled on their applications for the
amendment to the stream setback order and for the amendment to their 1998 permit for the taller
structure, material facts are in dispute or legal or factual issues are on appeal as to all remaining
issues regarding that period of violation or other periods of violation claimed by the town.
Moreover, material facts remain in dispute as to the Town= s requests for injunctive relief and
penalties, both as to Defendants= estoppel defense and as to the other factors to be considered in
ruling on those requests.
We will hold a brief telephone conference on November 13, 2002, to discuss whether any
preliminary injunctive relief should be entered by the Court, either on motion or by agreement of
the parties; whether any testimony should be taken from Mr.Flagg or Mr. Peter Jackson; and
whether this matter otherwise should be placed on inactive status pending the resolution of the
Supreme Court appeal and the remand order in Docket No. 186-9-00 Vtec.
Done at Barre, Vermont, this 24th day of October, 2002.
___________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
Footnotes
1
That decision ruled that neither a conditional use permit nor a 24 V.S.A. §4468-type of
variance was required for the as-built construction. The Town has appealed the decision to the
Supreme Court and Defendants (appellants in that appeal) have cross-appealed to the Supreme
Court. Neither party requested an order under V.R.C.P. 54(b) that would have allowed the
remanded issues to go forward before the ZBA while the other issues were appealed to the
Supreme Court.
2
One contested issue in the appeal was whether this watercourse qualified as a "stream" for
the purposes of §V(9) of the Zoning Ordinance, because if it did not, then the stream setback
regulation did not apply to this project and no reduction in the stream setback was necessary. The
April 2002 decision and order ruled that it does qualify as a stream; that issue is on appeal to the
Supreme Court.
3
The Town’s memoranda describe the structure as an 1800-square-foot structure as contrasted
with the 900-square-foot structure as approved. This description is misleading. The structure was
approved for a 900-square-foot footprint (30' x 30'), 24 feet in height, and 1½ stories going by
the elevation drawing (although the number of stories was not stated either in the application or
the approval, nor discussed in the minutes). The structure was built in the approved 900-square-
foot footprint (30' x 30'), but was raised to 34½ feet and 2 full stories in height, with a balcony
not shown in the approved drawings.
4
The parties undoubtedly have evidence as to the date of this construction but it has not been
supplied to the Court; it must have occurred some time in the summer or early fall of 1999, after
the June 9, 1999 conversation and before the October 1999 application for the as-built permit.