TransFarmations, Inc. v. Town of Amherst ( 2022 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Hillsborough-northern judicial district
    No. 2021-0214
    TRANSFARMATIONS, INC.
    v.
    TOWN OF AMHERST
    Argued: March 15, 2022
    Opinion Issued: November 30, 2022
    Donahue, Tucker & Ciandella, PLLC, of Exeter (Brendan Avery O’Donnell
    and John J. Ratigan on the brief, and Brendan Avery O’Donnell orally), for the
    plaintiff.
    Cronin, Bisson, & Zalinsky, PC, of Manchester (Christopher B. Drescher
    on the brief and orally), for the defendant.
    Cronin, Bisson, & Zalinsky, PC, of Manchester (Daniel D. Muller, Jr.), for
    the intervenors, filed no brief.
    HICKS, J. The plaintiff, TransFarmations, Inc. (TransFarmations),
    appeals a decision of the Superior Court (Anderson, J.) upholding decisions of
    the planning board for the defendant, the Town of Amherst (Town), denying
    TransFarmations’ two successive applications for a conditional use permit
    (CUP). We reverse and remand.
    The following facts were recited in the trial court’s order or relate the
    contents of documents in the record. In May 2019, TransFarmations requested
    a “Conceptual Meeting” with the Town’s planning board (Board) concerning its
    proposed development of an approximately 130-acre property known as the
    Jacobson Farm. TransFarmations called the proposed development the
    “Jacobson Farm Agrihood” and explained that “[t]he intention is to have about
    75% of the site preserved as open space with farming and forests as central
    features.” It further stated that the “development will be designed to meet
    many of the desired attributes the Town . . . has articulated in [its] Master Plan
    and [Integrated] Innovative . . . Housing Ordinance (IIHO),” including workforce
    housing and over-55 housing.
    According to the Town Planner’s staff report, the IIHO became part of the
    Town’s zoning ordinance in 2015.1 The staff report further explains that in
    meeting minutes discussing the IIHO’s intent, “it was noted that [the IIHO]
    provides one integrated ordinance with incentives for affordable housing, senior
    housing and [planned residential developments]. The ordinance is based upon
    what density you are eligible for by right in the underlying zoning district and
    provides bonuses for the innovative uses and proposed amenities.” (Quotation
    omitted.)
    TransFarmations subsequently submitted a CUP application under the
    IIHO for a planned residential development containing 64 residential units. A
    public hearing on the application was held on December 4, 2019, at which
    TransFarmations’ representative, Ken Clinton, asserted that the application
    met the CUP criteria contained in Section 3.18(C) of the Town’s zoning
    ordinance, including subsection (C)(1)(c). That provision requires the applicant
    to establish that “there will be no significant adverse impacts resulting from the
    proposed use upon the public health, safety, and general welfare of the
    neighborhood and the Town.” Clinton explained:
    [T]he project will be controlled by regulatory authority. It will
    feature state approved septic designs, water brought in from
    Pennichuck Water, lower farm pollutants due to best management
    practices (where there are none currently), and low and net zero
    objectives. Everything on site will be well-engineered and designed
    and based on town and state regulations. For the upcoming traffic
    study, a consultant is being considered to work jointly with this
    1   The IIHO has since been repealed.
    2
    proposal and another current proposed development in town, in
    order to get joint data that can be extrapolated to show how each
    affect traffic singularly and together.
    The Board then heard comments from members of the public, several of
    whom mentioned concerns about traffic. The Board discussed whether to table
    the application to a future date, with member Hart stating that he had
    “concerns regarding [section 3.18(C)(1)(c)] due to the traffic study not yet being
    complete.” Ultimately, the Board voted, four to two, to deny the application.
    The Board members voting to deny the application gave the following
    reasons. Member Coogan “stated that he doesn’t understand the project and
    how there is a benefit to the town to deserve the requested [density] bonuses.”
    Member Rosenblatt stated that he did not “believe the applicant sustained the
    burden of proof in this case,” specifically by failing to satisfy section
    3.18(C)(1)(b), which requires the proposal to meet “the purposes of the
    ordinance under which the application is proposed,” and by failing to satisfy
    section 3.18(C)(1)(c) “with regard to lack of adverse impact.” Member Harris
    stated that he “side[d] with” Rosenblatt, and Hart voted to deny the application
    “based on his previous explanation.” In addition, non-voting, alternate member
    Houpis voiced concerns about “the pitch of the proposed road, increased
    drainage, runoff, grazing, traffic volume, financial viability, and a lack of
    Amherst-specific data.” After the vote was taken, member Dell Orfano, who
    had not voted due to his position as Board chair, stated that “the applicant can
    reapply for a CUP with more information.”
    The Board issued its decision on December 5. The reason given for
    denial was that “[t]he applicant did not meet the[] burden of proof for Section
    3.18 C.1.c. that there would be no significant adverse impact resulting from the
    proposed use upon the public health, safety, and general welfare of the
    neighborhood and the Town of Amherst.” TransFarmations appealed the denial
    to the superior court. See RSA 677:15 (2016).
    TransFarmations submitted a revised CUP application under the IIHO on
    December 13, 2019. A public hearing on the application was noticed for July
    7, 2020 with the following explicit qualification:
    This hearing will be limited in scope to only the issue of
    whether the application and plan submitted in the . . . [case] is
    sufficiently different from the first application in the same matter
    to avoid preclusion of the Planning Board’s review under the Fisher
    v. Dover and CBDA Development, LLC[] v. Town of Thornton
    holdings.
    (Bolding omitted.) See Fisher v. City of Dover, 
    120 N.H. 187
     (1980); CBDA
    Dev., LLC v. Town of Thornton, 
    168 N.H. 715
     (2016). Prior to the public
    3
    hearing, TransFarmations’ attorney asserted in a letter to the Board that there
    were “multiple material changes” in the revised application as compared to the
    previous application that the Board had denied. In addition, TransFarmations
    submitted a 43-page traffic study containing an additional 278 pages of
    appendices.
    At the public hearing, several members of the public voiced continued
    concern about traffic, among other things. Board member Stoughton opined
    that the two applications were not materially different with respect to density
    and that the Board’s concerns about traffic and safety had not been sufficiently
    addressed. Board member Coogan expressed his belief that the applications
    were not materially different because it appeared that relatively the same
    number of residents would occupy the units. Board member Dokmo noted that
    TransFarmations had not addressed “the total number of bedrooms proposed
    or the amount of the site proposed to be disturbed.” Board member Brew also
    did not find the applications to be sufficiently different, stating that he did not
    “see that the concerns voiced the last time were addressed in this application,
    even with the additional supplied data.” Board member Houpis failed to see
    “relevant substantive changes and material differences” in the revised
    application “address[ing] the issues that caused the first application to be
    rejected.”
    Following its discussion, the Board voted, again splitting four to two, that
    the revised application did not materially differ from the first. Notice of that
    decision issued on July 27, and TransFarmations appealed the decision to the
    superior court. The trial court consolidated the two appeals.
    TransFarmations challenged the December 2019 decision on the ground
    that it violated RSA 676:4, I(h), which provides: “In case of disapproval of any
    application submitted to the planning board, the ground for such disapproval
    shall be adequately stated upon the records of the planning board.” RSA
    676:4, I(h) (2016). The trial court “recognize[d] that the Board’s minutes are
    not quite as clear as one might hope,” but concluded that when the “entire
    record of the Board’s minutes . . . [is] read in conjunction with the Board’s
    notice of denial, . . . the Board adequately stated its ground for disapproval
    upon the record.”
    In its challenge to the July 2020 decision, TransFarmations argued both
    that the decision failed to adequately state the ground for denial and that the
    Board acted unreasonably because the second CUP application was materially
    different from the first. The trial court concluded that the Board adequately
    provided the reason for the July 20 decision on the record because “the Board
    members discussed, in detail, their reasons for concluding that no material
    differences [between the first and second applications] existed.” The court also
    concluded that “the Board acted reasonably and lawfully in reaching [that]
    4
    decision.” Accordingly, the court affirmed both of the Board’s decisions.
    TransFarmations unsuccessfully moved for reconsideration, and this appeal
    followed.
    The trial court’s review of a planning board’s decision is governed by RSA
    677:15. Girard v. Town of Plymouth, 
    172 N.H. 576
    , 581 (2019); RSA 677:15.
    That statute provides that the trial court “may reverse or affirm, wholly or
    partly, or may modify the decision brought up for review when there is an error
    of law or when the court is persuaded by the balance of probabilities, on the
    evidence before it, that [the board’s] decision is unreasonable.” RSA 677:15, V.
    The trial court’s review is limited. Girard, 172 N.H. at 581. It “must treat the
    factual findings of the planning board as prima facie lawful and reasonable and
    cannot set aside its decision absent unreasonableness or an identified error of
    law.” Id. “The appealing party bears the burden of persuading the trial court
    that, by the balance of probabilities, the board’s decision was
    unreasonable.” Id. “The trial court determines not whether it agrees with the
    planning board’s findings, but whether there is evidence upon which its
    findings could have reasonably been based.” Id.
    This court’s review is similarly limited. Id. “We will reverse a trial court’s
    decision on appeal only if it is not supported by the evidence or is legally
    erroneous.” Id. “We review the trial court’s decision to determine whether a
    reasonable person could have reached the same decision as the trial court
    based upon the evidence before it.” Id. at 582.
    TransFarmations argues that the trial court erred on a number of
    grounds in affirming both the December 2019 and July 2020 decisions. At oral
    argument, however, its counsel indicated that if this court reversed the trial
    court’s affirmance of either decision, TransFarmations would proceed on the
    corresponding CUP application, which would effectively render the other CUP
    application moot. Accordingly, because we agree with TransFarmations that
    the trial court erred in affirming the Board’s decision that the second CUP
    application did not materially differ from the first, we need not address its
    remaining arguments.
    “It is well settled that a [planning] board, having rejected one [land use]
    application, may not review subsequent applications absent a ‘material change
    of circumstances affecting the merits of the application.’” Brandt Dev. Co. of
    N.H. v. City of Somersworth, 
    162 N.H. 553
    , 556 (2011) (quoting Fisher, 
    120 N.H. at 191
    ); see CBDA Dev., LLC, 168 N.H. at 723. In the seminal case of
    Fisher v. City of Dover, we held, with respect to a variance application to a
    zoning board of adjustment:
    When a material change of circumstances affecting the
    merits of the application has not occurred or the application is not
    for a use that materially differs in nature and degree from its
    5
    predecessor, the board of adjustment may not lawfully reach the
    merits of the petition. If it were otherwise, there would be no
    finality to proceedings before the board of adjustment, the integrity
    of the zoning plan would be threatened, and an undue burden
    would be placed on property owners seeking to uphold the zoning
    plan.
    Fisher, 
    120 N.H. at 188, 190
    . Subsequently, in CBDA Development, LLC, we
    held “that the subsequent application doctrine set forth in Fisher [also] applies
    in the planning board context.” CBDA Dev., LLC, 168 N.H. at 723.
    “The determination of whether changed circumstances exist is a question
    of fact which necessitates a consideration of the circumstances which existed
    at the time of the prior denial,” Fisher, 
    120 N.H. at 190-91
     (quotation omitted),
    and “[t]his determination must be made, in the first instance, by the Board,”
    CBDA Dev., LLC, 168 N.H. at 724. “[A]n applicant before a planning board
    bears the burden of demonstrating that a subsequent application materially
    differs in nature and degree from its predecessor.” Id. (quotation omitted).
    TransFarmations contends that the trial court erred in affirming the
    Board’s decision not to accept the second application because TransFarmations
    submitted that application “at the Board’s invitation and with the information
    the Board requested.” It contends that Dell Orfano, the Board’s chair,
    “expressly invited a revised application with more information, i.e., a completed
    traffic study.” Our post-Fisher cases recognize that “[e]vidence of an invitation
    to submit a modified application to meet an agency’s concerns . . . acts as
    additional evidence that a subsequent application so modified is materially
    different.” Appeal of Allen, 
    170 N.H. 754
    , 762 (2018). As we explained in Hill-
    Grant Living Trust v. Kearsarge Lighting Precinct, 
    159 N.H. 529
     (2009), “it is
    logical to presume that if the [board] invites submission of a subsequent
    application modified to meet its concerns, it would find an application so
    modified to be materially different from its predecessor, thus satisfying Fisher.”
    Hill-Grant Living Trust, 159 N.H. at 536.
    The Town disagrees with TransFarmations’ characterization of Dell
    Orfano’s statement. It contends that Dell Orfano’s statement “was not a direct
    invitation,” but rather, “is standard after any kind of a denial advising the
    Applicant of their rights and was not a ‘Board Invitation.’” Even assuming, as
    the Town contends, that the meaning of Dell Orfano’s statement depends to
    any extent upon whether such a statement from a planning board chair “is
    standard after any kind of a denial,” here the Town cites nothing to support its
    assertion that such statements are, in fact, standard. Moreover, an express
    invitation is not required. As we said in CBDA Development, LLC, “Fisher does
    not preclude consideration of a subsequent application — explicitly or
    6
    implicitly invited by a . . . board — which has been modified to address the
    board’s concerns about the initial application.” CBDA Dev., LLC, 168 N.H. at
    724. Therefore, we reject the Town’s argument.
    Nevertheless, the Town argues that Dell Orfano’s statement neither
    “mention[s] any requirement for a traffic study” nor “contains . . . [any]
    directive to . . . provide a traffic study.” Again, we disagree with the Town’s
    characterization of the statement. Dell Orfano invited TransFarmations to
    “reapply . . . with more information.” (Emphasis added). The only
    “information” mentioned by any voting Board member as missing from the first
    application was a traffic study. Accordingly, we agree with TransFarmations
    that the Board “expressly invited a revised application with more information,
    i.e., a completed traffic study.”
    The Town contends, however, that even with the completed traffic study,
    “the Board need not [have] move[d] forward” with the revised application,
    because “the traffic report confirmed [the Board’s] fears relative to traffic and
    safety.” In other words, the Town’s argument defends the trial court’s findings
    that “the Board considered the traffic study but did not agree with the expert’s
    conclusion that the project would not have an adverse impact on traffic in the
    neighborhood” and that “a reasonable person could have concluded that the
    traffic study did not address or alleviate the Board’s previously articulated
    concerns about traffic.” In turn, it defends the court’s finding “that Petitioner’s
    failure to resolve the Board’s concerns about traffic is enough, on its own, to
    justify the Board’s conclusion that the revised application was not materially
    different.”
    The Town relies upon our statement in CBDA Development, LLC that
    “before accepting a subsequent application under the Fisher doctrine, a board
    must be satisfied that the subsequent application has been modified so as to
    meaningfully resolve the board’s initial concerns.” Id. at 725. However,
    CBDA’s subsequent application was not significantly modified to address one of
    the “two basic reasons” that the board noted for its denial. Id. at 718
    (quotation omitted). Specifically, CBDA’s subsequent campground application
    still allowed an overwhelming majority of the campsites to be occupied “with a
    greater amount of permanency than what is intended in the Thornton
    Campground Regulation and State statutes.” Id. at 725-26 (quotation omitted).
    In the instant case, the trial court found that “the Board’s denial of
    TransFarmations’ first application was due, in large part, to concerns about
    traffic.” Nevertheless, the articulated reason for the denial was that “[t]he
    applicant did not meet the[] burden of proof for Section 3.18 C.1.c. that there
    would be no significant adverse impact resulting from the proposed use upon
    the public health, safety, and general welfare of the neighborhood and the
    Town of Amherst.” In reviewing the initial application, a Board member
    identified the incomplete traffic study as an impediment to the Board’s review.
    7
    The Board chair’s express statement invited TransFarmations to reapply with
    “more information,” which, as we conclude above, meant supplying a
    completed traffic study. Although unresolved “concerns” about traffic may
    have led the Board to decide that TransFarmations had not met its burden of
    proof with respect to Section 3.18(C)(1)(c), neither the Board’s December 2019
    decision nor its invitation to reapply identified any deficiency in the original
    application other than the lack of a completed traffic study. In other words,
    the Board did not find that, in fact, the project would have a significant adverse
    impact on traffic, but rather, that it required more information to understand
    the actual effect of the proposed use on traffic before determining whether
    modifications would be required to resolve its “concerns” about traffic.
    The determination whether a successive application is materially
    different from the former application is a step preliminary to consideration of
    the merits of the revised application. See Brandt Dev. Co. of N.H., 
    162 N.H. at 557
     (noting that the board must determine “as a threshold matter whether a
    material change of circumstances has occurred and whether full consideration
    is therefore required”). It is during that “full consideration” that the application
    with the additional information may be evaluated for satisfaction of the
    applicable CUP criteria, either as submitted or as modified during the planning
    process based on input from the board.
    A review of our successive application cases demonstrates that what
    constitutes a “material difference” in such cases turns upon the identified
    deficiencies in the initial application and the terms of the invitation to reapply.
    In our first post-Fisher case addressing successive reapplication, we noted that
    throughout the litigation in that case, the town had “taken the position that it
    denied the plaintiff’s request for a variance because of concerns about the
    particular proposed structure’s impact on the wetlands.” Morgenstern v. Town
    of Rye, 
    147 N.H. 558
    , 564–65 (2002). In addition, in its pleadings submitted to
    the trial court, “the town essentially invited the plaintiff to file a new variance
    application, stating, ‘[T]he applicant has provided no evidence that a smaller
    house and/or a house that did not require filling wetlands could not be built
    on the lot, thereby addressing the [zoning board of adjustment’s] concern.’” 
    Id. at 566
    . On those facts, we concluded that “[u]nlike the defendant in Fisher v.
    Dover, the plaintiff did not merely resubmit substantially the same application
    for a variance, but, at the town’s invitation, submitted a new proposal in an
    effort to meet the town’s concerns.” 
    Id. at 566
    .
    Similarly, in Hill-Grant Living Trust, the plaintiff sought, and was denied,
    a variance from “a zoning ordinance that prohibit[ed] the building of any
    structure more than 900 feet above sea level.” Hill-Grant Living Trust, 159
    N.H. at 531. The plaintiff then brought an action alleging inverse
    condemnation by regulatory taking. Id. The trial court granted summary
    judgment to the defendant on the ground that the taking claim was premature,
    and we affirmed. Id. We concluded that “the submission of a new variance
    8
    application would not have been futile,” id. at 538, noting statements by
    various zoning board members, including that, “if the applicant came back
    with a specific location, [the member] could see granting a variance on that
    specific location,” and that, although “the applicant is asking to build anywhere
    on the lot, . . . if the applicant resubmits with a certain elevation, the Board
    may grant a [v]ariance,” id. at 536 (quotations omitted).
    The scope of the actual or hypothetical revisions in Morgenstern and Hill-
    Grant Living Trust directly corresponded to the identified deficiencies that
    resulted in the initial denial. See Morgenstern, 
    147 N.H. at 566
    ; Hill-Grant
    Living Trust, 159 N.H. at 537. Although the revisions discussed in
    Morgenstern and Hill-Grant Living Trust involved or contemplated changes to
    the proposed project, changes of that scope are not required by the Fisher
    doctrine itself: When a denial identifies a lack of information as the deficiency
    in the initial application, we have held that a reapplication proposing a project
    substantially identical to the prior proposed project is materially different
    under Fisher if the new application provides the information missing from the
    prior application. In Appeal of Town of Nottingham, 
    153 N.H. 539
     (2006), for
    example, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services (DES)
    denied an application for a large groundwater withdrawal permit. Appeal of
    Town of Nottingham, 
    153 N.H. at 542
    . The applicant then submitted a second
    application, relying on information already on file with DES as well as
    subsequently submitted material. 
    Id.
     at 542–43. DES approved the
    subsequent application. 
    Id. at 543
    .
    On appeal, one of the parties challenging that approval argued that to
    the extent that the second application was “a resubmission of the already
    denied application, based on no change in events, [DES’s] approval of the
    application was contrary to Fisher.” 
    Id. at 565
     (quotation omitted). “Assuming
    without deciding that Fisher’s reasoning could be extended to” an application
    to DES, we disagreed. 
    Id.
     Instead, we agreed with the applicant that the case
    was more analogous to Morgenstern than Fisher. 
    Id.
     We concluded that the
    applicant’s “new application supplemented its prior one in response to
    comments made by DES in denying the prior application. It was therefore not
    substantially the same application.” 
    Id. at 566
     (quotation omitted). In
    particular, although DES denied the first application because it did “not
    contain all of the information required by Env–Ws 388.17,” DES noted that the
    applicant “subsequently complied with the requirements of Env–Ws 388 by
    submitting supplemental information after” the first denial. 
    Id. at 563
    (emphases added). Thus, we viewed DES’s comments regarding information
    lacking in the first application as identifying a deficiency and concluded that a
    subsequent application supplemented with that information was “not
    substantially the same application” under Fisher. 
    Id. at 566
     (quotation
    omitted).
    9
    Here, as in Appeal of Town of Nottingham, the Board identified a lack of
    information as the deficiency in the initial application. Accordingly, we
    conclude that TransFarmations’ second application supplying the requested
    information was “materially different from its predecessor, thus satisfying
    Fisher.” Hill-Grant Living Trust, 159 N.H. at 536. Because the trial court’s
    decision concluding otherwise misapplied our Fisher jurisprudence, it is legally
    erroneous. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order as to the July 2020
    decision and remand.
    Reversed and remanded.
    MACDONALD, C.J., and BASSETT, HANTZ MARCONI, and DONOVAN,
    JJ., concurred.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021-0214

Filed Date: 11/30/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/30/2022