Waitasfield Water Supply ( 2012 )


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  •                                     STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT – ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
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    ENTRY REGARDING MOTION
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    In re Waitsfield Water System Prelim. Plan Approval Application         Docket No. 39-3-12 Vtec
    (Appeal from DRB subdivision preliminary plat approval)
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    In re Waitsfield Water System Final Plan Approval Application          Docket No. 67-5-12 Vtec
    (Appeal from DRB subdivision final plat approval)
    Title: Motion to Revoke (Filing No. 1 in Docket No. 67-5-12 Vtec)
    Filed: May 21, 2012
    Filed By: Appellant Virginia Houston
    Response filed on 05/29/12 by Appellee Town of Waitsfield
    Opposition to Response filed on 06/04/12 by Appellant Virginia Houston
    Title: Motion to Dismiss Appeal (Filing No. 1 in Docket No. 39-3-12 Vtec; Filing No. 3 in Docket
    No. 67-5-12 Vtec)
    Filed: June 7, 2012
    Filed By: Appellee Town of Waitsfield
    Response in Opposition filed on 06/18/10 by Appellant Virginia Houston
    Opposition to Response filed on 06/25/12 by Appellee Town of Waitsfield
    ___ Granted                    X Denied            ___ Other
    The above-referenced Dockets concern applications by the Town of Waitsfield (“the
    Town”) for preliminary and final plat approval of a subdivision of lands now or formerly
    owned by Jean Damon and Virginia Houston. Ms. Houston (“Appellant”) has appealed
    decisions of the Town of Waitsfield Development Review Board (“the DRB”) granting each of
    these approvals to the Town for its proposed subdivision. Two motions are currently pending
    in these appeals—a motion by Appellant to “revoke” the DRB’s decision granting final plat
    approval and a motion by the Town to dismiss both of Appellant’s appeals.
    We offer the following background facts gleaned from the Town’s application for final
    plat approval of its proposed subdivision and the DRB’s decision on that application. See In re
    Waitsfield Final Subdivision Plan Review, Application #SUB 11-13 at 1–4 (Waitsfield DRB, Apr.
    30, 2012). We do not understand that any party to these appeals disputes these facts.
    In its applications, the Town proposes a subdivision in an effort to develop a portion of
    the Damon/Houston properties to host a public water supply system for the Town’s two village
    In re Waitsfield Water System Prelim. & Final Plan Apps., No. 39-3-12 & 65-5-12 Vtec (07-20-2012)    Page 2 of 6.
    growth center districts, Irasville Village and the historic Waitsfield Village. The components of
    the proposed water supply system are described in more detail in the Merits Decision recently
    issued by this Court concerning Appellant’s challenge to the Town’s application for a state land
    use (“Act 250”) permit for this same development. See In re Waitsfield Public Water System Act
    250 Permit, No. 33-2-10 Vtec (Vt. Super. Ct Envtl. Div. July 11, 2012) (Durkin, J.).
    The Town proposes in its subdivision applications to create a new parcel of land,
    approximately 1.43± acres in size, from sections of both the Damon and Houston parcels. The
    properties are located off of Long Road in the Town of Waitsfield, Vermont. The parcel to be
    created is accessed by a private roadway, known as Reed Road, which travels along the
    boundary line separating the Damon and Houston properties. The Town’s subdivision
    application also calls for the creation of a 1.49± acre parcel that encompasses the private
    roadway known as Reed Road, travelling from the intersection with Long Road to the area
    where the Town has already drilled the well to supply the water for its public water supply
    system. The Town proposes to acquire only an easement over this second parcel, to be enjoyed
    in common with the co-owners of this second parcel, Ms. Damon and Appellant.
    Waitsfield’s regulations governing the subdivision of land begin with the requirement
    that an applicant submit sketch plans for any proposed subdivision, the primary purpose of
    which is to determine whether the proposed subdivision should be classified as a “minor” or
    “major” subdivision. See Article II of the Town of Waitsfield Subdivision Regulations (“the
    Regulations”). Pursuant to Regulations Section 2.2(C), the DRB classified the Town’s proposed
    subdivision for its public water supply system as a major subdivision during the sketch plan
    review process. The Town thereafter submitted its application for preliminary approval of its
    subdivision plan. After the DRB issued its preliminary approval,1 Appellant filed an appeal of
    that determination with this Court. That appeal was assigned Docket No. 39-3-12 Vtec.
    While the preliminary subdivision plan appeal was pending with this Court (Docket No.
    39-3-12 Vtec), the Town submitted and the DRB reviewed an application for final plan approval.
    When the DRB granted final plan approval for the Town’s proposed subdivision,2 Appellant
    filed a second appeal with this Court. That appeal was assigned Docket No. 67-5-12 Vtec.
    Appellant filed a Statement of Question (SOQ) in the latter Docket that is nearly
    identical to her SOQ in the former Docket. The same substantive issues are raised in Questions
    1 through 9 in each SOQ, while the final plan approval appeal includes a tenth Question that
    challenges the DRB’s right to consider and approve the final plan application when the appeal
    of the preliminary plan determination was pending with this Court.
    There are two motions now pending in these Dockets. Appellant first filed a “Motion to
    Revoke” the DRB’s determination of final subdivision plan approval in Docket No. 67-5-12 Vtec,
    arguing that it was improper for the DRB to act on the Town’s final plan approval application
    when her appeal of the DRB’s preliminary plan approval was pending before this Court. The
    Town then moved to dismiss Appellant’s appeals in both Dockets. We address the parties’
    motions in the order in which they were filed.
    1
    See In re Waitsfield Preliminary Subdivision Plan Review, Application #SUB 11-13 (Waitsfield DRB, Mar. 20,
    2012). We note that while it appears that the Town filed separate preliminary and final subdivision plan approval
    applications, the DRB assigned the same application number (#SUB 11-13) to both applications.
    2
    See In re Waitsfield Final Subdivision Plan Review, Application #SUB 11-13 (Waitsfield DRB, Apr. 30, 2012).
    In re Waitsfield Water System Prelim. & Final Plan Apps., No. 39-3-12 & 65-5-12 Vtec (07-20-2012)   Page 3 of 6.
    I. Appellant’s Motion to Revoke
    As is explained in more detail below, we find Appellant’s arguments in support of her
    motion to revoke to have some logic, as Appellant’s appeal prevented the DRB’s preliminary
    approval from becoming final. But, Appellant offers no authority from the applicable statutes
    or the Regulations that bars the DRB’s consideration of the final plan application. Thus, as
    explained below, we ultimately conclude that Appellant’s Motion to Revoke must be DENIED.
    We further conclude that, due to the command of our procedural rules to address cases in an
    efficient and effective manner and the unique procedural continuity between preliminary and
    final plan subdivision approval processes, the Court should proceed with a single review of
    both applications now before us on appeal.
    Appellant principally argues in her motion to revoke, with reference to appropriate case
    law, that once she appealed the DRB’s preliminary plan approval, only this Court had the
    jurisdiction and authority to act. Appellant’s legal argument is correct, but it is not applicable in
    the procedures followed here. Generally, an appeal vests the appellate tribunal with
    jurisdiction over the subject matter of the appeal. See Kotz v. Kotz, 
    134 Vt. 36
    , 38 (1975). The
    tribunal from which the decision was appealed is “divested of jurisdiction” and cannot revisit
    its determinations while they are on appeal. 
    Id.
     In Kotz, the Vermont Supreme Court
    addressed the question of whether a trial court may reconsider and vacate a prior judgment,
    pursuant to V.R.C.P. 60(b) when that final judgment has already been appealed to the Vermont
    Supreme Court. 
    Id. at 37
    . The Court concluded it could not, and while Kotz is nearly thirty-
    seven years old, its precedent remains undisturbed today. 
    Id. at 39
    .
    The Kotz precedent is not on point here because, in the application before us, the DRB
    did not revisit its preliminary subdivision plan approval; that determination remains
    undisturbed before this Court and subject to de novo review. The DRB considered a separate
    application by the Town, not yet under appeal before this Court: a request for final plan
    approval of its subdivision application. Now that Appellant has appealed the DRB’s final
    subdivision plan approval, both the preliminary and final plan applications are before this
    Court.
    Appellant’s assertion that these procedural steps have somehow effectuated an unfair
    prejudice against her has no foundation. This Court will render its own determinations, based
    upon the evidence presented to it during a de novo hearing. The prior determinations by the
    DRB will have no impact upon this Court’s rulings on the legal issues presented in these
    appeals. See 10 V.S.A. § 8504(h); In re Poole, 
    136 Vt. 242
    , 245 (1978) (“A de novo hearing is one
    where the case is heard as though no action whatever had been held prior thereto. All of the
    evidence is heard anew, and the probative effect [is to be] determined by the appellate tribunal .
    . . as though no decision had been previously rendered.”)
    Appellant would have us revoke the DRB’s final plan determination, but she provides
    no legal authority for us to do so. Given that the Regulations require separate applications for
    preliminary and final approvals of major subdivisions, Regulations §§ 2.3, 2.4, we know of no
    authority for prohibiting the review about which Appellant complains, short of a stay that
    either the DRB or this Court could have put in place.
    Rule 5(e) of the Vermont Rules for Environmental Court Proceedings states that, unless
    “the act or decision appealed from is automatically stayed pursuant to 10 V.S.A. § 8504(f)(1),”
    the appealed permit “shall” take effect on “the earlier of 15 days from the date of filing of the
    In re Waitsfield Water System Prelim. & Final Plan Apps., No. 39-3-12 & 65-5-12 Vtec (07-20-2012)   Page 4 of 6.
    notice of appeal or the date of a ruling by th[is] court under this subsection on whether to issue
    a stay.” The automatic stay provided by 10 V.S.A. § 8504(f)(1) is not applicable to the appeals
    now before us, nor has Appellant requested that we issue a stay of the DRB considering the
    final subdivision plan application. The practical import of Rule 5(e) is that applicants who
    receive a permit that is appealed but not stayed may act upon the received permit, but that they
    do so at the risk of the appellate process overturning their permit. This is exactly the action the
    Town took by asking the DRB to receive and review the final plan approval application while
    the preliminary approval was on appeal to this Court. Because we know of no authority for
    revoking the DRB’s action on the final plan application, we conclude that Appellant’s motion to
    revoke must be DENIED.
    Although Appellant’s motion to revoke does not warrant a revocation of the DRB’s
    action granting final plat approval to the Town, it does bring to the Court’s attention the
    inefficiency of allowing two cases that address various stages of the same subdivision
    application and that raise identical issues to move forward. When the Permit Reform Act of
    2004 expanded this Court’s jurisdiction, one of its principal purposes was to “consolidate
    existing appeal routes for municipal zoning and subdivision decisions” and other state land use
    and environmental determinations. 10 V.S.A. § 8501(1). The first directive in our procedural
    rules is to “construe[] and administer [our Rules] to ensure summary and expedited
    proceedings consistent with a full and fair determination in every matter” coming before this
    Court. V.R.E.C.P. 1. Additionally, our Supreme Court has indicated that even where a
    municipality elects to have a multi-staged review process for proposed subdivisions, as is
    authorized by 24 V.S.A. § 4418, “subdivision review [should be considered as] one proceeding
    from application to preliminary plat review to final plat review.” In re Carroll, 
    2007 VT 19
    ,
    ¶¶ 11–13, 
    181 Vt. 383
    .
    Based on these directives, we have established a practice of considering the appeals from
    preliminary and final subdivision determinations together.            We have concluded that
    considering the appeals together is proper where, as here, all the legal issues presented in each
    appeal of the same subdivision application can be fairly and fully addressed in one proceeding
    and decision. Because it is undisputed that all the issues raised in the preliminary plan appeal
    are repeated in the final plan appeal, we conclude that the most efficient and fair manner in
    which to proceed is to DISMISS the preliminary plan appeal (Docket No. 39-3-12), with the
    condition that all the legal issues that any party could have raised in the appeal of the
    preliminary plan approval will be heard within our de novo hearing on the final application.
    Our intention is to conduct one de novo merits hearing on all properly raised challenges to the
    Town’s subdivision applications in one Docket (Docket No. 67-5-12 Vtec).
    II. The Town’s Motion to Dismiss
    The Town requests that the Court dismiss all of Appellant’s challenges to its subdivision
    proposal, arguing that Appellant did not “participate” in any of the proceedings before the
    DRB, and is therefore not entitled to appeal those municipal determinations, pursuant to 24
    V.S.A. § 4471(a).
    The parties do not appear to dispute the facts that are material to the Court’s
    determination of whether Appellant “participated”; rather, they dispute only how the
    applicable law should be applied to those facts. It is undisputed that Appellant did not provide
    sworn testimony before the DRB during either the preliminary or final plat approval
    In re Waitsfield Water System Prelim. & Final Plan Apps., No. 39-3-12 & 65-5-12 Vtec (07-20-2012)   Page 5 of 6.
    proceedings. In fact, it appears from the DRB hearing minutes3 that Appellant did not even
    attend the hearings. Rather, Appellant directed one of her attorneys to attend each DRB hearing
    and present her concerns by way of a letter addressed to the DRB.4 Thus, the legal issue
    presented here is whether a letter, prepared by an opponent’s legal counsel, submitted to and
    considered by the DRB, constitutes the type of “participation” contemplated by 24 V.S.A.
    § 4471(a). For the reasons detailed below, we conclude that Appellant did sufficiently
    participate in the DRB proceedings. We therefore DENY the Town’s motion to dismiss.
    The Vermont Supreme Court’s decision in Carroll provides the seminal interpretation of
    the level of participation required for a party to have standing to maintain an appeal of a
    municipal land use determination. 
    2007 VT 19
    . Carroll is particularly on point as it involved an
    appeal from a multi-stage subdivision application. 
    Id.
     ¶¶ 2–4.
    Carroll involved an appeal by Ms. Carroll of a final plat subdivision approval issued by
    the Town of Jericho Development Review Board. 
    Id.
     ¶¶ 3–6. Ms. Carroll conceded that she
    neither attended nor spoke at the hearing for the preliminary plat review. Id. ¶ 3. Ms. Carroll
    did, however, jointly with her husband, present a written list of concerns about the subdivision
    that noted it was on behalf of “the Carroll Family” during the preliminary plat review hearing.
    Id. The Court ultimately concluded that—because the “nature of subdivision review” is such
    that the multiple stages should actually be viewed as “one proceeding,” and because the
    applicant was not disputing that the Carrolls’ joint written statement was sufficient to constitute
    Ms. Carroll’s participation in the preliminary plat review hearing—her participation at the
    preliminary plat review stage was sufficient to grant her appeal rights. Id. ¶ 17. The import of
    Carroll to the case at hand is that the Court in Carroll necessarily found the written statement to
    be a sufficient means of participation under 24 V.S.A. § 4471(a).
    The Town makes a compelling argument that a personal appearance and sworn
    testimony must be provided to meet the standing requirement of 24 V.S.A. § 4471(a), but we
    find no support for the Town’s assertion in the statutory language, applicable case law, or
    common practice followed by municipal panels throughout Vermont. We fear that reading an
    in-person oath requirement into the statute, a requirement that is not explicitly stated in
    § 4471(a), could lead to many municipal panel proceedings being found deficient. We are also
    concerned that the Town is now challenging the manner in which Appellant participated when
    the record does not show that the Town objected to Appellant’s submission when the DRB was
    considering it.
    The primary purpose of the participation requirement is to provide sufficient notice of
    an opponent’s concerns about a development project while the municipal panel is considering
    the permit application. See Carroll, 
    2007 VT 19
    , ¶ 14. There can be no doubt that the letter from
    Appellant’s attorney put the Town and the DRB on notice of Appellant’s concerns. Further,
    both the minutes from the DRB hearings and the DRB decisions evidence that the DRB
    considered, but ultimately rejected, Appellant’s concerns raised in the letter drafted by
    Appellant’s attorney. Thus, we conclude that Appellant’s submission to the DRB of a letter
    3
    The Town attached copies of the minutes from the DRB hearings to its June 25, 2012 Memorandum in Reply to
    Appellant’s Response to Motion to Dismiss.
    4
    The Town attached a copy of Attorney Gillies’s February 14, 2012 letter to the DRB to its Motion to Dismiss as
    Exhibit A, filed June 7, 2012.
    In re Waitsfield Water System Prelim. & Final Plan Apps., No. 39-3-12 & 65-5-12 Vtec (07-20-2012)   Page 6 of 6.
    prepared by Appellant’s counsel that was subsequently considered by the DRB is sufficient to
    constitute “participation” under 24 V.S.A. § 4471(a).
    For the reasons discussed above, we DENY Appellant’s Motion to Revoke, we DISMISS
    the appeal in Docket 39-3-12 Vtec with the condition that all the legal issues that any party
    could have raised in the appeal of the preliminary plan approval will be heard within our de
    novo hearing on the final application in Docket No. 67-5-12 Vtec, and we DENY the Town’s
    Motion to Dismiss.
    The parties should prepare to discuss at the next status conference how the remaining
    appeals should be scheduled for resolution, unless mediation, the results of which the parties
    have been directed to report by Monday, August 23, 2012, brings about a resolution.
    ___________________________________________             July 20, 2012
    Thomas S. Durkin, Judge                             Date
    ======================================================================
    Date copies sent to: ____________        Clerk's Initials _______
    Copies sent to:
    Paul S. Gillies, Attorney for Appellant Virginia Houston
    Joseph S. McLean, Attorney for Appellee Town of Waitsfield
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 39-3-12 Vtec

Filed Date: 7/20/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/24/2018