Audet WW System & Potable Water Supply Permit ( 2011 )


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  •                                   STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                            ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
    }
    In re: Audet Wastewater System &         }
    Potable Water Supply Permit             }       Docket No. 34-2-10 Vtec
    (Appeal of Ewen & Mitchell)      }
    }
    Decision and Order on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
    Appellants Vicki L. Ewen and John R. and Dorothy R. Mitchell appealed from a
    decision of the Department of Environmental Conservation of the Vermont Agency of
    Natural Resources, which issued Wastewater System and Potable Water Supply
    (WSPWS) Permit No. WW-5-4533-2 to Appellee-Applicant R. Joseph Audet (Appellee-
    Applicant).
    Appellants are represented by Christopher J. Smart, Esq.; and Appellee-
    Applicant is represented by David J. Blythe, Esq. The Agency of Natural Resources
    (ANR) is represented by Anne F. Whiteley, Esq., but has not taken an active role with
    respect to the pending motions.
    On July 13, 2010, the Court resolved motions regarding whether a decision in a
    related civil case should be given any preclusive effect in this appeal (the 2010 Motion
    Decision). After conducting discovery on an extended schedule, the parties moved for
    summary judgment.
    Appellants moved for summary judgment that neither the former house on the
    subject property nor the potable water supply system serving that house was
    sufficiently constructed so that it could be used for its intended purpose as of January 1,
    2007, and therefore that Appellee-Applicant fails to qualify for the exemption he seeks.
    In turn, Appellee-Applicant moved for summary judgment asking the Court to “affirm
    1
    the issuance” of the WSPWS Permit.1        The following facts are undisputed unless
    otherwise noted.
    Standard Applicable to Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
    A grant of “[s]ummary judgment is appropriate when, giving the benefit of all
    reasonable doubts and inferences to the nonmoving party, there are no genuine issues
    of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Gade
    v. Chittenden Solid Waste Dist., 
    2009 VT 107
    , ¶ 7 (citing Mooney v. Town of Stowe,
    
    2008 VT 19
    , ¶ 5, 
    183 Vt. 600
     (mem.); V.R.C.P. 56(c)). When considering cross-motions
    for summary judgment, the Court gives each party “the benefit of all reasonable doubts
    and inferences when the opposing party’s motion is being judged.” City of Burlington
    v. Fairpoint Communications, Inc., 
    2009 VT 59
    , ¶ 5, 
    186 Vt. 332
     (citing Toys, Inc. v. F.M.
    Burlington, Co., 
    155 Vt. 44
     (1990)). If the moving party’s position is supported with an
    affidavit and documentary evidence, the opposing party “is required to ‘come forward
    with an opposing affidavit or other evidence that raises a dispute as to the fact or facts
    in issue.’” U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n v. Kimball, 
    2011 VT 81
    , ¶ 15 (citing Alpstetten Ass’n,
    Inc. v. Kelly, 
    137 Vt. 508
    , 514 (1979)). That is, a party opposing a motion for summary
    judgment may not rest on bare allegations alone. Johnson v. Harwood, 
    2008 VT 4
    , ¶ 5,
    
    183 Vt. 157
    .
    1  This is a de novo appeal; the Court must rule anew on the merits of Appellee-
    Applicant’s application for Wastewater System and Potable Water Supply Permit No.
    WW-5-4533-2, applying the substantive standards that were applicable before the ANR.
    10 V.S.A. § 8504(h); V.R.E.C.P. 5(g). Contrary to Appellee-Applicant’s argument,
    although the Court does give weight to the ANR’s interpretation of its own rules, the
    statute does not allow the Court simply to determine whether an ANR factual decision
    is based on substantial evidence in the record, as would be the case in an on-the-record
    proceeding. Cf, In re Stormwater NPDES Petition, No 14-1-07 Vtec, slip op. at 9, n. 2
    (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Feb. 18, 2009) (Durkin, J.) (distinguishing between de novo review in
    appeals of ANR’s own determinations and deference given to ANR determinations
    when used in separate permit proceedings).
    2
    Factual and Procedural Background
    Prior to Appellee-Applicant’s 2001 Purchase of the Subject Property
    Appellee-Applicant owns an approximately quarter-acre parcel of property in
    the Town of Worcester (the Lot or the Audet Lot), with 150 feet of frontage on Hersey
    Road (Town Highway 26) and a lot depth of 75 feet. Appellee-Applicant purchased the
    Lot in early January of 2001 from Robert Pasho for approximately $2700.2 Appellants’
    Ex. 8, at 37:22–24.
    The Lot is bordered on its remaining three sides by an approximately 90-acre
    parcel of property owned and occupied by Appellants Mitchell since 1971. Appellant
    Ewen owns the parcel of property located directly across Hersey Road from the Lot and
    the Mitchell property. She has resided at the property since 1970 (except for a period
    from 1977–1978) and has owned the property since 1983.
    A two-bedroom house (the former house) had been constructed on the Lot in
    1958. It was neither inhabited nor repaired after 1990, but remained on the lot at the
    time of Appellee-Applicant’s purchase of it in 2001. Appellants’ Ex. 8, at 32:19–34:21;
    Appellants’ Ex. 11, at ¶¶ 8, 9. The former house had been served by at least a dry well,
    and possibly also by a septic tank, for the disposal of wastewater.3 See Appellants’ Ex.
    9, at ¶ 3; Audet Ex. 3, at ¶ 4.
    2
    At the time of his purchase, Appellee-Applicant was aware from a 1990 Health Order,
    Appellants’ Ex. 10, that the house then on the lot had been vacant since about 1990, and
    that the Health Order required that it could not be occupied until it had a functioning
    wastewater disposal system. Appellants’ Ex. 11, at ¶ 8.
    3 In civil litigation in Audet v. Town of Worcester, No. 339-6-01 Wncv (Vt. Super. Ct.
    Mar. 28, 2003) (the 2003 Superior Court Decision), the Superior Court found that in
    January of 2001 the toilet was “connected to a septic tank buried next to the house and
    covered by an open shed attached to the house,” that “the septic tank was connected to
    a drywell located near the house,” and that the system was intended to function so that
    the solids would settle out into the septic tank and liquid would flow through a pipe
    into the dry well and thence into the ground. Id., slip op. at 2–3, ¶¶ 11–13. However,
    the affidavit of Appellee-Applicant’s engineer provided as Exhibit 3 to Appellee-
    3
    Robert Pasho acquired the Lot in 1968. In about 1970 Appellant Ewen’s father
    terminated a piped connection from a shallow well on the Ewen property to the former
    house; no permission for that water source had been obtained and a connection to the
    former house from that water source was never restored. Appellants’ Ex. 7, at ¶ 8.
    Shortly after the Mitchells purchased their own property in 1971, the occupants
    of the former house on the Lot installed a shallow well (the Well Tile) on the Mitchell
    property near the Lot’s southwest corner, without the Mitchells’ knowledge or
    permission. Appellants’ Ex. 6, at ¶ 8. In or about 1971 the occupants of the former
    house agreed not to use the Well Tile as a source of water for the former house on the
    Lot. Id. The Mitchells have never granted permission for anyone to take water from the
    Well Tile. Id.; Smart Aff (Feb. 4, 2011).
    Between 1971 and when the property was vacated in 1990, the occupants of the
    former house were supplied by the occupants of the Ewen property from time to time
    with jugs of water from the Ewen spring, but at no time did the owners of the Ewen
    parcel agree to do so. Appellants’ Ex. 7, at ¶ 9. In addition, during that period the
    occupants of the former house collected rainwater in barrels from the roof of the former
    house, and collected ditchwater in jugs from the Mitchell property, also without
    permission from the Mitchells. Appellants’ Ex. 6, at ¶¶ 9–10; Appellants’ Ex. 7, at
    ¶¶ 10–11.
    During the 1980s, Mr. Pasho’s sister, Lorraine Pasho, and a Ms. Madeleine Brown
    resided in the former house. 2003 Superior Court Decision, slip op. at 1. By late 1989,
    the two women were living at least “without running water.” Id., slip op. at 2.
    Applicant’s present Motion for Summary Judgment states that the interior plumbing
    fixtures were connected by a pipe “to a drywell located in a shed adjacent to the
    dwelling structure,” without any mention of a septic tank. As the motions for summary
    judgment now before the Court only relate to the potable water system for the former
    house, and to the former house itself, they do not require resolution of facts regarding
    the components of the wastewater system.
    4
    Appellee-Applicant does not dispute the lack of a water supply to the former house
    during this period.4 The occupants vacated the former house in August of 1990. Id.
    In September of 1990, the Town Health Officer, in conjunction with the Board of
    Health, issued a health order (the 1990 Health Order) requiring that the former house
    “not be occupied until an approved septic system is connected to the dwelling.”
    Appellants’ Ex. 10.   The 1990 Health Order stated that “[t]he previous use of the
    dwelling without a septic system was found to present a health hazard through ground
    and surface water contamination.” Id.; see also 18 V.S.A. § 613(b).
    From 1990 onwards, the former house remained abandoned and uninhabited; no
    improvements were made to the former house or to its potable water or wastewater
    systems after that time. Appellants’ Ex. 7, at ¶ 6; Appellants’ Ex. 8, at 32:19–34:21;
    Appellants’ Ex. 11, at ¶¶ 8, 9. The Superior Court found that, in January of 2001 when
    Appellee-Applicant had an excavator uncover the then-existing wastewater system, the
    former house “had no access to running water.” 2003 Superior Court Decision, slip op.
    at 2, ¶ 11.
    During Appellee-Applicant’s Ownership Prior to the Present Application
    Shortly after purchasing the Audet Lot in January of 2001, Appellee-Applicant
    applied to the Worcester Selectboard for a ruling that the Lot’s wastewater system had
    been “in existence” as of 1996, and therefore was exempt under the Town’s sewage
    ordinance then in effect, if used to serve a single-family house.5       At that time,
    4
    Appellee-Applicant does dispute the Superior Court’s conclusion that the toilet piped
    to the drywell wastewater disposal system was not functioning, claiming that the only
    reason it did not function during that period was due to the lack of a water supply.
    However, the present motions do not address the functionality of the drywell
    wastewater disposal system.
    5  In 2001 Appellee-Applicant also proposed and obtained a municipal permit for a
    commercial use on the Audet Lot, as an alternative to a residential use. However, the
    5
    municipalities were authorized by statute to regulate wastewater disposal for single-
    family dwellings through municipal sewage disposal ordinances.            See 24 V.S.A.
    § 3633(a) (1999).   The Selectboard determined that no septic system had been “in
    existence” serving the former house in 1996; Appellee-Applicant appealed that
    determination to the Washington Superior Court, which resulted in the 2003 Superior
    Court Decision.6
    In September of 2002, during a site visit taken by the then-Environmental Board
    at which Appellee-Applicant and his engineer were present, the participants observed
    that the Well Tile on the Mitchell property, near the southwest corner of the Audet Lot,
    was empty—that is, no water was in it—and that it lacked a cover. Appellants’ Ex 13, at
    13:12–19.
    In Appellee-Applicant’s own Proposed Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and
    Order in the civil proceeding, filed in approximately March of 2003, Appellee-Applicant
    stated that the water source for the former house on the Audet Lot was a spring on the
    Mitchell Property that had “been dry since at least January 2001 and is still dry at this
    time [approximately March of 2003]” and that the on-site drywell wastewater disposal
    system was “not currently operational due to the lack of an adequate water supply.”
    Appellants’ Ex. 2, ¶¶ 34, 35, and 37.
    In 2004, Appellee-Applicant applied to the ANR for a wastewater disposal and
    potable water supply permit for a four-bedroom duplex on the lot; that application was
    commercial proposal resulted in Act 250 litigation during which Appellee-Applicant
    abandoned commercial plans for the property. See generally In re Audet, 
    2004 VT 30
    ,
    
    176 Vt. 617
    .
    6 That court concluded that the drywell wastewater system serving the former house
    did not qualify as a system that was “in existence” in 1996, and therefore was not
    grandfathered under the municipal ordinance, because by 1996 it was “an abandoned
    septic system attached to an abandoned house” that was “uninhabitable and beyond
    repair.” 2003 Superior Court Decision, slip op. at 1, 8. However, the condition of the
    drywell wastewater system is not at issue in the present motions.
    6
    denied.
    A state statute enacted in 2002 gave the state the responsibility for regulating
    potable water supplies and wastewater systems, and established a five-year phase-out
    period for municipal regulation of such systems. 2001, No. 133 (Adj. Sess.); codified as
    10 V.S.A. ch. 64. The statute provided that municipal ordinances (including zoning
    bylaws) regulating potable water supplies and wastewater systems would be
    superseded by the state statute and rules as of July 1, 2007. 10 V.S.A. § 1976(b).
    Material facts are in dispute as to the state of deterioration of the structure of the
    former house as of January 1, 2007 or specifically during calendar year 2006. As early as
    2001 the Town attorney described the house as “uninhabitable at this time because of
    lack of roof and other structural problems.” Appellants’ Ex. 12. Similarly, in 2002, an
    Environmental Board hearing officer, during a site visit at the Audet Lot, described the
    former house as “what appears to be a dilapidated residential building,” that was an
    “uninhabitable building at this point in time,” with “windows broken at least in the
    door itself,” and ”rather large pieces” of roofing material lying on the ground near the
    southwest corner of the building.        Appellants’ Ex. 13, at 9:8–11:3.      In Appellee-
    Applicant’s own deposition taken in October of 2010, he stated that “in the last four
    years . . . the roof started leaking, [and] had problems.” Appellants’ Ex. 8, at 116:2–4.
    Whether the four-year period referred to the period prior to the removal of the house in
    2008, or to the period prior to the October 2010 deposition, it would encompass the
    status of the house as of January 1, 2007.
    However, these facts are contradicted by statements in Appellee-Applicant’s
    August 7, 2009 affidavit that the roof remained intact and weather-tight until
    approximately February 2008, and that the windows remained intact and weather-tight
    until the house was removed in approximately September 2008, Appellants’ Ex. 11, at
    ¶ 9, and by an assertion in his deposition that it was not until the final year during
    which the house remained standing, (that is from approximately September of 2007
    7
    through September of 2008), that water had come in and compromised the wood
    permanently, and that windows remained broken during that period. Appellants’ Ex.
    8, 117:16–23.
    In approximately late September 2008, Appellee-Applicant demolished and
    removed what was left of the former house on the Audet Lot. Audet Ex. 4, at ¶ 2.
    In 2008, Appellee-Applicant next proposed to the ANR to construct a three-
    bedroom single-family house on the Audet Lot, to be served by a new on-site drilled
    well water supply and a new wastewater disposal system. The ANR initially granted
    WSPWS Permit No. WW-5-4533-1 in November 2008; however, after reconsideration in
    May 2009 the ANR instead remanded the three-bedroom application to the ANR
    regional office and advised Appellee-Applicant to submit an amendment application or
    face revocation proceedings.7
    The Present WSPWS Permit Application at Issue in this Appeal
    In June of 2009 Appellee-Applicant applied to the ANR for the Wastewater
    System and Potable Water Supply Permit that is the subject of the present appeal. That
    application proposed a new two-bedroom single-family house on the property, to be
    served by a new “replacement” drilled well and a “replacement” wastewater system.8
    The application is governed by 10 V.S.A. ch. 64 and the Vermont Wastewater System
    7  Appellants’ appeal of the three-bedroom permit, Docket No. 287-12-08 Vtec, was
    dismissed to enable them to seek ANR reconsideration of that permit decision.
    Appellants’ subsequent appeal of the ANR’s reconsideration decision on the three-
    bedroom application (Docket No. 100-6-09 Vtec) was later dismissed as moot when
    Appellee-Applicant obtained the two-bedroom permit that is the subject of the present
    appeal, which superseded the three-bedroom proposal.
    8
    Neither party has provided either a copy of the application or a copy of the permit
    appealed from. A January 15, 2010 letter from the ANR Regional Office Programs
    Manager to Appellee-Applicant’s attorney, Audet Ex. 1, refers to the application as
    being for a “replacement 2 bedroom single family residence along with a replacement
    water supply and replacement wastewater systems.” See also Audet Ex. 2.
    8
    and Potable Water Supply Rules (WSPWS Rules).9
    On February 16, 2010, the ANR approved the two-bedroom application and
    issued Permit No. WW-5-4533-2 (the 2010 WSPWS Permit) to Appellee-Applicant. As
    far as it may be deduced from the approval letters, Audet Exs. 1 and 2, the 2010 WSPWS
    Permit was granted on the basis that the two-bedroom proposal was exempt from the
    requirements of the WSPWS Rules under the “reconstruction” exemption found in
    WSPWS Rules § 1-304(a)(21). Also as far as it may be deduced from the approval
    letters, the 2010 WSPWS Permit authorized Appellee-Applicant to construct a new two-
    bedroom house at the site of the demolished house and to install a new drilled well
    water supply and a new wastewater disposal system10 to serve the new house. That is,
    in authorizing the issuance of the 2010 WSPWS Permit, the Regional Office Programs
    Manager determined that as of January 1, 2007 there had been a “substantially
    completed” residential dwelling, a “substantially completed” wastewater system, and a
    “substantially completed” potable water supply system on the Audet Lot. Audet Ex. 1,
    at 1; Audet Ex. 2, at 1–2.
    Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
    Applicable Regulations
    To determine whether the Audet Lot qualifies for an exemption from the
    permitting requirements of the WSPWS Rules, it is necessary to understand the
    interplay between the two exemption sections applicable to this analysis. This decision
    will refer to these two exemptions as the “substantially completed” exemption—
    9 See Vermont Wastewater System and Potable Water Supply Rules (2007), available at
    http://www.anr.state.vt.us/dec/ww/Rules/OS/2007/FinalWSPWSRuleEffective20070929.
    pdf. (September 20, 2007).
    10  Without the application or the permit, the Court cannot determine whether a
    wastewater disposal system with a leach field was proposed, or whether Appellee-
    Applicant proposed to upgrade the drywell, or proposed any alternative technology.
    9
    WSPWS Rules § 1-304(a)(1)(A)—and the “reconstruction” exemption—WSPWS Rules
    § 1-304(a)(21).
    Appellee-Applicant argues that he is entitled to “reconstruct” the former house
    by building a new two-bedroom house in its place under the “reconstruction”
    exemption of § 1-304(a)(21). That section allows a building to be reconstructed without
    a permit (or permit amendment) if it is otherwise exempt (or has a permit) and was
    destroyed or voluntarily removed. WSPWS Rules § 1-304(a)(21). There is no dispute
    that the former house was voluntarily removed in 2008 and that it did not have a
    permit; therefore, as discussed in the 2010 Motion Decision, the threshold inquiry is
    whether the former house was “a building or structure that is exempt . . . under these
    Rules.” WSPWS Rules § 1-304(a)(21).11
    Appellee-Applicant claims that the former house is exempt under the
    “substantially completed” exemption of § 1-304(a)(1)(A).12 As explained in the 2010
    Motion Decision, Appellee-Applicant’s proposal to “reconstruct” or build a new two-
    bedroom house in place of the house removed in 2008 will only be eligible for the
    reconstruction exemption if he shows that all three elements—the house itself, the
    potable water supply system, and the wastewater disposal system—were “substantially
    11
    If the former house is ruled to be exempt, then the reconstruction exemption goes on
    to require the proposal to meet several additional standards. For a building that does
    not hold a prior permit, such as the former house on the Audet Lot, § 1-304(a)(21)
    requires that the building be reconstructed in approximately the same location; that
    there is no increase in design flow or other change in the operational requirements of
    the building’s potable water supply or wastewater disposal system; that there has been
    no other change to the building, lot, potable water supply, or wastewater system that
    would require a permit under the WSPWS Rules, and that it must be reconstructed
    within two years unless the Secretary extends the time period. WSPWS Rules
    § 1-304(a)(21)(B)–(F).
    12
    For the purposes of this analysis the Court will treat the “substantially completed”
    exemption as if it was intended to apply to buildings in the process of deterioration as
    well as to buildings that were under construction but not entirely finished as of the cut-
    off date.
    10
    completed” as of January 1, 2007.
    Section 1-304(a)(1)(A) provides that “all buildings or structures, campgrounds,
    and their associated potable water supplies and waste water systems that were
    substantially completed before January 1, 2007” were then exempt from the permitting
    requirements of the WSPWS Rules.13 The term “substantially completed” is defined,
    whether referring to a building or structure, a potable water supply, or a wastewater
    system, as being “sufficiently constructed so that it can be used for its intended
    purpose.”    WSPWS Rules § 1-201(a)(60).         Note 2 to § 1-304(a)(1) requires the
    decisionmaker, in performing this analysis, to examine the “design flow and/or use” of
    a building, wastewater system, or potable water supply “as it existed no earlier than
    January 1, 2006,” that is, only during the one-year period of calendar year 2006.
    Status of Potable Water System Serving Former House on Audet Lot, as of
    January 1, 2007
    The former house on the Audet Lot lacked an adequate water source long before
    calendar year 2006, and nothing presented to the Court by either party suggests that it
    had any source of water at all as of January 1, 2007. First, as of that date, and long
    before it, the Audet Lot lacked any legal right to pipe water from the shallow well on
    the Mitchell property to serve the former house. Moreover, the Mitchell Well Tile was a
    shallow well that was not actually producing water as of that date. All the evidence
    presented shows that it was dry in the years leading up to March of 2003 and nothing
    has been presented to controvert the conclusion that it remained in that condition
    13
    Once a building qualifies under the “substantially completed” exemption, it remains
    in effect, provided that any action taken after January 1, 2007 for which a permit is
    required “is exempt under one of the other permitting exemptions listed in” § 1-304(a).
    § 1-304(a)(1)(A)(i).
    11
    through the end of 2006 and beyond.14
    The potable water system was not sufficiently constructed to be able to be used
    for its intended purpose to supply water to the former house on the Audet Lot because
    it lacked a source of water. This is true regardless of whether the piping to the former
    house on the Audet Lot, leading from the location of the Mitchell Well Tile, remained in
    place or was intact during 2006.
    Thus, because the potable water supply system serving the former house was not
    sufficiently constructed so that it could be used for its intended purpose as of January 1,
    2007, the potable water supply system does not qualify as having been “substantially
    completed” as of that date. The former house was therefore also not able to be used for
    its intended purpose as of that date because it could not be inhabited without a source
    of potable water.
    Accordingly, the former house on the Audet lot does not qualify as exempt
    under WSPWS Rule § 1-304(a)(1) and therefore Appellee-Applicant’s proposed
    construction of a new two-bedroom house in the location of the former house does not
    meet the requirements for the reconstruction exemption in § 1-304(a)(21).
    Status of Structure of Former House on Audet Lot, as of January 1, 2007
    Aside from the status of the potable water supply to the former house on the
    Audet Lot, Appellants also argue that the structure of the house itself had deteriorated
    sufficiently as of January 1, 2007, so that it could not then be used for its intended
    14
    It is important not to conflate the completeness of the house, including its water and
    wastewater systems, as of January 1, 2007, which is required for the “substantially
    completed” exemption, with the fact that a new on-site drilled well is proposed in the
    present application. That is, to qualify for the “substantially completed” exemption, the
    potable water system must have had an adequate water source during calendar year
    2006. The fact that the newly-proposed potable water system does not require an off-
    site water source is not relevant to the exemption determination.
    12
    purpose as a residence.
    Although Appellants may have evidence to present at trial that, as of January 1,
    2007, windows in the house were broken and that the roof leaked or lacked roofing
    elements in part, material facts remain in dispute as to the level of deterioration of the
    house structure as of that date.         Appellee-Applicant’s August 7, 2009 affidavit,
    Appellants’ Ex. 11, at ¶ 9, asserts that the roof remained intact and weather-tight until
    early 2008, and that the windows were weather-tight until the house was removed in
    September 2008. Similarly, Appellee-Applicant stated in his deposition that it was not
    until the final year during which the house remained standing (that is from
    approximately September of 2007 through September of 2008) that water came in and
    permanently damaged the structure of the house. Appellants’ Ex. 8, 117:16–20.
    As the Vermont Supreme Court has explained, “[s]ummary judgment is not a
    substitute for a determination on the merits, so long as evidence is presented which
    creates an issue of material fact, no matter what view the court may take of the relative
    weight of that evidence.” Fritzeen v. Trudell Consulting Engineers, Inc., 
    170 Vt. 632
    ,
    633 (2000) (mem.) (citing Vermont Envtl. Bd. v. Chickering, 
    155 Vt. 308
    , 319 (1990)).
    That is, as the Court in Fritzeen went on to note, “[i]t is not the function of the trial court
    to find facts on a motion for summary judgment, even if the record appears to lean
    strongly in one direction.” 
    Id.
     (citing Booska v. Hubbard Ins. Agency, Inc., 
    160 Vt. 305
    ,
    309 (1993).
    Therefore, material facts remain in dispute as to the structural status of the
    former house on the Audet Lot as of January 1, 2007. Nevertheless, because the house
    had no source of potable water, the house was not sufficiently constructed so that it
    could be used for its intended purpose as a residence as of that date.
    13
    Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED
    that
    1.     Appellants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment that the potable water system
    was not “substantially completed” as of January 1, 2007 is GRANTED, and
    Appellee-Applicant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED, in that the potable
    water system had no water source as of that date. Appellee-Applicant therefore fails
    to qualify for an exemption from the permitting requirements of the WSPWS Rules
    under § 1-304(a)(1)(A) and (a)(21), concluding this appeal.
    2. Appellants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment that the former house was not
    “substantially completed” as of January 1, 2007 is GRANTED, and Appellee-
    Applicant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED, in that the former house
    was no longer sufficiently constructed so that it could be used for its intended
    purpose as a residence, at least because it lacked a source of potable water.
    Appellee-Applicant therefore fails to qualify for an exemption from the permitting
    requirements of the WSPWS Rules under § 1-304(a)(1)(A) and (a)(21), concluding
    this appeal.
    Because this decision concludes the appeal, although material facts remain in
    dispute as to whether the structure itself had deteriorated enough to make the house
    uninhabitable regardless of whether it was served by a water supply, it is not necessary
    to schedule an evidentiary hearing on those facts. Appellants shall prepare a judgment
    order, approved as to form, to be filed with the Court on or before August 17, 2011.
    Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 3rd day of August, 2011.
    _________________________________________________
    Merideth Wright
    Environmental Judge
    14