Town of Fairfax v. Beliveau ( 2010 )


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  •                                  STATE OF VERMONT
    ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
    }
    Town of Fairfax,                   }
    Plaintiff,                    }
    }
    v.                   }    Docket No. 274-11-08 Vtec
    }
    Leon Beliveau,                     }
    Defendant.                   }
    }
    }
    In re Beliveau Notice of Violation }    Docket No. 193-8-08 Vtec
    (Appeal of Beliveau)        }
    }
    Decision and Order
    In Docket No. 274-11-08 Vtec, the Town of Fairfax brought an enforcement action
    against Leon L. Beliveau, alleging that he had changed the use of his property at 1166
    Main Street from a single-family residence to a rooming and boarding house, without
    first obtaining a zoning permit for the rooming and boarding house use. In Docket No.
    193-8-08 Vtec, concluded by this Court’s Decision and Order on summary judgment
    issued on July 28, 2009 (July 2009 Decision), Mr. Beliveau had appealed from a decision
    of the Development Review Board (DRB) upholding a Notice of Violation for the same
    violation.1 The Town is represented by John H. Klesch, Esq.; Defendant-Appellant
    Beliveau (Defendant) has appeared and represents himself.
    1
    While the July 2009 Decision concluded Docket No. 193-8-08 Vtec, in order to avoid
    “any issue of piecemeal appeals,” the court postponed entering a final judgment order
    in the notice of violation appeal until a judgment order would be entered in the
    enforcement case (Docket No. 274-11-08 Vtec). July 2009 Decision, at 6, n.1.
    1
    In entry orders issued on April 2, 2009, April 8, 2009, and April 23, 2009, the
    Court discussed the scope of the violation alleged in these cases. The July 2009 Decision
    in the notice of violation appeal determined that the violation existed. July 2009
    Decision, at 4, 6. The July 2009 Decision further established the periods of occupancy of
    rooms at the property and the amounts of payments for that occupancy received by
    Defendant, through May 10, 2009.        Id. at 4–6.   That decision also established the
    amounts that had been expended by the Town regarding attorney’s fees and costs of the
    litigation as of June 23, 2009, and granted summary judgment in favor of the Town on
    the appropriate injunctive remedy: that Defendant immediately cease the use of the
    property as a boarding and rooming house, until and unless he obtains a zoning permit
    and any other necessary approvals required by the Zoning Bylaws to conduct such a
    use on the property. Id. at 6–7.
    After the summary judgment decision was issued, a previously scheduled
    evidentiary hearing was held in this matter before Merideth Wright, Environmental
    Judge, to take evidence on any issues not resolved by the July 2009 Decision, and in
    particular on the monetary factors that should be considered by the Court in calculating
    an appropriate penalty for the time period of the violation. The parties were given the
    opportunity to submit written memoranda and requests for findings.                 Upon
    consideration of the evidence and of the written memoranda and requests for findings
    filed by the parties, the Court finds and concludes as follows.
    Defendant owns a house and property at 1166 Main Street in the growth center
    zoning district of the Town of Fairfax.2 The 1166 Main Street house was Defendant’s
    primary residence from February 1999 through all periods at issue in the present
    litigation. Defendant received $44,106 in payments from boarders from January 1, 2007,
    2Facts and legal conclusions stated in the July 2009 Decision will be restated in this
    decision only as necessary. Unless otherwise noted, the 2007 Town of Fairfax Zoning
    Bylaws (Zoning Bylaws) are applicable to these cases.
    2
    through July 31, 2009. Of those revenues from the use of the house as a boarding house,
    Defendant received $17,804 during the 414-day period of the violation: from June 12,
    2008 (7 days after the notice of violation) through July 31, 2009. Defendant ceased
    accepting payments from persons residing in rooms at the house as of August 1, 2009.
    The Town has incurred $10,920.75 in attorney’s fees in this enforcement matter,
    including both the appeal of the notice of violation (Docket No. 193-8-08 Vtec) and the
    enforcement action (Docket No. 274-11-08 Vtec). In addition, the Town has incurred
    $283.93 in court costs and reimbursable attorney’s expenses in connection with the
    above-captioned litigation, for a total of $11,204.68.
    As of August 20, 2009, persons unrelated to Defendant were residing in rooms at
    the 1166 Main Street house, but Defendant was not receiving any money payments
    from those persons for their occupancy of rooms at the house.
    Defendant presented in evidence his 2008 tax return, including Schedule E for
    the 1166 Main St. Fairfax property. Based on that tax return, he paid $3775 for cleaning
    and maintenance, $5996 for repairs, $369 for supplies, $816 for insurance, $2712 in legal
    and other professional fees, $15,272 in mortgage interest, $4585 in taxes, and $8460 in
    utilities.   He also listed an amount of $3714 as depreciation of the property.      No
    evidence was presented by Defendant or the Town as to the tax rules applicable to an
    owner-occupied residence.
    Defendant now argues, contrary to the summary judgment decision in Docket
    No. 193-3-08 Vtec, that the rooming and boarding house use of the property should be
    considered to be a preexisting, nonconforming use of the property, entitled to continue
    without a permit. Defendant’s argument is based on the fact that the 2000 and 2002
    Zoning Bylaws, in effect when Defendant changed the use of the property, did not
    require owner-occupancy of the house as an element of the rooming and boarding
    house use category. However, owner-occupancy, or the lack of it, does not change the
    3
    fact that a violation existed.     Rather, the violation is Defendant’s supplying and
    charging for rooms (sleeping accommodations) without obtaining a permit for running
    a “rooming and boarding house.”
    In a zoning enforcement case, the Court assesses a daily penalty for the period
    during which the defendant has the benefit of the zoning violation. See 24 V.S.A.
    § 4451(a) (authorizing the imposition of up to $100 per violation of a zoning bylaw, and
    establishing that each day that such a violation continues is a separate offense); Town of
    Sherburne v. Carpenter, 
    155 Vt. 126
    , 133 (1990) (“As long as defendant has the benefit of
    the zoning ordinance violation, the statute requires that he pay a daily fine.”).
    The Court calculates a penalty “to remove the economic benefit and any avoided
    costs achieved by the defendant from the violation, as well as to compensate the
    enforcement entity generally for the legitimate costs of bringing the enforcement
    action.” Town of Calais v. Noordsij, No. 142-6-06 Vtec, slip op. at 7 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Aug.
    29, 2008) (Wright, J.) (citing City of St. Albans v. Hayford, 
    2008 VT 36
    , ¶¶ 15–18, 
    183 Vt. 596
    ). The Court may also consider the factors enumerated in the state environmental
    enforcement statute. See 10 V.S.A. §§ 8010(b), (c)(2); In re Jewell, 
    169 Vt. 604
    , 606–07
    (1999) (stating that the “court has discretion . . . not only to balance [a defendant’s]
    continuing violation against its compliance costs but also to consider such factors as
    those specified in [10 V.S.A. §§ 8010(b) and (c)(2)]”). These factors include deterrence,
    whether a defendant had reason to know that the violation existed, and the duration of
    the violation. 10 V.S.A. §§ 8010(b)(3), (6), & (8).
    In the present case, Defendant had the benefit of the zoning violation for two-
    and-a-half years, of which 414 days occurred after the seven-day period offered in the
    notice of violation to cure the violation. All that Defendant had to do to cure the
    violation was to apply for a zoning permit for the rooming and boarding use of the
    property. In the alternative, as discussed in the summary judgment decision, he could
    4
    have reverted to a single-family use of the property. See July 2009 Decision, at 3.3 If a
    zoning permit for the rooming and boarding use of the property also required
    conditional use approval or site plan approval, § 2.3 of the Zoning Bylaws requires the
    Zoning Administrator to refer the application to the Development Review Board for
    that purpose. Of course, any decision by the DRB on such an application could be
    appealed to this Court. See 24 V.S.A. § 4471.
    The economic benefit Defendant obtained from the violation was the $17,804 he
    received in payments for the sleeping accommodations he supplied at the 1166 Main
    Street house during the 414-day period after the notice of violation’s seven-day period
    to cure the violation. Defendant argues that this amount should be reduced by some or
    all of the expenses shown on Schedule E of his 2008 tax return for the 1166 Main Street
    property, and that he instead sustained a loss with regard to that property.
    It is not appropriate to reduce the economic benefit obtained by Defendant from
    the violation by any of the amounts shown as expenses on his tax return, as he has not
    shown that any of those expenses are attributable only to the rental of sleeping
    accommodations in the house. Rather, he would have had to pay the taxes, mortgage,
    utilities, repairs, supplies, cleaning, maintenance, and insurance on the house as his
    residence, regardless of whether he operated it as a boarding or rooming house.
    Similarly, Defendant has not shown whether or subject to what limitations a deduction
    for depreciation is applicable to a taxpayer’s own residence.
    With regard to the legal and other professional fees, Defendant’s tax return
    shows $2712 allocated to the 1166 Main Street house (separately from $1080 allocated to
    a property in Burlington not at issue in the present cases). Although the law firm
    3
    As discussed in the April 2, 2009, April 8, 2009, and April 23, 2009 entry orders, the
    definition of the use category “rooming and boarding house” requires both
    “supply[ing]” and “charg[ing] for meals or sleeping accommodations or both.” Zoning
    Bylaws, Appendix B (Definitions).
    5
    invoices billed to Defendant4 are all entitled “Beliveau v. Town of Fairfax,” in fact they
    show itemized legal services related to various proceedings in Environmental Court,
    Chittenden District Court, and the Vermont Supreme Court, as well as legal services
    regarding fire inspections, fire marshals, and tax assessments, involving the City of
    Burlington as well as the Town of Fairfax. The itemized legal bills do not reflect any
    expenses related to the Fairfax property other than those Defendant may have incurred
    in seeking advice regarding the present enforcement action and notice of violation
    appeal, in both of which he represented himself. Those expenses were only incurred by
    Defendant due to his contesting the violation at issue in the present enforcement case,
    and therefore should not be used to reduce the penalty amount for that same violation.
    In addition to removing the economic benefit obtained by Defendant due to the
    violation, the penalty amount should also generally compensate the Town for the costs
    of bringing the enforcement action. Town of Calais v. Noordsij, No. 142-6-06 Vtec, slip
    op. at 7. In the present case, an appropriate penalty amount must also be sufficient to
    deter the knowing violation of the zoning ordinance, as Defendant continued to charge
    for providing sleeping accommodations for more than a year after the issuance of the
    notice of violation. The length of time the violation existed was within the control of
    Defendant, as was the duration of the litigation and the extensive number of motions or
    requests filed by Defendant. In the present case, an appropriate penalty amount must
    go beyond simply the removal of economic benefit.          The penalty must provide a
    measure of deterrence, recognizing that this was a knowing violation of long duration,
    as well as compensating the Town for the expenses of conducting the litigation.
    Accordingly, the appropriate penalty in this case is $22,770, representing the
    removal of the economic benefit achieved by Defendant due to the violation,
    reimbursement to the Town of its litigation costs over the 414-day period of the
    4  Provided as an attachment to the Town’s Proposed Post-Hearing Findings and
    Conclusions of Law filed on September 4, 2009.
    6
    violation, and in recognition of the need for deterrence and the duration of the knowing
    violation in this case. This penalty, allocated over the period of the violation, amounts
    to a penalty of $55 per day, well within the available statutory penalty of $100 per day.
    See 24 V.S.A. § 4451(a).
    The Town argues for a penalty of the full $100 per day, on the basis that the
    violation has not ceased. That is, the Town argues that Defendant is still maintaining a
    violation at the 1166 Main Street house, even if he has stopped receiving payment from
    boarders, as non-household members continue to reside at the property, and Defendant
    never applied for a zoning permit to change the use of the property. If persons are
    occupying rooms in the house, but those persons are not living as a household unit, it is
    possible that such a use may also be a violation of the Zoning Bylaws. However, even if
    it is a violation, it is not the violation that was the subject of the notice of violation or the
    complaint in the above-captioned cases.5 The violations that were the subject of the
    above-captioned cases have been concluded by this decision and the July 2009 Decision.
    Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED
    that based on the violation already determined in the July 2009 Decision and Order, in
    Docket No. 274-11-08 the Court imposes a penalty of $22,770, payable to the
    municipality under 24 V.S.A. § 4451(a), calculated as $55 per day for 414 days.
    Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 13th day of January, 2010.
    _________________________________________________
    Merideth Wright
    Environmental Judge
    5
    If the Town were to pursue any other alleged violations after the date on which
    Defendant ceased to collect rental or other payments from persons occupying rooms in
    his house, such asserted violations may be the subject of future appeals of notices of
    violation or future enforcement actions, but they would receive new docket numbers
    and be treated as new cases when and if they are filed.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 274-11-08 Vtec

Filed Date: 1/13/2010

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/24/2018