Old Lantern Non-Conforming Use ( 2017 )


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  •                                     STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                             ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
    Environmental Division Unit                                 Docket No. 154-12-15 Vtec
    Old Lantern Non-Conforming Use
    Decision on Pending Motions
    This matter began with a complaint, lodged with the Town of Charlotte Zoning
    Administrator (Zoning Administrator”) by Appellants here—Alison and Adrian Wolverton
    (“Appellants”)—who alleged that certain improvements and expansions had been made to an
    event facility in the Town of Charlotte (“Town”) known as the Old Lantern Inn. Appellants sought
    in their initial complaint to have the Zoning Administrator conclude that the Old Lantern Inn
    should not be regarded as a pre-existing, nonconforming use, and that as a consequence, the Inn
    owners should be required to seek and secure applicable zoning approvals for its continued
    operation.
    When the Zoning Administrator declined to adopt Appellants’ allegations, they appealed
    her determinations to the Town of Charlotte Zoning Board of Adjustment (“ZBA”). When the ZBA
    affirmed the Zoning Administrator’s determinations, Appellants filed a timely appeal with this
    Court.
    Appellants are represented in this appeal by James A. Dumont, Esq. The Old Lantern Inn,
    together with its owners, Lisa and Roland Gaujac (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Old
    Lantern”), are represented by Liam L. Murphy, Esq. The Town is represented in this appeal by
    David W. Rugh, Esq. Neighbors Michael Frost, Karen Frost, Maura Wygmans, and Justin Wygmans
    also appear as Interested Persons and are representing themselves.
    Several motions have become ripe for the Court’s consideration. First, on May 26, 2017,
    the Court issued three separate Entry Orders to address separate motions for sanctions, a motion
    -1-
    to strike certain filings, and a motion for permission to make further filings. This Decision is issued
    to address the remaining motions that are ripe for the Court’s consideration. 1
    Appellants have filed a motion requesting that the Court enter summary judgment in their
    favor on Questions 2 and 3 from the Statement of Questions they filed on June 2, 2016.
    Appellants filed a second summary judgment motion concerning their Question 8, which included
    an alternate request that they be allowed to revise that Question for purposes of clarification.
    Old Lantern filed its own motion requesting that Appellants’ Questions 1, 4, 5, 6, and 7 be
    dismissed and that the remaining Questions (Questions 2, 3, and 8) be limited in scope. Each
    moving party filed a responsive memorandum to the other party’s motion. The Town and the
    Interested Parties chose not to participate in the discussion of these pending motions.
    We address all three motions below.
    First, we note that the parties assert that several material facts are disputed. But our
    analysis reveals that the parties’ disputes are mostly focused on the legal issues that determine
    what facts are material. Further, we note that when considering cross motions for summary
    judgment, particularly when disputed facts are presented, we are directed to view each set of
    facts in a light most favorable to the non-moving party as we consider each pending motion. In
    re Beliveau NOV, 
    2013 VT 41
    , ¶ 7, 
    194 Vt. 1
     (“When both parties move for summary judgment,
    each is entitled to the benefit of all reasonable doubts and inferences when the opposing party’s
    motion is being judged.” (quoting City of Burlington v. Fairpoint Commc’ns, Inc., 
    2009 VT 59
    , ¶ 5,
    
    186 Vt. 332
    )).
    We review the material facts, disputed and undisputed, in this light.
    Factual Background
    1.      The Old Lantern Inn and surrounding lands began operating sometime in the 1950s as a
    large camping area. The large barn now known as the Old Lantern Inn has been continuously
    1
    Since the Court issued its May 26, 2017 Entry Orders, the parties have filed additional motions. The Court
    addresses those most recently-filed motions in separate Entry Orders.
    -2-
    used as an event facility where meals for campers were provided, as well as concerts, weddings,
    community events, auctions, and other activities.2
    2.        The parties appear to agree that the Town first adopted zoning in the mid-1960s, although
    we have not been provided with a specific enactment date. If this general representation is
    proved true at trial, and if the representation that events began and then continued at the Old
    Lantern facility since the 1950s, we would conclude that the event facility use pre-dates Town
    zoning.
    3.        The Old Lantern Inn lies in the West Charlotte Village Zoning District (“WCV District”).
    4.        Meals have been prepared in a kitchen inside the Old Lantern Inn and served to the
    campers and those attending the other events at the Inn. Sometimes, the meals served at Old
    Lantern events have been prepared off site.
    5.        One family, the Burns family, operated the Old Lantern property from the 1950s until
    sometime just prior to the year 2000, when they sold the Old Lantern property to Mr. Dickerson
    and his business partners. During the Burns Family’s ownership, some of the land was sold off3
    and the camping operation ceased. But the Burns family continued to operate the Old Lantern
    Inn as an events facility. Most events occurred during the months of May through October,
    although the Burns family also had occasional events during the non-peak months. During the
    peak months, there were two to three events per weekend.
    6.        Mr. Dickerson and his business partners continued to operate the Old Lantern Inn from
    the year 2000 forward as an events facility, with a variety of events throughout the year, on a
    schedule similar to that conducted by the Burns family.
    2
    These and related facts are gleaned from the Affidavit of James Dickerson, an auctioneer at the property
    for about twenty years, beginning in the 1980s; Mr. Dickerson and his business partners thereafter purchased the
    Old Lantern property and operated it as an events facility from sometime in 2000 until 2006, when he and his
    partners sold it to Mr. & Mrs. Gaujac, the current owners of the Inn.
    While Appellants contest some of these facts, particularly concerning the consistent operation of the Inn
    as an event facility, they provide no first-hand sworn statements to contradict Mr. Dickerson’s sworn statement. We
    therefore regard Mr. Dickerson’s sworn statement as uncontested. See V.R.C.P. 56(c)(4) (“An affidavit used to
    support or oppose a motion must be made on personal knowledge, set out facts that would be admissible in
    evidence, and show that the affiant is competent to testify on the matters stated.”)
    3
    In fact, it has been represented that two parties to this appeal—Maura and Justin Wygmans—in 2005
    purchased the property in which they now reside from the former owners of the Old Lantern Inn.
    -3-
    7.      Sometime around the beginning of 2006, Mr. Dickerson and his partners decided to sell
    the Old Lantern Inn because one of his partners became ill. While the property was being
    marketed, the partners continued to host events at the Inn, although the number of events was
    temporarily reduced. In 2006, these partners then sold the Old Lantern Inn to the current
    owners: Lisa and Roland Gaujac. The Gaujacs closed on their purchase of the property, got up to
    speed on the operation of the business and made certain improvements. After their purchase,
    the Gaujacs have continuously operated the Inn as an events facility.
    8.      It seems that there is some dispute regarding the question of how many events have
    occurred during the Gaujacs’ ownership, because the Gaujacs claim the number has stayed the
    same, while the Appellants allege that the number has increased. However, while the Gaujacs
    presented evidence in the form of sworn statements by Mrs. Gaujac and Mr. Dickinson, based on
    firsthand knowledge, that the number of events has remained constant, Appellants failed to
    provide any credible evidence of an increase.4
    9.      The parties dispute whether the events, particularly weddings, have become more
    “intense.” Appellants assert that the intensity of the events has increased because they have
    been moved onto the western lawn area, because noise levels have increased, and because there
    are more guests. They also appear to make general references to more guests at some events
    and an increased numbers of events, but no sworn statement offered by Appellants provides
    specific numbers of guests or events.
    10.     The parties dispute the historical use of the west lawn for weddings, concerts, and other
    events, and whether those historical events employed amplification systems. Old Lantern asserts
    that the west lawn has historically been used for events and that sound amplification systems
    have historically been used. Appellants assert that the use of the west lawn and amplification
    4
    Appellants’ attorney refers to an estimated increase in the number of events that have occurred during
    the Gaujacs’ ownership, based upon argument offered by Attorney Murphy during presentations before the Town
    of Charlotte Planning Commission (our record here does not reveal that Attorney Murphy was sworn in or offered
    his statements as a witness). Appellants’ attorney also appears to offer calculations of a significant percentage
    increase in the number of events held during the Gaujacs’ ownership, although these percentage calculations, and
    any specific figures they may have been based upon, do not appear in any of the sworn statements presented to the
    Court.
    -4-
    systems generally began in recent years, although Appellants do not offer specifics on when this
    alleged new activity began.
    11.      The affidavits offered by Old Lantern provide first-hand knowledge that the west lawn for
    weddings and other functions has historically been used during weddings and other events.
    There were once two adjoining doors and stairs that traversed the three-foot drop from the door
    threshold to the west lawn immediately adjacent to the barn. However, those steps were
    removed at some point before the Gaujacs’ purchase. During that time, event guests would use
    another door on the barn to access the west lawn.
    12.      Sometime in 2008, the Gaujacs replaced the doors on the western barn wall with a set of
    French doors with opposing hinges to provide a single wide access. An undated photo marked
    as Appellants’ Exhibit F shows the French doors and five steps between the doors and the ground
    that were installed in 2008 on the west side of the Old Lantern barn.5
    13.      At some time prior to this case being filed, the Gaujacs renovated the kitchen at the Old
    Lantern barn. While the record before us is unclear, it appears that a neighbor complained
    sometime in the Spring of 2008 to the Zoning Administrator about the new French doors and
    stairs added to the western side of the Old Lantern barn. In response, on April 21, 2008, the
    Zoning Administrator wrote a letter to Mr. and Mrs. Gaujac, asking the Gaujacs to respond to a
    claim (presumably by the neighbor) that the new doors and stairs “suggest a change or
    enlargement in the approved use of the building and property.” See Zoning Administrator’s April
    21, 2008 letter, a copy of which has been filed as Appellants’ Exhibit D.
    14.      Mrs. Gaujac represents in her sworn statement that she and Mr. Gaujac invited the Zoning
    Administrator onto their property and “showed him that the [new French] doors were merely
    replacements of the pre-existing doors [on the west wall of the barn] and the steps were
    obviously replacements of steps that had been removed previously, as there was a three-foot
    drop from the door[s] to the ground of the West Lawn. As a result, [the Zoning Administrator]
    5
    Attorney Dumont referred to these stairs as a “stairwell” in his pleadings. We do not perceive the five
    un-enclosed stairs that traverse the three-foot drop to the west lawn as a stairwell, since that term is defined as “a
    vertical shaft in which stairs are located.” Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 10th Ed. (2000). The Zoning
    Administrator also uses the term “stairwell” in his April 21, 2008 correspondence to Mr. & Mrs. Gaujac (Exhibit D),
    based upon complaints from a neighbor. No affidavit offered by Appellants uses the term “stairwell.” We conclude
    that the five open stairs leading to the west lawn do not fit the definition of “stairwell.”
    -5-
    assured us that no permit was necessary.” See Affidavit of Lisa Gaujac dated February 9, 2017,
    filed in support of Old Lantern’s Opposition Memorandum.
    15.    No evidence has been submitted to contradict Mrs. Gaujac’s representations concerning
    these doors and steps, or the Zoning Administrator’s response. There also has been no evidence
    submitted that any zoning administrator has provided notice of an alleged zoning violation
    concerning the Old Lantern Inn since the 2008 allegations were presented.
    16.    On August 4, 2015, Maura O’Dea Wygman and Karen Frost, together with their then
    attorney, Michael Harris, and the Town’s Attorney, David Rugh, met with the Zoning
    Administrator to present a series of allegations against the Old Lantern Inn and its owners. Based
    on a sworn statement by Appellant Maura O’Dea Wygman, the allegations included::
    a. “the intensity or frequency of use [at the Old Lantern Inn] had changed” and
    b. “the addition of the new doors and stairway on the west side of the building
    had led to [a] changed use of that part of the property, including the yard on
    the west side of the building.”
    Wygman Affidavit, dated January 4, 2017, at ¶ 7.
    17.    A letter by the Zoning Administrator (detailed in ¶¶ 18–19, below) indicates that
    Appellants also alleged that “recent” renovations to the kitchen, with a resulting increase in
    meals prepared on site, led to an unlawful expansion of the use of the Old Lantern Inn. No party
    has provided a specific date for when these kitchen renovations occurred.
    18.    The Zoning Administrator responded to the August 2015 allegations against the Old
    Lantern Inn in a September 11, 2015 letter. The letter advises that the Old Lantern barn “has
    historically been used as an event/banquet facility and is considered a pre-existing,
    nonconforming use in the West Charlotte Village Zoning District.” Id. at 1. The Administrator
    focused exclusively upon “[q]uestions . . . raised recently regarding the scope of recent kitchen
    renovations and an apparent change in the facility’s operations from preparation of meals by
    caterers to on-site meal preparation . . ..” Id.
    19.    The letter goes on to advise that the Zoning Administrator confirmed with state officials
    that the current operation of the Inn did not constitute changes that required amendments to
    the Inn’s existing state Department of Health, wastewater, or water supply permits. The letter
    concludes: “Based on this information, I do not believe the facility’s recent kitchen renovation
    -6-
    and the shift to preparation of food on-site constitute an alteration or expansion of the Old
    Lantern barn and event facility’s pre-existing nonconforming use.” Id. at 2.
    20.    Old Lantern disputes the basis of the allegations presented to the Zoning Administrator
    in 2015. Specifically, via Mrs. Gaujac’s February 9, 2017 Affidavit, Old Lantern presents sworn
    statements that the French doors and three-foot-drop steps were not exclusively new, but rather
    replacements for pre-existing doors in the same location on the barn’s western wall and that the
    new steps merely replaced steps that were once in the same location, but had been previously
    removed. Id. at ¶¶ 13–15.
    21.    Mrs. Gaujac also offered an explanation for the kitchen renovation, stating in her affidavit
    that, in “response to a request by the Department of Health, we renovated our kitchen, but did
    not increase its size or capacity. We replaced the old stove, replaced the existing sink with a code
    compliant 3 bowl sink, and replaced the hooded vent system.” Id. at ¶ 17. Appellants do not
    dispute these factual representations.
    22.    Appellants thereafter appealed the Zoning Administrator’s adverse determinations to the
    ZBA. In their Notice of Appeal to the ZBA, Appellants stated the following requests:
    Relief Requested: Appellants request that the Town of Charlotte Zoning Board of
    Adjustment reverse the Zoning Administrator’s (ZA) determination that the on-
    site food preparation in the new commercial kitchen operation at the Old Lantern
    Barn, and related activities, does not constitute a change and/or alteration in the
    facility’s pre-existing non-conforming use that would cause the property to be
    subject to the CLUR[6] conditional use regulations. Appellants ask that the ZBA
    direct the ZA to require the property owners shall seek [sic] and obtain a
    conditional use permit in order to continue their present operations.
    Appellants’ Notice of Appeal to the ZBA, dated September 24, 2015, a copy of which was attached
    as Ex. A to Old Lantern’s Statement of Disputed Facts, filed February 9, 2017.
    23.    Appellants’ Notice of Appeal provides greater detail about the grounds for their
    requested relief that reference (A) the kitchen renovations; (B) an allegation that, with the
    renovated kitchen and on-site meals preparation, the Inn had become a public restaurant;
    (C) allegations that the noise levels at Old Lantern events has materially increased, such that its
    operation should be governed by the Town’s performance standards; and (D) that the Old
    6
    The Town of Charlotte Land Use Regulations.
    -7-
    Lantern lost its grandfathered status as a pre-existing, nonconforming use because it ceased
    operation in 2006 for a period of greater than six months.7 Id.
    24.     The ZBA heard Appellants’ appeal on November 4, 2015 and issued a written decision on
    December 4, 2015, upholding the Zoning Administrator’s determination concerning on-site meal
    preparations in the renovated kitchen.8 The ZBA also concluded that, as operated, the Old
    Lantern does not constitute a restaurant use as that term is defined in the Regulations, and that
    the Old Lantern Inn has not ceased operation for a period of six month or more and had therefore
    not abandoned its pre-existing, nonconforming use status. Id. at 4–5.
    25.     The ZBA specifically declined to address the other allegations that Appellants presented
    at the November 4, 2015 hearing concerning “issues of sounds, frequency [of] events, and alleged
    unpermitted improvements at the Old Lantern . . . [because those allegations] were not included
    in the Zoning Administrator’s Opinion, and are outside of the scope of this appeal.” Id. at 5.
    26.     Appellants thereafter filed a timely appeal from the ZBA ‘s decision with this Court. On
    June 2, 2016, Appellants filed their Statement of Questions, listing eight Questions in which
    various legal issues are presented.
    Discussion
    At its core, the matter presented concerns the complaint by Appellants that the Old
    Lantern is currently operating in a manner that exceeds its pre-existing, nonconforming use
    status. We therefore begin our analysis with a summary of why protections are afforded to uses
    that, while once conforming or pre-dating zoning regulations, do not conform to the existing land
    use regulations.
    I.      Preliminary Issue: Pre-Existing, Nonconforming Uses and De Novo Review.
    The parties appear to agree on at least one legal premise: that the manner in which the
    Old Lantern Inn is currently operating does not conform to the applicable provisions of the Town
    of Charlotte Land Use Regulations (“Regulations”). This conclusion is somewhat easily reached,
    7
    Old Lantern disputes these claims in the Affidavits filed by Mrs. Gaujac and Mr. Dickerson.
    8
    A copy of the ZBA’s December 4, 2015 Decision was filed with this Court on December 31, 2016 as an
    attachment to Appellants’ Notice of Appeal. We therefore regard that copy of the ZBA Decision to be part of the
    record in this appeal.
    -8-
    since the current Regulations do not list an events facility as a permitted use in the WCV District.
    See Regulations Table 2.1(C) and (B) (listing the permitted uses and uses allowed by right in the
    WCV District). While the Old Lantern uses may be categorized as a conditional use within the
    District, such a use may only be lawful after it receives conditional use approval, absent a pre-
    existing, nonconforming status.
    The Regulations include a recognition of the allowance of pre-existing land uses that do
    not conform with the existing Regulations:
    (A) Nonconforming Use. Any use of land or use of a structure legally in existence
    as of the effective date of these regulations which does not comply with the
    requirements of these regulations, as adopted or as subsequently amended, shall
    be considered a nonconforming use. A nonconforming use may be continued
    indefinitely in accordance with the Act [§4412(7)9], subject to the following
    limitations. A nonconforming use:
    (1) may not be moved or altered except with the approval of the Board of
    Adjustment in association with conditional use review under Section 5.4;
    (2) shall not be changed to another nonconforming use without approval under
    conditional use review under Section 5.4, and a determination by the Board of
    Adjustment that the proposed nonconforming use is of the same or a more
    restricted nature as the existing nonconforming use;
    (3) shall not be re-established if such use has been changed to, or replaced by, a
    conforming use, or if such use has been discontinued for a period of six (6)
    months, regardless of the intent to resume the prior use;
    (4) shall not be reestablished following abandonment or discontinuance resulting
    from structural damage from any cause, unless the nonconforming use is
    carried on uninterrupted in the undamaged part of the structure, or the use is
    reinstated within one (1) year of such damage. The Board of Adjustment may,
    on appeal, grant a one (1) year extension to reestablish the nonconforming
    use for situations it determines are beyond the applicant’s control.
    Regulations § 3.8(A).
    To explain why nonconforming uses are allowed to exist, we first acknowledge the
    established purpose of zoning. These two land use doctrines appear to contradict each other,
    9
    See 24 V.S.A. § 4412(7), which directs that all municipal land use regulations must “define how
    nonconformities will be addressed . . ..” Id. That statutory provision details the manner in which a municipality may
    regulate nonconformities, including the authorization that municipalities may “regulate and prohibit expansion and
    undue perpetuation of nonconformities.” Id. We note that the Regulations do not specifically reference how
    “expansions” of nonconforming uses are regulated in Town.
    -9-
    since a prime purpose of zoning is to bring about the orderly physical development of the
    community by confining particular uses to defined areas. DeWitt v. Brattleboro Zoning Board of
    Adjustment, 
    128 Vt. 313
    , 319 (1970) (quoting Hay v. Bd. of Adjustment of the Borough of Fort
    Lee, 
    117 A.2d 650
    , 651 (N.J.Super.Ct.App.Div. 1955). Nonconforming uses are inconsistent with
    that purpose and are tolerated only because they are antecedent to the zoning regulation. One
    goal of zoning is to gradually eliminate nonconformities. Id. at 323; San Diego County v.
    McClurken, 
    234 P.2d 972
     (1951). Enlargement or expansion of nonconforming uses thus violates
    the spirit and purpose of zoning. DeWitt, 
    128 Vt. at 319
    ; 4 N. Williams, American Land Planning
    Law s 113.03-113.06 (1975). Such uses are not allowed to multiply. Town of Mendon v. Ezzo,
    
    129 Vt. 351
    , 360 (1971). Mere increases alone in the volume of a nonconforming business use,
    on the other hand, is not prohibited. Frost v. Lucey, 
    231 A.2d 441
    , 447-48 (Me. 1967).
    It appears that the parties also agree that the historical uses of the Old Lantern barn have
    qualified as a pre-existing nonconforming use; at the very least, Appellants have not presented
    evidence that contradicts that assertion.10
    The Old Lantern barn’s use as an events facility appears to pre-date the initial enactment
    of zoning; if this fact proves to be undisputed at trial, we will conclude at trial that the Old Lantern
    event facility has constituted a lawful pre-existing use, even though its past operation does not
    conform to the current Regulations. See also 24 V.S.A. §4303(15) (defining nonconforming uses
    as the “use of land that does not conform to the present bylaws but did conform to all applicable
    laws, ordinances, and regulations prior to the enactment of the present bylaws” or predates the
    enactment of such bylaws).
    At least two questions remain, however: (1) whether the current use of the Old Lantern
    barn comports to its pre-existing, nonconforming use; and (2) whether the evidence presented
    supports a legal conclusion that such a use has been abandoned, pursuant to Regulations
    § 3.8(A)(3). That latter regulatory provision directs that a pre-existing, nonconforming use may
    not be “re-established if such use has been changed to, or replaced by, a conforming use, or if
    10
    Appellants separately assert that the Old Lantern “discontinued” operations for a period of time in 2006
    and that its right to operate as a lawful pre-existing, nonconforming use had been abandoned. Appellants further
    assert that improvements and expansions of use at the Old Lantern have caused it to lose its grandfathered status
    as a pre-existing, nonconforming use. We address both of these legal claims below.
    -10-
    such use has been discontinued for a period of six (6) months, regardless of the intent to resume
    the prior use . . ..” These two legal issues are addressed below in sections where we address the
    parties’ respective motions and the Questions that those motions target.
    Before we reach that discussion, we must address an additional procedural issue that the
    parties present: the scope of our review and jurisdiction over the claims presented. This issue
    arises because while Appellants claim (and Old Lantern does not contradict) that they raised
    several different claims when they complained to the Zoning Administrator, the Administrator
    only addressed the issue of kitchen renovations and Appellants’ claims that more meals were
    being prepared on site.
    Old Lantern initially asserted that the Zoning Administrator’s reply letter, limited to the
    kitchen renovations and on-site meal preparation, limits the scope of our jurisdiction and review.
    We find no legal foundation for this assertion.
    This appeal requires us to conduct a de novo review of the facts and legal issues
    presented, given that the Town has not elected to implement the necessary provisions for on-
    the-record review of their land use determinations. See V.R.E.C.P. 5(g) and (h); 10 V.S.A. 8504(h),
    and 24 V.S.A. 4471(b). In conducting a de novo review, we are instructed to disregard the
    appealed determinations of the municipal panel below. Rather, we are called upon to render our
    own decision, based upon the facts presented at our trial. Id. Stated differently, a de novo appeal
    essentially renders the decision appealed from void, since that determination is replaced by the
    de novo review conducted by this Court. In re Irish Constr. Application, No. 44-3-08 Vtec, slip op.
    at 6 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Sept. 8, 2008) (Durkin, J.) (stating that the Court is “directed to apply those
    standards anew, ‘as though no prior action had been taken’”).
    As both parties accurately reference, the Supreme Court decision in In re Torres provides
    us with important guidance on the limits of our jurisdiction in land use appeals: in a de novo
    municipal land use appeal, a reviewing court has the jurisdictional authority to address all issues
    presented to the municipal panel, including legal issues that the municipal panel below “might
    have” addressed. In re Torres, 
    154 Vt. 233
    , 236 (1990), citing In re Poole, 
    136 Vt. 242
    , 247 (1978).
    Appellants here contend that this Court should review all of the claims they presented to
    the Zoning Administrator, given that the ZBA was charged with conducting its own de novo
    -11-
    review of the claims presented. We disagree, but on grounds somewhat different than those
    offered by Old Lantern.
    First, we note that the present appeal places us in the same position as the appropriate
    municipal panel appealed from, which is the ZBA; we are not statutorily placed in the position of
    the Zoning Administrator. This distinction is important here because we interpret it to mean that
    we look to the claims presented to the ZBA, not the Administrator.
    When a party appeals a zoning administrator’s determination, they must meet specific
    statutory requirements concerning how they present their appeal and what their notice of appeal
    must contain:
    A notice of appeal shall be in writing and shall include the name and address
    of the appellant, a brief description of the property with respect to which the
    appeal is taken, a reference to the regulatory provisions applicable to that appeal,
    the relief requested by the appellant, and the alleged grounds why the requested
    relief is believed proper under the circumstances.
    24 V.S.A. § 4466.
    When we use these statutory requirements to assess Appellants’ Notice of Appeal to the
    ZBA, it appears that Appellants satisfied all of these statutory requirements, even to the point of
    using the listing of statutory requirements as headings within their Notice. But when we look to
    the sections of their Notice that provide the “relief requested” and the “grounds [for] the
    requested relief,” there is no mention of the French doors and stairs added in 2008, nor is there
    a specific challenge to the Old Lantern’s status as a pre-existing, nonconforming use. We
    therefore conclude that since Appellants did not provide notice of these complaints in their
    Notice of Appeal to the ZBA, they cannot now present those claims to this Court for adjudication.
    There is more in the undisputed facts presented that support our conclusion here. In
    particular, the complaints that Appellants left out of their Notice of Appeal—the French doors
    and stairs installed in 2008—were the subject of a previous complaint to the Zoning
    Administrator, to which the Zoning Administrator inquired of the Gaujacs and to which the
    Gaujacs responded. Their response appears to have fully satisfied the Zoning Administrator in
    2008, since we have no evidence of any allegation of a zoning violation being served on the
    Gaujacs since 2008. Had the complaining parties felt aggrieved by the inaction of the Zoning
    Administrator in 2008, they had a right to complain to the ZBA, or bring their own private
    -12-
    enforcement action, pursuant to 24 V.S.A. § 4465. More to the point, since the goal of Appellants
    here is to convince the Town to initiate a zoning enforcement action against Old Lantern,
    premised upon the doors and stairs installed in 2008, we understand that the 2008 decision by
    the Zoning Administrator that those installations did not constitute a change of use would
    foreclose a new enforcement action by the Town based upon those claims. Further, we are at a
    loss to understand how an alleged zoning violation that occurred in 2008 and was complained
    about and investigated by the Zoning Administrator that same year is now proper for this Court
    to adjudicate nine years later. We therefore conclude that the 2008 renovations to the western
    lawn doors and stairs may not be litigated here and that the factual disputes that remain concern
    the kitchen renovations and other allegations specifically identified in Appellants’ Notice of
    Appeal to the ZBA, discussed in detail below.
    With these preliminary issues resolved, we turn to the legal issues presented by
    Appellants’ Statement of Questions and the challenges surrounding those issues that have been
    raised in the three pending motions. Since the pending motions address overlapping and
    different Questions, our review below follows the numerical order of the Questions.
    II.    Question 1: Conformance with Regulations Concerning Nonconforming Uses
    By their Question 1, Appellants note that nonconforming uses are governed by
    Regulations §§ 1.3(D) and § 3.8, and allege that the present use of the Old Lantern Inn is “an
    illegal use (and therefore not a ‘nonconforming use’)” pursuant to those Regulations. Appellants’
    Statement of Questions at 1. Given the dispute of material facts concerning the complaints
    within our jurisdiction to adjudicate (especially concerning the kitchen renovations) we decline
    to enter summary judgment in Appellants’ favor concerning Question 1. We look forward to each
    parties’ presentation at trial concerning the historical use of the Old Lantern facilities and how
    the current activities at the Old Lantern compare to those historical uses.
    Given that the referenced Regulations may need to be reviewed at trial, we note that
    § 1.3(D) merely reports that nonconforming uses are governed by Regulations § 3.8. We
    therefore will refer at trial to the provisions in § 3.8 to determine whether the Old Lantern at
    some historical point became grandfathered as a pre-existing, nonconforming use, and whether
    the current activities at the Old Lantern allow that status to be maintained.
    -13-
    For the same reasons—the disputes of material facts—we decline to grant Old Lantern’s
    request that Appellants’ Question 1 be dismissed or amended.
    III.    Question 2: Intensity and Nonconforming Uses
    Appellants ask by their Question 2 whether the Regulations concerning a pre-existing,
    nonconforming use “encompass change in the intensity of a nonconforming use, as contemplated
    by In re Miserocchi, 
    170 Vt. 320
    , 327 (2000), and did the Old Lantern undergo changes, alterations
    or expansions in the intensity of use and therefore now is in violation because no conditional use
    approval was granted.” Appellants’ Statement of Questions at 2, filed March 7, 2016 (emphasis
    in the original).
    Given that the central focus of Appellants’ Question 2 is the “intensity of use,” we look
    first to the applicable Regulations and how they govern such intensity. Regulations § 3.8 does
    not use the word “intensity” and does not appear to regulate anything that could be regarded as
    “intensity.” Specifically, § 3.8 allows that pre-existing, nonconforming uses may be continued
    indefinitely pursuant to state law unless the use is: 1) moved or altered; 2) changed to another
    nonconforming use without ZBA approval; 3) discontinued for at least six months; or 4)
    abandoned due to structural damage for at least one year. Regulations §§ 3.8(A)(1)–(4); accord
    24. V.S.A. § 4412(7).
    Appellants’ Question 2 specifically cites the Supreme Court decision in Miserocchi,
    although we do not understand that decision to restrict an increase in the intensity of
    nonconforming uses. In fact, Miserocchi specifically provides “most courts have held that a mere
    increase in the volume or intensity of a nonconforming business activity is not prohibited by a
    zoning regulation prohibiting an extension or enlargement of a nonconforming use.” 
    170 Vt. 320
    ,
    327 (citing K. Young, Anderson’s American Law of Zoning §§ 6.38, 6.50 (4th ed. 1996) and DiBlasi
    v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals, 
    624 A2d 372
    , 376 (Conn. 1993) (mere increase in amount of business is
    not illegal expansion of original nonconforming use)).
    The Miserocchi Court went on to announce a conclusion that is of particular import to the
    circumstances alleged about the Old Lantern Inn by Appellants here:
    We recognize that a goal of zoning is to phase out nonconforming uses, see
    Weeks, 167 at 555, 712 A.2d at 910, but absent a regulation specifically prohibiting
    -14-
    an increase in the intensity of use of a noncomplying structure, we decline to
    create a rule contrary to the majority of law on this issue.
    Miserocchi, 
    170 Vt. at 327
     (emphasis added).
    The Miserocchi case presented a somewhat more complicated set of facts as are
    presented here, since Mr. and Mrs. Miserocchi were attempting to expand the use of a
    preexisting structure that did not comply with the current zoning regulations. The trial court had
    concluded that the Miserocchis were not entitled to use the portion of their barn that encroached
    into the front yard setback. 
    Id. at 323
    . The Supreme Court reversed that determination, and
    held that because the structure pre-dated zoning, the use of the entire structure constituted a
    pre-existing nonconforming use. 
    Id. at 325
    .
    The Supreme Court also reversed the trial court’s determination that the conversion of
    the Miserocchi barn from an agricultural use to a residential use should be denied because it
    would likely increase the “intensity of its use” of the noncomplying structure. In reversing that
    trial court ruling, the Supreme Court concluded that since the applicable zoning regulations did
    “not specifically address an increase in intensity of use” the regulations could not be used to
    restrict the Miserocchis’ planned use, even if it would increase its “intensity.” 
    Id. at 327
    .
    The Charlotte Regulations do not regulate or restrict an increase in the intensity of a
    nonconforming use. The Old Lantern disputes that there has been an increase in the intensity of
    their use. For both these reasons, we DENY Appellants’ summary judgment motion as to their
    Question 2. Further, in the absence of language in the Regulations that regulates or restricts an
    increase in the intensity of a nonconforming use, we must DISMISS Appellants’ Question 2 as
    non-judiciable.
    IV.    Question 3: Changes to Old Lantern’s Nonconforming Use
    By their Question 3, Appellants ask “[i]f the Old Lantern was a nonconforming use, did the
    Old Lantern undergo changes, alterations or expansions other than an increased intensity of use”
    that caused it to lose its lawful status. In light of our analysis above concerning the limits of our
    jurisdiction and review of Appellants’ claims, we focus our analysis to the “changes, alterations,
    and expansions” to the Old Lantern kitchen and its on-site meal preparation.
    -15-
    We must first begin our analysis of this Question with a review of what activities the
    Regulations restrict in regards to nonconforming uses. The relevant Regulation directs that pre-
    existing nonconforming uses may not be moved or altered. Regulations §§ 3.8(A)(1). We note
    that it does not appear that we have facts or allegations presented to us that the Old Lantern use
    has been “moved.” We therefore focus our analysis of Appellants’ Question 3 on the sole term
    from the regulations that seems applicable: alterations.
    Old Lantern disputes that the Inn’s operation as an event facility has been altered; in fact,
    they assert that the use has remained consistent throughout its over sixty years of operation.
    We therefore have a dispute as to a material fact that may only be resolved by trial.
    As the parties prepare for trial, we suggest that they review the Miserocchi decision and
    its progeny. Absent a specific regulatory restriction on an increase in intensity, we do not
    understand that the Town has authorized this Court to conclude that an intensity increase can
    be restricted. Further, we understand that a “change of use” means a different use, and not
    some changes that may have been made to the same use. This appeal may present a clear
    example of this distinction, dependent upon what credible facts are presented at trial: we do not
    regard a replacement of doors and stairs that had previously been used at an ongoing event
    facility to constitute a “change of use.” Rather, dependent upon the credible facts presented at
    trial, it may be regarded as a continuation of the same use.
    For these reasons, we DENY Appellant’s request that summary judgment be entered in
    their favor upon their Question 3. For the same reasons as previously stated, we GRANT Old
    Lantern’s request that Question 3 be limited in scope. However, we conclude that Appellant’s
    Question 3 should be limited to the legal issues raised in Appellants’ Notice of Appeal to the ZBA,
    and not limited to the legal issues addressed by the Zoning Administrator, as Old Lantern initially
    suggested in its motion.
    V.      Question 4: Changes to Another Nonconforming Use
    By their Question 4, Appellants ask if “the Old Lantern’s nonconforming use change[d] to
    another nonconforming use,” in a manner that was a violation of Regulations § 3.8(A)(2).11 That
    11
    While Appellants’ Question 4 does not specifically reference Regulations § 3.8(A)(2), we understand the
    remaining language of Question 4 to be sourced from that Regulation.
    -16-
    regulation prohibits a change from a pre-existing use to another use not permitted by the current
    Regulations. Id. However, we do not understand that there has been any representation that
    the Old Lantern’s pre-existing, nonconforming use—wedding and event facility—has ceased and
    been replaced by another nonconforming use. Appellants’ legal analysis, while thorough,
    appears to conflate distinct regulatory provisions by referencing the Performance Standards
    (Regulations § 3.12) and Conditional Use provisions (Regulations § 5.4) with the Regulations
    governing pre-existing, nonconforming uses (§ 3.8). If at trial the Old Lantern Inn is determined
    to be a pre-existing, nonconforming use that has continuously operated, we do not understand
    that the Regulations or the enabling statute (24 V.S.A. § 4412(7)) authorize the Town to regulate
    the Old Lantern’s nonconforming use under the Performance Standards or Conditional Use
    provisions, which speak in various ways to “intensity” and impacts. Rather, only if Old Lantern is
    determined to no longer enjoy the grandfathered status of a pre-existing, nonconforming use
    may the Old Lantern, in a separate, future municipal proceeding be subject to the Performance
    Standards and Conditional Use provisions.
    More to the point of the legal issues raised by Question 4, we interpret a change to
    another nonconforming use to be something more than possible changes to how a pre-existing
    use is conducted. Again, it appears that replacing doors and steps may prove at trial to be an
    appropriate example of this distinction from a change of how a nonconforming use is conducted
    to a wholly different use.
    Absent evidence presented that Old Lantern has been changed to a wholly different use,
    conforming or not, we conclude that Appellants have failed to present any facts to support the
    assertions made in their Question 4. We therefore DISMISS their Question 4.
    VI.    Question 5: Discontinuance of Use for Six Months or More
    By their Question 5, Appellants ask whether the Old Lantern discontinued its use for six
    months or more and therefore lost its grandfathered status as a pre-existing, nonconforming use.
    If such an allegation were true, Old Lantern could no longer be regarded as a pre-existing,
    nonconforming use, pursuant to Regulations § 3.8(A)(3).
    Appellants appear to allege that the Old Lantern Inn experienced a reduction in event
    activity, particularly just before and shortly after Mr. and Mrs. Gaujac purchased the property.
    -17-
    We do not understand Appellants to specifically allege a “discontinuance” of all event activities,
    and we do not understand Appellants to allege a specific duration of six months or more.
    Nonetheless, since Appellants make some allegation that could be detailed at trial that may
    invoke Regulations § 3.8(A)(3), we DENY Old Lantern’s request to dismiss this Question 5. We
    direct the parties to focus their trial presentation on the specific facts required under § 3.8(A)(3):
    whether there has been a specific discontinuance of the Old Lantern’s event business and
    whether any discontinuance has lasted six months or more.
    VII.   Question 6: Do the Performance Standards Apply to Nonconforming Uses
    By their Question 6, Appellants ask whether the Performance Standards codified in
    Regulations § 3.12 apply to nonconforming uses and if they do, do they apply to the Old Lantern.
    This Question appears to present a purely legal question that can be answered prior to trial.
    First, we note an assumption: we assume that Appellants’ Question 6 is premised upon
    the nonconforming use being regarding as lawfully pre-existing and therefore enjoying the
    grandfathered status recognized by 24 V.S.A. § 4412(7). We make this assumption because if a
    nonconforming use is not regarded as pre-existing, is must be regarded as merely an unpermitted
    use that must comply with all applicable zoning regulations. To understand this distinction and
    the rationale for allowing nonconforming uses to continue, we refer again to the precedent of
    our Supreme Court’s decision in DeWitt: while the ultimate goal of zoning regulations is to
    eliminate nonconforming uses, such uses that pre-date the current regulations must be
    “tolerated.” DeWitt, 
    128 Vt. at 319
    . Uses that were once lawful but now do not conform to
    current zoning regulations are allowed to continue in their current form “due to the fairness and
    due process concerns of the landowner.” King Cty., Dep't of Dev. & Envtl. Servs. v. King Cty., 
    305 P.3d 240
    , 244 (Wash. 2013) (citing Rhod–A–Zalea & 35th, Inc. v. Snohomish County, 
    959 P.2d 1024
     (Wash. 1998)).
    We again note that a mere increase in intensity of a nonconforming use will not be
    grounds for requiring that the pre-existing use conform to the current zoning regulations, unless
    the current regulations specifically state that increases in intensity are prohibited. Our Supreme
    Court established this precedent in a case that provides guidance here.
    -18-
    An enlargement or expansion of a nonconforming use, rather than a mere
    increase in business, is indicated where new facilities or a new product is involved.
    See San Diego County v. McClurken, [
    37 Cal.2d 683
    , 
    234 P.2d 972
     (1951)];
    Connecticut Sand & Stone Corp. v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 
    150 Conn. 439
    , 
    190 A.2d 594
     (1963). In the instant case, appellant commenced in 1975 to offer its
    customers a new product concrete mixed by appellant’s trucks at the job site.
    New facilities in the form of a new cement screw or auger in a cement tower were
    installed by appellant so that materials from its place of business could be more
    easily loaded into its trucks. Two new trucks were purchased to deliver and mix
    the concrete. Any manufacturing of concrete by appellant in its trucks, whether
    on or off the premises, is far different than its prior nonconforming use of on-
    premises manufacture of concrete bricks and blocks and sale of building materials.
    It constitutes an expansion and enlargement of the nonconforming use forbidden
    by the zoning regulations absent permission by [the municipality].
    Vermont Brick & Block, Inc. v. Vill. of Essex Junction, 
    135 Vt. 481
    , 483–4 (1977).
    If a use is established as lawfully pre-existing, it may not be regulated, even if it does not
    conform to the current zoning regulations. 
    Id. at 483
    . Stated differently, to impose zoning
    regulations upon an already lawfully established use violates both the provisions of 24 V.S.A.
    § 4412(7) and the due process protections of that property owner.12 King Cty., 305 P.3d at 244
    (citing Rhod–A–Zalea, 
    959 P.2d 1024
    ). Given this well-established precedent, we are able to
    answer the sole legal issue raised by Appellants’ Question 6 in the following manner: the
    Performance Standards codified in Regulations § 3.12 do not apply to pre-existing,
    nonconforming uses. See Purvis Nonconforming Use, No. 45-5-15 Vtec, slip op. at 8 (Vt. Super.
    Ct. Envtl. Div. Jan. 27, 2016) (Durkin, J.) (“Nonconforming uses are not violations—they are fully
    lawful uses.”).
    VIII.   Question 7: Do the Performance Standards Apply to the Old Lantern Due to Prior
    Approvals
    Appellants ask by their Question 7 whether the same Performance Standards referenced
    above apply to the Old Lantern Inn “because it applied for and obtain[ed] zoning approvals after
    the Town of] Charlotte adopted performance standards.”
    12
    State law does allow a municipality to regulate a nonconforming use “to abate public nuisances or to
    abate or remove public health risks or hazards.” 24 V.S.A. § 4412 (7)(C).
    -19-
    We are confused by Appellants’ Question 7. There have been no specific facts presented
    that Old Lantern applied for zoning approvals. For that matter, there have been no facts
    presented about when the Performance Standards were enacted. Given this material confusion,
    we conclude that Appellants’ Question 7 is non-judiciable and therefore GRANT Old Lantern’s
    motion to dismiss that Question.
    IX.    Question 8: Are these and the Prior ZBA Proceedings De Novo?
    By their Question 8, Appellants present a two-part legal issue that is successive in nature:
    if the answer to the first part of this Question is answered in the affirmative, the second part of
    the Question becomes moot. Since both parts of this Question 8 appear to ask a solely legal
    question, we address it in this pre-trial decision.
    This Question also lacks some clarity. No party has disputed that this Court must conduct
    a de novo review of the legal and factual issues preserved for our review. Nor does any party
    dispute that the ZBA was obligated to conduct a de novo review of Appellants’ appeal from the
    Zoning Administrator’s determination.       We therefore answer the first part of Appellants’
    Question 8 in the affirmative: both the ZBA and this Court must conduct de novo reviews.
    In de novo reviews, our task is not to determine whether the decision appealed from was
    “in error”; our task is to receive admissible evidence and render our own determination. We
    therefore decline the apparent invitation in Appellants’ Question 8 to review the propriety of the
    ZBA decision rendered below. Rather, as explained in our discussion above, we look to the
    Appellants’ Notice of Appeal filed with the ZBA as setting the parameters of what issues we have
    the jurisdictional authority to consider.
    It appears that Appellants might be asserting that because both the ZBA and this Court
    must conduct de novo reviews, we must look to the claims that they presented to the Zoning
    Administrator. They provide no authority for this legal position and our own research has
    revealed none, either. More to the point, to adopt Appellants’ reasoning, we would have to
    ignore the long-standing precedent of Torres and the statutory requirements for presenting
    appeals to the ZBA found in 24 V.S.A. § 4466. We decline to do so here.
    -20-
    CONCLUSION
    For all the reasons stated above, we conclude that Appellants’ Questions 1, 3, and 5 raise
    factual issues that are disputed and therefore must await trial to be resolved. Such Questions
    are limited for trial in the manner expressed above. Appellants Questions 2 and 4 are DISMISSED.
    Lastly, since Appellants’ Questions 6, 7 and 8, present solely legal questions, we have answered
    those Questions above and they no longer need be addressed at trial.
    Electronically signed on July 3, 2017 at Brattleboro, Vermont, pursuant to V.R.E.F. 7(d).
    ________________________________
    Thomas S. Durkin, Judge
    Environmental Division
    -21-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 154-12-15 Vtec

Filed Date: 7/3/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/31/2024