Budget Inn NOV ( 2015 )


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  •                                    STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                               ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
    Vermont Unit                                                    Docket No. 50-4-13 Vtec
    Budget Inn NOV                                          DECISION ON THE MERITS
    This appeal arises from a Notice of Violation (“NOV”) issued by the City of Barre (“the
    City”) citing Daat, Inc. and its principal, David Singh, (“Appellants”), for violating the City of
    Barre Zoning Regulations (“the Regulations”). The City argues that Appellants’ practice of
    letting rooms to individuals for longer than 30 days is not allowed under the current
    Regulations without conditional use approval. Appellants appealed the City’s NOV regarding
    this use to the City of Barre Development Review Board (“the DRB”). When the DRB affirmed
    the NOV, Appellants filed a timely appeal with this Court. Appellants filed a motion for
    summary judgment which the Court denied by written entry order. In re Budget Inn Nov, No.
    50-4-13 Vtec, slip op. (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Nov. 19, 2013) (Durkin, J.). After the parties
    were given an opportunity to prepare for trial, the Court held a site visit at the subject property
    followed by a single-day merits hearing at the Environmental Division Courtroom in Berlin,
    Vermont on February 18, 2014. Appellant David Singh and his attorney, Paul S. Gillies, Esq., and
    the attorney for the City, Robert Halpert, Esq., attended the site visit and merits hearing. After
    completion of the hearing, the Court granted the parties’ request to file proposed findings of
    fact and conclusions of law, which were filed on March 31 and April 2, 2014. Other writing
    obligations as well as administrative obligations caused a delay in the Court's completion of its
    research and writing of this Decision, and the Court offers its apology for this delay.
    Based upon the evidence admitted at trial, including that which was put into context by
    the site visit, the Court renders the following Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and the
    Judgment Order that accompanies this Merits Decision:
    Findings of Fact
    1.     Appellants own a commercially-developed property, located at 573 North Main Street
    (“the Property”). David Singh, a principal of the Appellant corporation, purchased the property
    in 2007 after having worked at the property for the prior owner.
    2.     The Property is located in the Commercial Zoning District (“C-District”), as that District is
    identified in Article 3 of the City of Barre Zoning Regulations, adopted Aug. 27, 2010 (“2010
    Regulations”). Those Regulations govern the allegations made by the City against Appellant.
    3.     At the time of Mr. Singh’s purchase, the Property was developed for use as a twenty-
    four-room motel and has been operated in a similar fashion by Appellants for the duration of
    their management and ownership. Appellants operate the motel under the business name “the
    Budget Inn.”
    4.     Although the facts presented at trial were not exacting and somewhat lacking, it is likely
    that the Property was first converted to a hotel or motel use in the 1950s; the prior use was
    most likely a primary residence.
    5.     The first zoning permit authorizing the operation of a motel was issued to the then
    owners of the Property in 1957. A copy of that zoning permit was admitted at trial as Exhibit 8.
    At that point or later, the motel on the Property was known as “the Heiress Motel.”
    6.     The Property improvements once also included multiple garage stalls. In 1961, a prior
    owner, a Mr. Michael Wobby, was issued a permit to demolish “5 single garage stalls.”
    Exhibit 9.
    7.     The duration of an individual’s stay at the motel on the Property has varied over the
    years. Most recently, including since Mr. Singh’s purchase in 2007, some of the rooms have
    been leased to individuals on a long-term basis, particularly over thirty days. Some of those
    individuals have used the leased motel room as their sole and principal residence.
    8.     Appellants have leased six or more of the twenty-four rooms at the Budget Inn to
    individuals who occupied their leased room for thirty or more days. Some lessees have leased
    rooms for many months; at least one lessee has leased the same room for a number of years.
    9.     Mr. Singh offered testimony that this practice of leasing about six rooms for extended
    stays preceded his and his corporation’s ownership. However, his testimony and the testimony
    on this point from a lessee was not specific and lacked exact or even general dates, lengths of
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    stay, and whether the practice of such extended stays had been continuous. Based upon the
    evidence presented, we could not determine whether this practice had operated continuously
    (i.e. without a year or more interruption) prior to 2005.
    10.    City officials became concerned about Appellants’ extended stay practices in late 2012
    and early 2013. The City of Barre Zoning Administrator (“Administrator”) first issued a notice to
    Appellants that their extended stay leasing practice violated the 2010 Regulations on January
    11, 2013 (“NOV”). A copy of the NOV was admitted at trial as Exhibit 3.
    11.    The Administrator sent clarifying letters to Appellants on January 18 and 24, 2013. See
    Exhibits 4 and 5.
    12.    Mr. Singh responded to the NOV and other January 2013 correspondences, challenging
    the Administrator’s assertion that his operation of the Budget Inn did not conform to the 2010
    Regulations and asserting that, if his offering of extended stay leases did not conform, that the
    practice had continued since prior to his ownership and should therefore be regarded as a pre-
    existing, nonconforming use.
    13.    Prior to trial, Appellant had begun certain improvements to the Property, including (1)
    improvements to some of the individual rooms and (2) a reduction to fourteen of the total
    number of rooms available for use.
    14.    Appellants have reduced the number of rooms, sometimes to as few as two rooms at a
    time, that are leased by individuals for extended stays of thirty days or more. While we found
    Mr. Singh to be sincere in his representations, the Court remains uncertain that no more than
    two rooms have actually been leased for extended stays at any one time.
    15.    Sometimes, in an effort to avoid being subject to applicable landlord/tenant provisions,
    Appellants have required Budget Inn room lessees to move out of their individual room for a
    day, but have allowed the same lessee to return to the same room after leaving for a twenty-
    four hour period. Often times, Appellants will arrange for these extended stay lessees to
    temporarily stay at another motel that they own in the City. We do not regard this practice as
    an interruption of the lessee’s extended stay at the Budget Inn.
    16.    Regardless of whether Appellants extended stay leasing practice conforms or should be
    allowed to continue (legal issues that are addressed in our Conclusions of Law Section, below),
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    Appellants have attempted to satisfy the need by low-income individuals to secure a stable and
    somewhat affordable residence in motel rooms for an extended period of time.
    Conclusions of Law
    Appellants challenge the NOV on three separate grounds as described in the three
    Questions raised in their Statement of Questions in this appeal. Those Questions are:
    1. Whether the Budget Inn is a preexisting, (allegedly) nonconforming use, and
    therefore exempt from recent changes to the Barre City Bylaws, as its
    practice of allowing residents to remain longer than 30 days was in place for
    many years before the City adopted regulations requiring “primarily”
    transient occupants at the motel.
    2. Whether the practice of renting rooms primarily to persons who reside more
    than 30 days in a room at the Budget Inn was in place for longer than 15
    years, thereby placing the “violation” (without admitting there is one)
    beyond the City’s ability to enforce. 24 V.S.A. § 4454(a) (fifteen years); Barre
    City Bylaws, § 14.3.05(3) (ten years, application only to subsequent
    purchasers, burden on respondent to prove when “violation” first occurred).
    3. Whether the Budget Inn is primarily for transients; whether the few units
    that are rented longer than 30 days, as compared to units that are rented for
    30 days or less, are sufficient in number to justify a defense to a claim that
    the Inn is not in accord with present Barre City zoning bylaws.
    (Appellants’ Notice of Appeal and Statement of Questions at 1–2, filed Apr. 24, 2013). We
    address these three issues in turn.
    I.     Preexisting Nonconforming Use
    Appellants first argue that the practice of allowing guests to stay longer than 30 days
    pre-dates the enactment of the applicable provisions of the 2010 Regulations and should
    therefore be regarded as a preexisting nonconforming use. Nonconforming uses are exempted
    from the general requirement of complying with the current zoning regulations, both by statute
    and the Regulations themselves. A “nonconforming use” is defined by statute as a “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, including a use improperly
    authorized as a result of error by the administrative officer.” 24 V.S.A. § 4303(15). Thus, “[i]n
    order to determine whether a landowner has the right to continue a nonconforming use, it is
    necessary first to determine when the use was once lawful, and then to determine which
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    amendment to the zoning ordinance made the use nonconforming and what was the extent or
    level of the use at that time.” In re Wesco Inc. NOV, No. 106-5-07 Vtec, slip op. at 13–14 (Vt.
    Envtl. Ct. Mar. 6, 2008) (Wright, J.) (citations and footnote omitted).
    In denying Appellants’ motion for summary judgment, the Court noted that Appellants
    would “have the opportunity at trial to establish through admissible evidence that the past use
    was in conformance with past regulations and the extent of the use at that time.” In re Budget
    Inn Nov, No. 50-4-13 Vtec, slip op. at 3. We therefore now review the evidence presented to
    determine if Appellants have presented evidence to support a legal conclusion that the
    complained-of use was once lawful.
    We interpret the applicable legal standard somewhat strictly, since the issue presented
    is whether Appellants may continue a use of their commercial property that they concede does
    not conform to the current zoning regulations.           As a general rule, lawful, preexisting
    nonconforming uses or structures must be allowed to continue. However, “[o]ne of the
    primary goals of zoning is to gradually eliminate nonconforming uses because ‘they are
    inconsistent with the purpose of developing use-consistent areas in communities.’” In re
    Casella Waste Mgmt., Inc., 
    2003 VT 49
    , ¶ 9, 
    175 Vt. 335
     (quoting In re Gregoire, 
    170 Vt. 556
    ,
    558 (1999) (mem.)). This recognizes that the “prime purpose behind zoning is to bring about
    the orderly physical development of a community by confining particular uses to defined
    areas.” Gregoire, 170 Vt. at 558 (citing Vermont Brick & Block, Inc. v Village of Essex Junction,
    
    135 Vt. 481
    , 483 (1977)). Thus, while we respect the rights of a landowner, such as Appellants
    here, to continue with lawful nonconformities, we also must recognize a community’s lawful
    right to cease non-lawful or expanded nonconformities. 
    Id.
    Appellants presented some evidence that as far back as 2000, some of the rooms at the
    motel may have been let for a period of time exceeding 30 days. This, however, is not sufficient
    to establish a preexisting nonconforming use, since this evidence does not suggest that the
    practice was then lawful.
    We next note that we interpret a zoning ordinance using the familiar rules of statutory
    construction and will “construe words according to their plain and ordinary meaning, giving
    effect to the whole and every part of the ordinance.” In re Appeal of Trahan, 
    2008 VT 90
    , ¶ 19,
    
    184 Vt. 262
     (citations omitted). We will therefore “adopt a construction that implements the
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    ordinance's legislative purpose and, in any event, will apply common sense.” In re Laberge
    Moto-Cross Track, 
    2011 VT 1
    , ¶ 8, 
    189 Vt. 578
     (quotations omitted).
    The Regulations in effect from 1974 to 2003 defined a “motel” use as a “building
    containing rooms which are rented as sleeping units for motor vehicle transients.” The plain
    and ordinary meaning of the words used does not contemplate extended stays by area
    residents for an indeterminate period of time. From 2003 to 2010, the use “Accommodation,
    Motel & Hotel” was defined as “[a] use of land for the provision of temporary sleeping facilities
    for travelers for a fee and for limited periods of time.” This definition was maintained in the
    2006 Regulations, but changed in the 2010 Regulations as discussed in Section III of this
    Decision below.
    Appellants’ primary contention is that it they should be permitted to continue the
    practice of letting a small number of rooms for extended stays to the extent that those rooms
    are used currently and have been in the past. We conclude that Appellants have failed to meet
    their burden to establish a lawful preexisting nonconforming use, since the letting of rooms for
    stays of indefinite lengths was not defined as lawful in the former regulations that were in
    effect at the earliest time Appellants can show that that use began. Appellants therefore have
    no vested right to continue this practice because they have failed to show that it was ever
    lawfully established.
    We further note that each version of the zoning regulations in effect during Appellants’
    management and ownership restricted nonconforming uses to those shown to have been used
    continuously, that is, not abandoned for a year or more at some period of time. In fact, the
    applicable provision—§ 4.7.02(3)—has remained unchanged when the City of Barre chose to
    amend its zoning regulations on the effective dates of August 5, 2003, July 18, 2006, and August
    27, 2010. See Appellants’ Exhibits D, E, and F. While Mr. Singh testified credibly that the
    practice of letting out some rooms for extended stays has occurred continuously, we received
    no credible evidence that the practice occurred continuously for any time prior to Appellants’
    management and ownership. We therefore conclude that the facts presented do not show that
    the pre-existing practice of letting out some rooms for extended stays began at a point when
    such a practice was lawful or authorized under the then-existing zoning regulations.
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    II.    Statute of Limitations on Enforcement Actions
    Appellants’ second Question asks whether the statutory or regulatory statute of
    limitations on zoning enforcement actions precludes enforcement against Appellants for the
    use of a limited number of rooms for extended stays longer than 30 days. Pursuant to 24 V.S.A.
    § 4454(a):
    An action, injunction, or other enforcement proceeding relating to the failure to
    obtain or comply with the terms and conditions of any required municipal land
    use permit may be instituted . . . if the action, injunction, or enforcement
    proceeding is instituted within 15 years from the date the alleged violation first
    occurred and not thereafter . . . . The burden of proving the date the alleged
    violation first occurred shall be on the person against whom the enforcement
    action is instituted.
    Additionally, the Regulations provide that “[a]n enforcement action relating to any municipal
    land use permit must be instituted within ten (10) years of the date of when the alleged
    violation first occurred and not thereafter . . . .”   2010 Regulations § 14.3.05(3)(a).    This
    shortened statute of limitation does not apply to the landowner who created the violation but
    only to a subsequent purchaser and continued the burden of proof upon “the person against
    whom the enforcement action is instituted.” Id.
    We also note that this Court has previously concluded that these limitation provisions
    do not bar enforcement of even long-standing use violations because “use violations are
    analyzed as continuing or recurring violations.” City of Burlington v. Richardson, No. 188-10-03
    Vtec, slip op. at 12 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. June 27, 2006) (Wright, J.). The Court noted that while the
    statutory limitation would bar enforcement actions seeking penalties or injunctive relief for
    alleged unlawful uses that occurred more than fifteen years prior to the action, an enforcement
    action would not be barred if the use violations occurred within fifteen years of the action’s
    commencement. Id.
    On a related point applicable to the relevant facts in the pending appeal, the Vermont
    Supreme Court, in City of St. Albans v. Hayford, concluded that a use of property that violated
    the zoning regulations which had been passed within 15 years of the action to enforce them
    could not benefit from § 4454(a) when the use had never been lawfully established. 
    2008 VT 36
    , ¶¶ 10–11, 
    183 Vt. 596
    . The facts of the Hayford case are very similar to the appeal at bar.
    Appellants here did not establish that the use of the property for extended stays was ever
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    lawful. It is therefore not exempt from an enforcement action under the 2010 Regulations. A
    use violation that has never been legally established is subject to an enforcement action so long
    as the alleged use violation is ongoing. By continuing to allow rooms to be let to residents who
    have stayed at the Appellants’ motel for months, or in some cases years, Appellants continued
    to violate the 2010 Regulations and neither 24 V.S.A. § 4454(a) nor Regulations § 14.3.05(3) bar
    enforcement of the Regulations.1
    III.  Whether a Violation of the Regulations Exists if the “Primary Use” is not for Extended
    Stays
    Appellants final Question asks whether if the current use of the property, to allow up to
    six rooms to be let for stays longer than 30 days, is a violation of the Regulations. Because
    Appellants’ use of the property is not a legally established preexisting nonconforming use, it
    must comply with the uses allowed in the zoning district in which it is located. The subject
    property is located within the C-District. A permitted use in the C-District is “Accommodation,
    Hotel/Motel.”       Regulations § 6, Table of Uses.            Another use category, “Accommodation,
    Extended Stay Hotel/Motel,” is a conditional use in the C-District. Id. “Accommodation, Motel”
    is defined in the Regulations as:
    A use of a structure which (a) contains living and sleeping accommodations used
    primarily for transient occupancy to the general public on a daily basis for
    compensation, with the exception of the manager’s or caretaker’s unit, and (b)
    has convenient access to parking for the units occupants by way of separate
    entrances, outside the main building, into the individual units.
    Id. at § 2.2.01. “Accommodation, Hotel” is defined similarly but specifically requires that rooms
    be accessed through the main building and not through separate entrances outside the main
    building. Id. As the Budget Inn has separate entrances it does not fit the definition of
    “Accommodation, Hotel.” “Accommodation, Extended Stay Motel/Hotel” is defined as:
    A hotel or motel containing furnished apartment-type units rented on a short
    term basis each with a kitchen (including stove with an oven or micro-wave
    oven, minimum twelve (12) cubic feet refrigerator, sink, and cooking and eating
    1
    We recognize that the City has not yet chosen to institute an enforcement action against Appellants and that the
    only legal issues before us are those that Appellants have raised in this appeal from the NOV determinations by the
    Administrator and then the DRB. However, since we regard the serving of a notice of alleged zoning violation upon
    a property owner or user as the initial step in a municipality’s efforts to compel conformance with its zoning
    regulations, we believe the reference to enforcement actions is appropriate here.
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    utensils), bath, living space, and separate bedroom/sleeping space. No more
    than fifteen percent (15%) of the units shall contain more than one bedroom.
    Guests shall not stay for more than one hundred eighty (180) days in any three
    hundred sixty five (365) day period.
    Id. Appellants contend that so long as the use of the motel is “primarily for transient occupancy
    to the general public on a daily basis for compensation” a number of rooms, specifically the six
    rooms that are currently being let to residents who have stayed longer than 30 days, can be let
    for stays longer than 30 days. Appellants contention is that so long as only a few rooms are let
    for long-term and non-transient occupancy, then the use of the motel remains a permitted
    “Accommodation, Motel” use and they have not violated the Regulations. For the reasons
    stated below, we conclude that Appellants’ contention is in error.
    First, as noted above, we must “construe words according to their plain and ordinary
    meaning, giving effect to the whole and every part of the ordinance.” In re Appeal of Trahan,
    
    2008 VT 90
    , ¶ 19, 
    184 Vt. 262
     (citations omitted). Here, the City of Barre has set out a separate
    defined use for hotels and motels that wish to offer extended stays and that use is a conditional
    use in the C-District meaning that Appellants would require another permit if they wished to
    establish such a use. Furthermore, even in the use category designated as extended stay
    motels the Regulations do not permit stays for longer than 180 days within any three hundred
    sixty five day period.     Considering these Regulations as a whole we cannot read the
    “Accommodation, Motel” use to include the letting of any rooms for indefinite stays of months
    or years.
    We note that no party asserts that Appellants’ use of the Budget Inn for “transient
    occupancy [by] the general public” violates the Regulations. That use is undisputedly lawful.
    Yet Appellants appear to assert that since they use their motel “primarily” for a permitted
    purpose, they should be allowed to also use their property for another purpose, for which they
    do not have a permit and which the Regulations specifically state may only be allowed after
    receipt of conditional use approval. The fact that this unpermitted use is similar to the principal
    use that is allowed (i.e.: extended stays vs. daily rentals) does not relieve Appellants of the
    9
    obligation to obtain conditional use approval, as directed by the Regulations, for their extended
    stay uses.2
    Appellants’ interpretation appears to stem from the less than clear use of the term
    “primary” in the 2010 Regulations. We did not receive clear testimony as to the rationale for
    the new use of “primary” when the 2006 Regulations were amended, effective in 2010.
    However, since many municipal zoning regulations speak to the “primary” use of a property and
    another use of a property, sometimes referred to as an “accessory” use of the property, we
    conclude that the use of the term “primary” in 2010 Regulations § § 2.2.01 is meant to signify
    the principal use of a property. The term infers that another use of the property may be
    allowed, but it does not, as Appellants appear to suggest, obviate the need for approval for that
    secondary use. If we were to follow Appellants’ interpretation, a property owner could put
    their property to any secondary use, so long as the “primary” use was permitted. We find no
    support in the Regulations for this interpretation and decline to create it here.
    Rather, as the City suggests, the word “primarily” is more properly read to modify the
    term “for transient occupancy” rather than the entire use category, and such an interpretation
    gives effect to the whole ordinance. Thus, temporarily displace local residents, or others who
    are not “transient,” can certainly be served by a motel in the City. To hold otherwise would
    allow what is essentially a mix of two distinct uses, “Accommodation, Motel” and
    “Accommodation, Extended Stay Motel” within one structure without ever obtaining a permit
    for an extended stay motel and without complying with the stricter requirements for an
    extended stay motel use, such as separate sleeping spaces and kitchen facilities. This would
    contravene the clear intent of the drafters of the Regulations to treat the two uses differently.
    Furthermore, the manifest intent of the distinction is to provide additional amenities for those
    staying in a place for longer periods of time to ensure that a safe, healthy, and habitable living
    arrangement can be ensured. Thus, for extended stays, a kitchen, a living area, and a separate
    2
    We acknowledge that, if Appellants were able to show that their current use of the Budget Inn represented a
    lawful, pre-existing but now now-conforming use, it would be lawful for them to continue that use, even without
    conditional use approval. But since we have already determined in Section I, above, that Appellants failed to
    present sufficient evidence for this Court to conclude that such use was lawfully pre-existing, we do not address
    that in our analysis here.
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    sleeping area are all required. That none of these requirements exist for the “Accommodation,
    Motel” use indicates that that use category is not intended to allow for extended stays.
    Furthermore the definition discusses stays being “on a daily basis.” We agree with the
    City’s interpretation that the letting of any rooms to local residents for stays exceeding 30 days
    is not a use “primarily for transient occupancy to the general public on a daily basis for
    compensation.” While the Regulations do not include any 30 day requirement, we find that
    when a stay continues beyond 30 days, the accommodations can no longer be reasonably said
    to be “on a daily basis” and therefore a motel or hotel that wishes to allow for stays longer than
    30 days must obtain a conditional use permit as an extended stay motel or hotel. This is also
    supported by the different treatment of motel residents who stay longer than 30 days under
    the Vermont Tax Code, which defines “permanent resident” as “any occupant who has
    occupied any room or rooms in a ‘hotel’ for at least 30 consecutive days.” 30 V.S.A. § 9202(7);
    30 V.S.A. § 9202(3) (defining “hotel” as including “motels”); see In re Williston Inn Group, 
    2008 VT 47
    , ¶ 9, 
    183 Vt. 621
     (noting that the meals-and-rooms tax is not due when the occupant of
    the room is a permanent resident of a hotel as defined in § 9202(7)). Thus, we conclude that
    stays longer than 30 days are not permitted in an “Accommodation, Motel” use within the City
    of Barre.
    Conclusion
    Because some rooms at Appellants’ motel are being let to persons who have resided
    there for significantly longer than 30 days, because that use is not a lawful preexisting
    nonconforming use, and because enforcement of the 2010 Regulations is not barred by any
    statute of limitations, Appellants are in violation of the Regulations. We therefore AFFIRM the
    Notice of Violation issued to Appellants by the City of Barre.       This completes the current
    proceedings before this Court. A Judgment Order accompanies this Merits Decision.
    Electronically signed on May 5, 2015 at Burlington, Vermont, pursuant to V.R.E.F. 7(d).
    ________________________________
    Thomas S. Durkin, Judge
    Environmental Division
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