Williams Amended CU Permit ( 2014 )


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  •                                  STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT - ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
    {
    In re Williams Amended CU Permit                 {          Docket No. 40-4-13 Vtec
    (Application No. 179-01-CU,                      {       (OTR appeal from Ludlow DRB)
    Amendment No. 2)                                 {
    {
    Decision in On-the-Record Appeal
    In this on-the-record appeal, Andrea Lehtonen and Mary Jane O’Hara (“Appellant”)1
    challenge a decision by the Town and Village of Ludlow, Vermont Development Review Board
    (“the DRB”) granting conditional use approval to Darren and Laura Williams (“Applicants”) to
    establish a spa and related “wellness services” at 70 Main Street in the Preservation District of the
    Village of Ludlow. The DRB conducted a site visit to the property and held a hearing on the
    application on March 11, 2013. The DRB then issued its Notice of Decision, including Findings of
    Fact and Conclusions of Law, on March 20, 2013. Appellants filed timely appeals with this Court.
    Appellants ask whether the proposed use complies with the Village of Ludlow Zoning and Flood
    Hazard Regulations (“the Regulations”) and whether the DRB correctly approved the application
    granting them a conditional use permit.
    Applicant initially filed a motion for summary judgment that included several requests:
    first, that the Court conclude that Ms. Lehtonen lacked party status and must therefore be
    dismissed from this appeal; and second, that the Court enter summary judgment for Applicant.
    We determined that Ms. Lehtonen had not presented sufficient evidence for the Court to
    conclude that she had party status and therefore dismissed her from this appeal. In re Williams
    Amended CU Permit Appeal, No. 40-4-13 Vtec, slip op. at 2 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Aug. 28,
    2013) (Durkin, J.). The Court declined to grant summary judgment for Applicant, since the
    pending appeal is from an on-the-record proceeding. Id. The Court later directed that the
    parties’ summary judgment pleadings should be converted into appellate briefs and afforded the
    parties an opportunity to file supplemental briefs by October 4, 2013, noting that the Court would
    thereafter render this Decision on the pending on-the-record appeal. In re Williams Amended CU
    Permit Appeal, No. 40-4-13 Vtec, slip op. at 1 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Sept. 9, 2013) (Durkin, J.).
    1 Ms. O’Hara and Ms. Lehtonen each filed their own Notice of Appeal and Statement of Questions; Ms.
    O’Hara’s appeal was filed as a cross-appeal.
    1
    The property at issue, formerly a residential dwelling, most recently contained a doctor’s
    office and an office for a financial services professional approved as a conditional use. Applicants
    applied for an amendment to the conditional use approval for the prior doctor’s office.
    Applicants propose a one bedroom apartment for their own occupancy on the second floor and
    space for various client services on the first floor. The DRB described these as including two “spa
    rooms,” one room for an aesthetician, a staff break room, a room for a hairdresser with two chairs,
    a common area, and two rental offices. In re Appl. No. 179-01-CU, Amendment No. 2, Notice of
    Decision, at 6 (Town of Ludlow Dev. Review Bd. Mar. 20, 2013). Some of these spaces will be
    operated by Applicants and their employees and others will be leased out to others.             The
    operation would be open by appointment with hours of operation from 7:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m.
    seven days a week. The record also indicates that Applicants propose to have a reception and
    retail area room on the first floor and to use the basement for “personal training,” but these facts
    are not reflected in the DRB decision.
    Applicants are represented in this appeal by John J. Kennelly, Esq. and Jeffrey P. Guevin,
    Esq. Appellant Mary Jane O’Hara is represented by Martin Nitka, Esq.
    Discussion
    I.     Standard of review.
    When considering an on-the-record appeal, this Court’s review is limited to a review of
    the municipal panel’s decision, the record made before the municipal panel, and the briefs
    submitted by the parties. In re Saman ROW Approval, No. 176-10-10 Vtec, slip op. at 1 (Vt. Super.
    Ct. Envtl. Div. Sept. 2, 2011) (Durkin, J.).   We therefore first consider the municipal panel’s
    decision below. We then read the panel’s findings of fact and examine the record to determine
    whether it contains evidence that a “reasonable person could accept . . . as adequate” support for
    those factual findings. Devers-Scott v. Office of Prof’l Regulation, 
    2007 VT 4
    , ¶ 6, 
    181 Vt. 248
    (quoting Braun v. Bd. of Dental Exam’rs, 
    167 Vt. 110
    , 114 (1997)). If so, we review the DRB’s legal
    conclusions de novo. In re Stowe Highlands Resort PUD to PRD Appl., 
    2009 VT 76
    , ¶ 7, 
    186 Vt. 568
     (mem.). As this Court has recognized, “[w]hen a municipality elects to make its land use
    determinations subject to on-the-record review, it is committing to meeting the procedural
    requirements in [the Municipal Administrative Procedure Act] or risking the remand of its
    determinations and, consequently, the loss of some of its earlier efforts.” In re Brandon Plaza
    2
    Conditional Use Permit, No. 128-8-10 Vtec, slip op. at 6–7 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Mar. 26, 2012)
    (Walsh, J.) (footnote omitted).
    II.    The DRB’s Findings of Fact.
    Municipalities that elect to conduct on-the-record review must satisfy the procedural
    requirements of the Vermont Municipal Administrative Procedure Act (MAPA). See 24 V.S.A.
    4471(b). MAPA requires municipal panels’ final decisions to “separately state findings of fact and
    conclusions of law.” 24 V.S.A. § 1209(a). Findings of fact must “explicitly and concisely restate
    the underlying facts that support the decision” and be “based exclusively on evidence” in the
    record. Id. § 1209(a), (b). Conclusions of law must be based on those findings. Id. § 1209(c). As
    recognized in a recent on-the-record appeal, also from the Ludlow DRB, “[g]iven the nature of the
    on-the-record review process . . . we anticipate[] that the DRB Decision [will] include specific
    factual findings on the nature of the Applicant’s proposal . . . .” In re Buss Conditional Use
    Application, No. 130-10-12 Vtec, slip op. at 2 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Apr. 29, 2013) (Durkin, J.).
    Here, as in Buss, the DRB failed to include sufficient findings of fact describing the proposed
    project for us to conduct the appropriate appellate review.
    The only description of the project in the DRB’s Notice of Decision is in the Conclusions of
    Law section and not in the Findings of Fact. In re Appl. No. 179-01-CU, Amendment No. 2,
    Notice of Decision, at 6 (Town of Ludlow Dev. Review Bd. Mar. 20, 2013). This description is:
    “The building will consist of two spa rooms, an aesthetics room, a staff break room, a room for a
    hairdresser with two chairs, pedicures and manicures, a common area for relaxation, two rental
    offices and a one bedroom owners [sic] apartment.” Id. This general description of the different
    rooms proposed fails to provide the Court with enough information to consider whether the
    application complies with the Regulations. It does not sufficiently describe the nature of the
    services provided or who will provide them. It fails to indicate the number of persons who will
    work in the building or how those persons will be employed. It does not provide how the two
    rental offices will be used beyond stating that “[t]he rental offices can not be rented except to
    those who fall into the category of wellness or in the allowed conditional uses for the District” as
    determined by the Zoning Administrator.         Id.   Without a more detailed description of the
    proposed use we cannot conduct the necessary appellate review of whether the project complies
    with the Regulations.
    3
    Part of the conditional use analysis under the Regulations requires consideration of the
    project’s traffic impacts. Apart from stating the speed limit on Main Street, where the project
    entrances are located, providing a general description of the driveway, and recognizing the
    applicant’s parking plan, the Findings of Fact are insufficient to determine what impacts, if any,
    the project may cause. The DRB noted that it would consider “visibility at intersections, traffic
    flow, and control, pedestrian safety and convenience and access in case of emergency” as part of
    site plan review, but it made no findings regarding these issues and the record contains no site
    plan approval. Id. at 3. This portion of the DRB decision merely recites the legal standards
    established by the Regulations, but does not contain any specific factual description of the
    proposed project or an estimate of the project’s impacts.
    Had the DRB included Findings of Fact that adequately described the project, we would
    then look at the record to determine whether it contains substantial evidence to support those
    DRB findings. Saman ROW Approval, No. 176-10-10 Vtec, slip op. at 1. But the DRB decision
    contains no such project description.        The record presented includes a summary project
    description, but it would be error for this Court to establish its own factual findings, in light of the
    DRB omissions.       We cannot usurp the responsibilities of a municipal panel when that
    municipality has chosen to conduct its land use review on-the-record. In re Zaremba Group
    Dollar General, No. 66-5-12 Vtec, slip op. at 2 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. June 12, 2013) (Walsh, J.)
    (citing In re Appeal of Leikert, No. 2004-213, slip op. at 1 (Vt. Nov. 10, 2004) (unpublished mem.),
    available at https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/UPEO2001-2005/eo04-213.pdf)).
    III.   The DRB’s Conclusions of Law.
    We also note that the DRB’s Conclusions of Law are far from clear. The parties all agree
    that the property at issue in this appeal is located in the Preservation Zoning District
    (“Preservation District”).   Permitted Uses in the Preservation District are: “(1) One Family
    Dwelling, (2) Accessory Uses and Upgrading, (3) Agricultural and Forestry, [and] (4) Home
    Occupation.”     Regulations § 410.      Conditional Uses are: “(1) Two Family Dwelling, (2)
    Professional Service: Doctor, Lawyer, Architect, Accountant, Dentist, Land Surveyor, Insurance
    Agency, Photography Studio, or Real Estate Office, or similar uses, (3) Day Care Center, Child or
    Adult, (4) Multiple Family Dwelling, (5) Inns, (6) Bed and Breakfast, [and] (7) Tourist Home.” Id.
    While the DRB decision recites these permitted uses in the Findings of Fact section, the
    Conclusions of Law section fails to state within which of these uses, if any, the project fits. The
    4
    Decision simply states that “[t]he Board has concluded that the project does fit into the categories
    that are present in the Zoning Regulations.” In re Appl. No. 179-01-CU, Amendment No. 2,
    Notice of Decision, at 6 (Town of Ludlow Dev. Review Bd. Mar. 20, 2013). This assertion falls far
    short of a legal conclusion, specific to this project, that provides any notice of how the DRB
    reached its conclusion. The DRB’s Conclusions of Law should incorporate the relevant factual
    findings and apply them to the specific legal standards in the Regulations, including the allowed
    and permitted uses for the relevant zoning district. The DRB Conclusions section does not
    contain a minimally necessary explanation. We must therefore conclude that it also is deficient
    and remand the pending matter so that the DRB may add some explanation for its legal
    conclusions, including a reference to specific factual findings about the project that have some
    relation to the legal standards established in the Regulations.
    The DRB mentioned throughout its decision that home based occupations are permitted in
    the Preservation District, but it never defined “home occupation” or explained how the proposed
    project fits within that term. The Regulations require that a home occupation be conducted
    “wholly by members of the family living on the premises, with the exception of one part-time
    non-family member employee.”        Regulations Art. 7 [Definitions] at 49–50.    The Regulations
    further limit home occupations to “up to 25% of the dwelling and/or attached accessory
    structure.” Id. at § 510.1. If the DRB considers this project to be a home occupation use, it must
    state how the project as proposed fits within these requirements. Similarly, if the DRB considers
    the project as proposed to be one of the conditional uses in the Preservation District, it must
    specifically state what conditional use category the project fits within and the underlying facts
    that support the DRB’s legal conclusion.
    We recognize that the DRB organized its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law around
    the five specific criteria that must be considered in conditional use review under the Regulations.
    However, because both the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law lack any specificity or
    explanation of the DRB’s reasoning, we are unable to review the application before us in this on-
    the-record appeal.    We therefore conclude that we must direct that these proceedings be
    remanded to the DRB, so that it may amend its decision to incorporate more specific and
    sufficient Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.
    5
    Conclusion
    For the reasons detailed above, we must REMAND the pending application to the Town
    of Ludlow Development Review Board for clarification of its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
    Law. We recognize that our decision in Buss predates this DRB decision by over one month and
    that the DRB was therefore unable to incorporate our suggestions in that prior opinion into their
    decision making process when considering this application. We hope that Buss and this decision
    assist the DRB in complying with the requirements of MAPA.2 We trust that, upon remand to
    clarify the DRB’s factual findings and legal conclusions, this matter may thereafter be quickly
    resolved.
    This completes the current proceedings before this Court.                A Judgment Order
    accompanies this Decision.
    Done at Newfane, Vermont this 10th day of January, 2014.
    Thomas S. Durkin, Environmental Judge
    2 We also note for the DRB’s benefit that the Vermont League of Cities and Towns has made available
    several documents meant to assist municipalities in undertaking on-the-record review and issuing
    decisions. See Vermont League of Cities & Towns, Municipal Assistance Technical Paper #1, Making it
    Stick: The Art of Writing Effective Zoning Decisions (2007), available at http://www.vlct.org/assets/
    Resource/Tech_Reports_Papers/TP_01_zoning_decision_03-07.pdf; Vermont League of Cities & Towns,
    Municipal Assistance Technical Paper #4, On the Record Review (2008), available at http://www.vlct.org/
    assets/Resource/Tech_Reports_Papers/TP_04_on_the_record_03-08.pdf.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 40-4-13 Vtec

Filed Date: 1/10/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/24/2018