Farmer Mold & Machine Works, Inc. ( 2015 )


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  •                                   STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                              ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
    Vermont Unit                                                   Docket No. 15-2-14 Vtec
    Farmer Mold & Machine Works, Inc. CU
    Permit
    DECISION ON MOTION
    Decision on Farmer Mold & Machine Works, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment
    Farmer Mold & Machine Works, Inc. and its principal Jim Gilmour (Applicant) received a
    Conditional Use Permit from the town of Clarendon Board of Zoning Adjustment (the Board), by
    written decision dated January 24, 2014, to move its business into an existing and unused
    16,000 square foot building located at 2705 Route 7B in the town of Clarendon, Vermont (the
    building). In addition to the physical relocation of the business, Applicant proposed interior
    renovations to the building to accommodate Applicant’s business needs and make the building
    more energy efficient as well as the construction of an on-site septic system and the instillation
    of a wood pellet storage silo.
    Vera Maria L. Kalakowski, Vera M. K. Kalakowski-Tizabi, Claire Kalakowski, Marjorie
    White Southard, Marion Pratico, Albert Trombley, Mary Trombley, George Solotruck, Mary
    Solotruck, Giles Jewett, Jr., Henry Vergi, Shirley Loomis, Doris roach, Helen Darby, and Shelly
    Allen (initial Appellants) timely appealed the conditional use permit to this Court. We note that
    in the Entry Order on initial Appellants’ motion for party status, issued contemporaneously with
    this decision, we dismissed some of these persons as appellants in this appeal for lack party
    status. Initial Appellants Shirley Loomis, Doris Roach, Helen Darby, Shelly Allen, and Vera M. K.
    Kalakowski-Tizabi were dismissed because they do not own or occupy property in the
    immediate neighborhood of the subject property. Although initial Appellants Vera Maria L.
    Kalakowski, Claire Kalakowski, Marion Pratico, Mary Trombley, Mary Solotruck, Giles Jewett, Jr.,
    and Henry Vergi satisfied the elements of interested persons, they are not entitled to appellant
    status because they did not participate in the proceedings below; they are, however, entitled to
    interested person status. Having satisfied the elements of interested person status and having
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    participated in the proceedings below, initial Appellants Marjorie White Southard, Albert
    Trombley, and George Solotruck are recognized as appellants in this matter (Appellants).
    On June 16, 2014 Applicant moved for summary judgment in its favor on all issues
    presented in Appellants’ Statement of Questions. By motion dated June 19, 2014, Applicant
    also challenged the standing of all Appellants and moved to dismiss the appeal. In an Entry
    Order issued contemporaneously with this Decision, we address that motion, granting it in part
    and denying it in part.
    Applicant is represented in the matter by A. Jay Kenlan, Esq. and Appellants are
    represented by Victor J. Segale, Esq.
    Factual Background
    For the sole purpose of putting the pending motions into context the Court recites the
    following facts, which it understands to be undisputed:
    1.     Applicant Farmer Mold & Machine Works, Inc. and its principal Jim Gilmour, seek a
    conditional use permit to establish business operations in an existing but unused 16,000
    square foot building.
    2.     The building is located on an approximately 11.9 acre parcel of land at 2705 Route 7B in
    the town of Clarendon, Vermont. The parcel formerly consisted of two separate lots.
    Lot 1 contained the building, which was owned by Pepsi Bottling Ventures and used as a
    warehouse and distribution center. Lot 2 was owned by Green Mountain Power.
    3.     The parcel is located in the Residential and Commercial Zoning District.
    4.     Applicant is a mechanical and electrical engineering company that designs and builds
    automated material handling equipment.
    5.     Applicant seeks to move from its current facility in St. Petersburg, Florida to the former
    Pepsi Building in Clarendon, where Applicant intends to design, fabricate, assemble,
    package, store, and sell custom machines and parts intended for an international client
    base.
    6.     The machines produced range in size, the largest measuring approximately eight feet
    long, four feet wide, and seven feet high.
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    7.      Applicant proposes renovations to the building that will both accommodate its business
    activities and make the building more energy efficient, including the addition of a
    precision machine shop, installation of a wood pellet storage silo, and the construction
    an on-site septic system.
    8.      All activities other than employee parking and deliveries to and from the building will be
    carried on inside the building. No storage or production activities will take place outside
    the building.
    Analysis
    Applicant now moves for summary judgment on all three Questions in Appellants’
    Statement of Questions. Appellants’ Question 1 challenges the conditional use permit issued to
    Applicant for a “light industrial.”1 Appellants contend that “the permit should have been
    denied as the business should have been classified as a ‘manufacturing’ and ‘assembly’ business
    which is not a permitted use in the Residential and Commercial Zoning district.” (Appellants’
    Statement of Questions at 1, filed Mar. 10, 2014).
    Question 2 relates to Appellants status as interested persons and specifically challenges
    Applicant’s use, asking whether it should be defined as a prohibited “manufacturing and
    assembly” use or as “light industry,” a conditional use in the Residential and Commercial
    District. As to the former portion of Appellants’ question, we address whether the Board erred
    in determining that they were not interested persons more fully in the entry order on
    Applicant’s motion to dismiss issued contemporaneously with this decision. Similar to the latter
    portion of Question 2, Question 3 asks whether the Board was “correct in ‘defaulting’ to the
    definition of ‘light industry’ as used in the Clarendon Zoning Regulations because
    ‘manufacturing’ and ‘assembly’ have no specific definitions in the Clarendon Zoning
    Regulations” in granting Applicant’s conditional use permit. Id. at 2.
    Because we address Appellants status as interested persons in the accompanying entry
    order, the definition of Applicant’s proposed use is the sole legal issue addressed in this appeal.
    It is on this issue that Applicant moves for summary judgment, asking the Court to determine as
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    We note that in this de novo appeal we do not review the decision of the municipal panel to determine whether
    it was proper or not. We therefore construe the question to ask whether Applicant’s use can be approved as a
    “light industrial” use in this de novo appeal.
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    a matter of law and based on the undisputed facts that the proposed development fits the
    definition of “light industry.”
    I.     Summary Judgment Standard
    The Court will grant summary judgment to a moving party upon a showing that “there is
    no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.” V.R.C.P. 56(a). We must “accept as true the [factual] allegations made in opposition to
    the motion for summary judgment” and give the non-moving party the benefit of all reasonable
    doubts and inferences. Robertson v. Mylan Labs., Inc., 
    2004 VT 15
    , ¶ 15, 
    176 Vt. 356
     (internal
    citation omitted); see V.R.C.P. 56(c) (laying out summary judgment procedures). In opposing a
    motion for summary judgment, however, a party seeking to raise a dispute of facts must file
    with the Court “a separate and concise statement of disputed facts, consisting of numbered
    paragraphs with specific citations to particular parts of materials in the record . . . .” V.R.C.P.
    56(c)(1)(A). These materials, whether already in the record or submitted by the party in
    response to the motion, must be in a form that would be admissible in evidence, including
    affidavits and other evidentiary materials. V.R.C.P. 56(c)(2). If the responding party “fails to
    properly support an assertion of fact or fails to properly address another party’s assertion of
    fact,” the Court may “grant summary judgment if the motion and supporting materials—
    including the facts considered undisputed—show that the movant is entitled to it.” V.R.C.P.
    56(e)(3). The Court “need consider only the materials cited in the required statements of fact,
    but it may consider other materials in the record.” V.R.C.P. 56(c)(3).
    II.    Defining Applicant’s Use
    Appellants did not file a statement of disputed facts or any supporting document that
    tend to establish a dispute as to any of the facts asserted by Applicant. We will therefore grant
    summary judgment if justified by Applicant’s motion and the undisputed facts. 
    Id.
     Appellants’
    contend that “the correct characterization, understanding or definition of Appellee’s business”
    is disputed. (Appellant’s Mem. in Opp. To Appellee’s Mot. for Summ. J. at 1, filed July 30 2014).
    Appellants go on to state:
    The key issue to be determined on this de novo Appeal is what is the full extent
    and nature of Appellee’s business proposed to be conducted on the property in
    question relative to the uses allowed in the respective zoning districts and
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    definitions contained (or not contained) in the Clarendon Zoning Regulations.
    How the true nature of the proposed business is defined and understood really is
    at the center of the dispute between Appellants and Appellee.
    Id. at 4. Apart from this assertion, however, Appellants contest no factual description of the
    proposed use as characterized in documents in the record, which includes the application filed
    with the Board. We therefore find Applicant’s proposed use for the building to be undisputed.
    Because the definition of Applicant’s proposed use requires both interpretation and application
    of the Regulations to the relevant undisputed factual descriptions, we conclude that this is a
    question of law appropriate for resolution through summary judgment. See In re Burlington
    Airport Permit, 
    2014 VT 72
    , ¶ 7 (describing “interpretation of a municipal zoning ordinance” as
    a “matter of law” and noting that “[w]hen construing a zoning ordinance, we apply the same
    rules as when construing a statute”); State v. Therrien, 
    2011 VT 120
    , ¶ 9, 
    191 Vt. 24
     (“The
    interpretation of a statute is a question of law that we review de novo.”).
    In considering this legal issue, we interpret a zoning ordinance using the familiar rules of
    statutory construction. In re Appeal of Trahan, 
    2008 VT 90
    , ¶ 19, 
    184 Vt. 262
    . We will
    “construe words according to their plain and ordinary meaning, giving effect to the whole and
    every part of the ordinance.” 
    Id.
     Where the plain meaning of the ordinance is clear it must be
    enforced and no further interpretation is necessary. Vermont Alliance of Nonprofit Orgs. v. City
    of Burlington, 
    2004 VT 57
    , ¶ 6, 
    177 Vt. 47
     (citing Hill v. Conway, 
    143 Vt. 91
    , 93 (1983)).
    It is the stated purposes of the Residential and Commercial District to both “provide for
    residential areas and encourage affordable housing, while permitting commercial enterprises”
    and to “provide for development compatible with existing commercial and residential
    structures.” Town of Clarendon Zoning Regulations (Regulations) § 202(B). The Table of
    Permitted and Conditional Uses, Article III of the Regulations, establishes that “Light Industry
    and Warehouse” use is a conditional use in the Residential Commercial District and that
    “Manufacturing, Processing, and/or Assembly” use is prohibited. Regulations § 305. The
    Definitions section, Article X of the Regulations, defines “Light Industry” as:
    The manufacture of finished products or parts, including processing, fabrication,
    assembly, treatment, packaging, incidental storage, sales, and distribution of
    such products but excluding basic industrial processing. Includes those uses
    which are generally not objectionably because of noise, frequent and/or heavy
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    truck traffic, or fumes. Light industry uses are those which consist of the
    production, processing, cleaning, testing or distribution of materials or goods.
    The Regulations do not define “Manufacturing, Processing, and/or Assembly.” Appellants
    contend that Applicant’s proposed use, as described above in the factual background section,
    should properly be considered a “manufacturing” or “assembly” use and therefore should be
    prohibited. We disagree.
    Based on the plain and ordinary meaning of the definition of “light industry,” some level
    of manufacturing, design, assembly, packaging, storage, sale, and distribution of manufactured
    goods and products is permissible as a conditional use in the Residential and Commercial
    District. This is the exact use described and proposed by Applicant in the documentation
    supporting its application for a conditional use permit and this motion for summary judgment.
    Because Appellants have not contested any of these underlying facts, we take them as
    undisputed.
    The fact that “light industry” includes as part of its definition “the manufacture of
    finished products or parts” clearly indicates that some manufacturing is allowed in the
    Residential and Commercial District, even where the Regulations state that “Manufacturing,
    Processing, and/or Assembly” as a use category is prohibited. This is an apparent ambiguity.
    “Because zoning ordinances limit common law property rights, any uncertainty must be
    resolved in favor of the property owner.” In re Bjerke Zoning Permit Denial, 
    2014 VT 13
    , ¶ 22
    (citing In re Weeks, 
    167 Vt. 551
    , 555 (1998)). Giving Applicant the benefit of this principle, the
    proposed use is a “light industry” use as that term is defined in the Regulations.
    Conclusion
    As noted above, the sole legal issue raised in Appellants’ Statement of Question, other
    than Appellants’ status as interested persons, is whether Applicant’s use can be defined as
    “light industry” and therefore allowable as a conditional use. Appellants raise no issues
    regarding the Regulations conditional use criteria or any adverse impacts of Applicant’s use.
    Having determined that Applicant’s proposed use fits within the definition of “light industry,”
    we answer Appellants’ Questions in favor of Applicant and GRANT Applicant’s motion for
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    Summary Judgment. As this was the only challenge to Applicant’s Conditional Use Permit, that
    Permit, issued by the Town of Clarendon Board of Zoning Adjustment, remains in full effect.
    This concludes the matter before the Court. A judgment order accompanies this
    Decision.
    Electronically signed on January 07, 2015 at 09:23 AM pursuant to V.R.E.F. 7(d).
    _________________________________________
    Thomas G. Walsh, Judge
    Superior Court, Environmental Division
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