Anne C. Rose Revocable Trust Building Permit ( 2008 )


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  •                                   STATE OF VERMONT
    ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
    }
    In re: Anne C. Rose Revocable Trust Building Permit }          Docket No. 290-12-07 Vtec
    (Appeal of Blood, et al.)                   }
    }
    Decision and Order on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
    The following group of twenty-four individuals: Stuart Blood, Lilian Shen, Michael
    S. Zens, Christina M. Robinson, Sally Duston Whitlock, Dean Whitlock, Ben Bradley,
    Nicolette Corrao, Barbara J. DeFelice, Christopher G. Levey, Ehrhard Frost, Brenda
    Courtemanche, Robert J. Pulaski, Cyrus Severance, Linda Matteson, James W. Masland,
    Mary Daly, Frank J. Barrett, Jr., Roberta Traub, Carol Penland, Bob Milanese, Fran Peront,
    Richard Hodge, and Adair Mulligan (Appellant Group), appealed from a December 1, 2007
    decision of the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) of the Town of Thetford which upheld
    the Zoning Administrator’s issuance of a zoning permit1 to Appellee-Applicant the Anne C.
    Rose Revocable Trust. As ruled by this Court in its July 24, 2008 decision relating to party
    status, Appellant Group has party status under 24 V.S.A. § 4465(b)(4).
    Appellant Group is represented by Paul S. Gillies, Esq. and Charles L. Merriman,
    Esq.; Appellee-Applicant is represented by C. Daniel Hershenson, Esq.; Interested Parties
    Jake Guest and Elizabeth Guest have entered their appearance and represent themselves;
    the Town of Thetford has also entered its appearance on its own behalf and is participating
    in this appeal through Michael J. Brown, the Chair of the Selectboard.
    1Although the parties refer to it as a “building” permit, both the application form and the
    Zoning Ordinance refer to it as a “zoning” permit; this decision also will use the term
    “zoning” permit.
    1
    After resolving motions to dismiss in a decision issued on July 24, 2008, the Court
    allowed parties to submit additional issues by summary judgment. Appellee-Applicant
    and Appellant Group have moved for summary judgment on both questions in Appellant
    Group’s Statement of Questions: (1) “[w]hether the [zoning] permit is inconsistent with
    condition 14(k) of the conditional use [approval] issued February 28, 2006, with respect to
    the distance between the septic system and the Connecticut River;” and (2) “[w]hether the
    [zoning] permit is inconsistent with conditions [14](i) and (j) of the conditional use
    [approval] relating to the design of water supply systems and septic systems to minimize
    or prevent the infiltration of flood waters into the water system[,] septic systems and
    discharges into flood waters.” The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted;
    portions of this section are repeated from the Court’s July 24, 2008 decision to the extent
    necessary.
    Appellee-Applicant applied to construct a single-family residence on a 10.1-acre
    parcel of land on Ely Road adjacent to the Connecticut River, in the Rural Residential
    zoning district and in a Flood Hazard Area overlay district. The application was referred to
    the ZBA for conditional use approval. The ZBA held hearings on September 13, 2005,
    October 11, 2005, and December 13, 2005, and issued its conditional use approval decision
    on February 28, 2006. As discussed in this Court’s July 24, 2008 decision, the ZBA’s
    conditional use approval decision became final without appeal. Appellant Group has now
    submitted the audio recording of the December 13, 2005 hearing (Appellant’s Exhibit 16-A),
    in connection with its argument regarding Condition 14(k) of the ZBA decision.
    To understand the context of Condition 14(k), it is important to understand the
    sequence of events at the December 13, 2005 hearing. The ZBA first took evidence on the
    proposed septic system; however, that testimony focused on responding to concerns about
    the potential for contamination of the river by the proposed septic system in the event of
    flooding conditions. The project engineer presented evidence that the potential inundation
    2
    of the leach field would not cause contamination, in that contaminants would remain
    within the flooded soil of the leach field and not be flushed into the river. This concern led
    to discussion of whether the septic tank should be located above grade, and, if so, whether
    it should be required to be water-tight. The location of the septic system within the
    property was not then specifically discussed.
    Following discussion of the septic system, in response to the ZBA’s concerns about
    the potential for additional development on the property in the future, Appellee-
    Applicant’s then-attorney Darrell Hotchkiss proposed limiting all construction to a two-
    acre building envelope, to be located in the northwest corner of the property, farthest from
    the river. Appellee-Applicant proposed that the remaining eight acres of the property
    would be subject to deeded covenants prohibiting further subdivision and development.
    In connection with this proposal, Attorney Hotchkiss submitted a sketch to the ZBA, drawn
    on a 1985 survey of the property, illustrating the location and approximate size of the
    proposed building envelope, together with a memorandum regarding “Protective
    Covenants Against Future Development.” This sketch and memorandum have been
    provided to the Court in connection with the pending motions as Attachment C to the
    Blacklow affidavit submitted by Appellee-Applicant as its Exhibit 2; the sketch is also
    attached to the August 2008 Hotchkiss affidavit. (Appellee-Applicant’s Exhibit 4)
    The ZBA briefly discussed the proposed development’s compatibility with the Town
    Plan. Then, in response to Attorney Hotchkiss’ inquiry as to whether the ZBA needed any
    more information, and his request to close the hearing if no more information was required,
    the ZBA closed the evidentiary portion of the hearing.
    The ZBA then discussed whether to vote immediately or to continue to deliberate on
    the conditional use approval at a later date. Attorney Hotchkiss encouraged the ZBA to
    vote that same evening. It was only in this context, after the closure of the evidence, that
    the only reference to a distance of seven hundred feet (from the river) was made, by
    3
    Attorney Hotchkiss. He said:
    I guess the only thing I would offer, is to just ask you to see
    whether or not this is a reasonable proposal for a reasonable
    use of a ten-point-one-acre parcel, with the development of a
    single-family residence, above the floodplain, probably — and
    I can only say probably — seven hundred feet back from the
    river, and with limitations with what’s been offered in the
    [deeded covenants] memorandum, which again is only because
    this is the extent to which the Roses wish to develop this
    property . . . .
    Attorney Hotchkiss’ affidavit reflects that, when referring to a distance as being “probably”
    seven hundred feet back from the river, he indicated the northerly boundary of the
    property, which measures about nine hundred feet in depth from the road to the river.
    Following this comment, no further mention was made by anyone at the meeting
    regarding a distance to the river. The ZBA decided to vote on the application that evening
    rather than postponing the vote to a later date. The ZBA approved the application in a
    motion that had as its “only condition” that “the Applicant works out with the
    Conservation Commission, in terms of how that particular covenant is placed in the deed
    and to whose benefit it runs,” referring to the covenants protecting from development the
    remaining eight acres of the property, beyond the two-acre building envelope.
    The ZBA issued its written notice of decision on February 28, 2006. The notice of
    decision recites the documents submitted to the ZBA in connection with the application,
    including “sets of plat plans prepared by Thomas C. Otterman,” without reference to their
    dates, as well as the Hotchkiss memorandum, and a “set of site plans and site section . . .
    prepared by Jonathan Rose.” In connection with the present motions, to explain the
    sequence of discussion of the septic system’s location, the parties have also provided a
    “Plot Plan and Wastewater Disposal System Design” prepared for Appellee-Applicant by
    Common Sense Septic Design. The document’s date of September 13, 2005 suggests that it
    4
    was a proposal presented at the first day of hearing; it shows a wastewater disposal system
    much closer to the river than the location within the two-acre building envelope shown on
    the 2007 Otterman plan and approved in the unappealed ANR Permit.
    Paragraph 14 of the conditional use approval decision sets out thirteen conditions,
    labeled (a) through (m). Condition 14(k) states: “[t]he septic system shall be located as
    shown on the plat plan at least 700’ from the Connecticut River, shall be located to avoid
    impairment to them or contamination from them during flooding. Additional protection
    for sealing the top of the tank where the openings are located shall be applied.”
    Condition 14(i) states: “[a]ll new and replacement water supply systems shall be
    designed so as to minimize or prevent the infiltration of flood waters into the system.”
    Condition 14(j) states: “[a]ll new and replacement septic systems shall be designed to
    minimize or prevent infiltration of flood waters into the systems and discharges from the
    systems into flood waters.”
    On March 17, 2006, Attorney Hotchkiss sent a letter to the Zoning Administrator
    requesting “correction/clarification” of portions of the written conditional use approval
    decision, including specifically the reference to the location of the septic system “at least
    700’ from the Connecticut River” in Condition 14(k). However, in the end the February
    2006 ZBA decision was neither corrected not appealed, and became final without the
    requested changes.
    After receiving the February 2006 ZBA decision, the project engineer prepared a site
    plan for the project, showing the two-acre building envelope in the northwestern portion of
    the parcel, and depicting the septic system in the most northwesterly corner of that
    envelope, between the road and the proposed location of the house and garage. This plan
    is labeled as a “topographical survey” and will be referred to as “the 2007 Otterman Plan.”
    The engineer’s affidavit reflects that he prepared the topographical survey, which is
    5
    internally dated July 26,2 2007, and shows the building envelope and site plan information,
    from the sketch that was submitted by Attorney Hotchkiss, which was approved by the
    ZBA at the December 13, 2005 hearing and was referred to in the ZBA’s February 2006
    conditional use approval decision.      Appellant’s Exhibit 5-A; Appellee’s Exhibit 2,
    Attachment D.
    The 2007 Otterman Plan demonstrates that the proposed septic system is placed as
    far from the river as is possible on the property. By scale from that copy of the plan, the
    distance between the septic system and the river is approximately 900 feet when measured
    parallel to the northerly boundary of Applicant’s property, but is only approximately 560
    feet measured at the closest point, perpendicular to the river. No point on Applicant’s
    property is more than seven hundred feet from the river if measured perpendicularly to the
    river at its closest point.
    In August of 2007, Applicant received its Wastewater System and Potable Water
    Supply Permit for the project from the Agency of Natural Resources, which required the
    project to be completed as described on the Otterman site plan and topographic survey,
    both dated 7/26/07, and on a 2003 sheet of construction standards and details.
    In September of 2007, Applicant received a zoning permit to construct the proposed
    residence and associated structures. The Zoning Administrator’s approval of the permit
    states: “[a]pplication per decision (2-28-06) of permit application #3406; must comply with
    requirements of said decision and location shown on Otterman 7-26-07 topographic
    survey.”    The Zoning Administrator’s affidavit of August 11, 2008 reflects that he
    interpreted the conditional use approval decision as requiring the septic system to be
    2 The preparation date of this document is 25 July 2007, but it was stamped as received by
    the ANR’s Wastewater Management Division on July 26, 2007, and everyone referring to
    the document appears to have used the July 26 date to refer to it.
    6
    located seven hundred feet from the river “when measured along the northern boundary”
    of the property, making the location shown on the 2007 Otterman Plan consistent with
    Condition 14(k) of the conditional use approval decision.
    Appellants appealed the zoning permit to the ZBA; and appealed the ZBA’s decision
    to this Court in the present appeal.
    Question 2 of the Statement of Questions
    Question 2 asks only “[w]hether the [zoning] permit is inconsistent with conditions
    (i) and (j) of the conditional use [approval] relating to the design of water supply systems
    and septic systems to minimize or prevent the infiltration of flood waters into the water
    system septic systems and discharges into the flood waters.” Appellant Group suggests in
    its argument, however, that the design of the septic system was not sufficiently reviewed to
    determine whether it meets the requirements of Conditions 14(i) and (j).
    Issues as to whether the design of the septic system will function so as to meet the
    requirements of the conditional use approval is not before the Court within Question 2 of
    the Statement of Questions; no enforcement case has been brought under 24 V.S.A. §§ 4451
    and 4452 or under 24 V.S.A. § 4470(b). As both the conditional use approval decision and
    the state ANR Permit became final without appeal, any issue of whether those approvals
    comply with state standards or Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
    requirements, or whether the system as designed meets the ordinance requirements for
    conditional use approval, cannot be raised in the present appeal. Rather, Question 2 only
    raises the issue of whether the zoning permit that is the subject of this appeal is consistent
    with the requirements imposed by the conditional use approval decision.
    The zoning permit that is the subject of the present appeal, by its very terms, is
    consistent with the requirements of Conditions 14(i) and 14(j) of the conditional use
    approval decision, as it specifically refers to the ZBA’s February 28, 2006 decision and states
    7
    that the project “must comply with requirements of said decision and location shown on
    Otterman 7/26/07 topographic survey.”
    The language of the zoning permit does not impose any additional requirements
    that might conflict with Conditions 14(i) and (j), nor is it in any way impossible to comply
    both with the zoning permit and with Conditions 14(i) and (j). Since the requirements of
    both documents are identical as to Conditions 14(i) and (j), summary judgment as to
    Question 2 must be granted in favor of Appellee-Applicant.
    Question 1
    Because the conditional use approval decision became final without appeal, all that
    is before this Court in Question 1 of this appeal is the interpretation of the alleged internal
    inconsistencies in Condition 14(k).
    As it does in construing zoning ordinances, the Court relies upon the normal rules of
    statutory construction when construing permit conditions. ANR v. Weston, 
    2003 VT 58
    , ¶
    16, 
    175 Vt. 573
     (mem.). The primary concern is to implement the intent of the drafters. In
    re Williston Inn Group, 
    2008 VT 47
    , ¶ 14 (mem.). The court must give “effect to the whole
    and every part” of the permit, In re Stowe Club Highlands, 
    164 Vt. 272
    , 279–80 (1995), to
    “avoid rendering one part mere surplusage,” In re Appeal of Jenness and Berrie, 
    2008 VT 117
    , ¶ 24, and so that the construction does not produce an absurd result. Wesco, Inc. v.
    Sorrell, 
    2004 VT 102
    , ¶14, 
    177 Vt. 287
    . Zoning permits, like zoning regulations, must be
    construed by resolving any ambiguity in favor of the landowner. Weston, 175 Vt. at 577;
    see also Appeal of Weeks, 
    167 Vt. 551
    , 555–56 (1998).
    To determine whether the zoning permit is consistent with Condition 14(k) of the
    conditional use approval decision, the Court must first resolve whether the requirement in
    Condition 14(k) that the septic system be located “as shown on the plat plan” is a reference
    to the same location as that shown on the 2007 Otterman Plan, despite the fact that the 2007
    8
    Otterman Plan was prepared more than a year after the December 13, 2005 hearing and the
    February 2006 conditional use approval decision.
    The undisputed facts and affidavits establish that the July 26, 2007 Otterman
    topographical survey and site plan was prepared by the engineer from, and shows the
    same building envelope as, the sketched site plan presented and voted on at the December
    13, 2005 ZBA hearing and referred to in the ZBA’s unappealed February 2006 conditional
    use approval decision.
    The remaining issue is whether the phrase “at least 700΄ from the Connecticut River”
    in any way modifies or alters the requirement that “[t]he septic system shall be located as
    shown on the plat plan.” Several circumstances suggest that the reference to seven
    hundred feet was not intended by the drafters of the ZBA decision to additionally limit
    construction of the septic system to a location at least seven hundred feet from the river,
    measured perpendicularly. First and most importantly, no location on the property would
    meet that additional requirement. The intent of the drafters of the conditional use approval
    decision cannot have been to create the absurd result of precluding the landowner’s use of
    the very location on the 2007 Otterman Plan that the ZBA itself had approved at the
    hearing and had required in the earlier clause of Condition 14(k).
    In addition, a seven-hundred-foot perpendicular distance is not required by any
    provision of the zoning ordinance3 or by any State law or regulation; in fact, the septic
    system location approved by the unappealed ANR permit would violate such a distance.
    The fact that such distance is not mandated by any law or regulation suggests that the
    drafters did not intend to impose the phrase “at least 700 feet from the Connecticut River”
    as an additional condition, but rather to ensure that the septic system would be placed
    3 The fact that setbacks are ordinarily measured along a line perpendicular to the relevant
    boundary does not define a measurement method for the septic system location.
    9
    within the agreed building envelope pointed out by Attorney Hotchkiss at the December
    2005 ZBA hearing (as distinct from the location originally proposed in September 2005 for
    the septic system).
    Further, the audio recording of the December 13, 2005 ZBA hearing indicates that
    the sole reference to a seven-hundred-foot distance from the river was made, not by a
    technical witness, but by Attorney Hotchkiss, after the evidentiary portion of the hearing
    had closed, and in the context of an argument in favor of concluding the voting that
    evening. Late in the hearing, after the ZBA had stated that it did not require any additional
    information, it turned to the decision of whether to vote immediately or to continue
    deliberations at a later date. Attorney Hotchkiss referred to “development of a single
    family residence above the floodplain, probably — and I can only say probably — seven
    hundred feet back from the River,” without any mention of the septic system. He referred
    to his sketch, indicating the distance to the proposed building envelope along the northerly
    boundary of the parcel.
    In context, the focus of his argument was his view of the evident reasonableness of
    the proposed development, to encourage the ZBA to vote that evening rather than to delay
    its decision. He did not propose the ‘probable’ seven-hundred-foot distance as an
    additional limitation on development, nor did he link the distance in any way to the
    location of the septic system or the house. Even if he had done so, an oral representation at
    a hearing is not binding on an applicant unless it is translated into an unambiguous
    condition of a written ZBA decision. See, e.g., In re Kostenblatt, 
    161 Vt. 292
    , 298–99 (1994).
    In the present case the reference to the seven-hundred-foot distance in the ZBA’s written
    conditional use approval decision is unquestionably ambiguous, for the reasons discussed
    above.
    Because the distance 700-foot reference in Condition 14(k) is ambiguous, and
    conflicts with the specific locational requirement of the unambiguous referenced plan, it
    10
    does not constitute a separate enforceable condition of the conditional use approval. Such
    conditions must be specific and “must be expressed with sufficient clarity to give notice of
    the limitations on the use of the land.” In re Farrell & Desautels, Inc., 
    135 Vt. 614
    , 617
    (1978); see Clayton v. Clayton Investments, Inc., 2007 VT 38A, ¶ 13 (mem.) (quoting In re
    Farrell). The requirement for the septic system to be located as shown on specific plans is
    expressed with the requisite clarity, and is reinforced by the fact that the later unappealed
    ANR Permit for the septic system approved the identical location as shown on the identical
    plans. This is not a case in which a distance limitation or measurement method is found in
    the relevant zoning ordinance, or is found in an applicant’s application materials. Even if
    the seven-hundred-foot reference did not conflict with the specific location on the plans,
    neither the zoning ordinance nor the application assists in determining how that reference
    was intended to be measured. The seven-hundred-foot reference by itself does not provide
    “sufficient clarity to give notice of the limitations on the use of the land,” and therefore
    cannot be enforced as a permit condition. See In re Farrell, 135 Vt. at 617.
    In context, the requirement of the ZBA decision that the septic system be installed in
    the “location shown on the plat plan“ is the enforceable condition of the conditional use
    approval. By contrast, the reference to “at least 700 feet from” the river is a subordinate
    clause simply assisting the reader in further defining or locating the building envelope, as
    indicated along the northerly boundary of the property by Appellee-Applicant’s attorney
    during the hearing. While it would have been helpful if the ZBA conditional use approval
    decision had been corrected or appealed to eliminate the apparent conflict, a close reading
    of the condition, in the context of the December 13, 2005 hearing, resolves the apparent
    conflict in favor of the landowner at the location shown on the plat plan, that is, the
    location shown on the 2007 Otterman Plan. The zoning permit, requiring compliance with
    “location shown on Otterman 7-26-07 topographic survey,” is therefore consistent with
    Condition 14(k) of the conditional use approval decision.
    11
    Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that
    Appellee-Applicant’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Questions 1 and 2 of the
    Statement of Questions is GRANTED, and Appellant Group’s Motion is DENIED,
    concluding this appeal.
    Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 30th day of September, 2008.
    _________________________________________________
    Merideth Wright
    Environmental Judge
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 290-12-07 Vtec

Filed Date: 9/30/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/24/2018