Appeal of Highlands Dev. Co, LLC & JAM Golf, LLC

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedAugust 11, 2005
Docket194-10-03 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Appeal of Highlands Dev. Co, LLC & JAM Golf, LLC (Appeal of Highlands Dev. Co, LLC & JAM Golf, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of Highlands Dev. Co, LLC & JAM Golf, LLC, (Vt. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} Appeal of Highlands Development Co., } Docket No. 194-10-03 Vtec LLC and JAM Golf, LLC } }

Decision and Order on Appellants’ Partial Motion for Summary Judgment

This decision concerns an appeal from the Decision of the City of South Burlington Development Review Board (DRB) dated September 25, 2003, in which the master plan presented by Appellants Highlands Development Co., LLC, and JAM Golf, LLC, for the Vermont National Country Club (VNCC) development was approved in part, denied in part, and approved with conditions. Appellants are represented by William A. Fead, Esq.; the City, as Appellee, is represented by Amanda S. E. Lafferty, Esq. Appellants have moved for partial summary judgment challenging the adoption, scope, and applicability to their project of the newly adopted master plan provisions in the City‟s Land Development Regulations (LDRs): §§ 15.07 and 15.18. Appellants‟ Motion for Summary Judgment asks this Court to address the following issues as presented by Questions 1, 2, and 3 of Appellants‟ Statement of Questions:  Whether LDRs §§ 15.07 and 15.18, relating to Master plan review and Approval, were adopted lawfully on May 12, 2003;  Whether the Master Plan Ordinance exceeds the zoning and planning authority of the City pursuant to the Vermont Planning and Development Act (the Act), 24 V.S.A. §§ 4301–4496 (2003) (as amended §§ 4301–4483 (2004)); and  Whether master plan approval was needed for the Appellants‟ previously approved planned unit development (PUD) known as the VNCC.

Factual Background The following facts are not genuinely disputed unless otherwise noted: 1. The property at issue, known as “Highlands at the VNCC,” is a ±418-acre PUD with twelve residential neighborhoods surrounding a golf course that straddles Dorset Street in the South East Quadrant (SEQ) zoning district. The PUD was originally approved in 1996 and 1997. 2. After a number of transactions between various entities, including a deed foreclosure, Appellant Highlands Development Co., LLC took title to the land permitted for residential development and Appellant JAM Golf, LLC took title to the golf course lands. 4. Appellant Highlands Development Co., LLC does not develop the individual residential parcels itself. Rather, it sells development parcels with multiple lots to individual residential developers, all under the auspices of the VNCC PUD. Highlands‟ successors thereafter build and market their projects as they see fit. 5. Four neighborhoods are fully built: Four Sisters, Nowland Farm, Holbrook/Tabor, and Fairway Drive. 6. The three individual developments within the VNCC PUD currently at issue are the Old Schoolhouse and Water Tower neighborhoods, both of which were purchased by the Wedgewood Development Company, Inc., and a tract known as Residential Parcel 3, or the Clubhouse Area, which remains unsold. 7. In 1996 and 1997, the Planning Commission first approved the VNCC PUD as a mixed use development on ±418 acres with 191 single-family residential units, forty multi- family units, and an eighteen-hole golf course and country club, with the associated roads and utilities throughout the PUD. In the present appeal, the parties did not submit these previous permits and subsequent approvals. The Court only has before it the applications and prior decisions for amending the Old Schoolhouse and Water Tower neighborhoods, as well as Residential Parcel 3. 8. Since the initial PUD approval, Appellants or their successors have applied to amend the original VNCC PUD by increasing the number of residential units. 9. Under the City‟s old Subdivision and Zoning Regulations, after the original PUD was approved as a major subdivision, developers had to first file a preliminary sketch plan with the DRB for classification and discussion to improve individual development tracts. See City‟s Ex. A, § 201. After sketch plan approval, they had to file a preliminary plat application and map with complete details of the project, which may be approved with conditions. See id. § 203. Lastly, a final plat application had to be filed and recorded that conforms to the conditions required at the conclusion of the Planning Commission‟s review. See id. § 204. 10. The City purportedly adopted the new LDRs on May 12, 2003, which replaced the old Subdivision and Zoning Regulations in their entirety. Before the adoption of the new LDRs, the City mailed notice of the proposed zoning amendment to all neighboring towns and the regional planning commission. However, the City failed to send prior notice to the Vermont Department of Housing and Community Affairs. See Appellants‟ Ex. 3, at 6–7. The first public hearing on the amended LDRs was noticed in the Burlington Free Press on March 8, 2003. See City‟s Ex. O. 11. The new LDRs changed the review process for larger developments. Two of the new LDRs‟ provisions, §§ 15.07 and 15.18, require certain major subdivisions and PUDs to undergo master plan review before preliminary plat review could proceed. Master plan review allows the whole project to be discussed at the DRB level and allows an applicant to request an amendment to a portion of that project, which can be reviewed concurrently with the master plan. The DRB can thus determine the overall impacts of a development on public facilities and institutions, protect open space and natural areas, and discourage the piecemeal development that occurs when multiple amendments to a PUD are filed separately. 12. In 2002, before adoption of the amended LDRs, Appellants filed applications for Subdivision Sketch Plan Review to amend the original VNCC PUD by increasing housing units for the Old Schoolhouse and Water Tower neighborhoods, as well as Residential Parcel 3. See City‟s Ex. B, C, H, I, J, K. 13. Later, in April of 2003 and after the LDR amendments were noticed, Appellants filed applications for Preliminary Subdivision Plat Review of the Old Schoolhouse and Water Tower neighborhoods. City‟s Ex. D, E, G, L, M. Appellants did not file a Preliminary Plat application for Residential Parcel 3 until they submitted their master plan application. 14. In June 2003, the DRB reopened hearings on Appellants‟ applications for Preliminary Subdivision Plat Review because the Board determined that master plan review was required prior to the DRB‟s consideration of Appellants‟ applications, pursuant to LDR § 15.07. 15. Appellants submitted their master plan application on June 23, 2003, in which the Appellants proposed how the individual unsold lots may be developed in the future. 16. On September 25, 2003, the DRB issued its Findings of Fact, Findings on the Applicable Criteria in LDR § 15.18(A) and (B), and its Decision and Conditions, which approved Appellants‟ Preliminary Subdivision Plats, denied portions of the master plan application, and attached conditions to other aspects of the project. See Appellants‟ Ex. 5.

Discussion

Appellants allege that the Master Plan Ordinance is void because the City failed to provide prior notice the Vermont Department of Housing and Community Affairs (DHCA) when adopting the new Land Development Regulations. At the outset, we note that Appellants‟ notice of appeal was filed within the two-year period to challenge zoning amendments. 24 V.S.A. § 4494(b) (new § 4483(b)). The Vermont Planning and Development Act requires the City, fifteen days prior to proposing a bylaw amendment, to send copies of the proposed zoning amendment to the planning commission of neighboring towns, the director of the regional planning commission, and the DHCA. 24 V.S.A. § 4403(e) (new § 4441(e)). The City admits that it failed to deliver a copy of the proposed bylaw revisions to DHCA “with proof of receipt, or mail[] by certified mail, return receipt requested.” 42 V.S.A. § 4403(e); see also City‟s Opp‟n to Appellants‟ Mot. for Partial Summ. J.

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