Appeal of Parker

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 2005
Docket217-12-03 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Appeal of Parker (Appeal of Parker) 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 Parker, (Vt. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} Appeal of Parker, et al. } Docket No. 217-12-03 Vtec } }

Decision and Order on Appellants' Motion for Summary Judgment

Appellants Sheree O. Parker, Keith Parker, Kelly Burke, Renee M. Burke, Anne

Burke, Raymond Burke, Pauline Dwinell, Sterling Dwinell, Denise Felch, Robert Felch,

Vera Frasier, Craig Frasier, Melvin Ladd, Claire Ladd, Anita Ladd, Lyn Morris, Joe Morris,

Merriam Newhall, Fred Newhall, Laurie Nuissl, Paul Rico, Herbert Roya, Sherlie Roya,

Richard W. Turner, Pamela Turner, Allison Wolf, and Tom Wolf appealed from a decision

of the Development Review Board (DRB) of the Town of Berlin, granting the conditional

use application of James Bond and Patricia Buxton, doing business as Cedar Spring, to

remove, store, load into trucks and transport water in bulk from a spring. Cross-

Appellants-Applicants ("Applicants") James Bond and Patricia Buxton cross-appealed from

the same decision.

Appellants Pamela Turner and Richard W. Turner entered their appearance

representing themselves; the remaining Appellants are represented by Gerald R. Tarrant, Esq.; Cross-Appellants James Bond and Patricia Buxton entered their appearance

representing themselves; Interested Persons Vernon Turner, Merrylees Turner and Robert

A. Buxton entered their appearance representing themselves. The Town of Berlin,

represented by Robert Halpert, Esq., participated in a telephone conference but did not

otherwise enter an appearance or participate in this appeal.

Appellants move for summary judgment on Questions 1, 3, 4, and 7 from

Appellants' statement of questions. The following facts are undisputed[1] unless otherwise

noted.

The property proposed for development is located at 667 Stewart Road in the Rural

Residential (R-40) zoning district in Berlin. A natural spring is located on the property in

a wooded area approximately a quarter mile from the road, within a Class II wetland area.

It overflows and provides water for a brook which flows into a beaver pond. In 2001

Applicants installed tiles in the spring to a depth of about 14 feet and extending

approximately a foot above the level of the ground.

Applicants propose to remove water from the spring for bulk sale to a water bottling

company. They propose to maintain the flow in the brook at at least 20 gallons per

minute. Applicants propose to remove water from the spring by installing a submerged

pump in the spring, which will pump the water through pipes to two storage tanks of

unspecified size located near the edge of the woods. From the tanks, the water is proposed to be fed by gravity to a hydrant or valve located in an 8' x 10' shed or structure

near the road. A truck loading and turnaround area is proposed near the road.

Applicants propose to operate from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday,

and to operate year-round during whatever periods that the road is passable and there is

an adequate overflow of water. They propose eight truck trips per day to come to the

property, load with water, and transport the water off the site. The expected weight of a

loaded truck is approximately 54,000 pounds.

At a series of DRB hearings in 2003, the Board considered whether the proposed

project was a permitted or conditional use in the R-40 district, whether therefore under

§2.3(D) it was prohibited in the R-40 district, and whether it fell within the exemptions in

§3.10, or whether it could be considered a cottage industry under §4.2(C) or "extraction

of earth resources for commercial purposes" under §4.3(B). Applicants opted to apply to

the DRB for approval of the project as a conditional use under §4.3(B).

Unlike the zoning regulations of some other municipalities, the Berlin Zoning Bylaws

prohibit all uses not specifically listed as allowed permitted or conditional uses in a district,

§2.3(D), unless they fall within the uses specifically exempted under §3.10. That is, the

Zoning Bylaws do not provide a mechanism for approval of other uses similar to those in

the listed categories. Unless water from an on-site spring or well is to be piped off-site, the development

of an on-site spring or well on a property serves some proposed use on the property,

such as an agricultural or recreational pond, a group of residences, a business or

professional office, a school, a retail store, a car wash, a public or private recreational

swimming pool, a bottling plant, a truck terminal, or some other use. Some of these uses

may be allowed permitted or conditional use categories in a particular zoning district, while

others may not be.

The Rural Residential (R-40) zoning district was established with the purposes of

protecting fragile natural resources, promoting continued agricultural activities, preventing

strip development along major roadside corridors, and encouraging moderate density

residential development, including limited commercial uses in appropriate locations. Table

2.3(A). Its listed use categories are found in Table 2.3. The question of whether the use

proposed for a property is allowed in this or any particular zoning district does not depend

on whether it is served by an on-site water supply; rather, it depends on the classification

or use category of the proposed use. We therefore must analyze the functional

components of Applicants' proposal to determine their use category or categories under the

Zoning Bylaws.

Applicants' proposal does not include a residence; therefore it does not fall in the

use category of either home occupation or cottage industry, both of which require the business owner to reside on the lot. §4.4. Rather, Applicants' proposal is a bulk water

shipping business, consisting of water storage tanks, a utility building housing the water

standpipe or valve, and a truck loading and turnaround area. It does not fall within any of

the listed allowed permitted or conditional uses in the R-40 zoning district.

Separate from the specific R-40 zoning district regulations, §4.3 allows the use

category of "extraction of earth resources" to be considered for conditional use approval in

any zoning district. Applicants argue that bulk shipping of groundwater from the property

should be considered as "extraction of earth resources" under this section.

Extraction of earth resources is defined in §7.2 as:

The on-site removal of surface and subsurface materials, including soil, sand,

gravel, stone, rock, minerals or similar materials. Typical uses include sand and

gravel pits and quarries, and related operations such as the crushing, screening,

and temporary storage of materials on-site (see Section 4.3). Specifically excluded

from this definition is the grading and removal of dirt which is associated with and

incidental to an approved site plan or subdivision, or an excavation associated with

an accepted agricultural practice.

Extraction of earth resources requires conditional use approval under §5.6, in addition to

meeting the specific standards of §4.3. The application under §4.3 must include erosion

control and site reclamation plans showing, among other things, depth to groundwater, which suggests in itself that groundwater is not within the earth resources considered for

removal under this section.

While groundwater passes through the ground underneath its surface, it is not a

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Related

Drinkwine v. State
274 A.2d 485 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1970)
Fire District No. 1 v. Graniteville Spring Water Co.
152 A. 42 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1930)
Chatfield v. Wilson
28 Vt. 49 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1855)

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