Appeal of Remy

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 12, 2004
Docket93-6-03 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Appeal of Remy (Appeal of Remy) 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 Remy, (Vt. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

Appeal of John Remy } } } Docket No. 93-6-03 Vtec } }

Decision and Order

Appellant John Remy appealed from a decision of the Development Review Board (DRB) of the Town of Williston denying his application for preliminary phasing allocation.

Appellant is represented by Carl H. Lisman, Esq.; the Town of Williston is represented by Paul S. Gillies, Esq. The parties filed a stipulation of 30 numbered paragraphs of facts on October 28, 2003. In addition, an evidentiary hearing was held in this matter before Merideth Wright, Environmental Judge. The parties were given the opportunity to submit written requests for findings and memoranda of law. Upon consideration of the evidence and the written memoranda and proposed findings, the Court finds and concludes as follows.

Appellant owns a 7.7-acre parcel of land on the north side of Route 2 in the Village Center zoning district. The property is relatively flat, sloping gently to the north, and is relatively open, except for an existing house and barn, and a wooded buffer around the side and rear lot lines. Immediately to the west of Appellant's property along Route 2 is the Williston Bed and Breakfast; immediately to the east of Appellant's property along Route 2 is the former Lantman dwelling. The Town's elementary and middle school and Town library adjoin Appellant's property to the west. The school's athletic and play fields are located to the west and north (rear) of Appellant's property. Town property containing recreational or so-called " multi-use" paths is located to the north of Appellant's property. Additional Town property is located to the east of Appellant's property, behind the former Lantman dwelling. Immediately to the east is a small residential subdivision.

Appellant's property is located almost directly across Route 2 from the Town's municipal buildings, including the fire and police departments, the town manager, town clerk, and planning and zoning offices. Appellant's house and barn are located on the parcel, near its Route 2 frontage. Appellant operates an antiques business on the property. Within walking distance of the property are shops, churches, the town library, elementary and middle school, and other amenities. An existing concrete sidewalk runs along the north side of Route 2 at the property location.

Appellant proposes to subdivide the parcel into nine residential lots. This proposal requires subdivision approval but does not require approval as a planned residential development or a planned unit development, and Appellant has not proposed the project as a planned residential development or a planned unit development. Appellant proposes to develop the project in phases, with two units in the first year, four units in the second year, and two units in the third year.

Lot 1, fronting on Route 2, is proposed to be 36,000 square feet in area and to contain Appellant's house and barn. Its existing driveway with access onto Route 2 is proposed to be eliminated, so that Lot 1 and the eight new lots will all have access by a new public street to be constructed by Appellant, ending in a cul-de-sac. Appellant proposes to reserve a 64-foot-wide strip between Lot 5 and Lot 6, that could provide future public road connection to the east. A five-foot-wide sidewalk is proposed to run from the Route 2 sidewalk along the public road and around the cul-de-sac, with two spur paths: one connecting to the recreational paths to the north, between Lot 6 and Lot 7, and one connecting to the school property to the west, along the southerly end of Lot 9.

Lots 2, 3, 4 and 5 are each slightly larger than the 20,000-square-foot minimum lot size. Lots 6, 7, and 8, at the end of the cul-de-sac, are somewhat larger in area, from 23,320 to 29,780 square feet. Lot 9 contains a similar-sized building envelope to Lots 2 through 5, but is 74,820 square feet in area, most of which is restricted to non-building uses due to wetlands. However, the restricted area that is part of Lot 9 is not preserved by easement or as an open-space lot. Each of the proposed building sites satisfies the setback, density, lot coverage, building coverage and building height requirements of the regulations.

Permitted uses in the Village Center zoning district include single-family and two-family residences and home occupations. The purpose of the district is " to create a compact, well- planned village center composed of single and two family dwellings together with neighborhood retail and service businesses, schools, and government and religious buildings."

The Town of Williston has adopted a process of Growth Management Review for proposed residential projects, to ensure that the rate of residential growth is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan and the Town's capacity to accommodate such growth. Article V of the Subdivision Regulations. Under that process, each proposed residential subdivision that has received concept plan approval may be considered for phasing allocation in the following calendar year. All eligible subdivisions are evaluated according to the standards found in ' 550; in the present case, Appellant appeals the rating given to his project under this section and the consequent denial of phasing allocation.

Constitutionality and Purpose of Section 550

Appellant argues that the point rating system in ' 550 is unconstitutionally void for vagueness. As applied to this application, it is not. It could be revised to be more complete or more specific, but it meets the test of providing sufficiently objective evaluation standards for the decisionmaker to provide a score for each of the competing applications to enable those application to be placed in a ranking or priority order. That is all that is at issue in this case.

When a scoring system is provided that divides a category into thirds, it is rational and reasonable to allocate the points available in that category evenly, so that each third contains a possible 6b points. Such an approach applied to a category worth a total of twenty points would make 6b the dividing point between the low and medium categories and 13" the dividing point between the medium and the high categories. Within each category, it is equally rational and reasonable to determine whether the project should rank higher or lower within that category by determining if it exhibits more or fewer of the features tested by that particular criterion. This is the approach applied by the Court in this de novo proceeding. Further, the Subdivision Regulations have been amended twice since the adoption of the 2000 Comprehensive Plan in January of 2001 and must be interpreted in light of the purpose of those regulations as carrying out that plan.

Application of Section 550

Location

A fair reading of the Town of Williston's Comprehensive Plan shows that the Town has focused its growth control efforts on avoiding sprawl so as to accommodate concentrated mixed use development in certain areas and to preserve both its rural and open space uses and historic character in other areas. The Comprehensive Plan recognizes the difficult problem of " planning for the development of a large area [that surrounding the Taft Corners intersection at Route 2 and Route 2A] in a manner that creates many of the amenities associated with traditional downtowns while also avoiding the more typical patterns of suburban commercial development." Plan, at p. 23. Towards that end, an important goal of the Town's growth management policies is to transform the development surrounding the Taft Corners intersection into a " true multi-function downtown area" with relatively high densities and a " compact mixture of office, retail, restaurant, service and residential uses." Plan, at p. 23.

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Appeal of Remy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-remy-vtsuperct-2004.