Appeal of Sunset Cliff, Inc.

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2004
Docket26-2-01 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Appeal of Sunset Cliff, Inc. (Appeal of Sunset Cliff, Inc.) 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 Sunset Cliff, Inc., (Vt. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

Appeal of Sunset Cliff, Inc. } } } Docket No. 26-2-01 Vtec } }

Decision and Order on Pending Motions

This is a closed appeal in which Appellant Sunset Cliff, Inc. appealed from a decision of the Development Review Board (DRB) of the City of Burlington granting final plat approval to Appellee-Applicant Keystone Development Corp. for construction of a planned residential development. In the litigation which concluded in Environmental Court by a decision issued on April 18, 2003, Appellant Sunset Cliff, Inc. (Sunset Cliff) was represented by Liam L. Murphy, Esq. and Lisa B. Shelkrot, Esq.; Appellee-Applicant Keystone Development Corp. (Keystone) was represented by Vincent A. Paradis, Esq.; and the City was represented by Kimberlee J. Sturtevant, Esq.

On August 2, 2004, under the above-captioned docket number, Sunset Cliff (now represented by Robert B. Hemley, Esq.) filed a motion " to enforce this Court's order issued April 18, 2003 and to enjoin any development work until all permits are issued." The motion asserted, without affidavits, that a principal of Keystone had retained the company Green Mountain Chipping to remove trees from the northeast woods on the property, and that the trees to be removed were to be identified as those in the tree removal plan that was the subject of the above-captioned litigation and the Court's April 2003 order.

Copies of the motion were provided to Attorney Sturtevant and to Attorney John W. O" Donnell, Esq. A telephone hearing was held before Judge Crawford, in Judge Wright's absence, at which Attorneys Hemley and Sturtevant participated. Attorney O" Donnell informed Attorney Hemley and the Court that neither he nor anyone else in the firm of Bergeron, Paradis & Fitzpatrick had yet been authorized to represent Keystone on this matter, and did not participate in the hearing. The hearing resulted in the issuance of an order on August 2, 2004 that the April 2003 order 'shall be fully enforced and respected by all parties' and that Keystone not " undertake any development work or site activity in furtherance of the proposed development of the site which is the subject of" the April 2003 order. The allegations contained in the motion related to the removal of trees in the northeast quadrant of the property.

On August 9, 2004, Attorney Paradis entered his and Attorney O" Donnell's appearance on behalf of Keystone in this matter and moved that the Court dissolve what they characterized as " the temporary restraining order issued August 2, 200[4]." His cover letter specifically requested the Court Manager to " direct this filing to Judge Crawford, since I believe he continues to preside over the order." On August 11, 2004, Attorney Williams filed with the Court a letter stating that Attorney Hemley will be out of the office and out of the country until August 30, 2004, and requesting that Attorney Hemley be given until September 7, 2004, to file a written response opposing the motion to dissolve. Attorney Williams' letter also requested that the Court " confirm in its scheduling order that the August 2, 2004 Order will remain in effect pending a final decision on the Motion to Dissolve."

Judge Crawford was first available to review the August 9 and 11 filings on his return on August 18, 2004, at which time he issued an entry order referring the matter back to " the regular Environmental Court Judge." He did not address the request to postpone the matter to accommodate Attorney Hemley's absence. The earliest time available in Judge Wright's calendar to hear argument on the pending motions (after this August 18, 2004 entry order) was Monday, August 23, 2004, as she was in trial the full days of August 19 and 20. It was therefore scheduled for a telephone hearing at noon on August 23, 2004. Attorneys Paradis, O" Donnell, Williams and Sturtevant participated in the telephone hearing, which was recorded on audio tape.

As to the tree retention plan and the grove of large pine trees in the northeastern quadrant of the site, the Court's April 2003 decision stated as follows on pages 12-14 of the decision:

The tree retention plans for the areas to be disturbed show all trees at least 10 inches in trunk diameter, but do not show the sizes, species or tree types except for the trees to be retained. Some 435 trees over 10" in diameter are shown on the plans as being removed [footnote deleted questioning whether some of the trees shown as being retained would in fact survive] for the project, many of which are located in the grove of large pine trees in the northeastern quadrant of the project. This quadrant contains much of the site's upland (non-wetland) area, and it is understandable that the development of the site is concentrated in this area. However § 28- 7(b)(9) [footnote deleted] of the Subdivision Regulations first requires that the grove of trees 'shall be preserved as far as possible by harmonious design," and also requires that all types of trees over 10" in diameter be preserved, unless it can be demonstrated " that retention of any such tree is not appropriate."

Appellee-Applicant's project engineer described the tree retention plan generally as having been designed to keep existing trees " where practical," but focused on the three-trees-per-unit requirement of § 28-7(b)(6), rather than on the tree or grove preservation requirements of § 28- 7(b)(9). Appellee-Applicant did not show that the project itself was designed, in the area of the grove of trees, to preserve the grove of trees " as far as possible." Appellee-Applicant did not show that any consideration was given to determining the placement or design of any of the buildings or parking areas (or to reducing the number or size of buildings or number of units), so as to preserve the grove of trees in the northeast quadrant of the site, or even so as to avoid having to remove certain of the larger trees within that grove, or to minimize the number or importance, to the grove as a whole, of the specific trees that would have to be removed.

Appellee-Applicant provided an analysis by a forester of the five largest [footnote deleted] trees, showing that they are not healthy and suffer from ice storm damage. However, even if the retention of those particular five trees is not appropriate, for the remaining 430 trees over 10" in diameter slated for removal, Appellee-Applicant has not demonstrated that retention of any of those trees is " not appropriate," as required by § 28-7(b)(9) of the Subdivision Regulations. Appellee-Applicant has not sought or obtained a waiver of that provision from the DRB and City Council under § 28-11 of the Subdivision Regulations. Accordingly, neither the overall layout and design of the proposed PRD, nor the tree retention plan, can be approved as designed under § 28-7(b)(9) of the Subdivision Regulations.

The April 2003 decision concluded that the project could not be approved as designed, under the then-existing City ordinances, and therefore denied the application, specifically " without prejudice to any further application addressing the issues discussed in this decision, in particular regarding the layout and design of the project, the tree removal plan, protection of the pine grove, . . . [and other listed issues, and]. . . without prejudice to any future application for a smaller or differently designed proposal on the property that addresses the requirements of the City's zoning ordinance and subdivision regulations." While the Court understands that the City was at one time working on revisions to its subdivision regulations, no party has disclosed whether any revisions have yet been proposed for public comment.

Because the April 2003 decision concluded the appeal then before the Court, Keystone is correct that Docket No.

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Related

§ 4470
Vermont § 4470(b)

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Appeal of Sunset Cliff, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-sunset-cliff-inc-vtsuperct-2004.