Appeal of Teeter

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 2005
Docket195-11-03 Vtec
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} Appeal of Teeter } Docket No. 195-11-03 Vtec } }

Decision and Order on Appellees' Motion to Dismiss and for Summary Judgment

Appellant Stanley Teeter appealed from a decision of the Planning Commission[1] of

the Town of Norwich approving a three-lot subdivision of property of Appellee-Applicants

Edwin and Joyce Childs. Appellant is represented by Brad W. Wilder, Esq.; Appellee-

Applicants Edwin and Joyce Childs are represented by C. Daniel Hershenson, Esq.; and

the Town of Norwich is represented by Frank H. Olmstead, Esq. Appellee-Applicants have

moved to dismiss Questions 1, 2 and 3 of the Statement of Questions as moot or beyond

the scope of the Environmental Court's jurisdiction, and have moved for summary judgment

in their favor on Questions 4 and 5 of the Statement of Questions.

The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Appellee-Applicants

own an approximately rectangular 85.94-acre parcel of land, bounded on its northeasterly

truncated corner by Turnpike Road, a town road. An existing fifty-foot-wide non-exclusive right-of-way (the "fifty-foot-wide right-of-way") runs southerly from Turnpike Road on

Town land along an existing parcel owned by Jorgensen[2], and continues on Town land

along or near the easterly boundary of Appellee-Applicants' property. Appellee-Applicants'

property is bounded both on its easterly and its southerly sides by land now owned by the

Town, on its westerly side by land of the Barbara G. Britton Revocable Trust, and on its

northerly side by Appellant's land.

In October of 1978, Allen H. Britton, Jr., conveyed to the Town of Norwich a 7.3-

acre triangular parcel of land bounded on its westerly side by the Childs parcel at issue in

the present appeal and extending some 70 feet onto the Town land lying to the south of

the Childs parcel, bounded on its northeasterly side by Turnpike Road, and bounded on its

southerly side by then-retained lands[3] of Britton. In that conveyance to the Town, Britton

reserved the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way running from Turnpike Road to what was then

Britton's retained land. The deed also provided that "[i]t is further expressly a condition

of this conveyance that:"

1. Edwin S. Childs and Joyce B. Childs, contig[u]ous land owners along the westerly boundary of the parcel herein conveyed shall use a part of the reserved right-of-way for access to the lands of the Childs. * * * 5. That the land is not to be used for any over night activities. Appellee-Applicants propose to subdivide their property into three parcels containing

18.08, 6.00, and 61.86 acres, respectively, and to deed the 61.86-acre parcel to the

Town, with conservation restrictions being held by the Upper Valley Land Trust.

After the subdivision approval had been appealed to this Court, but before the

briefing of these motions, in March of 2004, in contemplation of and conditioned on this

subdivision and the conveyance to the Town of the 61.86-acre parcel, the Town granted

to Appellee-Applicants a non-exclusive easement over the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way, plus

an easement of an additional narrow triangle of land to filling in the small area between

the existing fifty-foot-wide right-of-way and the easterly boundary of the 61.86-acre parcel,

with the right to locate and the duty to maintain a private driveway or road within that

right-of-way for vehicular and pedestrian access to the 6-acre parcel and to the 61.86

parcel, and for underground residential utility lines to the 6-acre parcel. In the 2004 right-

of-way easement deed, Appellee-Applicants relinquished to the Town any claim to use the

portion of the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way continuing southwesterly of the end of that

additional triangle. In the 2004 right-of-way easement deed, the Town may (but has no

duty to) improve, repair, or maintain any driveway or road located within the easement

area. On land owned by the Town, the Town maintains a hiking trail known as the Gile

Mountain Trail, extending towards Gile Mountain at least from the end of the 2004 right-

of-way deeded to Appellee-Applicants. The proposed 18-acre parcel has frontage on Turnpike Road, is bounded on the

north by Appellant's property, and contains Appellee-Applicants' existing residence.

Access to it is by an existing driveway directly from Turnpike Road. No issues are raised

in this appeal with respect to the proposed 18-acre parcel.

The proposed 6-acre parcel has frontage only on the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way on

Town land. It is proposed to have access to Turnpike Road by a private road or driveway

running along the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way. The proposed 6-acre parcel is intended to

be developed in the future for single-family residential use; the subdivision plan shows a

building envelope for such future development.

The remaining 61.86-acre parcel is proposed to be conveyed to the Town after

conservation easements and use restrictions have been conveyed to be held by the Upper

Valley Land Trust. Access to it is proposed to be over the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way and

the new easement triangle. It is not proposed for development of any structures.

The proposed three-lot subdivision qualifies to be considered as a minor subdivision

under §2.1(B) of the Subdivision Regulations, and to proceed directly to final plan approval

as the total density does not exceed one unit per twenty acres. §2.3(A)(1). Two of the

conditions imposed in the Planning Commission's approval of the proposed subdivision

addressed the issue of the access for the 6-acre lot: that no building permit be issued for

a residential structure until a town access permit has been issued for the intersection of the driveway with Turnpike Road, and until a permanent right-of-way has been granted

and recorded by the Town for the portion of that driveway located on Town land. It is not

necessary to the present motions to determine whether these conditions have been

satisfied by the March 2004 right-of-way easement (Exhibit E) and the access permit

attached to the affidavit of Edwin S. Childs.

In the present appeal the Court only has jurisdiction to determine whether the

proposal complies with the requirements of the subdivision regulations. The Court cannot

otherwise resolve private property disputes as between the parties, and cannot interpret

deed language unrelated to the requirements of the subdivision regulations. See, e.g.,

Appeal of Keough, Docket No. 244-11-02 Vtec (Vt. Envtl. Ct., March 11, 2003).

In Questions 1 and 2 of the Statement of Questions, Appellant challenges whether

the language in condition 1 in the 1978 deed from Britton to the Town, conditioned on

allowing the Childs to use "a part of the reserved right-of-way for access to" their land,

was adequate to provide Appellee-Applicants with rights of access from the proposed 6-

acre parcel and the proposed 61.86-acre parcel to Turnpike Road. Because the Town

owns the land lying under the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way, and there is no dispute that the

Town has deeded directly to the Childs a new easement for driveways to serve the 6-acre

parcel and the 61.86-acre parcel over that fifty-foot-wide right-of-way, the question of

whether Appellee-Applicants already held sufficient rights of access over the fifty-foot-wide right-of-way has become moot.

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Related

§ 301
Vermont § 301(8)

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Bluebook (online)
Appeal of Teeter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-teeter-vtsuperct-2005.