Appeals of Shantee Point Estates

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 2000
Docket144-8-99 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Appeals of Shantee Point Estates (Appeals of Shantee Point Estates) 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
Appeals of Shantee Point Estates, (Vt. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

} } Vermont Environmental Court In re: Appeals of } Shantee Point Estates, Inc. } Docket Nos. 169-9-98 Vtec, } 144-8-99 Vtec, 152-8-99 Vtec; and } 10-1-00 Vtec } }

} Stephen Dana, } Plaintiff, } } Franklin County, SS v. } Franklin Superior Court } Shantee Point Estates, Inc., } Defendant, } } v. } Docket No. S 313-97 Fc } Town of St. Albans, } Third-Party Defendant. } }

DECISION and ORDER In Docket No.169-9-98 Vtec, Appellant Shantee Point Estates, Inc. appealed from a decision of the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) of the Town of St. Albans upholding a Notice of Violation for constructing a road without site plan approval. In Docket No.144-8- 99 Vtec, Appellant appealed from the Planning Commission=s July 6, 1999 decision denying site plan approval for the construction of a segment of the road. In Docket No.152-8-99 Vtec, Appellant appealed from the ZBA=s July 15, 1999 decision upholding a Notice of Violation for constructing the road without subdivision approval. In Docket No.10- 1-00 Vtec, Appellant appealed from the Planning Commission=s January 4, 2000 decision, issued in writing on January 11, 2000, denying site plan approval for the construction of a segment of the road in a revised location. By agreement of the parties, the four Environmental Court cases were consolidated, and the parties agreed that the time to appeal for all four cases would run from the last final decision in any of them. The related

1 Franklin Superior Court case, Docket No. S 313-97 FC, was heard before Judge Wright in conjunction with the Environmental Court cases, but was not formally consolidated with them. Appellant/Defendant Shantee Point Estates, Inc. is represented by Liam M. Murphy, Esq. and Lisa B. Shelkrot, Esq.; Intervenor/Plaintiff Stephen Dana is represented by Brian P. Hehir, Esq.; and the Town was represented throughout these proceedings by David A. Barra, Esq., and has been represented since September 18, 2000 by Paul S. Gillies, Esq.

Effect of Prior Rulings: The December 15, 1999 decision and order in S 313-97 FC, determined that the disputed segment of road is a private road and not a Class IV Town Highway, and that the boundary between Plaintiff=s and Defendant=s property is the northerly line of Lot 11 and its extension easterly. The Court ordered that a portion of the so-called connector road which had been constructed on Plaintiff=s property had to be reconstructed so that it runs on Defendant=s property. As the Environmental Court order of January 17, 2000 noted, all issues in Docket No.169-9-98 Vtec were concluded as of the December 15, 1999 decision in S 313-97 FC determining the road to be a private road. The Environmental Court summary judgment order of June 1, 1999, had determined that Appellant was required to apply for and obtain site plan approval for the so-called Aconnector segment@ of the new road, but that if the old road were determined to be private, and therefore could be discontinued, then site plan approval would not be required for the remainder of the new road other than the connector segment. By agreement of the parties, the time to appeal runs from the last final decision in the four consolidated Environmental Court cases. As the Environmental Court order of January 17, 2000 also noted, Docket No. 152- 8-99 Vtec was concluded by the Environmental Court summary judgment order of that date, ruling that subdivision approval is required for the new road.

An evidentiary hearing was held on the remaining issues in all the related Environmental Court and Franklin Superior Court matters before Merideth Wright, sitting both as Environmental Judge and specially assigned as Presiding Judge. Both Assistant

2 Judges were unavailable for this matter. 4 V.S.A. '112. Upon consideration of the evidence and the written memoranda and proposed findings, the Court finds and concludes as follows. Factual findings made in the June 1999 decision in Docket No. 169- 9-98 Vtec and in the December 15, 1999 decision in Docket No. S 313-97 FC, are hereby incorporated by reference, and are repeated here only as necessary to clarify this remaining decision. Shantee Point is a peninsula of land running roughly north to south and extending into Lapan Bay of Lake Champlain in the Town of St. Albans. A road runs westerly from Maquam Shore Road to Lake Champlain, and turns southerly and runs along the shore down the peninsula. There is no dispute that the portion of the road from Maquam Shore Road to the Samson-Dana line(also identified as Athe turnaround@) is a Class III town highway, known as Town Highway 27 or Samson Road. The road continues along the shore as a gravel road, known as Shantee Point Road. In its original configuration, it turned towards the southeast on Appellant/Defendant=s property between leased lots 19 and 21, and then turned again towards the south behind lots 21 and 22 to serve the remaining leased lots and Intervenor/Plaintiff=s property at the end of the Point. The first .38 mile of this road extending southerly from the Samson-Dana line to the boundary between lots 10 and 11 is the portion of the road that was disputed, and which the December 15, 1999 decision in Docket No. S 313-97 FC ruled to be a private road. The remainder of the gravel road continuing towards the southwest and south was undisputed to be a private road. The parties agree that the entire private gravel road is not constructed to the standards in '4 of the Town road ordinance adopted in 1988, in that its traveled way is less than 28 feet wide and it is unpaved. The width of the right of way is undefined by the Partition Order, both on Intervenor/Plaintiff=s property and on Appellant/Defendant=s property. In 1997, Appellant/Defendant constructed an alternative road from the front road near the lot 10-11 boundary, extending easterly away from the lake at that location, and then turning to the south behind lots 11-19, joining with the original road behind lot 21 to serve the remaining leased lots and Intervenor/Plaintiff=s property at the end of the Point. The portion of this alternative road which connected the original road (in front of

3 Intervenor/Plaintiff=s lots 1 through 10) with the new road running behind lots 11 through 19, was initially constructed on a portion of what the Court later ruled to be Intervenor/Plaintiff=s property, and was redesigned to be located entirely on Appellant/Defendant=s property. Site plan approval for the original design of this alternative road is the subject of Docket No. 144- 8-99 Vtec; site plan approval for the revised design of this alternative road is the subject of Docket No. 10-1-00 Vtec. For the purposes of this discussion, the road in its original configuration, extending down the shore in front of lots 11 through 19, and turning towards the southeast between lots 19 and 21, is referred to as Athe old road@ or Athe front road.@ The road in its new configuration is referred to as Athe new road@ or Athe back road.@ The segment of road extending from the existing shore road over and behind lot 11 to connect with the back segment running behind lots 11 through 19 is referred to as Athe connector segment@ and is the subject of the two applications for site plan approval.

Docket No. S 313-97 Fc The remaining questions to be resolved in the Superior Court case are, first, whether under the Partition Order Appellant/Defendant may relocate the road without obtaining Intervenor/Plaintiff Dana=s agreement and, second, whether the Awidth and quality@ of the new road is at least as good as that of the old road. The language governing relocation of the roadway is found in the partition order of the Franklin Superior Court in Docket No. S 323-88 Fc, issued as of April 9, 1990. It states that nothing in the partition order Ashall be interpreted [or] construed to prohibit the . . . access roadway, as it crosses the . . .

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