B & M Realty Act 250

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedNovember 12, 2015
Docket103-8-13 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of B & M Realty Act 250 (B & M Realty Act 250) 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
B & M Realty Act 250, (Vt. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Vermont Unit Docket No. 103-8-13 Vtec

B&M Realty A250 Applic. DECISION ON THE MERITS

B&M Realty, LLP (Applicant) seeks to develop an area consisting of 167.7 acres on three separately deeded lots located between Woodstock Road (U.S. Route 4) and Old Quechee Road near the I-89 southbound exit ramps in the Town of Hartford, Vermont (Town).1 In 2005, Applicant and then-landowners David and Ernest Punt requested an amendment to the Hartford Zoning Regulations on and around lot 8-196 (the Punt property) to accommodate future development of the area. The Town of Hartford Planning Commission (the Planning Commission) voted to approve the zoning amendment on September 26, 2005, and the Town Selectboard held a public hearing on the matter in November of that year. Six years later, on May 18, 2012, Applicant filed an application with the Planning Commission for a zoning permit, as required by the applicable provisions of the Town of Hartford Zoning Regulations, to develop the three lots into a mixed commercial and residential use development to be known as the Quechee Highlands project (the Project). The Planning commission granted the application in a written decision dated October 17, 2012. Applicant subsequently filed an application for an Act 250 permit as required by 10 V.S.A. § 6081. District Environmental Commission #3 (the District Commission) denied the application in a written decision dated July 3, 2013, and Applicant filed a timely appeal in this Court. Applicant raises fourteen questions for our review, all addressing the Project’s compliance with three of the ten Criteria for Act 250 permit review in 10 V.S.A. § 6086. The first

1 Two lots are located on Woodstock Road (U.S. Route 4) and one, lot 8-196, is located on Old Quechee Road.

1 two questions address the project’s compliance with Criteria 5 and 9(k). The remaining twelve questions address the Project’s compliance with the Two Rivers-Ottauquechee Regional Plan (Criterion 10). In our October 7, 2014 decision, in response to Applicant’s motion for partial summary judgment, we concluded that the 2007 version of the Two Rivers-Ottauquechee Regional Plan would be relevant to our Act 250 Criterion 10 analysis. In reaching this conclusion, we answered Applicant’s Questions 6 and 10. Prior to our merits hearing Applicant withdrew Applicant’s Question 11. The Court held a merits hearing on March 17, 2015. The Planning Commission and the Vermont Natural Resources Board (NRB) participated as Appellees. Interested parties David, Carol, and Charles Rataj (the Ratajs) also participated. Applicant is represented by Paul Gillies, Esq., the Planning Commission is represented by Robert E. Woolmington, Esq., and Melanie Kehne, Esq. represents the Natural Resources Board. The Ratajs are self-represented in this matter. Before turning to our findings of fact and decision on the merits, we address the Ratajs’ post-hearing motion to re-open the evidence.

Motion for New Trial

On April 14, 2015, the Ratajs filed a motion to reopen the evidence from the March 17, 2015 merits hearing and asked the Court to accept two additional exhibits and allow them to call a rebuttal witness. The Ratajs claim their proposed exhibits contradict the accuracy of evidence and testimony offered by Applicant’s traffic expert, Mr. Saladino, concerning vehicle accident numbers and road safety. Further, the Ratajs argue that late disclosure of Mr. Saladino’s revised memorandum warrants an opportunity to recall Mr. Saladino and offer a rebuttal witness. At the March 17, 2015 hearing, through Mr. Saladino, Applicant offered traffic accident data from the Vermont Agency of Transportation (VTrans) reporting that between 2006 and 2010, there were ninety-eight accidents along U.S. Route 4, with an additional thirty-three accidents along U.S. Route 5. Mr. Saladino testified that a crash must result in over one thousand dollars of property damage or in serious injury or death for the accident to be reported by VTrans. Additionally, Mr. Saladino testified that, based on his 2012 report,

2 Applicant’s proposal to add several traffic turning lanes and a traffic control light, as well as its recommendation to reduce the posted speed limit, would adequately address road safety concerns associated with the proposed development. Applicant also offered Mr. Saladino’s revised report, Exhibit 1006, which incorporated traffic data made available since Mr. Saladino’s previous 2012 report. The revised report concludes that the existing conditions on the northbound I-89 exit along U.S. Route 4 should be downgraded from a service level of E to F. At the hearing, the Regional Planning Commission and the Ratajs objected to the admission of Exhibit 1006 because the revised report had not been disclosed until ten days before trial. Applicant admitted that the updated report had only been produced ten days before trial but offered that, although the updated report included more recent traffic numbers, the only revision to Mr. Saladino’s substantive conclusions was to downgrade the level of service he had previously determined for the northbound exit. Applicant further argued that, since its proposed mitigation would raise the service level to B—far better than the existing congestion level—the conclusion that congestion had worsened since the 2012 report, was not material. In order to have the most recent information before it, the Court admitted the exhibit, but explained that it would leave the record open for three weeks until April 7, 2015 for the parties to file any responses or to possibly recall Mr. Saladino concerning Exhibit 1006. In their April 15, 2015 motion, the Ratajs ask the Court to consider two exhibits as rebuttal to Mr. Saladino’s testimony and revised report. The Ratajs also request that they be permitted to recall Mr. Saladino and to offer their own rebuttal witness in order to challenge the information provided in the untimely disclosure of Exhibit 1006. The Ratajs’ Exhibit A, a printout from the Hartford Police Department, shows the number of accidents recorded by the Hartford Police along U.S. Route 4 to be about double the figure recorded by VTrans for the same period. The Ratajs’ Exhibit B is meeting notes from the Vermont Highway Safety Alliance discussing the tendency of drivers to drive 4-7 miles per hour above the posted limit along U.S. Route 4 in the area of the proposed development. In its response filed on April 30, 2015, Applicant opposes the Ratajs’ request to reopen the evidence. Applicant argues that the Ratajs were afforded a full opportunity to participate at the hearing and should not now be permitted to file documents and present arguments that

3 should have and could have been presented at the hearing. Further, Applicant contends that the Ratajs’ request to reopen the evidence is untimely as the deadline for all post-trial filings has passed. Moreover, Applicant argues the evidence submitted is irrelevant because the mitigation steps Applicant proposes would raise the level of service from either an E or an F to a B, and thus there is no need to challenge Mr. Saladino’s conclusion in his revised report. A motion to reopen the evidence will be treated as a motion for a new trial under V.R.C.P. 59(a). See In re Petition of Twenty-Four Vt. Utilities, 159 Vt. 339, 356–57 (1992). Rule 59(a) provides that, after a bench trial, “on a motion for a new trial . . . , the court before which the action has been tried may open the judgment if one has been entered, take additional testimony, amend findings of fact and conclusions of law or make new findings and conclusions, and direct the entry of a new judgment.” V.R.C.P. 59(a); see also V.R.E.C.P. 5(a)(2) (providing that the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure apply to appeals from decisions of a district commission in Act 250 proceedings “so far as applicable”).

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Bluebook (online)
B & M Realty Act 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-m-realty-act-250-vtsuperct-2015.