Brattleboro Chalet Motor Lodge, Inc. v. Thomas

279 A.2d 580, 129 Vt. 405, 1971 Vt. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 1, 1971
Docket155-70
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 279 A.2d 580 (Brattleboro Chalet Motor Lodge, Inc. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brattleboro Chalet Motor Lodge, Inc. v. Thomas, 279 A.2d 580, 129 Vt. 405, 1971 Vt. LEXIS 281 (Vt. 1971).

Opinion

Shangraw, J.

This is a bill in chancery brought by the plaintiff, a New Hampshire corporation, against the Secretary of State, as the state officer charged with the responsibility of enforcing billboard regulations under the statute. Plaintiff seeks to permanently enjoin the defendant from enforcing a removal order of an “on-premise sign” erected by the plaintiff on its property' in the Town of Brattleboro, Vermont.

*407 The case was heard by the chancellor on September 28, 1970 and findings of fact were made and filed. An order and decree followed wherein it was determined and adjudged that the sign in question was not in violation of the statutory law of the State of Vermont relating to the erection and maintenance of signs and more particularly as erected and maintained it was not in violation of 10 V.S.A. § 335(b).

It was further ordered that the defendant is permanently and strictly restrained and enjoined from ordering or causing the removal of said sign, or in any way interfering with its maintenance by the plaintiff, in its present form and location.

The defendant has appealed from certain findings and also from the order and decree. This appeal from the decree brings the whole case, including all questions litigated in the court below which affect the final decree, if they are briefed, to this court for review. Century Indemnity Co. v. Souther Adams Mead, 121 Vt. 434, 436, 159 A.2d 325 (1960).

The rectangular shaped sign, the subject matter of this controversy, has a 10 feet vertical measurement by a 30 feet horizontal measurement. It has two faces, on each of which appears the words in very large letters “CHALET MOTOR LODGE”. The sign is erected on two 10-inch steel beams set in concrete and attached by a steel bolt to the framing of a wooden stairway at the west end of a motel building on plaintiff’s property. This stairway gives access to the second floor of the motel. The sign extends above the roof line of the motel.

Plaintiff’s land runs westerly from the west of Route, U.S. 5, to the east right-of-way line of Interstate 91, and is about 1000 feet north of the intersection of Vt. Route 9, U.S. Route 5, and an exit ramp of Interstate 91. Interstate Highway 91, and the access ramps leading to and from it, are limited access facilities.

The motel structure is rectangular in shape, about 230 feet long, and runs approximately east-west on plaintiff’s lot. In passing plaintiff’s premises, Interstate 91 and Route U.S. 5 run approximately parallel courses, nearly north by northeast and south by southwest.

Under the provisions of 10 V.S.A. § 333, owners or occupants of real property may erect and maintain thereon on- *408 premises signs advertising the sale or lease thereof of activities being conducted thereon. Such signs are subject to regulations set forth in this statute, of which we are not concerned in the present case. We do however have occasion to consider 10 V.S.A. § 335 (b) which provides:

No on-premise sign may be erected if it is so located as to be readable primarily from a limited access facility.

Whether or not the sign in question is in violation of the above quoted section of the statute, as claimed by the defendant, leads us to findings made by the chancellor, 8 to 10 inclusive.

8) Travellers utilizing the two highways have views of the sign here in controversy as follows:

A. Travelling south:
(1) From the westerly (southbound) lane of Interstate 91, the sign comes into view and may be read, at least by a stopped traveller, at a point on Defendant’s Ex. A marked “7”. This point is about 915 feet from the sign itself. It remains visible for only about 50 feet southerly, then disappears from view, and again becomes visible and readable from a point about 200 feet north of the point on the highway opposite the sign. This point is also opposite the lane to the exit ramp. It continues readable for about 150 feet, when its angle would begin to obscure it. The sign is thus visible and readable to a traveller proceeding south on Interstate 91 for a total of about 200 feet, interrupted, the first 50 feet of which, at interstate speeds, would take only a fraction of a second.
(2) From U.S. Route 5, the sign is readable at a point (4 on Defendant’s Ex. A) about 485 feet north of the motel entrance, and 625 feet from the sign itself. It remains readable for about 50 feet, then disappears, and becomes readable again 240 feet from the entrance. It remains continuously in view until the entrance is reached. It is thus readable, travelling south, for about 290 feet, interrupted, from a highway having a 40 m.p.h. speed limit, *409 contrasted with the 65 m.p.h. interstate highway speed limit.
B. Travelling north:
(1) From the easterly (northbound) lane of Interstate 91, the sign becomes visible about 1700 feet southerly from its location, with view of it being intermittent due to buildings and trees. It continues readable to a point about 200 feet south of the sign, when it becomes no longer readable. Almost all of this theoretically readable distance has, however, no practical utility to the plaintiff, because it occurs after the traveller has passed the off-ramp which he would have to use to reach the motel premises. The sign is also readable for a short distance, from the off-ramp from the northbound lane.
(2) From U.S. Route 5, the sign can first be seen and read from point 3 on Defendant’s Ex. A, 730 feet from the motel entrance and 850 feet from the sign itself. It remains readable until the traveller reaches the motel entrance. Along this 730 foot stretch, it is at least as visible and readable as from any point on any highway.

9) Plaintiff’s customers cannot be broken down into categories which tell the routes they utilize to reach the motel, but it is apparent they use all the major highways, including Interstate 91, Route U.S. 5, and Vermont Route 9.

10) The sign is so located on plaintiff’s land that it is closer to the right-of-way line of Interstate 91 than it is to Route U.S. 5. It is, however, closer to the edge of Route U.S. 5 than it is to the east edge of the southbound lane of Interstate 91, the only lane which could, at a point opposite the sign, carry potential motel customers, since those in the northbound lane would have passed the exit ramp. The sign faces Route U.S. 5 slightly more directly than it does Interstate 91.

Continuing, in Finding No. 11 the chancellor reached the conclusion that the sign in controversy, as located, is not “readable primarily from a limited access facility” within the meaning and intent of 10 V.S.A. § 335 (b).

*410 Included in Finding No.

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Bluebook (online)
279 A.2d 580, 129 Vt. 405, 1971 Vt. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brattleboro-chalet-motor-lodge-inc-v-thomas-vt-1971.