fox v. bridgewater

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedDecember 28, 2023
Docket521-8-12 wrcv
StatusPublished

This text of fox v. bridgewater (fox v. bridgewater) 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
fox v. bridgewater, (Vt. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT:

SUPERIOR COURT . CIVIL DIVISION Windsor Unit © . Docket # 521-8-12 Wrev JAMES C. FOX and MARY JANE FOX

Ve - TOWN OF BRIDGEWATER

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER

This property tax appeal came before the Court for a final hearing on October 25 and 30 and December 5, 2013. A site visit was taken on the first day prior to taking evidence. Appellant James Fox (“Appellant” or “Mr. Fox”) represented himself. The Town of Bridgewater (the “Town” or “Bridgewater”) was represented by Attorney Robert E. Fletcher.

The Court ruled at the close of Appellant’s evidence that Appellant had produced sufficient evidence to overcome the presumption of validity of the Town’s valuation of the property, and proceeded to take evidence from the Town as well as rebuttal evidence from the Appellant.

The Appellant challenges the Town’s position that on April 1, 2012 the highest and best use of this 4-acre parcel of vacant land was as a developable building lot, and seeks a finding that its highest and best use was as vacant land with limited forestry value. The values advocated by each party correspond to that party’s position on highest and best use. Based on the findings of fact and the conclusions of law set forth below, the Court concludes that the property does not have a sole highest and best use, but has a mixed highest and best use: it has limited potential as a developable lot, with recreation and forestry as a more likely use. Based on this determination, and for the reasons set forth below, the Court sets the fair market value at $30,000 and the equalized value at $29,400.

Findings of Fact

The property consists of 4 acres and is a triangle located at the intersection of Latham Road and Perkins Road in Bridgewater. It is in a part of Bridgewater that is characterized by large estate-type properties including neighboring properties owned by current or former corporate executives of large national companies. It is largely wooded and is surrounded by other wooded land as well as open land that rises in eligiafidn dpitiie)

JAN 23 2044

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ~ WENDSOR UNIT eastern side. The portion near the intersection of the two roads is relatively flat. A fairly narrow strip of land along Perkins Road (the east boundary and the hypotenuse of the triangle) rises at an average grade of 14% in a northerly direction, but west of the narrow strip the land drops down a bank. On the Latham Road side, the frontage is low and wet, and a stream runs through the property and under Perkins Road through a culvert.

Most of the property is at the base of a bowl into which surrounding higher lands drain. The Vermont Agency of Natural Resources maintains a website with a map showing the Vermont Significant Wetland Inventory. It shows a large circle of yellow overlaying a significant majority of the parcel, and the legend identifies the yellow circle as “Class II Wetland.” Exhibit 7. The wetland designation does not front either Perkins Road or Latham Road. The Vermont Wetland Rules prescribe a 50’ buffer zone contiguous to the boundaries of a Class II wetland unless otherwise designated by the Secretary of ANR. Exhibit 17, Vermont Wetland Rules, effective August 1, 2010 at 10.

. Another page of the Natural Resources Atlas shows hydric soils between the yellow circle designating wetlands and the intersection of Perkins and Latham Roads. Exhibit 21. Hydric soils are “soils that are saturated, flooded or ponded long enough during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part . . . hydric soils shall be synonymous with the terms saturated soils and seasonally saturated soils as used in 10 V.S.A. Sec. 902(5).” Jd. at 6.

The ANR website contains disclaimers stating that the information displayed is approximate and that the data is not survey quality and should not be relied on for precise location:

This Vermont Significant Wetland Inventory (V SW) Map should not be relied upon to provide precise information regarding the location or configuration of significant wetlands. This map is intended only to denote the approximate location and configuration of significant wetlands. The actual boundaries of the wetlands depicted on this map must be determined in the field by Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) staff.

Exhibit 18.

Bridgewater has no zoning, so there are no restrictions on development of the parcel except for State regulations applicable to the location of septic and water systems, and wetlands restrictions. Allowed uses in Class Ii wetlands include activities such as silviculture, road and utility repair, specified recreational activities, and wildlife management. (See Exhibit 17, pages 19-21 for a more complete and specific list.)

The Town assessed the parcel based on a highest and best use of development as a residential building lot. It values the first two acres of all vacant land in the Town as a potential residential building lot. The Town presented evidence of value based on this highest and best use from two witnesses: Lister Thomas Standish, who valued the property at $63,300, and Kevin Leen of Vision Government Solutions, a company that performs mass appraisals for municipal governments, who valued the property at $61,000.

The determination of highest and best use was made by the Listers, and was simply adopted by Mr. Leen and not reevaluated by him when he appraised the parcel. Thus, the evidence of highest and best use came from Mr. Standish alone. His testimony was that the first two acres of all vacant land parcels in Bridgewater are presumed to be developable building lots, and that Appellant in this case has not proved that the parcel is not developable. The Town’s position is that because Appellant’s evidence shows that a mounds waste disposal system could be located on the non-wetlands portion of the property sufficient to serve a 9-bedroom residence, the owner has not shown it is not developable, and therefore it is valued as a developable building lot.

He noted that the Listers made an adjustment from the base land value! for a homestead, which is $32,000 per acre, by applying a 25% reduction based on the physical features of the land Another adjustment was applied by multiplying the value by 1.4 based on the desirability of the neighborhood, thereby increasing the value by 40%. These adjustments, together with another one to more accurately reflect actual sales values, produced a value of $54,900 for the 2-acre homestead plus $8,400 for the additional 2 acres for a total value of $63,300. Thus, the Town’s position is that an adjustment was made to reflect the wetness conditions of the land, but that use of the parcel as a developable lot is not precluded, and that the wetness characteristics that affect development have been taken into account. The Town’s evidence did not include a factual or quantitative basis for either the 25% reduction for property characteristics or the 1.4 upward adjustment for desirability of neighborhood.

Mr. Leen’s appraisal opinion of $61,000 was based entirely on the Town’s identification of the highest and best use as a developable building lot, without adjustment for any characteristics of the specific parcel. He took land value from the updated 2012 land schedule, identified three sales of properties he considered comparable except that all had improvements on them, subtracted the value of the improvements on each to identify a range from $44,000 to $69,000, and reconciled them at $61,000.

Appellant introduced no evidence to challenge the Town’s evidence of the fair market value of the property if highest and best use is determined to be as a developable building lot. His evidence was that highest and best use is not as a developable building lot but rather for nondevelopment uses such as forestry or recreation.

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fox v. bridgewater, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-bridgewater-vtsuperct-2023.