Geddes PUD

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 20, 2010
Docket231-11-09 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Geddes PUD (Geddes PUD) 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
Geddes PUD, (Vt. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} In re Geddes Planned Unit Development } Docket No. 231-11-09 Vtec (Appeal of Lindala) } }

Decision and Order on Pending Motions

Appellant Roger Lindala appealed from a decision of the Planning Commission

of the Town of Bakersfield, which granted site plan approval for a nine-lot Planned Unit

Development (PUD) major subdivision proposed by Appellee-Applicants Gary and

Gloria Geddes (Applicants).1 Mr. Lindala has appeared and represents himself;

Appellee-Applicants are represented by Joseph F. Cahill, Esq.; and Interested Persons

Michael Curry and Deborah McFarlane are represented by Thomas G. Walsh, Esq. and

Annie Dwight, Esq. The Town of Bakersfield has not entered an appearance in this

appeal.

Applicants have now moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that Mr.

Lindala’s notice of appeal was untimely filed, and therefore that this Court lacks

jurisdiction of this appeal. In response, Mr. Lindala has moved to extend the time for

filing an appeal under Vermont Rules of Appellate Procedure (V.R.A.P.) 4(d), and has

also moved to reopen the time to file an appeal under V.R.A.P. 4(c).

Factual and Procedural History

On May 28, 2009, Applicants applied for site plan approval of a 9-unit PUD

proposed to be developed on property located at 1697 Egypt Road in Bakersfield. Mr.

1 Mr. Lindala had also participated in two prior cases involving this property, Docket Nos. 101-5-07 Vtec and 293-12-08 Vtec, which were remanded to allow consideration of the application under the 2009 Zoning Bylaw. 1 Lindala attended and participated in the Planning Commission hearing regarding this

application, which was held on August 11, 2009. The Planning Commission granted

site plan approval for the project in a written decision issued on October 12, 2009. In re:

Geddes PUD/Major Subdivision, Application No. PC-04-09, Findings & Decision, slip

op. at 1, 4–5 (Bakersfield Planning Comm’n Oct. 12, 2009) [hereinafter Planning

Commission Decision].2

Because Mr. Lindala had participated in the hearing as an interested person, the

Planning Commission was required to mail him a copy of the decision. See 24 V.S.A.

§ 4464(b)(3) (“Copies of the [municipal panel] decision shall also be mailed to every

person or body appearing and having been heard at the hearing . . . .”).3 Mr. Lindala

received a copy of the Planning Commission Decision by certified mail on November 3,

2009, twenty-two days after the decision was issued by the Planning Commission.

2 The town has not entered an appearance in this proceeding and none of the parties has briefed the issue of the timeliness of the Planning Commission’s written decision. The Planning Commission Decision was issued on the 62nd day after the hearing. Under 24 V.S.A. § 4464(b)(1), a municipal panel’s failure to issue a decision within 45 days after the adjournment of the public hearing results in deemed approval of the application, effective on the 46th day. The former statute, in effect prior to July of 2004, did allow sixty days for the issuance of a planning commission decision, however, that sixty-day period ran from the date on which the application was submitted rather than from the date of the hearing. See 24 V.S.A. § 4407(5) (2004) (stating that a planning commission conducting site plan review was required to “act to approve or disprove any such site plan within 60 days after the date upon which it receives the proposed plan, and failure to so act within such period shall be deemed approval”). 3 Section 4464(b)(3) of Title 24 requires the decision to be sent by certified mail, within the 45-day deemed-approval period under § 4464(b)(1), to the applicant (in proceedings such as this one originating at the municipal panel) or to the person who brought an appeal of a zoning administrator’s decision to the municipal panel (not applicable to the present proceeding). It also requires a copy of the decision to be mailed to those who appeared and were heard at the hearing, but does not state a specific time limit for the latter notice, and does not require that notice to be sent by certified mail. 2 The final page of the Planning Commission Decision stated that “this decision

may be appealed to the Vermont Environmental Court by an interested person who

participated in the proceeding(s) before the [Planning Commission],” and warned that

“[s]uch appeal must be taken within 30 days of the date of this decision.” Id. at 5. See

also 24 V.S.A. § 4471 (governing appeals to the environmental court); 10 V.S.A. § 8504

(stating that an interested person who has participated in a municipal regulatory

proceeding “may appeal to the environmental court an act or decision made under that

chapter by a board of adjustment, a planning commission, or a development review

board”); V.R.E.C.P. 5(b) (stating that appeals to the environmental court must be taken

“within 30 days of the date of the act, decision, or jurisdictional opinion appealed

from”). Accordingly, interested persons wishing to appeal the October 12, 2009

Planning Commission Decision had until November 12, 2009, to file a timely appeal

with this Court.4 No appeal was taken during the thirty-day appeal period.

On November 18, 2009, six days after the expiration of the appeal period, Mr.

Lindala filed a Notice of Appeal with this Court. The notice stated: “Please accept this

as my notice of Appeal from a decision of the Bakersfield Planning Commission for this

noted matter: Geddes PUD / Major Subdivision Permit application C-04-09.” Mr.

Lindala did not accompany his Notice of Appeal with any separate motion for

permission to file the appeal late, nor did the notice explicitly ask the Court to accept

the appeal as timely or to reopen or extend the time for filing an appeal of the October

12 Planning Commission Decision.

4 See V.R.E.C.P. 5(a)(2) (“Except as modified by this rule and by subdivisions (b)–(e) of Rule 2, the Vermont Rules of Civil and Appellate Procedure, so far as applicable, govern all proceedings under this rule.”); V.R.E.C.P. 5(b)(1) (“An appeal under this rule shall be taken by filing . . . a notice of appeal . . . within 30 days of the date of the act, decision, or jurisdictional opinion appealed from, unless the court extends the time as provided in Rule 4 of the [V.R.A.P.].” As the 30th day fell on a court holiday, November 11, 2009, V.R.C.P. 6(a) provides for the appeal period to run to the next day. 3 After Applicants had moved to dismiss the appeal as untimely, see Applicants’

Motion to Dismiss (Mar. 16, 2010), Mr. Lindala then asked the Court to reopen or extend

the time to file the appeal. In his response to Applicants’ motion, filed on March 19,

2010, Mr. Lindala stated:

[A]s the written notice of the decision was not received until November 3, 2009, and so 22 days after the noted date on that decision, I ask the Court to consider my request to have the necessary relief to have the time to file reopened and extended for “good cause” under V.R.A.P. 4(c) and (d) with my November 17, 2009 Notice treated as acceptable and timely for that request for extension and notice.

Lindala Response to Motion to Dismiss, at 1 (Mar. 19, 2010). As his “good cause”

reason for not filing a timely appeal, Mr. Lindala stated that he “took the timely filing

requirement to be from that Nov. 3, 2009 date” on which he actually received the

Planning Commission decision by certified mail. Essentially, Mr. Lindala’s March 19

response is a motion to extend the time for filing an appeal under V.R.A.P. 4(d), as well

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Geddes PUD, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geddes-pud-vtsuperct-2010.