Godnick Family Trust Permit & Variance Application

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 2010
Docket52-4-09 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Godnick Family Trust Permit & Variance Application (Godnick Family Trust Permit & Variance Application) 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
Godnick Family Trust Permit & Variance Application, (Vt. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} In re Godnick Family Trust } Docket No. 52-4-09 Vtec Permit & Variance Application } }

Decision on Motion for Summary Judgment

The Gilbert G. Godnick Marital Trust (the “Trust”) owns property along U.S. Route 7 in the City of Rutland (“City”) on which the Godnick’s Grand Furniture Store is operated. When the City of Rutland Development Review Board (“DRB”) granted the Trust’s application for a variance to demolish three residential structures at 3–5 Field Avenue and to construct a commercial addition to its existing building, together with a related parking area and landscaping, the only appeal1 presented to this Court was that of the Trust, which appealed the DRB’s rejection of two requests to modify the conditions attached to the variance. The Trust is represented in these proceedings by James P.W. Goss, Esq. A number of neighbors entered their individual appearances in this appeal, including Richard and Linda Sgorbati, Karen Barber, Marjory Perkins, James Abatiell, J.C. and Valerie Biebuyck, and five members of the Hathaway family.2 Each of the neighbors appears pro se. However, since the appeal’s commencement, several neighbors have either withdrawn or declined to further participate. The only neighbors remaining in this proceeding include members of the Biebuyck and Hathaway families. The City has also entered an appearance in this appeal through its attorney, Andrew G. Costello, Esq. The parties have undertaken significant efforts to negotiate acceptable modifications to the conditions attached to the variance, ultimately reaching an agreement acceptable to the remaining parties. The Trust has presented the terms of this agreement in its motion for summary judgment, which is not opposed by the City, the Biebuycks, or the Hathaways. It is the propriety of these proposed modifications to the variance conditions that is the subject of this Decision.

1 No party to the DRB proceeding appealed the DRB’s granting of the Trust’s variance request. 2 The Hathaways also requested leave from the Court to intervene in the Trust’s appeal, pursuant to 24 V.S.A. § 4471(c). See also 10 V.S.A. § 8504(n). Their request for intervenor status was granted on May 18, 2009.

1 Factual & Procedural Background For the sole purpose of putting the pending motion into context, we recite the following facts, which we understand to be undisputed: 1. The Trust owns two adjoining properties at the northwest corner of the intersection of North Main Street3 and Field Avenue in the City. At 259 North Main Street, the Trust owns and operates the Godnick’s Grand Furniture Store (“Store”). Directly adjacent the Store, at 3–5 Field Avenue, the Trust owns a smaller residential lot that hosts three small houses and a commercial parking area. 2. The eastern and northern property lines of the Field Avenue property abut the outer walls of the Store. The western property line abuts another residential property, owned and occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Biebuyck; the southern boundary fronts Field Avenue. The Field Avenue property is in the Single Family Residential Zoning District (“SFR District”). 3. The Trust wishes to expand the commercial building in which the Store operates. To do so, it sought authority to demolish the three rental houses at 3–5 Field Avenue and to construct an addition to the Store building that would extend onto a portion of the 3–5 Field Avenue property. The site improvements would also include a parking area, landscaping, and earthen berms to provide screening and protection for adjoining neighbors. 4. In October of 2008, the Trust submitted a permit application to the City of Rutland Zoning Administrator (“Administrator”), seeking permission to begin the proposed demolition and construction project on the Field Avenue property. 5. The Trust indicated that the improvements would be used as a commercial building and commercial parking area, but did not specify their precise commercial uses. Potential uses identified in the application included general business use, professional offices, retail use or accessory space to retail use, or self-storage units. 6. The Trust offered some details for its proposed project, including that the construction would consist of a long, narrow addition to the section of the Store that abuts the northern property line of 3–5 Field Avenue. The 100-foot by 33-foot addition would be situated on the western portion of the lot, perpendicular to Field Avenue. Once completed, this addition to the Godnick Store building would surround the remaining parking lot on 3–5 Field Avenue. As a general reference, we have attached to this Decision a copy of the Trust’s hand-drawn site plan,

3 North Main Street is also known as U.S. Route 7.

2 revised as of January 13, 2009, and marked as Exhibit A. We note that this site plan is not drawn to scale. 7. The easterly side of the new addition, facing the interior of the remaining parking area, would be about nineteen feet high; the roof would then slope down in a westerly direction, so that the westerly side of the addition, which would run parallel to the property line shared with the Biebuycks, would be about ten feet high. 8. The Trust proposed to screen this building addition from westerly neighbors (the Biebuycks) by constructing a four-foot-high earthen berm along the western property line, which would extend 100 feet along the western boundary and parallel to the addition. Eighteen hemlock trees would be planted atop this berm. The addition would also be partially screened from residences across Field Avenue by four flowering trees that spanned the shorter, thirty- three-foot side of the addition. 9. The Administrator initially denied the Trust’s zoning permit application and referred the proposal to the DRB for variance review because it contemplated a commercial use in the SFR District. On November 19, 2008, the Trust submitted a variance application to the DRB. 10. The DRB held a public hearing on the application on December 17, 2008. In response to concerns raised during the hearing, the Trust modified its project to include conditions regarding storm drainage, snow removal, lighting, and noise. After further discussions with the neighbors, the Trust also agreed to increase the amount of tree plantings for screening along Field Avenue. The Trust proposed to replace the four flowering trees with six-foot-tall hemlock trees in addition to extending the coverage area to a total of fifty-five feet, twenty-two feet beyond the southeastern corner of the addition. The Trust submitted this final proposal to the DRB on January 14, 2009. See attached Exhibit A. 11. On February 27, 2009, the DRB granted the Trust a variance for the project, subject to ten conditions. No party appealed the granting of a variance. 12. The DRB was then presented with motions to alter Conditions #1 and #3 included in the DRB’s variance approval.4 The Trust represented that the modification requests would better reflect the project revisions contained in its January 14 proposal. The DRB denied both of these

4 The Trust asked the DRB to modify Condition #1, while neighbors requested the DRB modify Condition #3. Following the neighbors’ request, the Trust notified the DRB that it also supported the modification of Condition #3.

3 requests, citing a lack of new information as justification for its decision. The Trust appealed the DRB’s refusal to modify these conditions to this Court on April 6, 2009. 13. Numerous neighbors entered appearances in this appeal: J.C.

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Related

State v. Madison
658 A.2d 536 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1995)
Chioffi v. Winooski Zoning Board
556 A.2d 103 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1989)
In re Glen M.
575 A.2d 193 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1990)

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Godnick Family Trust Permit & Variance Application, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godnick-family-trust-permit-variance-application-vtsuperct-2010.