Hawkins Bay Lane Minor SD - Decision on the Merits

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedAugust 7, 2018
Docket91-7-17 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Hawkins Bay Lane Minor SD - Decision on the Merits (Hawkins Bay Lane Minor SD - Decision on the Merits) 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
Hawkins Bay Lane Minor SD - Decision on the Merits, (Vt. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Environmental Division Unit Docket No. 91-7-17 Vtec

Hawkins Bay Lane Minor SD

Decision on the Merits

Appellant/Applicants John Evans and Marjorie London (“Applicants”) own a 10.13± acre parcel adjoining the Hawkins Bay section of Lake Champlain in Ferrisburgh, Vermont. Their lot was first created by a subdivision approved in 1992. Most recently, Applicants submitted an application to the Town of Ferrisburgh Planning Commission (“Planning Commission”) to amend a condition of the previous subdivision approval. When the Planning Commission denied their request, Applicants appealed to this Court. As the parties prepared for trial, the Court directed that they exhaust their efforts to reach a voluntary resolution, including by employing an independent mediator. When those efforts failed, the Court thanked the parties for their efforts, and scheduled the matter for trial. Applicants were assisted in this proceeding by their attorney, Michael T. Russell, Esq. Their neighbors, Betsey and Tim Etchells, Hugh and Christine McBride, and Stuart M. MacCrellish (“Neighbors”) appeared as Interested Persons and were assisted by their attorney, Alexander J. LaRosa, Esq. The Town of Ferrisburgh (“Town”) was assisted by its attorney, Benjamin W. Putnam, Esq. The Court received all relevant testimony during a one-day trial held at the Vermont Superior Court, Addison Unit, in Middlebury, Vermont. The parties advised that they did not believe that a site visit would assist the Court in understanding the issues presented, and the Court elected to not conduct a site visit. After trial, the Court afforded the parties the opportunity to file proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. When that filing deadline passed, this matter came under advisement on March 23, 2018. Due to other commitments and work responsibilities, the Court was delayed by several months in completing its research and drafting

-1- of this Merits Decision. The Court offers its apologies to the parties and their attorneys for that delay. Based upon the evidence presented at trial, the Court renders the following Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Judgment Order that accompanies this Merits Decision.

Findings of Fact

I. Existing Neighborhood 1. Applicants own a 10.13± parcel of land that is accessed by Hawkins Bay Lane in Ferrisburgh, Vermont. Their property is depicted as Lot 2 on a survey plat admitted into evidence at trial as Exhibit C. 2. Exhibit C also depicts several small lots whose northern borders run along the shores of Lake Champlain. These lots were created by a subdivision of many years ago. One of these lots is owned and occupied by Interested Persons Hugh and Christine McBride. Mr. McBride attended the trial and offered testimony. 3. Interested Persons Betsey and Tim Etchells own the parcel identified on Exhibit C as Lot 4, which borders Applicants’ Lot 2 to the east. 4. Interested Person Stuart M. MacCrellish is the co-owner of what is identified as Lot 5 on Exhibit C. Lot 5 is the western-most lot depicted on Exhibit C.

II. Subdivision and 1992 Approval, After Appeal 5. In 1989, the then-owner of a larger parcel that included Applicants’ land initially sought authority to create a planned residential development (“PRD”). Several owners of the small lots along the shores of Lake Champlain expressed concerns about the proposed PRD. 6. Those small lot owners sought to have conditions placed upon the PRD, including that no development could occur on the PRD lands within 100 feet from the rear boundary line of the small lots. Those agreed-upon conditions were incorporated into the Planning Commission PRD approval. 7. The then owner of the larger tract chose not to proceed with the PRD development and instead chose to seek approval for a conventional 3-lot subdivision. 8. The Planning Commission approved the 3-lot subdivision, with the same lot lines and conditions agreed upon by the then applicant and the small lot owners. The applicant appealed -2- that determination to the state court that then had jurisdiction over municipal land use appeals: what was then known as the Addison County Superior Court.1 9. As the subdivision application was considered on appeal, the parties advised the Addison Superior Court that they had reached a settlement that they wished to present to the Court for approval and adoption into a judgment order. The parties’ Settlement Stipulation was admitted into evidence at our 2018 trial as Exhibit 8. The Addison Superior Court approved the settlement on March 8, 1992 and incorporated it into a Judgement Order. The Judgment Order was admitted into evidence at our 2018 trial as Exhibit 9. 10. Both the parties’ 1992 Stipulation and the Court Judgment Order contained the following terms that are of import to the legal issues preserved for our review in the pending appeal: 1. There shall be a “No Build Zone” on Lot 1 and Lot 2 where no buildings may be built. The “No Build Zone” shall be the same area as the Conservation Zone (the Conservation Zone is established as 200 feet inland from the 95.5 foot [i.e.: mean high water mark] elevation on the lake) except in two areas, where the No Build Zone will be 170 feet from the 95.5 foot line on Lake Champlain: . . . (2) Lot 2, the area which lies east of the east line of the Baldwin Camp as extended southerly. Such “No Build Zone” shall be shown on the final mylar. . . .. 13. The Hawkins Bay Homeowners Association or any of its members shall have a right to enforce the above conditions, including the right of specific performance and injunction action. . . .. Exhibits 8, at 1; Exhibit 9, at 5. 11. The deviation from the Conservation District boundary line that the parties included in their Stipulation was a compromise that anticipated that the owner of Lot 2 may wish to build thirty feet closer to the Lake Champlain shoreline (i.e.: 170 feet from the shoreline, instead of the otherwise agreed-upon limit of the No Build Zone of 200 feet from the shoreline). 12. At the time of the 1992 Stipulation and Judgment Order, all land within 200 feet from the shoreline was located in either the Shoreland or the Conservation Zoning Districts. The remaining portion of Lot 2 was located in what was then known as the Rural Agricultural District.

1 In 1995, jurisdiction over appeals from all municipal land use determinations was legislatively transferred to what was then known as the Vermont Environmental Court.

-3- 13. The limits of the agreed-upon No Build Zone on Applicants’ Lot 2 are depicted on a site map that was admitted into evidence at our 2018 trial as Exhibit D; the No Build Zone limit is overwritten on Exhibit D with red ink. The limits of the Conservation District are shown on Exhibit D as 30 feet south of that portion of the No Build Zone. 14. The Zoning By-Laws and Subdivision Regulations of the Town of Ferrisburgh that were in effect at the time of the 1992 litigation were those that had been adopted by Town vote on November 8, 1988 (“1988 By-Laws and Regulations”). A copy of the 1988 By-Laws and Regulations were admitted at our 2018 trial as Exhibit QQ. 15. The 1988 By-Laws and Regulations provided that single-family dwellings were allowed in the Conservation District, subject to conditional use and site plan approval. 1988 By-Laws and Regulations §§ 1003(A) and (B), p. 39–40. 16. The 1988 By-Laws and Regulations identified one- and two-family dwellings in the neighboring Rural Agricultural District as permitted uses. Id. at § 1002(B), p. 39. 17. Both the deviation from the Conservation District boundary line and the credible testimony offered at trial convinced the Court that the then-parties’ 1992 Stipulation establishing the No Build Zone was not premised solely upon the then-existing zoning regulations.

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