Highridge Ridgetop PUD Renewal - Altered Merits Decision

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedAugust 8, 2019
Docket60-5-17 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Highridge Ridgetop PUD Renewal - Altered Merits Decision (Highridge Ridgetop PUD Renewal - Altered Merits Decision) 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
Highridge Ridgetop PUD Renewal - Altered Merits Decision, (Vt. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Environmental Division Unit Docket No. 60-5-17 Vtec

Highridge/Ridgetop PUD Renewal

Altered Decision on the Merits1

Killington/Pico Ski Resort Partners, LLC, (“KPSRP” or “Applicant”) is the current owner of the development rights for the unbuilt portions of two adjoining developments known as Highridge and Ridgetop, near the Killington Ski Resort in Killington, Vermont. 2 A predecessor developer first received municipal land use approval for the two developments in 1988. The planned developments were not fully completed at the time that their original planned unit development (“PUD”) approval expired. So now, thirty years after the original PUD approval was issued, KPSRP seeks to extend the latest PUD authorizing the development with its pending application (Application No. PUD 17-003). When the Town of Killington Planning Commission (“the Planning Commission”) approved KPSRP’s pending PUD application, the Highridge Condominium Owners’ Association (“Appellant” or “Highridge Owners’ Assoc.”) filed a timely appeal with this Court. After the parties engaged in

1 This Altered Decision on the Merits supersedes this Court’s prior June 6, 2019 Decision on the Merits. In response to a motion to amend the judgment pursuant to V.R.C.P. 59(e), this Court reworded Conditions 3 and 4 for clarity. We also made minor adjustments to Conditions 1 and 5. These changes implicate page 27 of this Altered Decision on the Merits. 2 In separate litigation originally filed in the Civil Division of the Vermont Superior Court, Rutland Unit, these same parties disputed the ownership and development rights in the Highridge development. There appears to be no dispute that the Highridge Owners’ Association has an ownership interest in the areas identified as common lands. However, the Owners’ Association disputed that KPSRP, as successor to the original developer, had the right to complete the development. The Civil Division originally granted summary judgment to the Owners’ Association, but the Vermont Supreme Court reversed that determination, concluding that KPSRP “is the successor in interest to the original developer with respect to development rights, and is entitled to construct the proposed additional [Highridge] units under the declaration of condominium . . ., without the consent of the Association.” Highridge Condo. Owners Assoc. v. Killington/Pico Ski Resort Partners, LLC, 2014 VT 120 ¶¶ 1, 25, 198 Vt. 44.

-1- settlement discussions that did not resolve their disputes, they completed discovery and other efforts at trial preparation, and the Court conducted a two-day trial at the Vermont Superior Court, Criminal Division, Rutland Unit, on November 28 and 29, 2018. After the trial was completed, the parties requested thirty days to file proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. That filing deadline was extended several times, at one or more of the parties’ request, such that the matter came under advisement for the Court’s consideration on February 6, 2019. KPSRP was assisted in this litigation by its attorneys, Andrew H. Maass, Esq., and Erin Gilmore, Esq.; Highridge Owners’ Assoc. was assisted by its attorney, Judith L. Dillon, Esq.; the Town of Killington (“Town”) was assisted by its attorney, Kevin E. Brown, Esq.; the Ridgetop Landowners Association appeared but was unrepresented; and Ridgetop owner Ely A. Kirschner appeared as a self-represented person. Procedural History This development has an extended permitting and litigation history. We need not detail that entire history to address the issues presented by the present appeal. Rather, we provide the following summary to assist in providing some context for the Factual Findings that follow. By its pending application, KPSRP seeks a further extension of the timeline for the joint PUD approval of the two developments known as Highridge and Ridgetop; the first PUD approval was granted in 1988. In connection with that initial PUD approval, the then-developer sought and received site plan approval, a zoning permit, and other necessary state permits to develop both properties. Some, but not all, of the proposed developments at both Highridge and Ridgetop were constructed; the individual residential units that were completed were sold to individual owners. The Ridgetop development was planned to contain nine single-family homes, with surrounding common lands and access roads. The Highridge development was planned to include residences contained in multiple-unit buildings, as well as three single-family dwellings. It was not entirely clear from the evidence presented at trial when the initial construction was completed in the Highridge and Ridgetop developments, although the Highridge Owners’ Assoc. president, who testified at trial, estimated that the residences now existing at the two developments were completed in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The Court notes that that

-2- estimate coincides with an economic recession that began in the late 1980s and especially stifled development of second homes near and at Vermont ski resorts. At trial, the parties appeared to agree that currently six of the nine Ridgetop homes have been completed and sold and that thirty-six of the Highridge units (including the three planned single-family dwellings) have been completed and sold. KPSRP seeks PUD approval for the three remaining homes in the Ridgetop development and thirty-seven residences in proposed condominium buildings in the Highridge development. The PUD approval issued in 1988 (“PUD #88-169”) contained several conditions, including that its authority would last for a four-year term. It appears that this PUD approval was allowed to lapse. Then, about ten years after the initial PUD approval, KPSRP acquired all rights of the initial developer and thereafter filed an application for a new PUD approval for both developments. The Planning Commission granted that approval with conditions, including a condition that the new PUD approval would expire on May 26, 2003. See PUD #99-029.3 As that expiration date approached, KPSRP applied for a further extension of the PUD approval, which the Planning Commission granted with similar conditions, including that the extended PUD approval would expire on March 27, 2006. See PUD #02-006. Upon that date, the extended PUD approval expired. In November of 2006, KPSRP filed two new applications: the first for a new PUD approval (PUD Application #06-098) and the second for a new site plan approval (Site Plan Application #06- 099). Those approvals were granted by the Planning Commission on March 15, 2007. See PUD #06-098 and Site Plan #06-099. The PUD approval contained conditions similar to those defined by its predecessors, including that its authority would expire on March 14, 2011, if the developments were not completed as proposed. By the spring of 2011, it became clear that KPSRP’s plans to complete the developments would not be achieved by the authorization expiration date. Therefore, on March 11, 2011, KPSRP applied for renewals of both the PUD and site plan approvals. See Application #11-005.

3 Some of this procedural history has been gleaned from this Court’s Decision in a prior appeal concerning these same developments. See Ridgetop/Highridge PUD, No. 69-5-11 Vtec (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Feb. 22, 2016) (Walsh, J.). That 2016 Decision is referenced in more detail below.

-3- Notice of a Planning Commission hearing on the renewal application, set for March 23, 2011, was sent, but that notice only referenced a completion of the Ridgetop development. Nonetheless, it appears that both developments were discussed in the pending application and at the Planning Commission hearing.

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