In re Appeal of McEwing Services, LLC

2004 VT 53, 857 A.2d 299, 177 Vt. 38, 2004 Vt. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 18, 2004
DocketNo. 03-078
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 2004 VT 53 (In re Appeal of McEwing Services, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Appeal of McEwing Services, LLC, 2004 VT 53, 857 A.2d 299, 177 Vt. 38, 2004 Vt. LEXIS 177 (Vt. 2004).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

¶ 1. The Town of Moretown Development Review Board denied appellant, MeEwing Services, LLC, a conditional use permit for the construction of a telecommunications tower after four months of deliberations. MeEwing appealed to the Vermont Environmental. Court claiming that the permit was deemed approved, pursuant to 24 V.S.A. § 4407(2) and town zoning regulations, on January 28, 2002 — sixty days after the board held the final duly noticed public hearing on the application. The town countered that the sixty-day deemed approval period did not begin to run until the board “closed the evidence,” and because the board did not announce closure of the evidence until April 3, its April 10 decision was timely and effective to deny McEwing’s application. The environmental court granted summary judgment in favor of the town. We reverse.

¶ 2. Pursuant to the. Legislature’s grant of authority, the Town of Moretown has adopted municipal zoning regulations. See 24 V.S.A. § 4407 (“Any municipality may adopt zoning regulations____”); see also Town of Moretown, Vermont Zoning Regulations § 1.1 (March 7,2000) (recognizing legislative grant of authority to adopt regulations). Moretown’s zoning regulations divide the town into five zoning districts. Town of Moretown, Vermont Zoning Regulations' § 2.1; see also 24 V.S.A. § 4407(1) (allowing for the creation of zoning districts). Under § 4407(2) and § 5.2 of the town’s zoning regulations, certain uses, known as “conditional uses,” may be permitted only by approval of the town’s development review board. Both the statute and the regulation require that the board hold a public hearing to gather evidence and allow for public comment on the application. 24 V.S.A. §§ 4407(2), 4467; Moretown Zoning Regulations § 5.2(B). After the final public hearing on the proposed conditional use occurs, the board then has sixty days to render its decision; failure to act within the sixty-day period results in deemed approval of the application. 24 V.S.A. § 4407(2); Moretown Zoning Regulations § 5.2(B).

¶3. On September 27, 2001, MeEwing applied to the board for conditional use approval to construct a wireless telecommunications tower and a parking area on leased land located within the town’s commercial district. The board held the first duly noticed public hearing on the MeEwing application on October 30, 2001. Representa[40]*40tives from McEwing, various telecommunications companies interested in the project, members of the public, and one of the leased land’s owners attended the meeting. After questioning McEwing representatives about certain aspects of the project, the board moved to go into a closed “deliberative session.” At that time, the board informed McEwing that it was not “closing the evidence,” and that McEwing might be asked to reappear before the board and submit additional evidence. During the deliberative session, the board voted to continue the matter to November 28, 2001 and to write to McEwing seeking more information.

¶ 4. On November 2, the board wrote a letter to McEwing requesting more information about various aspects of the application and the underlying lease provisions for the project. McEwing provided the requested information by letter prior to the November 28 hearing. McEwing representatives attended the November 28 public hearing on its application. The board accepted the additional information submitted by McEwing during the public portion of the hearing. Before going into deliberative session again, the board advised McEwing that additional evidence might be requested. Despite this statement, the board did not subsequently request anything further from McEwing. At the conclusion of the deliberative session, the board again moved to continue for further deliberations.

¶ 5. McEwing’s was not the only telecommunications tower application considered by the board at the November 28 meeting. The board questioned and received evidence from representatives for two other applicants and took public comment on those applications as well.

¶ 6. The board conducted a number of deliberative sessions on McEwing’s application. The first of these occurred on December 19. During the deliberative session, the board considered a motion to consolidate the three pending tower applications, but concluded that “it must resolve each application separately on [its] respective merits.” The board again determined to continue the deliberative session to January 9, 2002 when two hearings were scheduled on other applications, including one for a fourth tower application. The minutes indicate that the “[b]oard does not expect to make substantial progress on deliberations that evening and will likely continue the three pending matters for further deliberation or evidentiary hearing in late January or early February.”

¶ 7. A series of additional deliberative sessions followed without any resolution of McEwing’s application, solicitation of additional evidence from McEwing, or comment from the public on its application. These [41]*41occurred on January 30, February 13, February 27, March 13 and March 21.

¶ 8. On February 12, 2002, McEwing sent a letter to the board indicating that it had secured a commitment from another telecommunications company to use the facility in the event that the board approved the application. The letter also included a photographic simulation of the tower that McEwing hoped to build. Though the board had not requested the information, it accepted the letter into evidence at the hearing the following day. The minutes indicate that the subject of the February 13 hearing was a subdivision application unrelated to any of the four telecommunication tower applications. No McEwing representatives attended the meeting. Nonetheless, the board circulated the McEwing letter before entering into deliberative session.

¶ 9. On April 3,2002, the board voted to “close the evidence” on all of the telecommunications tower applications including McEwing’s. In a decision dated April 10, 2002, the board voted to deny McEwing’s application. The board concluded that (1) telecommunications facilities are neither permitted nor conditional uses in the commercial district where McEwing’s proposed facility would be located, and (2) the lot size for the project did not satisfy the minimum requirements for uses within the commercial district.

¶ 10. McEwing appealed the decision to the environmental court, arguing that its application was approved by operation of law by virtue of the board’s failure to render a decision within sixty days after November 28, 2001, the date of the final noticed public hearing on McEwing’s application. Both parties moved for summary judgment, and the court ruled in favor of the town, holding that the board avoided the application of the statute by continuing its deliberative sessions and making clear to McEwing that it had not “closed the evidence” on its application. The court ruled that the board’s April 10 decision was within the sixty-day period when measured from April 3, the date the board pronounced the evidence closed. The court further held that the board’s decision was timely even if measured from February 13 — the date when the board accepted, during a public hearing on other matters, the letter and photograph that McEwing had voluntarily submitted to it the previous day. In the court’s view, this submission, coupled with McEwing’s failure to demand a prompt decision from the board, amounted to a waiver of the deemed approval remedy. We disagree.

[42]*42¶ 11. We review the decision on a motion for summary judgment using the same standard as the environmental court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2004 VT 53, 857 A.2d 299, 177 Vt. 38, 2004 Vt. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appeal-of-mcewing-services-llc-vt-2004.