In Re Shenandoah LLC

2011 VT 68, 27 A.3d 1078, 190 Vt. 149, 2011 Vt. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJuly 1, 2011
Docket2009-388
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2011 VT 68 (In Re Shenandoah 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 Shenandoah LLC, 2011 VT 68, 27 A.3d 1078, 190 Vt. 149, 2011 Vt. LEXIS 68 (Vt. 2011).

Opinions

Burgess, J.

¶ 1. Shenandoah, LLC, David Shlansky, Ting Chang, and other entities and individuals appeal from the Environmental Court’s summary judgment decision upholding an Act 250 jurisdictional opinion. They challenge the court’s attribution of certain development and subdivision activities to Shlansky and Chang. Appellants also argue that “person-based jurisdiction” under .Act [151]*151250 violates the Vermont Constitution. Appellants failed to preserve their constitutional argument, and we do not address it. We affirm the court’s jurisdictional opinion.

¶ 2. Appellants have a variety of overlapping interests. Shlansky averred below that in 2000 he created an irrevocable trust (Trust) to benefit his and his wife Chang’s children. Chang is the trustee of the Trust. Shlansky, as settlor of the Trust, contributed the property that is the subject of the underlying jurisdictional opinion. Appellants did not disclose the purpose for which the Trust was established, and the Environmental Court presumed that Shlansky conveyed real estate to the Trust to benefit the minor children and for general estate planning purposes. As of June 2009, the Trust had two beneficiaries: Asa Shlansky, age nine, and Beatrice Shlansky, age seven.

¶ 3. The Trust has an ownership stake in various companies that have engaged in land-development activities in the relevant jurisdictional area. The Trust and Pedro Zevallos own Shenandoah, LLC, Ferrisburgh Realty Investors (FRI), and Bluefield, LLC. The Trust also owns Witherbee, LLC. Shlansky owns Mahaiwe, LLC.2 The court found that FRI had created a twenty-one-lot planned residential development in September 2008. Bluefield created a two-lot subdivision in 2007. Witherbee constructed five housing units in March 2007, and Mahaiwe constructed four housing units in November 2005.

¶ 4. Shenandoah now seeks to build a ten-unit residential housing project known as the Shade Roller Planned Unit Development (Shade Roller PUD) in Vergennes. In August 2008, Zevallos, as Vice President of Shenandoah, requested a jurisdictional opinion to determine if the project required an Act 250 permit. See 10 V.S.A. § 6007(c). He also asked for clarification of “[t]he current total subdivision and housing unit counts for the owners and manager of Shenandoah, LLC, for Act 250 jurisdictional purposes” and “[w]hat the total housing unit counts for the owners and manager of Shenandoah, LLC, will be as a result of the Shade Roller [PUD].” This information is relevant to determining when the various parties will need to obtain Act 250 [152]*152permits for purposes of future subdivisions and development. See id. § 6001(3)(A)(iv), (19).

¶ 5. In a September 2008 decision, the district coordinator found that the project required an Act 250 permit because it involved the construction of a housing project with ten or more units. See id. § 6001(3)(A)(iv) (defining “development” under Act 250 to include the “construction of housing projects . . . with 10 or more units”). The district coordinator also attributed a certain amount of subdivision lots and housing units for purposes of Act 250 jurisdiction to FRI, Bluefield, Shenandoah, Shlansky, Chang, the Shlansky children, and Zevallos, based on their relationships with one another. Additional housing units were attributed to Shlansky and Chang based on Shlansky’s control of Mahaiwe.

¶ 6. Appellants appealed portions of this decision to the Environmental Court. They submitted a statement of questions, and later filed a memorandum of law. The court construed this latter document as a motion for summary judgment, and in a September 2009 order, it upheld the district coordinator’s jurisdictional opinion. As explained in greater detail below, it concluded that Shlansky and Chang benefit from the Trust’s land-development activities, and thus, the Trust’s development activities were attributable to them personally. Appellants challenge this conclusion on appeal. As support for their position, they point to the affidavits filed by Shlansky and Chang, and “the legal existence of the Trust, which is irrevocable.”

¶ 7. We begin with the statutory and regulatory requirements at issue. Generally speaking, an Act 250 permit is required before a “person” can sell any interest in a subdivision, commence construction on a subdivision or development, or commence development. 10 V.S.A. § 6081(a); see id. § 6001(14) (defining “person”). As relevant here, the term “subdivision” means “a tract or tracts of land, owned or controlled by a person, which the person has partitioned or divided for the purpose of resale into 10 or more lots within a radius of five miles of any point on any lot, or within the jurisdictional area of the same district commission, within any continuous period of five years.” Id. § 6001(19). For purposes of a “subdivision,” the term “person”:

(i) shall mean an individual, partnership, corporation, association, unincorporated organization, trust or other [153]*153legal or commercial entity, including a joint venture or affiliated ownership;
(iii) includes individuals and entities affiliated with each other for profit, consideration, or any other beneficial interest derived from the partition or division of land; [and]
(iv) includes an individual’s parents and children, natural and adoptive, and spouse, unless the individual establishes that he or she will derive no profit or consideration, or acquire any other beneficial interest from the partition or division of land by the parent, child or spouse.

Id. § 6001(14)(A).

¶ 8. We held in In re Spencer that this statutory language was “intended to broaden the definition of a ‘person’ owning or controlling land to include those who may not be mentioned specifically in the conveyance, but who may nevertheless derive some benefit from partition or division of the land.” 152 Vt. 330, 339, 566 A.2d 959, 964 (1989). We found this interpretation consistent with the Legislature’s express finding that “ ‘to ensure appropriate Act 250 review, it is necessary to treat persons with an affiliation for profit, consideration, or some other beneficial interest derived from the partition or division of land as a single person for the purpose of determining whether a particular conveyance is subject to Act 250 jurisdiction.’ ” Id. (quoting 1987, No. 64, § 1).

¶ 9. Relying on Spencer, and the plain language of the statute, the Environmental Court found that all prior subdivisions attributable to Zevallos and the Trust were also attributable to Shenandoah because.they were “individuals and entities affiliated with each other for profit.” 10 V.S.A. § 6001(14)(A)(iii). Zevallos and the Trust also owned Bluefield and FRI, making these four parties “individuals and entities affiliated with each other for profit.” Id. Therefore, the court attributed twenty-one lots that FRI had created in 2008 and lots created by Bluefield in 2007 to Zevallos, the Trust, and Shenandoah, for purposes of Act 250.

¶ 10. The court also considered how many subdivided lots should be attributed to the individual appellants for purposes of [154]*154Act 250. It explained that FRI was owned in part by the Trust. The Trust would accrue profits from FRI’s activities, which would in turn benefit the Shlansky children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 VT 68, 27 A.3d 1078, 190 Vt. 149, 2011 Vt. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shenandoah-llc-vt-2011.