In Wright & Boester Conditional Use Application (Day Patterson and Janet Showers, Appellants)

2021 VT 80, 267 A.3d 659
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 2021
Docket2020-261
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2021 VT 80 (In Wright & Boester Conditional Use Application (Day Patterson and Janet Showers, Appellants)) 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 Wright & Boester Conditional Use Application (Day Patterson and Janet Showers, Appellants), 2021 VT 80, 267 A.3d 659 (Vt. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2021 VT 80

No. 2020-261

In re Wright & Boester Conditional Use Application Supreme Court (Day Patterson and Janet Showers, Appellants) On Appeal from Superior Court, Environmental Division

May Term, 2021

Thomas S. Durkin, J.

Christopher D. Roy of Downs Rachlin Martin PLLC, Burlington, for Appellants.

Anthony N.L. Iarrapino of Wilschek Iarrapino Law Office, PLLC, Montpelier, for Appellees.

Sara Davies Coe of Davies Law, PLC, Barton, for Amicus Curiae Town of Greensboro.

PRESENT: Robinson, Eaton, Carroll and Cohen, JJ., and Corsones, Supr. J., Specially Assigned

¶ 1. EATON, J. Applicants Marian Wright and Greg Boester and their neighbors,

Day Patterson and Janet Showers, own abutting parcels of land on the shore of Caspian Lake in

Greensboro. Neighbors appeal from an Environmental Division decision granting applicants a

permit to tear down and reconstruct a lakeside structure on their parcel in accordance with a

revised plan they submitted just prior to trial. We reverse, concluding that the court erred both

when it determined that the structure at issue was properly designated an “accessory structure”

rather than a “boathouse” under the applicable zoning bylaws and when it declined to remand the

materially revised proposal for consideration by the municipal developmental review board in

the first instance. I. Factual & Procedural Background

¶ 2. The following facts are drawn from the Environmental Division’s findings. The

parties own neighboring waterfront properties situated on Black’s Point, a small peninsula in

Caspian Lake. Both properties are accessed using a private road which ends in a circular

turnaround serving a small cluster of homes on the Point.

¶ 3. Applicants’ parcel contains a house, a shed, and the two-story lakeside structure

which is the subject of this dispute. The structure is visible from the turnaround, from an

established path running along the shoreline, and from the lake. Because of its location on the

sloped shore, it appears to be a single-story building when viewed from the turnaround, while

both floors are visible from the lake. Its first floor is used to store canoes, kayaks, and related

accoutrements; double doors open to a wooden dock extending onto the lake. Because the

building is situated close to the boundary of neighbors’ property, a portion of that dock may

encroach on neighbors’ parcel by a matter of inches. The structure’s upper level—accessed

through an external door facing the turnaround—has several rooms, windows overlooking the

lake, and a toilet, sink, and shower. This floor is used both as additional living space and for

storage of household items.

¶ 4. In December 2017, applicants sought a conditional use permit or variance from

the Greensboro Development Review Board (DRB) allowing them to demolish and rebuild the

lakeside structure on its existing footprint, but add a third level, increasing the building’s height

by ten feet. The DRB considers such proposals against the Greensboro Zoning Bylaw, which is

intended to provide for “orderly community growth” and “further the purposes of the . . .

Greensboro Town Plan.” Greensboro Zoning Bylaw [Bylaw] § 1.2,

https://www.greensborovt.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Greensboro-Zoning-Bylaw-Original-

2015.pdf [https://perma.cc/2QQJ-JHGD]. The Town Plan recognizes Caspian Lake as “the

Town’s natural resource jewel.” In order to maintain this resource, the Plan includes several

2 goals relevant here: (1) to preserve Caspian Lake and the surrounding land as a recreation area;

(2) to protect its shorelines from erosion and overdevelopment; and (3) to “ensure the views of

our rural landscape are not significantly altered by man-made structures that are out of character

with the community.”

¶ 5. Because it is built on land contiguous to Caspian Lake, the structure at issue here

is located within what the bylaws designate as the Shoreland Protection District (SPD). Id.

§ 2.7(A). The SPD was established to protect “surface water resources” on Caspian Lake and to

preserve the mix of residential and summer homes, together with the “recreation uses traditional

to the[] lake[].” Id. § 2.7(B). The structure is also located within an area the bylaws designate as

the Shoreland Buffer Resource Zone (SBRZ), which encompasses the land on the shore of the

lake “consisting of trees, shrubs, Natural Ground Cover and an understory of plants that

functions to filter runoff, control sediment and nutrient movement, control erosion and provide

fish and wildlife habitat.” Id. § 8.4.

¶ 6. The Greensboro Zoning Bylaw came into effect in 1972, after the existing

structure was built. It is undisputed that the structure is therefore a legal nonconforming

structure. Legal nonconforming structures are those constructed prior to the adoption of the

bylaws, or under an earlier, less-restrictive iteration thereof, which are not in compliance with

the provisions of the current bylaws. Id. § 3.8. Although such structures may exist

“indefinitely” under the bylaws, they may not be “moved, altered, extended, or enlarged in a

manner which will increase the existing degree of nonconformance.” Id. § 3.8(A), 3.8(A)(1).

They may, however, be demolished and reconstructed—subject to DRB approval and where such

reconstruction does not increase the original structure’s degree of nonconformance. Id.

§ 3.8(A)(2). The same general principle applies to lawful nonconforming uses predating zoning:

they may continue “indefinitely” but may not be expanded or extended such that the degree of

nonconformance increases. Id. § 3.8(B).

3 ¶ 7. In the bylaws, the only exception to the prohibition on new development within

150 feet of Caspian Lake applies to boathouses; a single boathouse may be added to a tax lot as a

conditional use within the SBRZ. Bylaw § 8.8(B)(3). A “boathouse” is defined as “[a] building

at or near the high[-]water mark used only for storage of boats.” Id. § 8.4. Regulations on

boathouses were amended in 2015 to limit each lot to one boathouse and prohibit boathouses

from having decks or porches. Id. at 6. The bylaws cap the maximum height for a boathouse at

fifteen feet. Id. § 8.8(B)(3)(d). An “accessory structure,” in contrast, is a catchall designation

encompassing buildings “customarily incidental and subordinate to a principal building” on the

same lot or an adjoining lot with the same owner; such structures may be twice as tall as

boathouses, with a maximum height of thirty feet. Id. §§ 2.7(E), 9.2.

¶ 8. In February 2018, the DRB approved the permit application with conditions. It

rejected applicant’s assertion that the structure was an accessory structure subject to the thirty-

foot height limit and concluded that the structure was a “boathouse” as that term is defined in the

bylaws, albeit one with living space above it, and thus subject to the more restrictive fifteen-foot

height limit. It therefore denied the application with respect to the proposed addition of a third

story.

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