Kelsey Notice of Violation

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedMarch 18, 2011
Docket123-7-10 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Kelsey Notice of Violation (Kelsey Notice of Violation) 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
Kelsey Notice of Violation, (Vt. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT cigar/rom

SUPER§OR COUFN" EN\FSRQNMENTAL Di\/l lS§Gi\l

SUPERIOR CGURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION

In re I

Decision and Order on Cross-Motions for Sumrnarv ludgrnent

Appellant Robert Kelsey appealed from a ]une 28, 2010 decision of the Development Review Board (DRB) of the Town of North Hero, upholding a Notice of Violation issued to him on April 23,- 2010 for subdividing property Without obtaining a subdivision permit and for deeding a beach-access easement and other beach rights Without prior approval1 Appellant is represented by Daniel S. Triggs, Esq.; the rl`own of North Hero is represented by Paul S. Gillies, Esq.; and lnterested Person l\/lary ]ane Healy has entered an appearance representing herself

Appellant and the ToWn have each moved for summary judgment on all three questions in the Staternent of Questions. The first question asks the Court to determine Whether § 130(D) of the North Hero Zoning Bylaws (the Zoning Bylaws) has the effect of eliminating the Zoning Bylaws’ requirement to obtain land use permits and makes the Zoning BylaWs unenforceable ` lf the Zoning Bylaws are enforceable, Question 2 asks the Court to determine Whether the conveyance of a pre-existing non-conforming lot together With a portion of a pre-existing conforming lot constitutes a subdivision under §§ l30(b)(l) and 340,' and Question 3 asks

Whether the DRB lacks jurisdiction to regulate the transfer of beach rights in that

l Neither the Notice of Violation nor the DRB decision upholding that Notice of Violation has been provided to the Court.

conveyance because Appellant’s property held pre-existing alienable beach rights

prior to the transfer. The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted.

Appellant owns a large parcel of land lying between U.S. Route 2 and Lake Champlain in the Town of North Hero; at the time of the 2009 transaction that is the subject of the Notice of Violation at issue in this case, Appellant’s large parcel consisted of 41.47 acres of land. Appellant's large parcel is bounded on the west by Lake Champlain and on the east by U.S. Route 2. As shown on Diagram l attached to this decision, a private road known as West View Lane, approximately 60 feet in width by scale from the tax map provided as Town’s Exhibit 3, runs along the northerly boundary of Appellant's property, giving access to Route 2 and to the lake over property now owned by ]aro.

The Shorelands zoning district consists of the land from the low water mark of Lal

Appellant's large parcel is bounded on its north, that is, on the northerly edge of the West View Lane right-of-way as it runs on Appellant's large parcel, by four properties The most westerly of these four properties is a 008-acre lakeshore lot owned by ]aro, 66 feet in width at the lake. The next property to the east along the northerly boundary of Appellant's large parcel is a lot owned by Arnosky, not at issue in this appeal. The next property to the east along the northerly boundary of Appellant’s large parcel is the triangular 022-acre lot also then owned by Appellant and part of the 2009 transaction at issue in this appeal. The remaining property to the east along the northerly boundary of Appellant’s large parcel, between the

triangular 022-acre lot and U.S. Route 2, is the southeastern boundary of a 6.9-acre

lot also owned by ]aro. The Town tax map provided as Town’s Exhibit 3 shows the right-of-way for West View Lane as traveling from Route 2 across the larger ]aro lot, onto Appellant's large parcel and westerly on Appellant’s large parcel along its northerly boundary, continuing westerly to the lake on, and occupying the entirety of, the small laro lakeshore parcel.

From the deeds provided as Town’s Exhibits 1 and 2 and Appellant’s Exhibit 2, the triangular 022-acre lot was created in or prior to 1949, and was conveyed in 1957 to Appellant’s predecessors: Mae Manning and Vera l

For clarity and ease of reference, the Court will refer to the 022-acre triangular lot as the ”l\/lanning/Kelsey Lot” or as ”Lot A,” as shown on Diagram 1 attached to this decision. Appellant acquired the l\/lanning/Kelsey Lot, together with other property, through a ]anuary 21 1996 decree of distribution of the estate of Mae ' l\/lanning, the surviving joint tenant. That decree is referred to in the deeds but has not been provided to the Court in connection with the present motions,' therefore the Court cannot determine whether Appellant also acquired the 41.47-acre parcel by

that decree.2 The Town tax map provided as Town’s Exhibit 3 shows the

2 lf both parcels came into Appellant's ownership by the 1996 decree, it would be necessary to determine what minimum lot size was required under the zoning ordinance in effect in 1996, if any, and what merger provisions were then provided by the then-zoning ordinance, to determine whether the l\/lanning/Kelsey Lot merged with Appellant’s large parcel at that time, or became a separate, pre-existing

l\/lanning/Kelsey Lot as being distinct from the remainder of Appellant's property, that is, from Appellant’s large parcel. 'The parties all treat the l\/lanning/Kelsey Lot as a pre-existing nonconforming lot, and the Court will analyze it as such without considering the possibility of a 1996 merger, which is discussed at note 2. The preexisting Manning/l

lnterested Person Healy owns a landlocked one-acre trapezoidal parcel of land on the southerly side of West View Lane, entirely surrounded by Appellant's z large parcel. The northerly boundary of the Healy parcel is the southerly edge of the West View Lane right-of-way. The Healy memorandum refers to a boat launch ramp developed by the Healys in 1972 on the lakeshore, approximately one hundred fifty feet south of the ]aro beach access, and located at the direction of the Healys’ grantors: l\/lanning and Kelsey. The deed from Manning and l

By a single deed executed on November 24, 2009, and recorded on l\lovember 25, 2009, Appellant transferred the preexisting Lot A to a l\/lartin Deem, together with a half-acre of vacant land on the south side of the West View Lane right-of- way, directly to the east of the Healy property and extending southerly along the easterly Healy boundary a distance of 120 feet from the southerly edge of the West

View Lane right-of-way.3 Until this conveyance, the half-acre of vacant land was

small lot, entitled to remain as a separate non-conforming lot. See Appeal of Weeks, 167 Vt.

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Kelsey Notice of Violation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelsey-notice-of-violation-vtsuperct-2011.