Laberge Shooting Range JO - Decision on the Merits

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedMarch 9, 2018
Docket96-8-16 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Laberge Shooting Range JO - Decision on the Merits (Laberge Shooting Range JO - Decision on the Merits) 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
Laberge Shooting Range JO - Decision on the Merits, (Vt. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Docket No. 96-8-16 Vtec

Laberge Shooting Range JO DECISION ON THE MERITS

The dispute before the Court is not new. As early as 1991, if not earlier, parties have been embroiled over a shooting range on the Laberge farm in Charlotte, Vermont. This action is an appeal from an August 2, 2016 Natural Resources Board (NRB) Reconsideration Decision affirming the District #4 Coordinator’s February 12, 2016, Jurisdictional Opinion that the shooting range (the Range) in Charlotte is subject to Act 250 jurisdiction.1 The appeal is brought by Laberge & Sons, Inc. (Laberge), which seeks to reverse the conclusion that the Range has triggered Act 250 jurisdiction and therefore needs an Act 250 Permit. Opposing Laberge is the Firing Range Neighborhood Group, LLC, (the Neighborhood Group), which supports the conclusion that the shooting range has triggered Act 250 jurisdiction. The NRB is also participating in this matter. Procedural History Laberge filed its Amended Statement of Questions on November 10, 2016. In a January 4, 2017 decision we granted Laberge’s motion to amend the Statement of Questions but rejected the inclusion of Amended Question 9. In an August 15, 2017 decision we granted the Neighborhood Group summary judgment on Amended Question 7. The remaining issues are therefore framed by Amended Questions 1–6 and 8. This matter was further narrowed by the parties’ stipulation to bifurcate the case for trial, which was entered as an order by the Court on October 3, 2017. In that stipulation the parties agreed to first address two issues in a trial: (a) whether the Range’s acceptance of donations constitutes a change in use triggering Act 250 jurisdiction, and (b) whether the construction,

1 The August 2, 2016 decision is titled “Reconsideration Decision – Altered;” it was issued after a prior decision solely to correct the number of the jurisdictional opinion.

1 repair, and relocation of shooting benches and construction of berms at the Range were for safety purposes and exempt from Act 250 review. The Court held a trial on January 31, 2018 at the Costello Courthouse in Burlington, Vermont. At the parties’ direction, the Court did not conduct a site visit. Appearing at trial were Laberge and its lawyer Hans G. Huessy, Esq., the Neighborhood Group and its lawyer Justin B. Barnard, Esq., and the NRB and its lawyer Gregory Boulbol, Esq. Based upon the evidence presented at trial, the Court renders the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. This decision focuses solely on the first issue: whether the Range’s acceptance of donations constitutes a change in use triggering Act 250 jurisdiction. As our conclusion determines the outcome of this matter, all other remaining issues are moot. Findings of Fact2 The 1995 Jurisdictional Opinion 1. In 1994, a group of neighbors sought an Act 250 advisory opinion (now titled Jurisdictional Opinion) relating to the Range and a gravel pit operation conducted by Laberge. 2. The District #4 Coordinator (District Coordinator) requested information from Laberge to assist in the jurisdictional determination. 3. Laberge’s lawyer provided a January 5, 1995 letter to the District Coordinator in response to the Coordinator’s request. The letter states that Laberge does not charge fees for use of the Range. The letter notes that the neighbors suggested the Range was a commercial operation in part because a donation box had been prominently displayed at the entrance to the Range for a number of years. The letter states that the donation box was put up in 1992 as a temporary measure to contribute to legal fees arising from challenges to the use of the property. 4. On April 14, 1995, the District Coordinator issued Jurisdictional Opinion #4-113 (the 1995 JO), concluding that the Range was not subject to Act 250 jurisdiction. 5. The 1995 JO lists the sources of information it is based on. In relevant part, the list includes the Laberge lawyer’s January 5, 1995 letter, the District Coordinator’s meeting with the

2 We note that the majority of the evidence in this matter was provided through exhibits admitted by stipulation at the outset of trial. The Court did not have the benefit of reviewing this evidence in advance of or during trial, and, because of this, was unable to ask questions to solicit additional evidence to aid this decision.

2 neighbors in December 1994, the District Coordinator’s site visit to the Range in March 1995, and other sources of information. 6. The 1995 JO concludes that while the construction of shooting benches in the 1950s was an improvement, it was not an improvement made for a commercial purpose because there was “no evidence that the use of the shooting range was or has ever been associated with payment of a purchase price, fee, contribution, donation, or other object having value.” 7. The 1995 JO adds that according to Louis Laberge, a representative of Laberge, “the use of the range has always been by permission only and no fees have ever been charged for personal use, for training purposes, or for competitions.” 8. Because the use of the Range did not meet the definition of commercial purpose, the 1995 JO concludes that the Range was neither a pre-existing development, nor a development at the time the 1995 JO was issued. 9. The 1995 JO includes a certificate of service certifying that copies of the opinion were sent to specific people. Testimony of Amie Laberge 10. Amie Laberge’s family owns the farm on which the Range is located. 11. Mr. Laberge described the Range as being situated on the farm, and indicated that it is adjacent to or part of the pasture used by the farm to graze cows. 12. Mr. Laberge testified at trial that the Range has received in-kind donations of labor and materials for many years, although he was unsure exactly how far back such donations went. He pointed to donations by Rice Lumber as an example of historic in-kind donations. 13. The Range began to receive cash donations when Laberge’s legal problems first began. This appears to have been in the early 1990s, when neighbors first requested an Act 250 jurisdictional opinion.3 14. The Range continues to receive cash donations. These donations are received via a donation box at the entrance to the range. According to Mr. Laberge, a sign at the box states

3 The January 5, 1995 letter from the Laberge’s attorney refers to a November 21, 1991 advisory opinion by the same District Coordinator who issued the 1995 JO. According to the letter, the 1991 opinion concluded that the use of the Laberge property at that time did not require an Act 250 permit.

3 “donations are appreciated,” or “if you chose to donate you may, if you don’t want to you don’t have to.”4 15. Cash donations are received from individuals, from some (but not all) of the police departments that use the Range, and possibly from the UVM shooting team. 16. Laberge does not keep records of cash or in-kind donations. Mr. Laberge recalls only a single instance where Laberge gave a receipt for a donation. 17. An exhibit introduced at trial indicates that $47,062.70 in cash donations to the Range was deposited into the Laberge bank account from May 2014 to November 2016. 18. The Laberges have never bought materials for the Range, and Mr. Laberge does not recall ever using the donation money to pay anyone to do work on the Range. 19. The Laberges never requested or required cash donations in exchange for use of the Range. 20. Cash donations are used primarily to pay legal fees, but have also been used to pay for property taxes and insurance. It is unclear what portion of the farm’s property taxes and insurance are paid with donation money, or how frequently this has been done. 21. Mr. Laberge testified, unequivocally, that the Laberge's would continue operating the Range if they stopped accpeting donations.

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