Miller Conditional Use Application (After Remand)

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedNovember 5, 2007
Docket59-03-07 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Miller Conditional Use Application (After Remand) (Miller Conditional Use Application (After Remand)) 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
Miller Conditional Use Application (After Remand), (Vt. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} In re: Miller Conditional Use Application } Docket No. 59-3-07 Vtec (After Remand) } }

Decision On The Record Appellants Charles C. Miller, Jr. and Carole B. Miller (“Appellants”) appealed from a decision of the Town and Village of Ludlow Development Review Board (“DRB”), denying their conditional use application. Appellants are represented by Martin Nitka, Esq. The Town and Village of Ludlow (“Ludlow”) is represented by J. Christopher Callahan, Esq. Now pending in this on-the-record appeal is Appellants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and Ludlow’s Objection thereto, as well as Ludlow’s own Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment. Appellants argue that the delay between this Court’s remand Order in Docket No. 159-7-06 Vtec and the DRB’s decision entitles them to a deemed approval of their application. Ludlow argues that the deemed approval remedy is not applicable here and that the DRB’s decision should be upheld in regards to all issues raised in Appellants’ Statement of Questions.

Factual Background We first note that this Court is not charged with the responsibility of rendering factual findings in an on-the-record appeal. Rather, our role is to review the appealed decision from an appellate perspective, giving discretion to an appealed decision when there is substantial factual foundation in the record of the proceedings below. With that perspective in mind, we note that the following material facts concerning the proposed project, all of which we understand to be undisputed (unless otherwise noted), so as to give context to our analysis here. In a similar vein, the Court granted Appellants’ request and conducted a site visit on the subject property on August 8, 2007. The Court’s site visit is not part of the record here; no testimony was taken and no record of the site visit was preserved. Rather, the Court conducted the site visit solely to assist in its review of the factual record relied upon by the DRB in rendering its Decision. As noted above, the following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted.

-1- 1. Appellants applied for a conditional use permit to construct an eight-acre gravel pit on the approximately 113.8-acre property they own at 125 Sears Farm Road in Ludlow. Notice of Decision, Ludlow Development Review Board (Feb. 21, 2007) (“Second DRB Decision”). 2. The project would be located near the easterly boundary of Appellants’ property, approximately halfway between the northerly and southerly boundaries. The proposed project would be located approximately 275 feet westerly of Route 100. 3. The project would be completed in three phases over a total of twelve years. Forty percent of the gravel would be removed in both of the first and second phases; the final twenty percent of the gravel would be removed in the third and final phase. March 13, 2006 Transcript at 7-10 (“March Transcript”). 4. The project would access Route 100 by way of a 50 foot right-of-way over the Stryhas property, which is easterly of the property owned by the Appellant-Applicants. 5. The project as proposed would limit trips to and from the gravel pit to 25 round trips per day between the hours of 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. 6. The DRB held hearings on Appellants’ application on March 13 and May 8, 2006. 7. The DRB first denied Appellants’ application by its June 22, 2006 decision (“First DRB Decision”). 8. Appellants appealed the First DRB Decision to this Court on July 11, 2006. That first appeal was assigned Docket No. 159-7-06 Vtec. 9. On September 11, 2006, Ludlow requested that this Court remand Docket No. 159-7-06 Vtec back to the DRB. Appellants filed a written objection. 10. After a conference with the parties, Merideth Wright, Environmental Judge, ordered Docket No. 159-7-06 Vtec remanded to the DRB by an Entry Order dated September 20, 2006. 11. After the case was remanded, the DRB did not consider any new or additional evidence; it did not schedule any additional evidentiary hearings. 12. The DRB then issued its Second Decision on Appellants’ conditional use application on February 21, 2007, 134 days or approximately five months after the remand in Docket No. 159- 7-06 Vtec. This Second DRB Decision again denied Appellants’ application. 13. Appellant thereafter filed a second notice of appeal. This second appeal was assigned Docket No. 59-3-07 Vtec; it is the only active appeal concerning Appellants’ conditional use application now pending before this Court.

-2- 14. Appellants have moved for summary judgment on the issue of deemed approval pursuant to 24 V.S.A. § 4464(b)(1) and Ludlow Zoning Ordinance § 260.5. Appellants also have submitted a memorandum that broadly argues that the factual bases for the DRB’s decision were anecdotal, and presumably unreliable, in nature, thereby warranting that this Court render its own findings of fact. 15. Ludlow filed its objection to Appellants’ summary judgment motion and filed its own cross motion for summary judgment, seeking affirmation of the Second DRB Decision on all issues raised in Appellants’ Statement of Questions. Both parties’ motions are now ripe for this Court’s consideration.

Discussion The procedural posture of this case raises the unique issue of the applicability of the deemed approval remedy to a municipal determination that this Court has remanded back to the municipal board. Appellants also contest the procedural standard of review this Court should apply to the appealed decision. Because the standard of review may impact our analysis of all the issues, we first consider the appropriate standard of review.

Standard of Review for On-the-Record Appeals Appellants argue that this Court should review the record, then make its own findings and final decision, without regard to the findings made by the DRB. Appellants assert that the precedent announced in In re Town of Sherburne, 154 Vt. 596 (1990), is not applicable to Environmental Court proceedings and that the statute governing on-the-record appeals to this Court – 24 V.S.A. § 4471 – does not specifically prohibit this Court from rendering its own findings, based upon the record below. Appellants’ Memorandum at 3; see also Sherburne, 154 Vt. at 603 (noting that the statute in question limited appellate review to the question of whether the Water Resources Board acted arbitrarily, unreasonably, or contrary to law). Appellants argue that although 24 V.S.A. § 4471(b) requires that appeals of municipal panel decisions such as this shall be “on the record in accordance with the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure,” the Civil Rules do not prevent us from considering the evidence anew, without regard to the findings rendered by the DRB. We find this suggestion curious, particularly because, if followed, the Court would be rendering findings based upon evidence that it did not receive, but rather was received by the DRB below. Witness credibility would be difficult to gauge, since we did not hear the witnesses’ testimony. More important, because we find no legal

-3- precedent that allows us to select the standard of review, we decline to follow the procedure Appellants here suggests. Under Vermont law, a municipality that wishes to have appeals from its land use determinations reviewed on-the-record must go through the complete process of adopting and implementing the necessary procedures described in 24 V.S.A. §§ 4471 and 4472, the Vermont Municipal Administrative Procedures Act (24 V.S.A. §§ 1201-1210) and the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure (V.R.C.P.). These provisions require a more purposeful adherence to procedure, including (but not limited to) the swearing in of all witnesses, an audio or video recording of all hearings sufficient to allow a transcript to be produced, and detailed written decisions that specify both findings of fact based upon the evidence presented and application of the zoning ordinance to those findings.

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Miller Conditional Use Application (After Remand), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-conditional-use-application-after-remand-vtsuperct-2007.