O'Halloran v. Gardners Wharf Holding

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 7, 2011
DocketW.C. No. 09-470
StatusPublished

This text of O'Halloran v. Gardners Wharf Holding (O'Halloran v. Gardners Wharf Holding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Halloran v. Gardners Wharf Holding, (R.I. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
In this zoning appeal, Mary Ann and Gerard O'Halloran ("O'Hallorans" or "Appellants") challenge the unanimous Decision of the Zoning Board of Review for the Town of North Kingstown ("Decision" or "Board's Decision") granting Gardner's Wharf Holding, LLC's ("Gardner's" or "Appellee's") application for a special use permit and relief from several conditions imposed upon the property by a May 1996 Decision of the Zoning Board. Appellants specifically allege that the Board's decision to remove those conditions was contrary to the doctrine of administrative finality, failed to make the necessary findings of fact, and ignored the uncontradicted evidence in the record.

For the reasons set forth in this Decision, this Court affirms the Decision of the *Page 2 Board. Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 45-24-69.

I. FACTS AND TRAVEL
The subject property, Lot 258 on Assessor's Plat 117, ("the property") is located at 170 Main Street in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. It is situated within the Wickford Historic District and is zoned Waterfront Business. (June 9, 2009 North Kingstown Zoning Board of Review Decision (the "2009 Decision.")) In May of 1996, the North Kingstown Zoning Board of Review ("Board" or "Zoning Board") granted a special use permit and dimensional variances1 to Gardner's predecessor in interest, allowing it to operate a retail fish market at the property. (May 14, 1996 North Kingstown Zoning Board of Review Decision (the "1996 Decision.")) In granting this relief, the Board imposed upon the property thirty-three (33) enumerated conditions, contained within the 1996 Decision. Id. Many of these conditions were excerpted from a "Consent Agreement" entered into between Gardner's predecessor and the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (RIDEM).2 (RIDEM Consent Agreement, December 15, 1995, In Re: Warwick Cove Holding Company, ISDS Application No. 9323-1350). *Page 3

After operating the fish market at the property for approximately seven (7) years, Gardner's predecessor sold its interest in the property to the Appellee in 2003. (May 26, 2009 Tr. North Kingstown Zoning Board Hearing at 61.)3 For the next six (6) years, the Appellee continued to operate Gardner's Wharf as a fish market. In January of 2009, however, Gardner petitioned the Zoning Board for a special use permit to allow it to sell hot food as a "take-out" or "carry-out" service. In addition, it requested permission to install an outdoor freezer and fryolators at the property. (2009 Decision). These operations, however, were explicitly prohibited by the Board's 1996 Decision. Therefore, in addition to its request for a special use permit, Gardner also petitioned the Board for relief from the following five (5) conditions of the 1996 Decision:

14. Any stationary or mobile exterior motor or compressor be prohibited from being operated during the hours of 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m.

15. All permanent compressors or motors be contained within the building.

18. The operation will not include a sit-down restaurant or take-out type service.

25. The operation may not have a fryolator-type frier, grill or any similar cooking device. A single burner stove is permitted to allow preparation of chowder, stuffies and seafood salad and to cook unsold fish and shellfish before spoilage.

26. No food cooked on premises may be served warmed.

(1996 Decision). The Board held properly advertised hearings on April 28, 2009, May 12, 2009, and May 26, 2009, at which it considered evidence and heard testimony on Gardner's petition. *Page 4

A. The Evidence Presented at Hearing
Prior to testimony being presented, the Town Solicitor, James Reilly, issued an instruction to the Board concerning the doctrine of administrative finality.4 Attorney Reilly explained that, because the Board was being asked to grant relief from conditions it previously imposed upon the property, the Board's inquiry should focus on what changes since those conditions were imposed in 1996 "would warrant" or "justify" the Board's removal of those conditions in 2009. (April 28, 2009 Tr. at 12.) In compliance with this instruction, the Board sought to elicit testimony throughout the hearings regarding what had changed in relation to these conditions over the last thirteen years.

At the hearings, Gardner presented three expert witnesses. All were accepted by the Board as experts in their respective fields. (April 28, 2009 Tr. at 31, 56; May 12, 2009 Tr. at 5.) Edward Pimentel, a former principal planner in the Town of North Kingstown and a Land Use Consultant for Pimentel Consulting Inc., testified as Gardner's planning expert.5 Paul Bannon, the president of RAB Professional Engineers Inc., specializing in traffic engineering and transportation planning and design, testified as Gardner's traffic expert.6 Jeffrey Hanson, a project manager for the John P. Caito Corporation and licensed Class 3 ISDS7 designer, testified as Gardner's ISDS expert.8 The Board also heard testimony from Susan Licardi, the Town of North Kingstown's *Page 5 Director of Water Supply, who testified concerning the water usage at the property. (May 26, 2009 Tr. at 3-16.)

In addition, the owner and operator of Gardner's Wharf, Peter Chevalier, testified concerning his operation at the property, the current equipment he employed, and the nature and technology of the equipment he desired to add. Appellant, Marianne O'Halloran, testified on her own behalf, but did not present any expert witnesses to the Board in support of her position. Numerous members of the community also testified throughout the hearings, some speaking in favor of the proposal and some speaking against.

Mr. Pimentel testified that "the unique, most vital change that has happened since the initial operation and those conditions of approval" was the Town's enactment of the Wickford Village Plan ("WVP") in 19989 — a plan specifically created to address the unique nature and needs of Wickford Village proper.Id. at 32-33, 38; Petitioner's Ex. 4, Excerpts from WVP. The WVP was developed based on studies and surveys of Wickford and its residents. (April 28, 2009 Tr. at 37-38; Petitioner's Ex. 4, p. 4.) These surveys indicated that the "variety of services" offered in Wickford Village was what people who came to the village liked most about it. Id. As a result, it was a goal of the WVP to create a "self-sufficient village" offering a "variety of services," that people would "be able to obtain . . . within a five-minute walk." Id. Mr. Pimentel explained, "[people] wanted to be able to live in this community, shop in the community, meet their needs [in the community]." Id. at 38.

In addition to enacting the WVP, Mr. Pimentel acknowledged that Wickford itself *Page 6 had changed since the Board's Decision in 1996. Id. at 38. Ryan's Market, the Village's grocery store, which Mr. Pimentel described as "a mainstay in Wickford for many, many years" was gone.Id. at 38, 49.

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Bluebook (online)
O'Halloran v. Gardners Wharf Holding, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohalloran-v-gardners-wharf-holding-risuperct-2011.