Poultney Properties LLC Change of Use & SP App. - Decision on Motions

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedNovember 26, 2018
Docket98-7-17 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Poultney Properties LLC Change of Use & SP App. - Decision on Motions (Poultney Properties LLC Change of Use & SP App. - Decision on Motions) 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.

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Poultney Properties LLC Change of Use & SP App. - Decision on Motions, (Vt. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Docket No. 98-7-17 Vtec

Poultney Properties LLC Change of Use & SP App. DECISION ON MOTION

Poultney Properties, LLC, appeals the partial denial of its application for change of use and site plan approval by the Town of Poultney Development Review Board (DRB). Neal Vreeland and a group of Poultney residents, Concerned Citizens of Poultney, joined the appeal to oppose the application. Before the Court are Mr. Vreeland and Poultney Properties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. Poultney Properties is represented by David Cooper, Esq., and David Carpenter, Esq. Mr. Vreeland is self-represented. Concerned Citizens of Poultney is represented by its spokesperson, C.B. Hall.

Standard of Review We will grant summary judgment “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” V.R.C.P. 56(a), applicable through V.R.E.C.P. 5(a)(2). We accept as true all of the nonmovant’s allegations of fact, as long as they are supported by affidavits or other evidence. White v. Quechee Lakes Landowners’ Ass’n, Inc., 170 Vt. 25, 28 (1999) (citation omitted). In considering cross-motions for summary judgment, the Court considers each motion individually and gives the opposing party the benefit of all reasonable doubts and inferences. City of Burlington v. Fairpoint Commc’ns, Inc., 2009 VT 59, ¶ 5, 186 Vt. 332.

Factual Background We recite the following facts based on the record now before us and for the sole purpose of deciding the pending motions. The following are not specific factual findings with relevance

1 outside of this summary judgment decision. See Blake v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 2006 VT 48, ¶ 21, 180 Vt. 14 (citing Fritzeen v. Trudell Consulting Eng’rs, Inc., 170 Vt. 632, 633 (2000) (mem.)). 1. Poultney Properties, LLC, owns a single parcel on Beaman Street (the Property) in Poultney, Vermont. The Property is 1.76 acres. 2. The Property contains four separate buildings with street addresses of 53, 55, 57, and 61 Beaman Street. The buildings predate the Poultney Unified Bylaws (Bylaws) and have shared a single parcel since before the Bylaws were enacted. 3. The buildings at 55 and 61 Beaman Street have not been occupied for three years. 57 Beaman Street has been used continuously as a woodworking shop. 4. The former owner of the Property, Vermont Electro-Mechanical Assembly Services, used the multiple buildings for light industry. 5. The buildings on the Property do not comply with the Bylaws’ setback requirements. This nonconformity predates the Bylaws. 6. The Property is accessed from streets with residentially zoned frontages, which does not comply with the Bylaws. The Property’s access predates the Bylaws. 7. The Property is in the Village Industrial District. Light industrial and retail uses are permitted in the District, subject to site plan review. 8. On February 23, 2017, Poultney Properties submitted three applications relating to the Property to the DRB. The DRB merged these applications into one. 9. Poultney Properties seeks to remove the historic barn at 53 Beaman Street, to install a college-run woodworking shop and classroom at 55 Beaman, to continue the woodworking shop at 57 Beaman, and to introduce a retail store at 61 Beaman. 10. Poultney Properties proposes to modify 61 Beaman Street to accommodate the retail use by adding a loading area and altering the front entrance. 11. Poultney Properties proposes the following changes to the Property: the addition of a chain barrier at the rear of the loading area to modify vehicle circulation on the Property; a reduction in the number of parking spaces from 36 to 29; construction of a six-foot-high wooden fence to provide a screen on the western side of the parking lot, which abuts

2 residential property; and increased amounts of landscaped and grassed area on the Property. 12. The retail store will require new lighting, a new loading area, more frequent truck deliveries, new truck entry and exit routes, a dumpster, modified hours of operation relative to the prior use, and increased customer circulation. 13. The Property requires a new snow removal plan. 14. On June 28, 2017, the DRB approved the application with respect to 53, 55, and 57 Beaman. It denied the application for a retail store at 61 Beaman. 15. Poultney Properties timely appealed the DRB’s denial of the retail store to this Court on July 26, 2017.

Discussion The issues presently before the Court require us to decide whether the DRB improperly denied the retail store at 61 Beaman Street. Mr. Vreeland offers a number of Bylaws provisions to suggest that the application was properly denied. Alternatively, he and Concerned Citizens of Poultney argue that there are disputes of material fact relating to the details of the site plan that warrant a trial.1 Poultney Properties asserts that any aspects of its proposal that do not comply with the Bylaws are protected as preexisting nonconformities. Further, in its view, summary judgment is appropriate because there are no material facts in dispute. For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that the Bylaws provisions offered by Mr. Vreeland do not apply to the present application because of the preexisting nonconforming nature of the Property. But because there are disputes of material fact surrounding the site plan application, summary judgment is inappropriate on that issue.

1 Concerned Citizens of Poultney has not moved for summary judgment but has provided responsive briefings on the cross-motions. Mr. Vreeland originally moved for summary judgment in this matter. Later, in Mr. Vreeland’s opposition to Poultney Properties’ motion for summary judgment, he asserted that there are genuine disputes of material fact. Because he continues to assert the arguments of his summary judgment motion, we treat his contradictory position that a trial is necessary as an argument in the alternative.

3 I. Whether Bylaws § 1411 requires denial of the application. We must first determine whether Poultney Properties proposes a new nonconforming use of the Property that is disallowed by § 1411. Section 1411 mandates that “only one principal building shall be placed on a zoning lot.” A principal building is the structure “in which is conducted the main or principal use of the lot.” Bylaws Article XIII. The parties agree that four buildings located on one parcel do not comply with § 1411. The parties dispute whether this nonconformity involves nonconforming structures or a nonconforming use of the Property. Specifically, the parties disagree over the meaning of nonconforming use: whether use is evaluated with respect to the use of the parcel as a whole, or based on the respective uses of the individual buildings. Poultney Properties argues that use should be evaluated on a building-by-building basis. It asserts that the two uses it proposes, light industrial and retail, are permitted in the Village Industrial District so a nonconforming use is not at issue. It asserts that § 1411 relates to the placement of buildings on a lot and not to the number of uses allowed per parcel. Therefore, while § 1411 renders the Property’s multiple buildings nonconforming structures, it does not generate a nonconforming use. Mr. Vreeland and Concerned Citizens of Poultney argue that use is determined at the level of the parcel as a whole. Poultney Properties, they argue, proposes to use the Property to combine multiple permitted uses on one parcel in violation of § 1411. They present the use as retail mixed with industry. Their interpretation of § 1411 limits each parcel to a single permitted use, as well as a single principal building, barring the combination of multiple uses on one parcel.

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