Roy, Hirschbuhl, Barr v. Woodstock Community Trust, Inc.

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 1, 2013
Docket2011-265
StatusPublished

This text of Roy, Hirschbuhl, Barr v. Woodstock Community Trust, Inc. (Roy, Hirschbuhl, Barr v. Woodstock Community Trust, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roy, Hirschbuhl, Barr v. Woodstock Community Trust, Inc., (Vt. 2013).

Opinion

2013 VT 100

Roy, Hirschbuhl, Barr, et al. v. Woodstock Community Trust, Inc. (2011-265)

2013 VT 100

[Filed 01-Nov-2013]

NOTICE:  This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports.  Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@state.vt.us or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

No. 2011-265

David E. Roy, Mary R. Roy, Michael Hirschbuhl, Tonia Hirschbuhl, Richard Roy, Roberta Roy, Glenn Barr, et al.

Supreme Court

On Appeal from

     v.

Superior Court, Windsor Unit,

Civil Division

Woodstock Community Trust, Inc.

September Term, 2012

Katherine A. Hayes, J.

Kaveh S. Shahi of Cleary Shahi & Aicher, P.C., Rutland, for Plaintiffs-Appellants/

  Cross-Appellees.

Robert S. DiPalma and Kristina M. Roomet of Paul Frank + Collins P.C., Burlington, for

  Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

PRESENT:  Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Skoglund, Burgess and Robinson, JJ.

¶ 1.             DOOLEY, J.     This case arises out of a proposed housing development in West Woodstock, Vermont.  It is not the first case to come before us related to this development.  In Roy v. Woodstock Community Trust and Housing Vermont PRD, 2012 VT 87, ___ Vt. ___, 60 A.3d 686, we affirmed the permits for the project granted by the town development review board and the district environmental commission and affirmed by the environmental division of the superior court.  This appeal, brought by the owners of abutting properties to the land in question—David and Mary Roy, Michael and Tonia Hirschbuhl, Richard and Roberta Roy, Glenn and Charlotte Barr, Richard and Shirley Burroughs, and Jay Smith—presents a number of more narrow questions related to easements and other property rights.  It also includes a cross-appeal by Woodstock Community Trust, Inc. (WCT) of a finding of the superior court related to those same property rights.  We affirm in part and reverse in part.

¶ 2.             The property in question consists of two abutting parcels located along Route 4 in West Woodstock.  One of the parcels is a half-acre lot with a building on it, known as the Grange Hall (“parcel 1”), and the other a 7.5-acre parcel that contains no building but includes a parking lot as well as the driveway that provides access to the property from Route 4 (“parcel 2”). 

¶ 3.             WCT is a nonprofit corporation; part of its mission is to promote affordable housing within Woodstock.  It purchased both of these parcels in 2005.  It took title subject to three water easements that run across the property, owned by plaintiffs Shirley and Richard Burroughs, Roberta and Richard Roy, and Jay Smith.  Smith also maintains that he owns spring rights on the property. 

¶ 4.             Plaintiffs brought this case in 2007, while the project was still under review for permitting approval, alleging a wide variety of property-right violations.  The trial court dismissed one claim, decided others on partial summary judgment, and sent the remaining claims to trial.  During the course of the jury trial, the court granted a number of Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 50 motions for judgment as a matter of law, leaving only one question for the jury: whether the proposed project unreasonably interfered with Smith’s spring rights—rights that the court had found, after the close of evidence at trial, to exist as a matter of law. 

¶ 5.             In May 2011, the jury found for Smith, and a judgment was entered in July 2011.   After the trial, both parties submitted proposed judgment orders.  WCT requested an evidentiary hearing, but the hearing did not take place because plaintiffs filed a letter with the trial court requesting the prompt issuance of a final judgment order sufficient to allow Smith and the other plaintiffs to appeal.  The trial court, in its words, “[i]nterpret[ed] this to mean that plaintiff was no longer pursuing injunctive relief, . . . [and] issued a final judgment order stating simply that the proposed development unreasonably interfered with plaintiff’s spring rights.”    

¶ 6.             After plaintiffs filed their appeal in this Court, WCT filed a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law together with a motion to alter or amend the judgment or for new trial and obtained a remand order from this Court authorizing review by the trial court of those motions.  The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the motions in November 2011 and considered WCT’s proposal to modify its plans and found that the project as modified no longer interfered with Smith’s spring rights.  It therefore issued an amended judgment order on December 30, 2011, ordering WCT to lay a polyethylene sleeve and pipe on its property to allow Smith access to his spring rights, calling this “an appropriate equitable remedy for the interference that was found by the jury.”  

¶ 7.             On appeal, plaintiffs argue that: (1) the trial court lacked jurisdiction post-judgment to hold an evidentiary hearing about interference with Smith’s spring rights; (2) Smith was denied his right to a jury trial in that evidentiary hearing; (3) the equitable remedy that resulted from that hearing was a de facto overturning of the jury verdict; (4) Smith was entitled to injunctive relief as well as declaratory relief as a result of the jury verdict; (5) the trial court erred by allowing, on summary judgment, the unilateral relocation of the Roys’[1]

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