Sheldrick Building Permit

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 1, 2009
Docket185-9-07 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Sheldrick Building Permit (Sheldrick Building Permit) 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
Sheldrick Building Permit, (Vt. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} In re Sheldrick Building Permit } Docket No. 185-9-07 Vtec (Appeal of Bennett and Naritomi) } (appeal of municipal building permit) }

Merits Decision Donald and Heidi Sheldrick sought and obtained a zoning permit from the Town of Charlotte Zoning Administrator for the construction of a two-bay garage/workshop (“Proposed Workshop” or “Workshop”) at their home at 1091 Roscoe Road. Appellants Stuart Bennett and Patti Naritomi (“Appellants”) filed a timely appeal of the Zoning Administrator’s issuance of the Sheldrick permit. When the Town of Charlotte Zoning Board of Adjustment (“ZBA”) upheld the issuance of the Sheldrick building permit, Appellants filed a timely appeal with this Court.1 Appellants presented three issues for this Court’s review in their Statement of Questions. When this Court’s Interim Decision of May 30, 2008 on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment (“Interim Decision”) resolved some, but not all of the issues presented, this matter proceeded to trial, which was completed over two days. The Court conducted a site visit of the subject property and the surrounding neighborhood prior to addressing the parties’ summary judgment motions. The site visit also assisted the Court by putting the evidence received at trial into context. Procedural Background By our Interim Decision on the parties’ summary judgment cross-motions, we reduced the legal issues requiring adjudication at trial, specifically holding that the following two issues were all that remained of the challenges Appellant preserved for our review in this appeal. We concluded that the first issue to address was whether the Proposed Workshop would be “subordinate . . . to the principal structure and use” as that phrase is used in §§ 3.6(A)(2) and 10.2 of the Town of Charlotte Land Use Regulations (“Regulations”). Interim Decision at 6–10. We also concluded that the second and remaining issue to address at trial was whether the

1 Appellants are represented by Vincent A. Paradis, Esq.; Appellee-Applicants Donald and Heidi Sheldrick (“Applicants”) are represented by Liam L. Murphy, Esq.; the Town of Charlotte is represented by John H. Klesch, Esq.; and Annemarie Curlin, appearing in this proceeding as an interested person, represents herself.

1 Proposed Workshop and its use for a home occupation conforms to the Performance Standards itemized in Regulations § 3.12. Id. at 10–11. Our Interim Decision clarified some further legal issues that bear repeating in this Merits Decision. First, we note that Applicants’ only pending zoning request is for permission to build their Proposed Workshop as a lawful accessory structure and that the only disputed issue is whether their accessory structure is “subordinate” to their dwelling and residential use of their property. Id. at 6–9.2 As to the use of the Proposed Workshop, Applicants contend that they are not required to obtain a use permit for their Workshop, since their activities may be classified as a home occupation that does not require a permit. Id. at 9–10; see also Regulations § 4.11(A)(1). We reserved responding to Applicants’ contention on the home occupation issue, subject only to addressing the subordination and performance standard issues being addressed at trial. Interim Decision at 10. Within the context of these remaining legal issues, we render the following Findings of Fact from the evidence admitted at trial, including that evidence put into context by the site visit the Court conducted with the parties prior to trial:

Findings of Fact 1. Applicants own a four-acre parcel of land on the easterly side of Roscoe Road. The property is located in the Rural Zoning District, as defined by Regulations Table 2.5. Presently situated on Applicants’ property is a single family dwelling, a detached garage, a horse barn, a run-in shed for horses and other animals, and a temporary workshop/garage. The existing buildings on Applicants’ property are depicted in the photos admitted in to evidence at trial as Exhibits H-1 through H-6, and are shown by the demonstrative model prepared by Appellants’ expert and admitted in to evidence at trial as Exhibits 11 through 11-6. 2. Mrs. Sheldrick has lived in this neighborhood her whole life. The Sheldricks purchased the subject property from Mrs. Sheldrick’s parents; Mrs. Sheldrick first resided on the property in 1997 in a mobile home, which was later replaced by the existing dwelling. 3. The existing dwelling, constructed in 1999, measures 28’ x 32’ and includes a 12’ x 8’ enclosed mudroom, a 6’ x 8’ front porch, and a 12’ x 16’ rear deck. Thus, the footprint of the existing dwelling comprises approximately 1,232 square feet. With three floors of finished

2 There has been no contest of Applicants’ representation that their Proposed Workshop conforms to setback and density requirements for the Rural Zoning District.

2 living space, the cumulative floor space of the dwelling comprises approximately 2,832 square feet. The dwelling is depicted on Applicants’ Exhibit H-1. 4. The dimensions of the outbuildings on the property are as follows: a. detached garage is 24’ x 40’, with a footprint of 960 square feet; b. horse barn is 12’ x 60’, with a footprint of 720 square feet; c. run-in shed for animals is 10’ x 12’, with a footprint of 120 square feet; and d. temporary garage is 14’ x 32’, with a footprint of 488 square feet. Therefore, the total existing building coverage on the property, including the dwelling and the outbuildings, is 3,520 square feet, which represents approximately 2% building coverage for the four-acre parcel.

5. Applicants obtained a zoning permit in October of 2007 to construct the temporary garage and use it for the purpose of their home occupation truck repair business. Applicants have pledged to remove the temporary garage, if they receive permission to construct and use the Proposed Workshop. 6. With the exception of the temporary garage, all of the existing buildings on Applicants’ property are used as their primary residence or in connection with their primary residence and to house their personal hobbies, including the raising of horses and other animals. None of these existing buildings (again, with the exception of the temporary garage) are used for commercial or business-related purposes.3 7. Mr. Sheldrick first lived at the subject property in 2003; he has performed some type of occupational work on the property since he first moved there, beginning with the repair of truck drive shafts at his home while he worked away from home at a machine shop. 8. He began his home-based business of repairing large trucks in 2004. Many of the trucks he services are delivery trucks, including trucks that deliver fuel, lumber, beverages, and other supplies. The largest trucks he services are logging trucks, with a self-contained boom and claw to stack logs. 9. Trucks are commonly identified by various classes, ranging from class 1 (which includes utility vans and full-sized pick up trucks) to class 8 (which includes dump and cement trucks). A copy of a truck classification table, with truck examples, was admitted as Applicants’ Exhibit P.

3 Mr. Sheldrick once used a portion of his existing garage to store work tools and supplies, but this practice will cease once the Proposed Workshop is completed.

3 The majority of trucks Mr. Sheldrick repairs are in the class 6 and 7 category, with an occasional truck in the class 8 category. 10. The truck repair business requires Mr. Sheldrick to travel to the disabled truck and to often repair the truck away from his home; Mr. Sheldrick performs an average of up to 60% of his truck repair business away from his home.

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Related

In re Glen M.
575 A.2d 193 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
Sheldrick Building Permit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheldrick-building-permit-vtsuperct-2009.