Sorrentino Building Site Application

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 6, 2009
Docket231-10-07 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Sorrentino Building Site Application (Sorrentino Building Site Application) 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
Sorrentino Building Site Application, (Vt. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} In re: Sorrentino Building Site Application } Docket No. 231-10-07 Vtec (Appeal of Sorrentino) } }

Decision and Order on Pending Motions

Appellant Alfonse Sorrentino appealed from a decision of the Development

Review Board (DRB) of the Town of Woodstock, determining that his application to

develop a residential building site in the Scenic Ridgeline overlay district was

incomplete. Appellant-Applicant is represented by Kirk C. Kardashian, Esq., and Robin

Stern, Esq.; the Town is represented by Todd C. Steadman, Esq.

The Town has moved to dismiss Questions 5 and 6 of the Statement of

Questions,1 and both parties have moved for summary judgment. The following facts

are undisputed unless otherwise noted.

Town’s Motion to Dismiss Questions 5 and 6

Because this appeal is de novo rather than on the record, the question of what the

DRB required from Appellant or from any similarly situated applicants is not relevant,

unless Appellant intended to make a constitutional equal protection argument not

1Questions 2 through 6 of the Statement of Questions are posed in terms of whether the DRB erred in various ways. However, the Town of Woodstock has not adopted the procedures necessary for appeals from its decisions to be on the record. Compare 24 V.S.A. §§ 4471(b), 4472(a) (third sentence), and V.R.E.C.P. 5(h) (explaining on-the-record appeals), with 24 V.S.A. § 4472(a) (second sentence), and V.R.E.C.P. 5(g) (explaining de novo appeals). For the purposes of the present motions, this decision will treat those questions as if they had been stated in de novo terms. As the appeal is resolved on the basis of these motions, we will not require Appellant to file a restated Statement of Questions. 1 explicitly stated in Question 5. See In re Letourneau, 168 Vt. 539, 549 (1998) (regarding

the required showing in an enforcement context as to selective treatment); see also In re

Valois Airplane Storage Application, No. 254-11-07 Vtec, slip op. at 10–11 (Vt. Envtl. Ct.

Sept. 23, 2008) (Wright, J.).

Similarly, because this appeal is de novo rather than on the record, the accuracy

of the DRB’s minutes is not relevant in the present appeal. Appellant does not claim

that this matter should be remanded for the DRB to correct deficiencies in a decision

reflected in the minutes. See V.R.E.C.P. 5(i); e.g., In re Chandler Repair and Home

Industry Application, No. 79-4-07 Vtec, slip op. at 2, 4 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Feb. 19, 2008)

(Wright, J.).

Accordingly, the Town’s motion to dismiss Questions 5 and 6 must be

GRANTED.

Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment

Appellant owns property located on Golf Avenue in the Residential Five Acre

zoning district; a portion of the property is also located in the Scenic Ridgeline overlay

zoning district. Appellant is an architect who intends to design the single-family house

at issue in the present proceedings.

Development of a single-family dwelling in the Residential Five Acre district (but

not also within an overlay district) requires only an administrative permit to be

obtained from the Administrative Officer. §§ 302(C)(2), 707, 708(B)(2).2 However,

2 All references are to sections of the Town of Woodstock Zoning Regulations, as amended through August 7, 2007, unless otherwise noted. We note that amendments to § 406 of the Zoning Regulations, Scenic Ridgeline Review, were adopted on December 18, 2007; however, neither party suggests that those amendments were applicable to the August 2007 application at issue in this proceeding. See 24 V.S.A. § 4449(d) (requiring that applications submitted after the date of public notice for the first public hearing on an amended zoning ordinance be reviewed under the proposed regulations). 2 development of a single-family residence in the Scenic Ridgeline overlay district also

requires DRB3 action under § 406. One issue raised by the present motions is whether

§ 406 also requires conditional use review for projects in the Scenic Ridgeline overlay

district, §§ 406(D)(1), (2), 708(C), 710, even if such a project is exempt from § 406(F)

scenic ridgeline review due to a non-visibility determination, § 406(E)(2)(a).

In October of 2005, Appellant had received an Administrative Permit (the 2005

Permit) to build a single-family home on a portion of his property that was not in the

Scenic Ridgeline overlay district. However, after receiving this permit, he determined

that the permitted residence would be quite visible from town highways, contrary to his

own wishes and the purposes of the Scenic Ridgeline overlay regulatory scheme.

In August of 2007, Appellant therefore submitted a new application for

conditional use approval4 (the 2007 Plan) to place the house on a portion of his property

within the Scenic Ridgeline overlay district, but placed so that it would be screened

from visibility by what he characterized (in the Project Description appended to his

application) as a “thick wall of mature hemlock trees.” Under the 2005 Permit some of

these trees would have been removed for construction of the house and its driveway.

The 2007 Plan depicts the stand of mature hemlocks with the note: “existing 100 foot

hemlocks to remain as necessary to provide adequate screening.”

The 2007 Plan also depicts the footprint of what is depicted on the plan and

labeled as the “proposed residential building envelope,5” and shows the “limits of

3 The Zoning Regulations still refer separately to the Planning Commission and the Zoning Board of Adjustment; this decision will refer to the DRB as the Town of Woodstock now has a DRB. 4 See Appellant’s Ex. 1 at 3. This form, entitled “Overlay Zoning Conditional Use Support Statement,” was submitted by Appellant as part of his 2007 application. 5 The term “building envelope” is commonly used to indicate a two-dimensional area laid out on a plan or topographical map. See In re Rouleau Property Appeals, Nos. 231- 12-04 Vtec, 29-2-05 Vtec, 192-9-05 Vtec, 28-2-05 Vtec, 193-9-05 Vtec, slip op. at 4 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Nov. 17, 2006) (Wright, J.). The term may be used in the sense of all of the 3 disturbance” as just outside that footprint. Note 6 to the 2007 Plan gives the dimensions

of this “proposed residential building envelope” as “length = 230’, width = 100’, height =

35’.” That is, Appellant provided the maximum extent of the volume of space within

which the building would be constructed.6 He requested in his Project Description that

the Conservation Commission use that maximum volume to determine whether any

portion of it would be visible, as required by § 406(E)(2)(a).

Appellant did not at that time submit the building elevations required for an

administrative permit application by § 708(B)(2)(c), as he was applying first for

conditional use approval and wished to obtain the non-visibility determination at the

outset. He preferred not to design the building until the Conservation Commission

would have determined that the entire potential building volume is not visible from

any Town highway, and therefore that review by the DRB under the Scenic Ridgeline

overlay district criteria in §§ 406(F) and (G) would not be required.

In August of 2007, Appellant submitted the 2007 Plan application to the Zoning

Administrator, who forwarded it7 to the Conservation Commission for the required

visibility determination applicable to projects in the Scenic Ridgeline overlay district

pursuant to § 406(E)(2)(a). Under that section, the Conservation Commission must

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