Wood NOV and Permits Applications & Town of Hartford v. Wood - Entry Regarding Motion

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 2018
Docket1-1-11 Vtec 138-8-10 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Wood NOV and Permits Applications & Town of Hartford v. Wood - Entry Regarding Motion (Wood NOV and Permits Applications & Town of Hartford v. Wood - Entry Regarding Motion) 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
Wood NOV and Permits Applications & Town of Hartford v. Wood - Entry Regarding Motion, (Vt. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Docket No. 1-1-11 Vtec & Docket No. 138-8-10 Vtec

Town of Hartford v. Wood and Wood NOV and Permit Applications

ENTRY REGARDING MOTION

Title: Motion for Relief from Judgment Order (Motion 23) Filer: Marc Wood Attorney: Brice C. Simon Filed Date: March 5, 2018 Response in Opposition filed on 04/02/2018 by Attorney William F. Ellis for the Town of Hartford Reply in Support of Motion filed on 06/18/2018 by Attorney Brice C. Simon for Appellant Marc Wood Further Response in Opposition filed on 06/28/2018 by Attorney William F. Ellis for the Town of Hartford. The motion is DENIED.

Marc Wood’s efforts to develop his properties along Vermont Route 14 in the Town of Hartford (“Town”) began sometime in 1998. His development on these properties remains incomplete and Mr. Wood and his properties have been the subject of many separate appeals and enforcement actions. Both the parties and this Court have attempted to bring some finality to these combined litigations, but those attempts have thus far been unsuccessful. Due to that long history, we believe it appropriate to provide the following brief history of Mr. Wood’s development efforts and the Town’s enforcement efforts before we review the pending post- judgment motion in the above referenced dockets.1

1 We provided a more complete procedural summary of the various litigations in this Court concerning Mr. Wood’s development efforts in an Entry Order issued in response to Mr. Wood’s motion for the presiding judge to recuse himself. See Town of Hartford v. Wood & Wood NOV & Permit Appeals, Nos. 1-1-11 Vtec, 138-8-10 Vtec, slip op. at 1–4 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. June 1, 2018) (Durkin, J.). Town of Hartford v. Wood & Wood NOV & Permit Apps., No. 138-8-10 & 1-1-11 Vtec (EO on Post-Judgment Motion for Relief) (09-19-2018) Page 2 of 19.

Background Mr. Wood’s properties are located on the southerly side of Vermont Route 14 (a/k/a Maple Street). 2 Prior to Mr. Wood’s development efforts, both lots sloped steeply away from the highway, down towards a Town road known as either Mill Hill Road or Ferry Boat Crossing. The property on the other side of that Town road abuts the White River. Mr. Wood’s two parcels are relatively narrow, compared to their length along Maple Street; the difference in elevation from their northern to southern boundaries is about 40 feet. Mr. Wood applied for a permit to develop the lots in 1998. In order to develop the lots more effectively, Mr. Wood proposed to construct a stone retaining wall along the combined parcels’ southern and western boundaries which would be nearly 30 feet at its highest point from base to top of the wall. Mr. Wood then amended his permit application by proposing that concrete slabs, harvested from a nearby interstate highway bridge reconstruction project, would be used instead of stone to construct his proposed retaining wall. His then engineer proposed specifications for the revised retaining wall, including the following, which we included in a 2012 merits decision: 3. The slabs shall be reinforced concrete, obtained from a bridge rehabilitation project with a minimum thickness of 10 inches. Only slabs that have been sawn and have maintained their integrity during removal may be used; hammered slabs are unacceptable. The minimum width of an acceptable slab is 8 feet. . . .. Any fixtures or steel shall be removed prior to slab placement if another slab will bear on it. Transverse joints shall have a width of approximately 2 to 4 inches and filled with pea gravel for drainage purposes. Transverse joints shall be offset at least 3 feet from the joint above and below. Curb or non-curb slabs may be used on the outside face of the wall and only non-curb sections may be used behind the face. Slabs shall be set level or tilted so that the end furthest from the wall face is lower than the front face. Town of Hartford v. Wood & Wood NOV & Permit Applications, Nos. 138-8-10 Vtec, 1-1-11 Vtec, slip op. at 4 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Mar. 27, 2012) (hereinafter the “2012 Corrected Merits Decision”). Based upon the design specifications presented by Mr. Wood’s engineer, and after the Town had its own engineer review and offer comments upon that design, Mr. Wood’s application for a zoning permit for his proposed revised retaining wall was approved on October 14, 1999. That permit became known as Permit #99-1180. Shortly after Mr. Wood began stockpiling the concrete slabs and constructing the retaining wall, the Town became concerned that Mr. Wood was not constructing the wall as proposed and permitted. After several discussions between the parties did not resolve the Town’s concerns, the Town served Mr. Wood with its first notice of alleged zoning violations

2 Mr. Wood is the sole owner of what is referred to as the Diner parcel. At the time of the 2010 litigation, he owned the other parcel, referred to as the Club parcel, jointly with his then wife. Town of Hartford v. Wood & Wood NOV & Permit Apps., No. 138-8-10 & 1-1-11 Vtec (EO on Post-Judgment Motion for Relief) (09-19-2018) Page 3 of 19.

(“NOV”) and then an enforcement complaint. That litigation resulted in a judgment order in favor of the Town. See Town of Hartford v. Wood, Nos. 72-3-00 Vtec, 91-5-00 Vtec, and 219-5-00 Wrcv (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Sept. 24, 2001) (Wright, J.), aff’d Town of Hartford v. Wood, No. 2001-473, 2002 WL 34423566 (unpub. mem.). Several post-judgment motions were then filed, including motions for contempt by the Town and motions to reopen and reconsider by Mr. Wood. The undersigned addressed all post-judgment motions and the matter was re-closed on March 6, 2008. Several other actions, appeals, and pre- and post- judgment motions have been filed in many dockets, all concerning Mr. Wood’s efforts to develop his Maple Street properties, including reconstruction of the partially burnt Diner building.3 Those matters are procedurally detailed in our Entry Order of June 1, 2018, cited above. The Town has served Mr. Wood with multiple notices of alleged zoning violations (“NOV”) over nearly two decades, all concerning his Maple Street properties. In the proceedings that are the subject of Dockets Nos. 138-8-10 Vtec and 1-1-11 Vtec, Mr. Wood challenged the March 19, 2010 NOV served on him by the Town which detailed how his partially-constructed wall was illegally constructed. The 2010 NOV also addressed how Mr. Wood had begun renovations and other work to the buildings on the Diner and Club Parcels. Docket No 138-8-10 Vtec also concerned Mr. Wood’s appeal of two of the Town Zoning Administrator’s determinations, affirmed by the Town of Hartford Zoning Board of Adjustment (“ZBA”), that his two 2010 applications were incomplete and should be returned to him without decision. His first application was for further revisions to his concrete slab retaining wall; his second application was to construct a single-family home on the Diner parcel, presumably in place of the partially burnt Diner building, which Mr. Wood had begun to reconstruct without a necessary permit. 4 Docket No. 1-1-11 Vtec was assigned to the Town’s zoning enforcement complaint that was based upon the 2010 NOV. The Court completed a trial on the coordinated appeals on July 22, 2011. After allowing the parties additional time to file proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, the Court issued its 23-page Corrected Merits Decision on March 27, 2012, in which it announced its conclusion that Mr. Wood had partially constructed his proposed retaining wall in a non- conforming manner and that he had submitted incomplete permit applications. 5 Concerning the wall, the Court specifically found that:

3 We note that we held Mr. Wood in contempt in separate dockets for continuing to make improvements to the Diner building without a necessary zoning permit. In re Appeal of Wood, Nos. 121-7-03 Vtec & 185-10-04 Vtec (Vt. Envtl.

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Related

In re Wood NOV, Town of Hartford v. Wood
2013 VT 40 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2013)
Richwagen v. Richwagen
568 A.2d 419 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1989)

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