                                          STATE OF VERMONT
                                       ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

                                                          }
Appeal of Van Nostrand                                    }             Docket No. 209-11-04 Vtec
                                                          }             Docket No. 101-5-05 Vtec
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                                            Decision on the Merits

         Applicants Ronald C. and Elizabeth M. Van Nostrand (“Applicants”) appealed two
decisions of the Town of Salisbury Development Review Board (DRB). In the first, Docket No.
209-11-04 Vtec, Applicants appealed the DRB’s decision to reverse the Salisbury Zoning
Administrator’s (ZA)1 approval of their application for a zoning permit to construct a four-
bedroom, single-family residence and septic system on their 24± acre parcel. The second appeal,
Docket No. 101–5–05 Vtec, was from the DRB’s decision to deny Applicants a variance2 under
§ 502 of the Salisbury Zoning Regulations (“Regulations”). The two appeals were consolidated
by this Court in its Entry Order of June 1, 2005.
         On January 13, 2006, this Court issued a decision granting partial summary judgment to
Applicants, finding that their 24± acre parcel was a lawful, pre–existing lot, the access for which
was previously permitted, but which contains a portion3 that did not conform with the 50-foot
width requirements in the amended zoning regulations. Applicants filed a supplemental motion,
requesting that this Court grant them summary judgment as to the remaining issues in Docket
No. 209-11-04 Vtec. Appellee Linda C. Nordlund (“Appellee”) filed a motion requesting that
this Court reconsider the determinations announced in its January 13 Decision, including the
determination in Docket No. 209-11-04 Vtec that Applicants’ back parcel constitutes a lawful
pre-existing lot with a non-conforming right-of-way access and the determination in Docket No.
101-5-05 Vtec that a variance was not necessary for the easement access Applicants alleged they



1
  As noted in our January 13, 2006 Decision, the Salisbury Zoning Administrator also serves as the Salisbury Health
Officer.
2
  The application at issue in Docket No. 101-5-05 Vtec contained two requests, stated in the alternative: either that
the DRB approve the “existing easement” that served Appellant-Applicants’ back parcel or grant a variance for the
“existing easement,” given that it is undisputed that the portion of the easement which is purported to pass over the
northwest corner of Appellee’s property is not fifty feet wide, as required by Regulations § 502. The DRB denied
both requests. This Court announced, in its Decision of January 13, 2006, that a variance was not needed for the
back parcel easement and vacated the DRB denial of April 21, 2005.
3
  See Finding 13, below.
enjoy over Appellee’s parcel. By our December 11, 2006 Decision, we denied both motions and
established that the consolidated cases were ready for trial.
        A trial was conducted on March 12, 2007. Based upon the evidence admitted at trial,
including that which was put into context by the Court’s previous site visit, the Court makes the
following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

                                              Factual Findings
1.      Applicants own two parcels of land on the westerly side of West Shore Road along Lake
Dunmore in Salisbury, Vermont: the “Front Parcel” (1.1± acres with frontage on West Shore
Road) and the “Back Parcel” (interior parcel of 24± acres with no road frontage).4
2.      As with many lakes throughout Vermont, Lake Dunmore has attracted development,
particularly in the form of subdivisions that created small lots that adjoin the lake and upon
which homes—most seasonal, some year-round—have been built.
3.      Applicants’ predecessors in title once owned the Front Parcel and the Back Parcel
separately. When the Back Parcel was originally subdivided off in 1955, resulting in it being
landlocked, an easement was reserved by the sellers, a Mrs. and Mr. Farnham, that traveled “over
an old logging road which cuts across the northwesterly corner of the lands” now owned by
Appellee.
4.      Appellee disputed the validity of this easement, its width and the propriety of Applicants’
improvements to it in a quiet title action brought in Addison Superior Court. By Decision of
September 7, 2006 and Declaratory Judgment Order of December 14, 2006, the Addison
Superior Court determined the following: (1) the easement for Applicants’ Back Parcel over the
northwesterly corner of Appellee’s lot remains valid; (2) the easement established in 1955 was
not clearly defined, but was best estimated to be eighteen feet wide; and (3) Applicants’ recent
improvements to this access way, including the installation of an underground pipe for utilities,
did not constitute an expansion beyond the scope of the original easement.5



4
  Appellee asserted in her pre-trial motion that because the Back Parcel can be accessed by way of a common drive
over the Front Parcel, we have mischaracterized the Back Parcel as having “no road frontage.” Appellee is mistaken
on this legal conclusion. While the two separate parcels are now owned by the same individuals, the easement that
benefits the Back Parcel has not been extinguished by this common ownership because part of that easement runs
over and encumbers Appellee’s property.
5
  See Nordlund v. van Nostrand, Docket No. 56-3-06 Ancv, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order at 7-8
(An. Super. Ct., Sept. 7, 2006). The Addison Superior Court Decision of September 7, 2006 and Declaratory
Judgment Order of December 14, 2006 are now on appeal to the Vermont Supreme Court.

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5.      At some point prior to 2000, the Front and Back Parcels again came under common
ownership. The Addison Superior Court also determined that this joint ownership of the lots,
while perhaps regarded as a merger, did not cause an extinguishment of the easement that served
as access for the Back Parcel, at least to the extent that the access traveled across the easement
encumbering Appellee’s parcel.6
6.      On April 4, 2000, Applicants’ predecessors in title received a subdivision permit to re-
create the two lots described as the Front Parcel and the Back Parcel.
7.      The 2000 subdivision application and permit did not clearly define the easement access to
be used for the back Parcel. However, No one appealed the 2000 subdivision permit. Applicants
and their predecessors in title delayed commencement of development of the Back Parcel.
8.      Under the zoning regulations in effect in 2000, a landlocked parcel was required to be
served by an easement of no less than twenty feet. The Town of Salisbury Zoning Regulations
(“Regulations”) were thereafter amended to reflect that a landlocked parcel must benefit from “a
permanent easement or right-of-way at least fifty (50) feet in width.” Regulations § 502.7
9.      On August 19, 2004, Applicants applied for permits to construct a single-family dwelling
on the Back Parcel. The Salisbury ZA issued a building permit and a sewage disposal permit
(No. 04-49 and No. 04-50).
10.     Both of Applicants’ Parcels, as well as Appellee’s parcel, are located in the Lakeshore
(LZ) Zoning District. Regulations § 210. A single-family seasonal or year-round residence is
identified as a permitted use in the LZ District. Regulations § 970(B).
11.     Applicants’ 2004 single-family development proposal for the Back Parcel complies with
all other size, setback and use restrictions for the LZ District. Appellee did not dispute this at
trial; her concerns regarding Applicants’ proposed development for the Back Parcel are based
solely on the easement that encumbers her property and Applicants’ proposed use of it as an
access for the Back Parcel residence.
12.     The Back Parcel access Applicants propose to use begins as a shared driveway with their
Front Parcel residence; the latter driveway splits off just before the Back Parcel access crosses

6
  Nordlund v. van Nostrand, Docket No. 56-3-06 Ancv, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law at 5.
7
  The current § 502 of the Regulations states:
         No land development may be permitted on lots which do not have either frontage on a public road,
         or public waters, or with the approval of the planning commission, access to such a road or waters
         by a permanent easement or right of way at least fifty (50) feet in width.
Regulations § 502. The only difference in the version of § 502 in effect prior to March 5, 2002, was that the
required width of access rights-of-way was twenty feet.

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Appellee’s northwesterly corner. At this juncture, the Front Parcel driveway rises more steeply
and turns to the north, towards the Front Parcel residence. The Back Parcel access continues to
rise in elevation, but appears less steep and is a more straight approach than the Front Parcel
driveway.
13.    In their 2004 applications, and again before this Court on appeal, Applicants noted that
only a small portion of the Back Parcel access crossed over Appellee’s land.            In fact, as
evidenced by the survey map of Appellee’s lot admitted at trial as Exhibit 2, the access crosses
over Appellee’s northwesterly corner only for a distance of 44.66± feet, as measured from the
center line of the easement. Applicants represented, and this Court so finds, that the Back Parcel
access travels over Applicants’ Front Parcel for about 150 feet, or more than three quarters of its
total distance. The portion of the Back Parcel access that travels over Applicants’ Front Parcel
can be expanded to fifty feet in width.
14.    Appellee filed a timely appeal of Applicants’ 2004 permits with the DRB. Appellee’s
sole objection to Applicants’ proposed development, both before the DRB and before this Court
on appeal, relates to their concerns about the easement encumbering her land and benefiting the
Back Parcel.
15.    The DRB held a public hearing on Appellee’s appeal. On October 28, 2004, the DRB
issued its decision reversing the Salisbury ZA’s issuance of permits 04-49 and 04-50.
16.    Applicants timely filed an appeal of the DRB decision with this Court, which is the
subject of Docket Number 209-11-04 Vtec.
17.    While that appeal was pending with this Court, Applicants applied to the DRB to either
approve the existing right-of-way easement they asserted over the northwest corner of Appellee’s
adjoining parcel, or grant a variance for such existing easement, given that the easement was not
wide enough, at least as it crossed over Appellee’s parcel, to comply with Regulations § 502.
18.    After a hearing, the DRB issued a decision denying both Applicants’ easement approval
and variance requests on April 21, 2005.
19.    Applicants filed a timely appeal of the DRB’s April 21, 2005 decision to this Court,
which is the subject of Docket Number 101-5-05 Vtec.
20.    In our January 13, 2006 Decision on the motion for summary judgment and motion to
reconsider, this Court determined that Applicants’ Back Parcel is served by a lawful, pre-existing
nonconforming access, the non-conformity being that the portion of the access that encumbers
and travels over Appellee’s northwesterly corner was not wide enough to conform to the

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amended Regulations § 502. The Court left for trial the taking of evidence and determination of
whether Applicants’ proposed development of the Back Parcel would constitute an unlawful
expansion of this nonconformity.
21.     This Court also determined that, because of the previous unappealed subdivision permit,
which authorized access for the Back Parcel by way of the purported easement, Applicants did
not need a variance from Regulations § 502 to proceed with their plans for the Back Parcel.

                                                 Discussion
        All of the legal issues raised in Applicants’ original Statement of Questions in their
permit appeal8 were addressed in this Court’s Decision of January 13, 2006. In sum, this Court
determined that the 2000 subdivision permit created a vested right in the owner of the Back
Parcel, even though the subsequent amendment to the Salisbury Zoning Regulations required
that landlocked parcels be served by permanent easements of at least fifty feet. In so holding, we
noted that
        The sole nonconformity in the appeals at issue here is the width of the right-of-
        way. As such, the nonconformity rests with the nature of the lot, not with a
        structure on it, nor with a use proposed for it. The fact that a permitted, subdivided
        parcel of undeveloped land no longer complies with the applicable zoning laws
        cannot be a basis for denying a permitted use on the property, in the absence of
        any other claims of noncompliance. Weeks, 167 Vt. at 555 (citing Lubinsky v.
        Fair Haven Zoning Bd., 148 Vt. 47, 51 (1986)) (lawful pre-existing, noncomplying
        “parcels retain their development rights even though their area is less than
        prescribed by the ordinance.”)

Appeal of Van Nostrand, Docket Nos. 209-11-04 & 101-5-05 Vtec, slip op. at 8 (Vt. Envtl. Ct.,
Jan. 13, 2006).
        All the evidence admitted at trial, including that which was put into context by the site
visit the Court conducted jointly with the parties and the Addison Superior Court Judge hearing
the easement challenge, has confirmed the legal foundation upon which we based our January
13, 2006 Decision.
        We remain convinced of the importance of this Court respecting its jurisdictional
limitations, as noted on page 9 of our January 13, 2006 Decision (“the Environmental Court is
not vested with the jurisdiction to determine the parties’ respective private property rights to land
or easements that benefit or encroach upon their property”). Appellee sought and received a
8
  The zoning permit appeal is Docket No. 209-11-04 Vtec. As noted in the January 13, 2006 Decision, Applicants’
variance appeal (i.e.: Docket No. 101-5-05 Vtec) was rendered moot by the Court’s summary judgment
determination in Docket No. 209-11-04 Vtec.

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determination from the Court with jurisdiction to decide her challenges to Applicants’ easement.
While the Addison Superior Court determination that the easement encumbering the
northwesterly corner of Appellee’s parcel and benefiting Applicants’ Back Parcel is valid and
has not been exceeded by Applicants’ recent improvements is now on appeal to the Vermont
Supreme Court, we conclude that Applicants have fulfilled their threshold burden in this land use
appeal of showing that they have the legal right to use the access they propose for their Back
Parcel.
          We continue to view the nonconformity here as a “bulk nonconformity,” as established
by our Supreme Court in In re Miserocchi, 170 Vt. 320, 328 (2000). In the appeal at bar, the
narrowness of the small portion of the Back Parcel access, as it crosses over the northwesterly
corner of Appellee’s parcel, cannot be regarded as a “use” nonconformity; that portion of the
Back Parcel access does not conform with the “bulk” restrictions of the current zoning
regulations.     However, much like the nonconforming barn in Miserocchi, or the other
nonconforming structures in the cases from various jurisdictions cited in Miserocchi, the subject
property may be developed for a permitted use, so long as the proposed use does not increase the
nonconformity of the pre-existing, permitted access.
          This last legal question provides for some mental gymnastics, since the nonconformity to
address here is the narrowness of a portion of the Back Parcel access. Applicants suggested at
trial that “increasing” this nonconformity would mean “reducing” the width of the access as it
traverses Appellee’s parcel; they offered undisputed evidence that they do not propose to reduce
the width of the access. Appellee expressed legitimate concerns about improvements to and
possible expansion of the access that Applicants already completed, including while these
appeals and the Addison Superior Court litigation were pending.
          Construction of land use improvements while an appeal or quiet title action is pending
can cause understandable frustrations. But the legal issue of whether Applicants have exceeded
the limits of the easement over Appellee’s parcel, first created in 1955, is not an issue within the
jurisdiction or responsibility of this Court to decide. We therefore decline to do so, and conclude
based upon the evidence admitted at trial that Applicants are entitled to rely upon the easement
first established in 1955 to access their Back Parcel and that the single-family development they
propose will not increase the nonconformity of that access as it crosses over Appellee’s parcel.
In fact, with the exception of the portion of the access that crosses Appellee’s northwesterly
corner, the Back Parcel access can now be fifty feet in width and therefore in compliance with

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the current Regulation § 502. Since Applicants’ proposed development complies in all other
respects with the use, setback and size restrictions for the LZ District, we conclude that their
zoning application should be approved.
                                          Conclusions
       For the foregoing reasons, Ronald C. and Elizabeth M. Van Nostrand’s application for a
zoning permit to construct a four-bedroom, single-family residence and septic system on their
24± acre parcel is hereby APPROVED. In so doing, we REVERSE and VACATE the October
28, 2004 Decision of the Salisbury DRB and do hereby REINSTATE Permits 04-49 and 04-50
issued by the Salisbury Zoning Administrator. Any construction time periods or other time
limitations based upon such permits shall run anew from the date of this Decision.
       This completes the proceedings pending before this Court in both appeals. A Judgment
Order accompanies this Decision.



       Done at Berlin, Vermont this 18th day of May, 2007.



                                            ___________________________________
                                             Thomas S. Durkin, Environmental Judge




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