                                      STATE OF VERMONT

            Appeal of Isaac Cowan                     Vermont Environmental Court
                                                      Docket No. 73-3-02 Vtec
                                                }
            Town of Richmond v. Cowan
                                                }
                                                      Vermont Environmental Court
                                                }
            Isaac Cowan v. Town of                    Docket No. 102-5-02 Vtec
                                                }
            Richmond                            }
                                                      Chittenden Superior Court
                                                      Docket No. S145-03 CnC

                     Decision and Order on Motions for Summary Judgment

(as corrected on pages 2, 3 and 8 per motion to alter and 7/1/03 telephone conference)

In Docket No. 73-3-02 Vtec, Appellant Isaac Cowan appealed from a decision of the
Development Review Board (DRB) of the Town of Richmond affirming the Zoning
Administrator=s denial of Appellant=s zoning permit application for a single-family residence.
Docket No. 102-5-02 Vtec is the Town= s enforcement action for injunctive relief and a fine
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regarding a retaining wall on Appellant= s property. In the Superior Court case , Docket No.
S145-03 CnC, Appellant appealed the denial of his application for approval of the septic system
for the single family house. Appellant is represented by John W. O= Donnell, Esq.; the Town is
represented by Mark L. Sperry, Esq.; and Interested Persons Erica Ell and Ned Gaston are
represented by David L. Grayck, Esq.

Appellant has moved for summary judgment in all three cases. The following facts are undisputed
unless otherwise noted.

Appellant owns a one-acre parcel of land located at 420 Snipe Ireland Road, in both the
agricultural/residential zoning district and the flood hazard overlay zoning district. The flood
hazard overlay district is defined as the areas within the 100-year flood plain by reference to the
most recent Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRM) and the Flood Boundary and Floodway Maps
created by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). ' 6.8.2 of the Zoning
Regulations. At Appellant= s parcel, the 100-year flood plain appears to occupy all the area
between Snipe Ireland Road and Snipe Ireland Brook, as well as an area on the other side of the
brook. (See Exhibit A to the Rodjenski affidavit filed May 15, 2003.)

Appellant= s parcel has 208 feet of frontage on Snipe Ireland Road. Snipe Ireland Brook bisects
the parcel, running roughly parallel to the road approximately 102 feet from the edge of the road
and at an elevation approximately 30 feet below the elevation of the road. The property is fairly
flat for approximately the first 36 feet back from the road, and then slopes at approximately a 20%
grade down towards the brook. The slope is unstable and is subject to erosion in its present
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condition. On the far side of the stream the land slopes steeply upwards and is not proposed for
development; the contours of the land on the other side of the stream are not shown in any off the
affidavit attachments.

The Ell/Gaston lot, which they purchased from Appellant in 1998, is adjacent to and to the south
of Appellant= s lot. A driveway extends from Appellant= s lot onto the Ell/Gaston lot, to a parking
area near a footbridge over the brook. The Ell/Gaston house has an alternative access from O=
Neil Drive by a driveway over a small later-acquired adjacent parcel not at issue in the present
case.
In the flood hazard overlay district, only the following uses are permitted uses in the flood plain
outside of the floodway: (a) agriculture, horticulture, or forestry not involving structures; (b)
seasonal sales of farm produce; and (c) parks, playgrounds, and other outdoor recreational
facilities not involving structures. ' 6.8.4. In the flood hazard overlay district, only the following
uses are conditional uses in the flood plain outside of the floodway: (a) parking areas; (b)
essential public services; (c) structures that are accessory to private dwellings or to the listed
permitted uses, that do not involve sanitary systems; or (d) enlargements or substantial
improvements of [existing noncomplying] structures. ' 6.8.5. Subsection (e) of ' 6.8.5 specifically
prohibits any but the listed uses to be allowed in the floodplain. As distinct from the floodplain,
within the floodway itself, no structures are permitted except for uses such as bridges, dams, or
bank stabilization projects, and an applicant must show that the proposed use will A not
substantially increase the 100-year flood hazard area or the velocity of the watercourse or
endanger existing uses.@ ' 6.8.6.

In 2000, the property contained no structures or other improvements. In a zoning permit
application for a retaining wall filed in 2000, Appellant proposed to install a twelve-foot-high
concrete block retaining wall approximately from 10 feet to 28 feet away from the bank of the
brook and roughly parallel to the brook, running from the northerly boundary of the parcel 108 feet
(approximately halfway) southerly down the lot. Appellant then proposed to grade the fill between
the road and the wall to A decrease the severity of the slope as well as increase the potential for
future agriculture or residential uses,@ with a resulting grade of approximately 12%. The
application did not propose the wall to be temporary or set a removal date for the wall. In the
narrative of the application, under the heading of > proposed grading,= Appellant stated that the
wall A will be built at an elevation that is out of flood plane [sic].@

In early 2001, the Zoning Administrator approved the application (Permit No. 00-199), requiring
Appellant to submit a revised site plan depicting all setbacks from property lines and distances
from the proposed wall to the top of the streambank. The approval required the project to conform
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to the revised site plan, required that construction not occur between October 15th and April 15 ,
and required the work to comply with state erosion control standards. No party appealed the
Zoning Administrator= s decision, and it became final.

On January 29, 2001 the Zoning Administrator issued a certified letter to Appellant requesting
compliance with the condition requiring the filing of a revised site plan. The letter noted that the
wall must be located outside the flood hazard overlay district, reminded Appellant that his
application had represented that the wall would be built at an elevation that is out of the flood
plain, and stated that the westerly edge of the flood hazard overlay district on the property is at a
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distance 25 feet from the edge of the brook. This letter was not issued in the form of a Notice of
Violation. It was returned unclaimed to the Zoning Administrator.

In February 2001, Appellant constructed the retaining wall on the parcel. The southern corner of
the wall is located 14'10" from the edge of the brook, and the northern corner of the wall is
located 12' 8" from the edge of the brook. Due to the curve of the brook, the wall is located as
much as 21 feet from the edge of the brook at an intermediate point along the wall.

On March 12, 2001, the Zoning Administrator re-sent the January 2001 letter; which was received
by Appellant on March 14, 2001. No party appealed the Zoning Administrator= s March 12, 2001
letter and it became final.

On July 12, 2001, Appellant applied for a permit to install a septic system on the parcel. On July
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18, 2001, the Town Health Officer denied the application on the grounds that the system fails to
comply with the Town= s Sewage Ordinance, specifically due to the lack of a replacement area,
lack of the minimum isolation distances between the proposed disposal field and the roadway
ditch, the top of the embankment, and the foundation, the lack of sufficient natural soil on the
downhill side of the proposed disposal field, and the lack of sufficient depth of the test pits. In
addition, the health officer ruled that the system as designed may lead to the creation of a health
hazard due to the topography of the site, its proximity to Snipe Ireland Brook and the high
maintenance demands of the proposed system.

On August 23, 2001, the Zoning Administrator sent Appellant a Notice of Violation, describing the
violations the failure to meet the conditions of permit 00-199 prior to construction of the retaining
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wall and the erection of an accessory structure within the flood hazard overlay zone, and
notifying Appellant of his right to appeal to the DRB within 15 days. After the appeal period had
elapsed, on September 20, 2001, the Town= s attorney sent a letter to Appellant stating that the
notice of violation had become final and that he must remove the structure and the fill or the Town
would bring an enforcement action, including a request for fines.

In November of 2001, Appellant applied for a permit to construct a 27' x 66' single-family house
on the parcel. Assuming that the A Sanitary Plan@ attached as Exhibit O to the Rodjenski
affidavit is one of the site plans associated with this permit, the existing retaining wall was
planned to be left in place and not removed, additional courses of blocks were proposed to be
added to increase the height of the existing retaining wall, and the building pad was proposed to
adjoin the westerly face of the retaining wall. The Zoning Administrator denied the permit on the
basis of the matters stated in the Town Attorney= s September 2001 letter. The DRB upheld the
denial on appeal.

The Town adopted a new sewage disposal ordinance effective February 3, 2002. The parties
have not stated whether this ordinance was adopted within the Town= s zoning ordinance or as a
separate ordinance. If it is within the zoning ordinance, the parties have not stated when it was
first proposed, or whether 24 V.S.A. ' 4443(d) applies to it.

In Docket No. 73-3-02 Vtec, Appellant appealed the DRB= s decision upholding the Zoning
Administrator= s denial of Appellant= s zoning permit application. Appellant argues that the basis
on which the Zoning Administrator denied Appellant= s application was that the existing retaining
wall was a part of the house= s foundation, but that Appellant now proposes to remove the
existing retaining wall and to construct a retaining wall westerly of the flood hazard overlay district
boundary, assumed to be 25 feet from the stream.

Appellant= s application as it was submitted to the Zoning Administrator and DRB showed the
existing retaining wall remaining in place and as directly adjacent to the building pad. If Appellant
now proposes to remove the existing retaining wall and to construct a more westerly retaining
wall, that revised application may be submitted to the town process, but it must be evaluated by
the regulations in place as of the time of the revised application, and is not before the Court in the
present appeal. If Appellant claims that the existing retaining wall was a > bank stabilization=
project, that it is in the floodway, but that it should be allowed to remain in place under ' 6.8.6,
then Appellant must apply for its approval under that section and make the additional showing
necessary under that section.

As to the application that was before the Zoning Administrator and then the DRB, and is on
appeal in Docket No. 73-3-02 Vtec, Appellant= s motion for summary judgment must be DENIED
and Summary Judgment must be GRANTED in favor of the Town. As proposed, at least the
existing retaining wall, as well as at least part, if not all, of the house, lie within the flood hazard
overlay district and do not fall within a use category approvable under ' 6.8.4 or 5. This denial is
specifically without prejudice to Appellant= s submitting in the future any revised application for a
change in the location of the retaining wall, house footprint, or septic system components, or for
approval of the retaining wall (either existing or in a different location) under ' 6.8.6.

In Docket No. 102-5-02 Vtec, the Town requests injunctive relief and a monetary penalty in an
enforcement action against Appellant for the construction of the existing retaining wall. Appellant
failed to appeal the August 23, 2001 Notice of Violation and therefore cannot contest the
violation. If Appellant intends to remove the existing retaining wall when and if the house is built,
that may go to the appropriateness or timing of the injunctive relief, but not to the existence of the
violation. Appellant= s motion for summary judgment must be DENIED and summary judgment
GRANTED to the Town on the issue the existence of the violation as to the existing retaining wall.
At the telephone conference scheduled in the final paragraph of this decision, we will discuss
whether a hearing should be scheduled on the timing of injunctive relief and the appropriateness
or components of a monetary penalty, or whether such a hearing should be postponed until the
other two matters and any future permit applications are resolved.

In Docket No. S145-03 CnC Appellant argues that at the time he applied for a septic system
permit the Town did not have an approved Sewage Ordinance, under 24 V.S.A. ' 3633(b), and
that therefore the Town had no basis to deny Appellant= s application for a septic system permit.
Even if Appellant is correct that as of the time of the application, the Town did not have a
properly-approved sewage ordinance, the Zoning Administrator was entitled to determine whether
any element of the disposal system was located in the flood hazard overlay district and therefore
could not be allowed. In addition, the Town Health Officer (also the Zoning Administrator) who
denied the approval also denied it on the basis that as proposed it was likely to create a health
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hazard . Appellant=s motion for summary judgment is therefore DENIED: even if no valid on-site
sewage ordinance was in effect, the Town potentially had alternate grounds on which to deny
Appellant= s application; and material facts are in dispute as to the existence of a valid sewage
ordinance and as to the boundaries of the flood hazard district, floodplain, and floodway.

Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that Appellant= s
Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED, and that summary judgment is hereby ENTERED for
the Town in Docket No. 73-3-02 Vtec and on the existence of the violation in Docket No. 102-5-02
Vtec, as discussed above. We will hold a telephone conference on July 1, 2003 to discuss the
remaining issues in these three matters. If the parties would prefer an earlier conference, it can
be held in person at the Chittenden District Court at noon on Wednesday June 25, 2003. Please
discuss the conference scheduling with each other and call the Court by June 13, 2003 to advise
of your preferences for the conference.

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Done at Barre, Vermont, this 9 day of June, 2003.




___________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge and Specially Assigned Superior Judge




                                             Footnotes

1.
   The septic system appeal was originally filed in Environmental Court under Docket No. 74-3-
02 Vtec, was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, and was subsequently refiled in Chittenden
Superior Court, under Docket No. S145-03 CnC.

2.
    This condition may have been caused by Appellant’s having cut down trees and other slope-
stabilizing vegetation in the summer of 1999 and having deposited a large amount of fill on the
site in late August or early September of 1999, as stated in Mr. Gaston’s affidavit. This fact is not
material to any of the issues in the present cases, although it may be relevant in the event a
variance is ever requested for the development of the parcel.

3
 . This fact is not material to any of the issues in the present cases, although it may be relevant
in the event a variance is ever requested for the development of the parcel.

4.
    It is not clear to the Court whether this represents the edge of the floodway or the flood plain,
or whether the parties disagree as to the location of the flood hazard overlay district, the 100-year
flood plain, or the floodway, on Appellant’s property, as between the 25-foot distance stated by
the Zoning Administrator, the definition in the ordinance, and the representations of Appellant in
the various applications.

5.
     Jeannine McCrumb, who is also the Zoning Administrator.

6.
   It is unclear to the Court how the wall could be an accessory structure as there is no principal
use on the lot, that is, no other permitted or conditional or pre-existing use on the lot to which it
could be accessory.

7.
   We note that town selectboards have broad authority under 18 V.S.A. §126 to issue health
orders to prevent as well as to abate public health hazards.
