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In re: Appeal of Joseph A. Iadanza (Decision and Order on Motion to Dismiss and Merits), 181-10-99 Vtec (2001)

Court: Vermont Superior Court Number: 181-10-99 Vtec Visitors: 3
Filed: Jan. 08, 2001
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: STATE OF VERMONT ENVIRONMENTAL COURT In re: Appeal of Joseph A. } Iadanza } } Docket No. 181-10-99 Vtec } } Decision and Order on Motion to Dismiss and Merits Appellant Joseph A. Iadanza appealed from the September 7, 1999 decision of the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) of the Town of Hinesburg regarding a junkyard formerly owned by Victor and Bernard Giroux, and now owned by James and Mark Burnett. Appellant is represented by Richard C. Whittlesey, Esq.; Appellees James and Mark Burnett are re
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                                     STATE OF VERMONT

                                  ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

               In re: Appeal of Joseph A.         }
               Iadanza                            }
                                                  } Docket No. 181-10-99 Vtec
                                                  }
                                                  }

                      Decision and Order on Motion to Dismiss and Merits

Appellant Joseph A. Iadanza appealed from the September 7, 1999 decision of the Zoning Board
of Adjustment (ZBA) of the Town of Hinesburg regarding a junkyard formerly owned by Victor
and Bernard Giroux, and now owned by James and Mark Burnett. Appellant is represented by
Richard C. Whittlesey, Esq.; Appellees James and Mark Burnett are represented by Roger E.
Kohn, Esq.; and the Town is represented by Ernest M. Allen, Esq.

An evidentiary hearing was held in this matter before Merideth Wright, Environmental Judge.
The parties were given the opportunity to submit written requests for findings and memoranda of
law. Appellees have also moved to dismiss on the basis of res judicata or collateral estoppel.

Motion to Dismiss

Appellees have moved to dismiss on the basis of res judicata or collateral estoppel, arguing that
Appellant= s current issues either were or should have been decided in previous actions: either by
appealing to the Transportation Board and thence to superior court the action of the Hinesburg
Selectboard in granting a certificate under 24 V.S.A. ' 2251, or by appealing to the Supreme
Court from the Environmental Court= s ruling in In re Appeal of Iadanza, Docket No. 230-12-98
Vtec (May 28, 1999).

However, the issues raised in the present appeal could not have been raised in either of those
prior actions. In its decision in Docket No. 230-12-98 Vtec, this Court noted that the ZBA= s
issuance of the certification regarding location called for under 24 V.S.A. ' 2251 is not an action
taken under Chapter 117, but rather under Chapter 61, subchapter 10. In that decision, the Court
noted that Appellant could request the Zoning Administrator to take any enforcement action
regarding the extent of Appellees= preexisting, nonconforming use, or whether any abandonment
has occurred, and to appeal to the ZBA any adverse decision of the Zoning Administrator. That
is what Appellant has done in the present case.

The present appeal involves essentially two questions: whether the scope of Appellees= junkyard
exceeds the scope of the preexisting Giroux use (including the extent to which the Giroux use
had been abandoned or relinquished over time, if at all) and whether it violates the performance
standards of the Zoning Regulations. Neither of these issues could have been litigated by
appealing the Environmental Court= s May 1999 order in Docket No. 230-12-98 Vtec, nor by
appealing the Selectboard= s action under 24 V.S.A. ' 2251.
Accordingly, the present appeal is not barred either on the basis of res judicata or collateral
estoppel, and Appellees= Motion to Dismiss is hereby DENIED.

Merits of Appeal

Upon consideration of the evidence and the written memoranda and proposed findings, the Court
finds and concludes as follows.

The property at issue in this case, now owned by Appellees, is an approximately six-acre parcel
on the easterly side of Route 116, the main road through the Town of Hinesburg. The property
was formerly owned by Ernest Giroux and his wife, who purchased it in 1952. In about 1954,
Ernest Giroux and his two brothers Victor and Bernard, started a junkyard on the property. They
bought and sold cars, and kept junked cars and car parts at this location. They bought and sold
scrap materials, including scrap metals, and stored the scrap at this location. They obtained
annual junkyard permits in their name, records of which go back to 1968. Victor and Bernard
Giroux also operated an automobile repair and body shop, also doing non-automotive metal
fabrication and welding, at a business location in Hinesburg Village, formerly their father= s
blacksmith shop and automotive garage. That business had been known as Giroux= s Body Shop
since about 1957.

The first zoning ordinance was adopted in Hinesburg in 1965 or 1966. Under the present zoning
ordinance, junkyards are not an allowed use anywhere in the Town.

In the 1960s, a solid metal fence, approximately 16 feet high, was erected around the junkyard to
provide screening. From before the adoption of zoning in Hinesburg through its purchase by
Appellee-Applicants in 1999, the junkyard was in active use for storage of scrap materials,
junked vehicles, and the storage of various pieces of heavy equipment in current use, including
forklifts, dumpsters (A roll-offs@ ), the trailer portion of tractor-trailers, and a cherry-picker.
However, the level of activity at the junkyard varied from year to year and season to season, as
did the volume of the Giroux business. The level of activity at the junkyard lessened after Ernest
Giroux sold his interest in the property to his brothers. Victor and Bernard Giroux continued to
use it to store scrap metal and junked vehicles in connection with their auto repair, body shop
and metal fabrication business in the Village, with approximately two to three trips to the
junkyard occurring per week. From before 1990, and into the 1990s, most of the active use of the
junkyard took place in the well-screened north yard, while the south yard was used more for
longer-term storage of junked vehicles and trailers.

In 1989, the owner of property to the southeast of the junkyard built a nine-lot residential
subdivision, on lots from approximately four to seven acres in size, served by an access road
running uphill from Route 116 along the south side of the junkyard property. Appellant
purchased his lot in the subdivision in 1990. These lots are at a higher elevation than Route 116
and the junkyard. When he was considering the purchase of his property, Appellant thought1 that
the junkyard was entirely dormant.

As of Appellant= s purchase of his property, the more active portion of the junkyard, the > north=
yard, has been entirely screened by the solid fence. To the south of this portion, the > south= yard
was in less active use and for a time its hedge and fence were in disrepair. Activities in the south
yard were visible to an observer, while activities in the north yard were not visible due to the
internal solid fencing.

From 1990 to the fall of 1998, Appellant had not noticed or been bothered by the noise from any
activities on the junkyard property, except that he noticed piles of discarded materials, including
metals, appliances, and a fire truck stored in the south yard, and noticed sheep grazing on the
property; except that during three or four days in 1990, a portable car crusher was brought to the
junkyard and was operated to crush cars already located on the site; except that he noticed
several well-drilling trucks parked in the south yard during 1995-1996; and except that he
noticed a pile of stainless steel delivered to the property in 1997 which remained until September
1998.

Appellees James and Mark Burnett are brothers who worked in their father= s junk business on
Route 2A and are themselves in the junk and scrap metal business. They were familiar with the
operation of the junkyard on the property in question when it was operated by the Giroux
brothers. They purchased it on May 4, 1999, and worked on it prior to purchase in the fall of
1998. To complete that purchase, they obtained a junkyard permit for it in their name. Mark
Burnett and his wife also purchased the house located directly in front of the junkyard property.

Since that time, Appellees have operated their business, Burnett= s Scrap Metals, a commercial
scrap metal recycling business, from the site. In their business, they leave roll-off containers at
their customers= places of business. They maintain at the junkyard a front-end loader, two pickup
trucks, roll-off containers, a truck capable of picking up and hauling filled roll-off containers,
and a small bucket loader, none of which were acquired from the Giroux brothers. The office and
telephone for the business are located in the Mark Burnett residence. They use the roll-off truck
to pick up containers filled with scrap metal from area businesses, bring them back to the
junkyard, dump and sort the scrap metals, and load the scrap onto tractor-trailer containers for
shipment out of the area to scrap metal dealers out of state.

They operate the business on Monday through Saturday from 7 a.m. to approximately 6 or 7 p.m.
The sounds emanating from the junkyard due to their operation include the sounds and engine
noise from the operation of the heavy equipment on site, the sound of metal items dropped
against each other, and the sounds of the back-up beepers from the equipment. Both the number
of traffic trips from the site and the sound from the site represent an increase in the level of
activity at the junkyard compared to the Giroux use of the site, at least during the 1990s.

Section 5.10.1 of the Zoning Regulations provides that non-conforming uses such as this
junkyard A shall not be moved, enlarged, altered, extended, or restored (except as provided
below).@ It also provides that A [a]ny external evidence of such use shall not be increased by any
means whatever without conditional use approval of the Board of Adjustment, and only if the
Board finds that the proposed use is no more non-conforming than the previous use and
conforms to the standards of Section 5.12 of these regulations.@ Section 5.12 contains the
performance standards, including a prohibition on unreasonable noises.
Section 5.10.2 allows a non-conforming use to continue indefinitely, except that under
subsection (1) if it is changed to another non-conforming use it must obtain conditional use
approval; under subsection (2) it shall not be re-established if it has been discontinued for a six
month period, except due to damage; and under subsection (3) it shall not be restored after more
than a year has elapsed after damage. Subsections (1) and (3) do not apply, as the use category
has not been changed, and no damage to the junkyard has occurred.

Appellant argues that the Giroux use of the junkyard had been effectively discontinued prior to
1990, and that their use as a A holding area for scrap materials generated by or in conjunction
with the A Giroux Body Shop@ refabrication business@ did not qualify as a > junkyard= use, so that
Appellees= use of the junkyard constitutes an impermissible reestablishment of a discontinued
non-conforming use.

The use category A junkyard@ is defined in the Zoning Regulations as A any place of outdoor
storage or deposit, which is maintained, operated or used in connection with a business for
storing, keeping, processing, buying or selling junk, or as a scrap metal processing facility.@ The
term A junk,@ in turn, is define to include old or scrap metals and nonferrous materials, and
discarded motor vehicles or parts thereof. Under these definitions, both the Giroux use and
Appellees= use of the property fall within the use category of A junkyard.@ The use of the property
as a A junkyard@ under the Hinesburg definition was reduced in intensity, but was never
discontinued under the Giroux ownership, so that ' 5.10.2(2) does not apply. Appellees= use also
qualifies as a junkyard under that definition, so that ' 5.10.2(1) does not apply.

There is no question that the intensity of use decreased in the 1990s under the Giroux ownership,
and that it has increased substantially under Appellees= ownership. Appellees also operate the
business solely from the property rather than also having an off-premises active business
location. However, unlike the comparable provisions of Act 250, the Hinesburg Zoning
Regulations do not require a permit or trigger review upon some > substantial change= to the
junkyard operation. The junkyard use itself has not been enlarged, altered or extended physically
on the property; therefore the first clause of ' 5.10.1 does not prohibit Appellees= use. See,
Franklin County v. City of St. Albans, 
154 Vt. 327
, 330-31 (1990).

However, ' 5.10.1 also requires that any A external evidence@ of a non-complying use A shall not
be increased by any means whatever@ without conditional use approval of the Board of
Adjustment. This section is not limited to external visual evidence. As the external noise
generated by the junkyard has increased in duration and type, and may have increased in volume
as well, Appellees must seek conditional use approval of that increase from the ZBA. We note
that the regulations appear only to require approval of the increase in external evidence, and not
of the underlying use.

In determining whether to grant conditional use approval, the Regulations direct the ZBA to
assess whether the use conforms to the performance standards in ' 5.12, including the noise
performance standards. In determining whether to grant conditional use approval, the ZBA is
free to determine whether to impose conditions to assure that the performance standards will be
met, such as internal site circulation to minimize the use of the back-up beepers, or so-called >
smart= beepers triggered by an obstruction in the path of the equipment, or lining certain metal
containers with sound deadening materials. Also, unlike in the present appeal2, conditional use
approval calls for the ZBA to assess the character of the area. Appellant also asserts that
Appellees= junkyard operation violates the performance standards of the Zoning Regulations as
to noise. Section 5.12.1 prohibits A unreasonable@ noises and also defines hours beyond which
noise should not be discernable beyond the property line. Appellees= junkyard does not violate
the restrictions on hours of operation.

While Appellant has shown that the noise from the junkyard has increased beyond that occurring
when he bought his property, and has shown that he finds the noise disturbing and irritating, we
cannot find on the evidence presented that these noises are unreasonable during operating hours
in a pre-existing junkyard located directly on Route 116. This finding is without prejudice to any
assessment the ZBA may make in its conditional use proceeding, from the evidence presented to
it in the future in such proceeding.

Based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that Appellees must obtain
conditional use approval of the increase in noise level at the junkyard under ' 5.10.1, as an
increase in the A external evidence@ of a non-complying use. Otherwise, Appellant= s appeal is
denied.

Done at Barre, Vermont, this 8th day of January, 2001.




___________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge



                                            Footnotes
1.
     Any cause of action which Appellant may believe he has for misrepresentation in the
purchase of his property is beyond the jurisdiction of the Environmental Court; any such cause of
action must be brought in Superior Court.
2.
     Although Appellant’s argument in the present case refers to the area as residential, evidence
has not been presented in the present appeal from which the Court can draw a conclusion as to
the character of the area, nor do we do so in the present appeal as character of the area is not a
criterion in the present appeal.

Source:  CourtListener

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