Vermont Supreme Court to Hear Cases
At Vermont Law School on March 24
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 12, 2008
CONTACT: Cathy
Gattone, Supreme Court Docket Clerk
802-828-3278,
cathy.gattone@state.vt.us
SOUTH ROYALTON, VT –– The Vermont Supreme Court will travel
to Vermont Law School on March 24, 2008, to hear oral arguments in six cases.
The arguments will begin at 9:30 a.m., and will be heard in the Robert Fiske
Jr. Courtroom on the second floor of Oakes Hall. The visit continues the
court’s tradition of holding session at VLS each spring. The public is invited
to attend.
Cases on the court’s March 24 docket will include an appeal
to an Act 250 finding as it relates to an alpaca farm in Winhall; a question of
whether “pesticide drift” constitutes trespass or nuisance where the Right to
Farm Act is concerned; and consideration of whether a certain dietary
restriction imposed by the Department of Corrections amounts to punishment,
thereby affording inmates their due process rights.
Here are summaries of all six cases. For more information,
please visit the court’s public information page at:
http://www.vermontjudiciary.org/Resources/pubinfo.aspx
Media please note: The Vermont Supreme Court guidelines on cameras in the courtroom will
apply.
In re: Eustance
Act 250 Jurisdictional Opinion #2-231, 2007-156
9:30 a.m.
This case presents a classic Vermont tension: balancing the rights of
private landowners trying to earn a living by farming their land with the
rights of neighboring landowners who bought their property to enjoy the
neighborhood’s peace and tranquility. Appellants Robert and Lourdes Eustance
bought a forty-seven-acre lot in the Town of Winhall within a residential subdivision
subject to Act 250 conditions that limit development. The Eustances then
cleared eight acres of land for pasture and created an alpaca farm with barns,
related facilities, and a limited number of public events each year. Several years later, the owners of a vacation
home neighboring the farm complained to the District 2 Environmental Commission
that the farm was noncompliant with the subdivision’s Act 250 permit. Following
a hearing, the Commission found that the Eustances’ property was subject to Act
250 amendment jurisdiction, notwithstanding Act 250’s general farming
exemption. The Environmental Court
affirmed, and the Eustances filed this appeal. The Eustances argue that Act
250’s intent is to protect Vermont’s
environment from development, not to prohibit diversified farming operations.
Larkin v. Marceau,
2007-176
10:00 a.m.
Plaintiff, John Larkin, purchased land from the
defendant on which he has planned a 122-unit residential development near South Burlington. Defendant, Edward Marceau, operates an
apple orchard on adjacent land. This case arises out of the defendant’s use of
pesticides on his property. Even when done in accordance with accepted
agricultural practices by licensed applicators, this results in detectable
levels of pesticides drifting onto plaintiff’s property. Plaintiff filed an action in trespass against
the defendant, claiming that defendant’s activities have prevented him from
occupying a 250-foot strip of land on the Larkin-Marceau boundary line. The
Chittenden Superior Court held that plaintiff’s suit was better characterized
as a nuisance action, and dismissed the claim under the authority of the Right
to Farm Act, which creates a rebuttable presumption prohibiting nuisance claims
against agricultural operations. On appeal, this Court is asked to address the
question of whether pesticide drift constitutes trespass, not nuisance, and is
therefore not barred by the Right to Farm Act.
State v. Mandy
Cram, 2007-054
11:00 a.m.
A homeowner in rural Salisbury, Vermont
exited his bathroom one morning and discovered a stranger, Ms. Cram, standing
in his living room. She advised the startled homeowner that her car was
overheating and she wanted to call her husband for help. The homeowner handed
Ms. Cram a phone, she placed a call, and then she promptly drove off. The home
had recently been burglarized, so the owner immediately called the police. A
trooper soon located Ms. Cram and discovered in her possession a photo
identification card cracked and bent in a manner consistent with being used to
pry open doors. Ms. Cram admitted to entering the home in order to use the
phone, but only after her knocks went unanswered. Ms. Cram was charged with
Unlawful Trespass, and entered a conditional plea of guilty, reserving the
right to appeal from the denial of her motion to dismiss. Criminal trespass is
a specific intent crime, requiring the intruder to know that he or she is not
licensed or privileged to enter the home. On appeal, Ms. Cram argues that there
is no evidence in the record showing that she knew she was neither licensed nor
privileged to enter the dwelling.
Borden v. Hofman, 2006-345
11:30 a.m.
Nutraloaf is a food product made of cubed whole-wheat
bread, nondairy cheese, raw carrots, spinach, seedless raisins, great northern
beans, vegetable oil, tomato paste, powdered milk, and potato flakes. The
Vermont Department of Corrections places inmates who misuse food, utensils, or
bodily waste on a diet of “Special Management Meals,” which consist of
Nutraloaf and water. Mr. Borden and two other inmates filed a
class-action suit in Windsor County Superior Court claiming that the Nutraloaf diet is “punishment” and therefore the
DOC must afford inmates procedural due process before feeding them
Nutraloaf. The superior court disagreed, and the issue on appeal is
whether feeding prisoners Nutraloaf constitutes “punishment.” The
appellants contend that the superior court misinterpreted Conway v. Cummings,
161 Vt. 113 (1993), which outlines the test to determine what constitutes punishment.
State v. Pitts,
2007-077, 2007-219
2:00 p.m.
In December 2005, police officers approached Yosef
Pitts and asked to speak with him. The
officers suspected that Mr. Pitts was part of a drug distribution ring. One of the officers first asked Mr. Pitts for
identification, but he replied that he did not have any, explaining that he was
from New York
and had been living with his sister Sequoya Pitts. The officer next asked Mr. Pitts if had any
weapons on him. Mr. Pitts replied that
he had a knife and indicated its location.
In the process of securing the knife, the officer patted down Mr. Pitts’
pockets and found a large wad of cash.
The officer then asked Mr. Pitts if he had any drugs; Mr. Pitts replied
that he had a small amount of marijuana. Thereafter, the officer asked Mr. Pitts to
remain with the other officer in the police cruiser while he confirmed Mr.
Pitts’ identity with his sister. The
officer went to the home and knocked on the door. Ms. Pitts answered the door and allowed the
officer to enter, whereupon the officer saw a marijuana “roach” in the living
room. He informed Ms. Pitts that the
marijuana gave him probable cause to search the apartment; he gave her the
choice to either consent to the search immediately or wait for him to get a
search warrant. Ms. Pitts consented to a
search, and police discovered additional drugs and drug paraphernalia. Mr. and Ms. Pitts were both charged and
convicted of possession of cocaine and marijuana. The following constitutional questions are
presented on appeal: (1) whether Ms. Pitts has standing to challenge the stop
and search of her brother; (2) whether the police officers had a reasonable
suspicion that Mr. Pitts had engaged in criminal conduct; (3) whether Mr.
Pitts’ consent to the search of his person was voluntary; (4) whether the
physical evidence retrieved from Ms. Pitts’ apartment was the fruit of an
illegal stop and search of her brother; and (5) whether Ms. Pitts’ consent to
the search of her apartment was voluntary.
Jensen v. Cashin,
2007-255
2:30 p.m.
This case arises out of a tragic automobile
accident. Julie Jensen purchased a 1994
Toyota Supra for her son Charles (age 14) to restore. On August 24, 2004, Charles got his mother’s
permission to allow his friend Norman
(age 16) to take him for a drive in the car.
Charles did not have a driver’s license, but Norman had a junior operator’s license. While out on the drive, Norman stopped and picked up a friend,
Philip. Charles later took over as
driver. While driving, Charles lost
control of the car and crashed into rock ledges lining the side of the
road. Norman and Philip were killed
instantly. Charles, who was wearing his
seatbelt, did not suffer any life-threatening injuries. Anticipating a civil suit against them, Charles
and his mother filed an action in the United States District Court for the
District of Vermont seeking a declaratory judgment that they are not liable for
the deaths, or that their liability is offset by comparative or contributory
negligence. The administrators of the
decedents’ estates filed counterclaims seeking compensatory and punitive
damages. The district court certified two unresolved questions of state law to
the Vermont Supreme Court: (1) whether Vermont’s
Wrongful Death Act, 14 V.S.A. § 1492, allows for punitive damages; and (2)
whether Vermont’s
Survival Statute, 14 V.S.A. § 1452, does.
# # #
Vermont Law School––a private,
independent institution––is ranked #1 in environmental law by U.S. News & World Report. VLS offers a Juris Doctor (JD) curriculum that emphasizes public
service, a Master of Studies in Environmental Law (MSEL) degree for lawyers and
nonlawyers, and two post-JD degrees, the Master of Laws (LLM) in Environmental Law and the LLM in American
Legal Studies (for international students). The school also features innovative
experiential programs and is home to the Environmental
Law Center
and the South Royalton Legal Clinic. For more
information, visit www.vermontlaw.edu.