In Re Appeal of Van Nostrand

2008 VT 77, 957 A.2d 399, 184 Vt. 557, 2008 Vt. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 2, 2008
Docket07-229
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2008 VT 77 (In Re Appeal of Van Nostrand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Appeal of Van Nostrand, 2008 VT 77, 957 A.2d 399, 184 Vt. 557, 2008 Vt. LEXIS 77 (Vt. 2008).

Opinion

¶ 1. Linda Nordlund appeals from a judgment of the Environmental Court granting Ronald and Elizabeth Van Nostrand’s application for a zoning permit to construct a single-family residence and septic system on their twenty-four-acre lot in the Town of Salisbury. Nordlund contends that the court erred in ruling that the lot is served by a legally nonconforming right-of-way and therefore is not subject to the current zoning bylaws requiring a fifty-foot right-of-way for parcels lacking frontage on a public road. We reverse and remand.

¶ 2. This is the second appeal arising out of a dispute between adjoining landowners. Nordlund v. Van Nostrand, No. 2007-027 (Aug. 17, 2007) (unreported mem.) sets forth many of the underlying facts, which we summarize as follows. The Van Nostrands own two lots on the westerly side of West Shore Road near Lake Dunmore. The first lot (the front parcel) is approximately 1.1 acres with frontage on West Shore Road. The second adjoining lot (the back parcel) is an interior lot of approximately twenty-four acres with no road frontage. The back parcel is benefited, however, by a right-of-way — described in a number of deeds as an old logging road ■ — • which traverses the Van Nostrands’ front parcel for about 150 feet and then continues across the northwest corner of a lot owned by Nordlund for about forty-four feet before connecting with the Van Nostrands’ back parcel.

V 3. In April 2000, the Van Nostrands’ predecessors-in-interest, the Kycias, applied for and received a permit from the town to subdivide the front and back parcels. The permit application is not a part of the record. The permit itself consists of a preprinted, one-page form labeled “zoning permit” that includes a checked box indicating the “permit type” as “subdivision,” a hand-written description of the permitted work as “single-lot subdivision,” and conditions calling for a “revised plat record and/or warranty deed” to be filed in the town land records. 1 Although § 502 of the town’s zoning regulations then in effect prohibited “land development” on lots that lacked either road frontage or a “permanent easement or right-of-way at least twenty (20) feet in width,” the permit makes no reference to this zoning requirement and contains no findings concerning the nature, width, accessibility, or safety of the right-of-way across the *558 Nordlund property. No appeal was taken from the issuance of the 2000 permit.

¶ 4. In May 2000, the Kycias conveyed the front and back parcels in separate deeds to the Van Nostrands, and in April 2004, the Van Nostrands applied for permits to construct a four-bedroom, single-family residence and supporting septic system on the back parcel. The zoning administrator issued the permits, but Nordlund appealed the decision to the Development Review Board (DRB). Following a hearing in October 2004, the DRB voted to reverse the issuance of the permits, citing § 502 of the zoning regulations, which had been amended in 2002 to increase the width of the required right-of-way to fifty feet. The Van Nostrands appealed the DRB ruling to the Environmental Court, and while that appeal was pending, submitted a second application to the town for a variance to reduce the width of the necessary right-of-way to twenty feet. The DRB denied the application for a variance, and the Van Nostrands appealed this ruling to the Environmental Court, which consolidated the two appeals for review and decision.

¶ 5. In January 2006, the court issued a written decision on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. At the outset, the corad observed that issuance of the subdivision permit to the Van Nostrands’ predeeessors-in-interest in 2000 clearly did not create a vested right to obtain a zoning permit under the regulations in effect when the permit was granted. See In re Taft Corners Assocs., 171 Vt. 135, 144, 758 A.2d 804, 811 (2000) (holding that “the balance of competing policy interests [militate] against giving holders of subdivision permits vested rights to zoning permits under the zoning ordinance applicable when the subdivision permit was sought or obtained”). The court went on, however, to conclude that the back parcel “became a [legal] preexisting non-conforming lot” in 2002 when the town amended § 502 to require a right-of-way of no less than 50 feet because the “right-of-way width was deemed in compliance with the zoning regulations [then in effect] when its subdivision was approved” in 2000.

¶ 6. Thus, contrary to the conclusion of the DRB, the court determined that the Van Nostrands were not required to demonstrate compliance with § 502, because that issue had been implicitly resolved when the subdivision permit issued. The only question that remained, in the court’s view, was whether the proposed development of the back parcel would “ ‘increase’ the non-conformity of the right-of-way,” resulting in a narrowing of the road. See In re Miserocchi, 170 Vt. 320, 326-27, 749 A.2d 607, 611 (2000) (although traditionally disfavored, changes to nonconforming uses are often allowed if they do not increase the nonconformity). The court ruled that this was an issue which involved disputed questions of fact requiring an evidentiary hearing, and directed the parties to prepare to address the issue at trial. In light of its ruling, the court determined that the Van Nostrands’ variance application was moot, and declined to address the issue on appeal.

¶ 7. Subsequent to the court’s ruling, but before the scheduled evidentiary hearing, Nordlund filed a quiet-title action in the superior court seeking to invalidate the claimed right-of-way across her property. In December 2006, the superior court ruled that the right-of-way was valid and that its width across the Nordlund property was eighteen feet. Nordlund appealed, and we affirmed the judgment. See Nordlund, No. 2007-027, slip op. at 3-4.

¶ 8. Thereafter, in the pending action before it, the Environmental Court denied a series of additional motions and held a one-day trial in March 2007. The following May, the court issued its decision, finding that the proposed development of the back parcel would not in *559 crease the nonconformity of the right-of-way. Accordingly, the court approved the Van Nostrands’ application for a zoning permit to construct a single-family residence and septic system on the back parcel, and entered a final judgment in their favor. This appeal followed.

¶ 9. We agree with the trial court that this case turns largely on “the context and relevancy of [the] 2000 subdivision permit.” However, we disagree with the court’s key conclusion that the right-of-way across the Nordlund property “was deemed in compliance with the zoning regulations [then in effect] when [the] subdivision was approved” in 2000. It is, of course, axiomatic that, when zoning bylaws are in effect, “no land development may be undertaken or effected except in conformance with those bylaws.” 24 V.S.A. § 4446; see In re Kostenblatt, 161 Vt. 292, 300, 640 A.2d 39, 44-45 (1994) (zoning permit need not identify all applicable zoning requirements for those requirements to be applicable and enforceable).

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Bluebook (online)
2008 VT 77, 957 A.2d 399, 184 Vt. 557, 2008 Vt. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appeal-of-van-nostrand-vt-2008.