In Re Dousevicz, Inc. CU & Site Plan Approval (Kathleen Culpo, Appellants)

2025 VT 22
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 2, 2025
Docket24-AP-130
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 VT 22 (In Re Dousevicz, Inc. CU & Site Plan Approval (Kathleen Culpo, Appellants)) 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 Dousevicz, Inc. CU & Site Plan Approval (Kathleen Culpo, Appellants), 2025 VT 22 (Vt. 2025).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: Reporter@vtcourts.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2025 VT 22

No. 24-AP-130

In re Dousevicz, Inc. CU & Site Plan Approval Supreme Court (Kathleen Culpo et al., Appellants) On Appeal from Superior Court, Environmental Division

January Term, 2025

Thomas S. Durkin, J.

Bridgett L. Remington of Pratt Vreeland Kennelly Martin & White Ltd., Rutland, for Appellants.

Christopher D. Roy of Downs Rachlin Martin PLLC, Burlington, for Appellee.

PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Eaton, Carroll and Waples, JJ., and Tomasi, Supr. J., Specially Assigned

¶ 1. CARROLL, J. Neighbors appeal an Environmental Division order that approved

the construction of a senior-living facility in the Town of Castleton and struck several conditions

imposed by the Town’s Development Review Board (DRB). Neighbors argue that the court erred

in concluding that: (1) it lacked jurisdiction to consider one of their arguments; (2) the project’s

memory-care unit was not a “nursing home” under the town’s zoning bylaws; and (3) the project

did not need a kitchen in each unit to be considered a “multi-family dwelling.” We affirm the

court’s conclusion regarding the jurisdictional issue. We conclude, however, that the court applied

an incorrect legal standard in evaluating the memory-care use and erred in looking to the “majority

of the project” with respect to the requirement that residents “do their own cooking in the

building.” We thus reverse and remand the court’s decision with respect to the memory-care use to allow the court to consider, based on the evidence presented at trial, whether the memory-care

component and its kitchen arrangement satisfies the ordinance.

¶ 2. The record indicates the following. Applicant sought permission from the DRB to

build a 23,500-square-foot, four-story, ninety-nine-unit senior-living facility with associated

parking. The project included an independent-living facility, an assisted-living facility, and a

memory-care unit. The project was proposed as a Planned Unit Development (PUD) in the Town’s

Rural Residential 2 Acres (RR-2A) District. The purpose of the RR-2A district is “to provide

residential opportunities in the major portions of the community to the extent there are not

substantial conflicts with natural resources.”

¶ 3. A PUD is a conditional use in the RR-2A district. Allowed uses for a PUD include

“single family, two family, and multiple-family dwelling units.” Applicant identified the project

as a multiple-family dwelling unit. This use is defined in the town’s zoning bylaws as:

A building or portion thereof used for occupancy by three (3) or more families living independently of each other, and doing their own cooking in the building, including but not limited to apartments, group houses, and row houses. A fraternity and/or sorority house shall be considered a multiple family residence.

¶ 4. Following a hearing, the DRB approved the application subject to conditions. It

found the proposal’s independent-living and assisted-living units satisfied the multiple-family

dwelling unit definition because these uses contemplated residents doing their own cooking in the

building. Residents in the memory-care unit would not do their own cooking, however, and the

DRB therefore concluded that the memory-care unit did not qualify as a multiple-family dwelling

unit.

¶ 5. The DRB found the memory-care unit akin to a “nursing home” as defined in the

bylaws, particularly given the level of medical need of those who qualified for these units. The

bylaws defined a “nursing or rest or convalescent home” as “[a] place, other than a hospital which

maintains and operates facilities, for profit or otherwise, accommodating two or more persons

unrelated to the home operator, who are suffering from illness, disease, injury or deformity and 2 require in house nursing care.” A nursing home was considered a nonresidential use and required

conditional-use approval in the RR-2A district. For a nursing-home use, the “maximum number

of persons permitted on any one lot” was thirty. Because the proposed project exceeded this limit,

the DRB did not approve the proposed nursing-home use. It approved the remaining aspects of the

project with conditions, including that each residential unit be equipped with a kitchen.

¶ 6. Applicant appealed to the Environmental Division, which reviewed the matter de

novo. In its statement of questions, applicant challenged the condition prohibiting it from

including a memory-care unit as part of the project and the requirement that each residential unit

have a kitchen. Neighbors did not appeal. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.

Applicant also moved to strike neighbors’ challenge to the project’s height as outside the court’s

jurisdiction. The court granted applicant’s motion to strike neighbors’ argument and denied both

motions for summary judgment. It found a dispute of material fact regarding the level of “nursing

care” that would be provided in the memory-care units.

¶ 7. Following a one-day trial, the court made findings on the record, which it later

summarized in a written order. The court considered whether the proposed facility, as a whole,

should be classified as a “multifamily dwelling unit” or a “nursing home.” It found the bylaw

definitions of these terms somewhat ambiguous and looked to state laws regulating “long-term

care facilities,” concluding that this provided a more clear and understandable definition of

“nursing home.” See 33 V.S.A. §§ 7101-7217. State law defines a “[n]ursing home” in relevant

part as “an institution or distinct part of an institution that is primarily engaged in providing to its

residents any of the following: (A) skilled nursing care and related services for residents who

require medical or nursing care.” Id. § 7102(7).

¶ 8. The court concluded that the proposed facility was a multi-family dwelling and not

a nursing home. It reasoned that a nursing home was a place that provided “skilled nursing care

for those residents who require specialized medical attention.” It was persuaded by testimony

from a registered nurse that the proposed facility would not provide the level of skilled nursing 3 care that a licensed nursing home would provide. It found that the proposed facility was designed

to provide various independent- and assisted-living residential units and support services and

considered the facility more akin to a multifamily dwelling unit than a nursing home. The court

considered the definition of “multifamily dwelling unit” satisfied because most units would have

a full kitchen and/or kitchenettes. The court therefore granted applicant’s request for a conditional

use permit subject to the DRB’s terms and conditions with the exception of the condition

prohibiting the memory-care unit and requiring that each unit be equipped with a kitchen.1

Neighbors appeal.

¶ 9. We begin with neighbors’ challenge to the scope of issues before the Environmental

Division. As indicated above, neighbors attempted to challenge the height of the project in their

cross-motion for summary judgment.

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