In Re Town of Shelburne Zoning Appeal

258 A.2d 836, 128 Vt. 89, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 7, 1969
Docket57-68
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 258 A.2d 836 (In Re Town of Shelburne Zoning Appeal) 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 Town of Shelburne Zoning Appeal, 258 A.2d 836, 128 Vt. 89, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 205 (Vt. 1969).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Involved in this appeal are two questions. The first question presented is: “Do the provisions of 24 V.S.A. Sec. 2202, relating to the granting of permits for dumps, control over a local zoning ordinance which prohibits dumping except in the Charlotte town dump?” The second question presented *90 is: “Should the Charlotte Zoning Board of Adjustment have granted the application of the Town of Shelburne for the operation of a sanitary landfill under 24 V.S.A. Sec. 2202?”

The facts of this case are not new in this Court. The Town of Shelburne purchased a plot of land in the Town of Charlotte with an intended use of such land for a dump for the use of the Town of Shelburne. The case first appeared here on a Petition for a Writ of Certiorari on the ground that the Selectmen of the Town of Charlotte had granted the Town of Shelburne authority to establish the dump requested, and the writ issued on the ground, among others, that the Board of Selectmen of the Town of Charlotte had not given the notice and public hearing on the application, required by due process, to the inhabitants of the Town of Charlotte before giving the permission granted. In re Petition St. George et al., 125 Vt. 408, 217 A.2d 45. At the time of the decision in St. George, the Town of Charlotte did not have a zoning ordinance.

Subsequent to the decision of this Court, on March 1, 1966, the Town of Charlotte adopted a zoning ordinance, at its Town Meeting. Section 4 of the thus enacted Charlotte Zoning Ordinance provides as follows:

“All uses not permitted or authorized as special exceptions in a district are prohibited in such district. Uses prohibited in all districts are:
A. Dumping or storage of trash, garbage, automobile junk or any refuse, except such activity carried on at a place as may be provided by the Board of Selectmen.”

On October 10, 1967, the Town of Shelburne filed an application for the operation of a sanitary landfill dump on the land in Charlotte which had previously been purchased in Charlotte by the Town of Shelburne. The request for the permit to operate such landfill dump to the Board of Zoning Adjustment of Charlotte was made by Shelburne under 24 V.S.A. Sec. 2202.

The Board of Zoning Adjustment duly gave notice of a public hearing to be held on the Shelburne petition, but such notice stated that the meeting would be held on the question of whether the Town of Shelburne should be granted a vari *91 anee under the zoning ordinance of the Town of Charlotte to establish and operate such a landfill dump.

The meeting of the Board of Zoning Adjustment on the Shelburne petition was held in Charlotte on October 31, 1967, before a large and participating audience. At this meeting, Shelburne insisted that the only question was whether the granting of a permit to the Town of Shelburne from the Board of Zoning Adjustment of the Town of Charlotte to establish a sanitary landfill dump would constitute a nuisance under the provisions of 24 V.S.A. Sec. 2202. However, the position of the Board of Adjustment of Charlotte was that the purpose of the meeting was only for their decision whether to grant a variance under the then existing Charlotte zoning ordinance. The Town of Shelburne presented evidence to the Board of Zoning Adjustment of Charlotte that the proposed landfill dump would not constitute a nuisance, which evidence included a letter from the state Board of Health approving the proposed location and management of the landfill dump.

The meeting before the Zoning Board of Charlotte came to an eventual end, after much discussion on whether the Board of Adjustment should proceed under the state law or under the zoning ordinance of the Town of Charlotte. The Board of Zoning Adjustment of Charlotte made no findings of fact, nor did it make a decision following the meeting.

However, on November 27, 1967, the Charlotte Zoning Board of Adjustment notified the Selectmen of Shelburne that it would not hear the application for the landfill dump under 24 V.S.A. Sec. 2202, since they believed that it would be proper to conduct a hearing only on the question of whether Shelburne could be granted permission for the use of land in Charlotte for dumping under the terms of the Zoning Ordinance of the Town of Charlotte. The Town of Shelburne was invited to make an application for a variance to the Charlotte Zoning Ordinance.

An appeal was taken by Shelburne to the Chittenden County Court of Chancery. That court, in its judgment order, stated Shelburne should apply to the Board of Zoning Adjustment of Charlotte for a variance from the zoning ordinance provisions of that town, and if such application for a permit was made by Shelburne, that the variance should be granted.

*92 This Court, in St. George, supra, was concerned mainly with the question of whether a public and advertised hearing should have been held in Charlotte before the granting of the permit by the Selectmen of Charlotte granted the request of Shelburne to establish a dump in the former town. This Court granted a writ of certiorari to the petitioners in the St. George case so that such hearing could be held, and vacated the permit previously granted by the Selectmen of Charlotte. In the opinion, written by Chief Justice Holden, it was stated:

“In design and effect, the present statute is akin to the statutory provisions regulating municipal zoning set forth in Chapter 67 of the same title. As with the regulation of trailer parks in the succeding (sic) subchapter, the regulation of refuse disposal is in Pari materia with the zoning statutes.”

The statute upon which Shelburne seeks a permit from the Charlotte Board of Zoning Adjustment is 24 V.S.A. Sec. 2202, which provides:

“Garbage Disposal; penalty
Except as otherwise specifically provided in these statutes, no person, persons, corporation or association shall establish or use a dump for any garbage, refuse, waste or rubbish in any town or incorporated village, where the use of such dump is for other than the private or personal disposal of garbage, refuse, waste or rubbish of said person, persons, corporation or association, unless a permit is first obtained from the zoning board of adjustment, selectmen or other appropriate governing body in said town or incorporated village. Unless it shall find that the grant of such permit shall give rise to a nuisance or that the applicant has not complied with established regulations promulgated pursuant to the authority of this section, such permit shall be issued to the applicant by said zoning board of adjustment, selectmen or other appropriate governing body.
The provisions of the preceding paragraph shall not apply to an existing use of any parcel of land now serving the purposes prohibited thereunder.”

The ordinance of the Town of Charlotte, in effect, prohibits all dumps in that town except those provided by the Board of *93 Selectmen.

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Related

In Re Zoning Permit Application of Clyde
437 A.2d 121 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
258 A.2d 836, 128 Vt. 89, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-town-of-shelburne-zoning-appeal-vt-1969.