Winooski Hotel Group v. Winooski

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 2025
Docket22-cv-380
StatusPublished

This text of Winooski Hotel Group v. Winooski (Winooski Hotel Group v. Winooski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winooski Hotel Group v. Winooski, (Vt. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

7ermont Superior Court Filed 01/23/25 Chittenden UUnit

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Chittenden Unit Case No. 22-CV-00380 175 Main Street Burlington VT 05401 802-863-3467 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Winooski Hotel Group, LLC et al v. City of Winooski et al

DECISION ON MOTION TO DISMISS COUNTERCLAIMS

This action arises from a dispute over a proposed hotel redevelopment project in downtown Winooski. Plaintiff Winooski Hotel Group now moves to dismiss Defendant Winooski Downtown

Redevelopment Association's counterclaims that seek a declaratory judgment. Plaintiff contends that those claims fail for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because there is no longer a justiciable

controversy. The court grants the motion. Background The case stems from Plaintiff's plan to build a hotel on its property, 4 Winooski Falls Way

("Lot 9") in downtown Winooski. In the original Complaint, filed February 2, 2022, Plaintiff sought a declaration that the Declaration of Covenants, Easements, Conditions[,] and Restrictions for the Winooski Downtown Development Project, dated May 25, 2004 (the "Covenants"), prohibited the Association from contesting Plaintiff's Act 250 application. The Association counterclaimed,

essentially seeking contrary declarations about the meaning and enforceability of the Covenants. See Counterclaim (filed Mar. 4, 2022). Specifically, in Count 1, the Association seeks a declaratory

judgment that the Covenants "do[] not restrict the right of the Association or any of its members to participate in judicial or administrative actions relating to development of Lots 2 and 9, including Act 250 proceedings on the Proposal" and that, to the Covenants do impose such restrictions, the provision "is contrary to public policy and void." Counterclaim 11 28-29. In Count 2, Plaintiff seeks a declaration essentially that the Covenants prohibit the development of the proposed hotel project. /d.

qq 31-36. On July 15, 2024, Plaintiff amended its Complaint, dropping its declaratory judgment claims and dropping the Association as a party. The impetus for the amendment was apparently the plan by

the City of Winooski and the Agency of Transportation to seize Lot 9 for the "Burlington-Winooski

Bridge Project." Am. Compl. 11 193, 205 (describing two offers VTrans made for the property: one for Decision on Motion to Dismiss Counterclaims Page 1 of 4 22-CV-00380 Winooski Hotel Group, LLC et al v. City of Winooski et al a full and permanent fee simple transfer, and the other for a six-year transfer); Ex. A. Plaintiff is currently awaiting the City’s initiation of condemnation proceedings to seize Lot 9. Am. Compl. ¶ 207. At a minimum, Plaintiff “will have no right or ability to utilize its property in any fashion until approximately 2031 at the earliest.” Id. ¶ 208 (emphasis omitted). Discussion In moving to dismiss, Plaintiff contends that the Association’s counterclaims fail under Rule 12(b)(1) because there is no longer a justiciable controversy as to the meaning of the Covenants. This is because, Plaintiff asserts, its “present development plans for Lot 9 have, for all intents and purposes, been foreclosed” by the City and VTrans’s condemnation plans. Mot. to Dismiss at 3. Its property will be unavailable until at least 2031, and it is “completely unknowable” whether it will have the “ability or desire to pursue its development plans” that far in the future. Id. “With the actual and immediate controversy between [Plaintiff] and the Association being wholly founded upon [Plaintiff]’s imminent development plans, and the Association’s rights to contest those plans and the permitting process preceding any development, the substantive controversy is no longer.” Id. The Association argues that Plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss impermissibly relies on matters outside the pleadings and contradicts Plaintiff’s allegations from its original complaint, and that an actual case or controversy continues to exist in any event. Opp’n at 5–7. For a court to have subject matter jurisdiction, a case “must involve an actual controversy arising between adverse litigants who have a legally cognizable interest in the outcome of the case.” Paige v. State, 2017 VT 54, ¶ 6, 205 Vt. 287. “The requirement of an actual case or controversy applies to declaratory judgment actions.” Echeverria v. Town of Tunbridge, 2024 VT 47, ¶ 18. “Unless an actual or justiciable controversy is present, a declaratory judgment is merely an advisory opinion,” which courts “lack the constitutional authority to render.” Id. (quotation omitted). “Thus, declaratory relief is available only when a party is suffering from the threat of actual injury to a protected legal interest.” Id. (quotation omitted). While a “mere abstract question or hypothetical threat is not a sufficient basis for a declaratory judgment,” Williams v. State, 156 Vt. 42, 60 (1990), at the same time, “[a] person is not required to wait for the consummation of threatened injury to obtain preventive relief. If the injury is certainly impending, that is enough.” Doe v. Dep’t for Child. & Fams., 2020 VT 79, ¶ 12, 213 Vt. 151 (quotation omitted). Thus, a “court faced with a request for declaratory relief must look at the litigation situation as a whole in determining whether it is appropriate to entertain the request for such relief.” Burlington Sch. Dist. v. Provost, 2019 VT 87, ¶ 15, 211 Vt. 277 (quotation omitted).

Decision on Motion to Dismiss Counterclaims Page 2 of 4 22-CV-00380 Winooski Hotel Group, LLC et al v. City of Winooski et al When considering a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1), “ ‘all uncontroverted factual allegations of the complaint [are] accepted as true and construed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.’ ‘A court may consider evidence outside the pleadings.’ ” Mullinnex v. Menard, 2020 VT 33, ¶ 8, 212 Vt. 432 (citations omitted; emphasis added). This teaching clearly forecloses the Association’s argument that Plaintiff impermissibly relies on matters outside the pleadings. The City’s and VTrans’s plans with respect to Lot 9 are therefore properly before the court, as is the consequent fact that Plaintiff’s plans for the property are at the very least in limbo until 2031 at the earliest. The Association concedes that Counterclaim Count II no longer presents a justiciable controversy and consents to dismissal with prejudice of that count. It contends, however, that taking the allegations of its Counterclaim as true, there is still a live controversy as to Count I. See Counterclaim ¶ 21. But this contention is belied by Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint, which expressly disclaims that there is still an actual controversy as to its claim in the original complaint that certain provisions in the Covenants limited the Association’s ability to contest the Lot 9 Act 250 permitting process. First Am. Compl. ¶ 13 n.2. “There can be no doubt that an action is mooted if the plaintiff voluntarily withdraws. Our model of adversary litigation requires that there be at least one pair of contesting parties. The conclusion is so clear that only rare circumstances will create a need to express it.” Wright & Miller, 13B Fed. Prac. & Proc. Juris. § 3533.2 (3d ed.) (footnotes omitted). Plaintiff has also submitted a letter from the Agency of Transportation stating that it requires Plaintiff’s land for a bridge project and making Plaintiff an official offer for that land. Ex. A. This demonstrates that there is presently no actual case or controversy as to the matters alleged in Counterclaim Count I. Therefore, the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over that claim. The Association’s reliance on Watson v. Vill. at Northshore I Ass’n, Inc., 2018 VT 8, ¶ 67, 207 Vt. 154 and Echeverria v. Town of Tunbridge, 2024 VT 47, ¶ 18 is misplaced.

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Related

Williams v. State
589 A.2d 840 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1990)
Burlington School District v. Adam Provost and Seven Days
2019 VT 87 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2019)
Patrick Mullinnex . v. Lisa Menard
2020 VT 33 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2020)
John Echeverria and Carin Pratt v. Town of Tunbridge
2024 VT 47 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
Winooski Hotel Group v. Winooski, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winooski-hotel-group-v-winooski-vtsuperct-2025.