STATE OF VERMONT
SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
Vermont Unit Docket No. 121-8-14 Vtec
934 North Avenue LLC Conditional Use
Application
DECISION ON MOTION
Decision on Motion for Summary Judgment
The matter presently before the Court relates to approximately 0.61 acres of land
located at 934 North Avenue (“Property”) in the City of Burlington, Vermont (“City”). The
Property includes three one-bedroom apartments and a commercial space, which has been
used as a funeral home since 1973. 934 North Avenue, LLC (“Applicant”) now seeks conditional
use approval for the Property as an “Attached Dwelling(s) —Mixed Use” to allow for continued
use of the apartments and a change in use of the commercial space from a funeral home to
general office use. On July 24, 2014 the City of Burlington Development Review Board (“DRB”)
denied the application and Applicant timely appealed that denial to this Court, filing a
Statement of Questions consisting of three Questions. Applicant now moves for summary
judgment in their favor on all three Questions. The City opposes Applicant’s motion.
Applicant is represented by Daniel P. O’Rourke, Esq. and the City is represented by
Kimberlee J. Sturtevant, Esq.
Factual Background
For the sole purpose of putting the pending motion into context, the Court recites the
following facts which it understands to be undisputed:
1. 934 North Avenue, LLC (“Applicant”) owns property consisting of approximately 0.61
acres located at 934 North Avenue (“Property”) in the City of Burlington, Vermont (“City”).
2. The Property is located in the Residential Low Density Zoning District (“RL District”).
3. The Property includes a commercial space and three one-bedroom apartments.
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4. Ready Funeral Services, Inc. has operated a funeral home in the commercial space since
the Property was acquired in 1973. Ready Funeral Services, Inc. is currently the sole member of
the Applicant limited liability company.
5. The funeral home was a permitted use in the zoning district in 1973. A funeral home
use is now a conditional use in the RL District.
6. Ready Funeral Services used the commercial space for viewings and wakes, offices for its
employees, a showroom for products, and a retail space for the sale of stationary and cards.
7. The Property is located directly across the street from the Burlington Elks Club, to the
north of a large church, and to the south of a gas station, pharmacy, and bank.
8. The Elks Club is a non-conforming use, the church is a conditional use, and the bank, gas
station, and pharmacy are in a different zoning district than Applicant’s Property.
9. The application seeks to maintain the three existing apartments, a residential use, and
to change the current use of the nonresidential portion of the property from a funeral home to
a general office use. Applicant submitted a conditional use application to the City seeking
approval to use the Property as an “Attached Dwelling(s)—Mixed Use.”
Discussion
In the present motion for summary judgment, Applicant asks the Court to conclude as a
matter of law that its proposed use is allowable as “Attached Dwelling(s) – Mixed Use,” an
allowable conditional use under the City of Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance
(“Ordinance”) § 3.5.6(a)(2). (Applicant’s Motion for Summary Judgment at 4, filed Jan. 7, 2015).
Applicant argues that its proposed use fits within the definition of this use category and may,
therefore, be approved as a conditional use. Applicant further argues that based on the
undisputed facts it is entitled to a conditional use permit under the review criteria for
conditional uses established in Ordinance § 3.5.6(a).
The City opposes the motion and argues that the Court should interpret “Attached
Dwelling(s) – Mixed Use” to allow only a mix of uses otherwise approvable, that is conditional
or permitted uses, within the RL District. Because general office use is not an allowed use,
either permitted or conditional, in the RL District per Ordinance Appendix A – Use Table, the
City argues the application should be denied. (City’s Opposition at 1, filed Feb. 13, 2015).
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Furthermore, the City argues that Applicant’s proposed use of the Property does not satisfy the
standards for conditional use under Ordinance § 3.5.6(a)(2). We discuss these arguments in
turn.
I. Standard of Review
A moving party is entitled to summary judgment upon a showing that “there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law.” V.R.C.P. 56(a). The court accepts as true all factual allegations made in opposition to the
motion for summary judgment, so long as they are supported by “specific citations to particular
parts of materials in the record” and gives the non-moving party the benefit of all reasonable
doubts and inferences. Robertson v. Mylan Labs., Inc., 2004 VT 15, ¶ 15, 176 Vt. 356 (internal
citation omitted); see V.R.C.P. 56(c) (laying out summary judgment procedures).
II. Questions 1 and 2
The parties focus their dispute upon the proper legal interpretation of the Ordinance as
it applies to mixed uses in the RL District. We interpret a zoning ordinance using the familiar
rules of statutory construction. In re Appeal of Trahan, 2008 VT 90, ¶ 19, 184 Vt. 262. We will
“construe words according to their plain and ordinary meaning, giving effect to the whole and
every part of the ordinance.” Id. Where the plain meaning of the ordinance is clear, it must be
enforced and no further interpretation is necessary. Vermont Alliance of Nonprofit Orgs. v. City
of Burlington, 2004 VT 57, ¶ 6, 177 Vt. 47 (citing Hill v. Conway, 143 Vt. 91, 93 (1983)). In
construing statutory or ordinance language, our “paramount goal” is to implement the intent of
its drafters. Colwell v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2003 VT 5, ¶ 7, 175 Vt. 61. We will therefore “adopt a
construction that implements the ordinance's legislative purpose and, in any event, will apply
common sense.” In re Laberge Moto-Cross Track, 2011 VT 1, ¶ 8,189 Vt. 578 (quotations
omitted).
Ordinance § 4.4.5(c) requires an applicant look to the Use Table in Appendix A for “[t]he
principal land uses that may be permitted, or conditionally permitted pursuant to the
requirements of Article 3, within the Residential Districts.” The Use Table identifies “Attached
Dwelling(s) – Mixed Use” as a conditional use in the RL District. The Definitions Section, Article
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13, defines “Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling” as “a building containing any combination of
residential and/or non-residential uses.”
Applicant argues that their proposed development is permitted in the RL District
because “Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling” is permitted as a conditional use in the RL District.
(Applicant’s Motion at 4, 5). They suggest that by its plain language, mixed use should “be
recognized as a separate and distinct conditional use in the City’s RL district.” Id. at 4. The City,
however, disagrees with this interpretation, arguing that regardless of whether mixed use is
permitted as a conditional use in the RL District, “Office – General” is not a permitted or
conditional use in the RL District, “whether or not they are included in a mixed use application.”
(City’s Motion at 2). They suggest that “[i]t is illogical that the drafters intended for an office
general use to be allowed in the RL district if it is part of a mixed use when it is not otherwise
allowed” in that same District. Id. at 4.
By its plain language, we do not interpret § 4.4.5(c) and the Use Table to contemplate
“Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling” as a separate and distinct conditional use in the RL District,
irrespective of the uses allowed or specifically dis-allowed in that District. Although Article 13
defines the use as any combination of residential and/or nonresidential uses, it does not
indicate that the drafters meant that any use, including a use that is specifically not allowed
that District, would be allowed when combined with a residential use. As noted above, in
construing ordinance language, our “paramount goal” is to implement the intent of its drafters
and apply common sense. For this reason, we consider the Use Table, which sets out those
uses that are allowed as of right in the RL District (permitted uses) and those uses that are
allowed only after conditional use review (conditional uses). The Use Table also sets out uses
that are prohibited and may not be located within the RL District, even subject to conditional
use review.
While the Ordinance includes as a conditional use “Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling,” the
Court can think of no legitimate reason why the City would allow an otherwise prohibited use
to be permitted under this category, merely because it is attached to a dwelling. No such
explanation is offered in the Ordinance. Where the City has elected to prohibit a use in the RL
District, a machine shop for example, regardless of whether an applicant seeking to open a
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machine shop could satisfy the conditional use requirements, it makes little sense to then allow
a machine shop as a conditional use when it is combined with a residential dwelling. In this
Court’s judgment, it would contravene the purpose of the Ordinance to allow an applicant to
establish an otherwise prohibited use by attaching a residential use to it and calling it a “Mixed
Use, Attached Dwelling.”
Rather, the term “Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling” may reasonably be interpreted to
expressly permit a mix of otherwise allowable uses in a single building, subject to conditional
use review. Therefore, because the “Office – General” use category is not allowed as either a
permitted or conditional use in the RL District, it cannot be one of the uses allowed under the
“Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling” conditional use category.
Applicant complains that such a reading of the Ordinance, particularly the definition for
“Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling,” contradicts the express language of that definition. We note
that the City could have avoided this legal dispute, had this definition included a clarifying
phrase that the non-residential component of the mixed use must be one that was otherwise
allowed in the specified District. However, when this Ordinance is read in its entirety, as we are
directed to do under other precedent governing statutory construction, we conclude that a use
prohibited in a certain zoning district may not be allowed, simply because it is attached to or
“mixed” with a residential use.
When called upon to interpret language that is “part of a larger statutory scheme, we
‘read operative sections of [the] statutory scheme in context and the entire scheme in pari
materia.’” In re Paynter 2-Lot Subdivision, 2010 VT 28, ¶6, 187 Vt. 637 (quoting Cushion v.
Dep't of PATH, 174 Vt. 475, 479 (2002) (mem.)). Applicant seeks to change the use of the non-
residential portion of its property to a general office use. Such a use is specifically listed as a
“use not permitted” in the RL District. See Ordinance Appendix Table A at 4–5. Thus, were we
to adopt Applicant’s reasoning, we would allow a use in the RL District that the Ordinance
specifically prohibits. Since such a use is specifically listed as one that is not allowed in the RL
District, we decline to adopt Applicant’s interpretation of the applicable Ordinance provisions.
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III. Question 3
Finding that Applicant’s proposed development, which includes three one-bedroom
residential units and a “general office” use, is not permitted in the RL District, we conclude that
Question 3 is moot and that such a review is not necessary in connection with Applicant’s
pending summary judgment motion. If we had concluded otherwise, we would have then
embarked upon a review of the conditional use standards contained in Ordinance Article 3.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that pursuant to Ordinance § 4.4.5(c) and as
defined in Article 13, all intended uses proposed as part of a “Mixed Use, Attached Dwelling”
must be either permitted or allowable as conditional uses and may not be specifically listed as
“not permitted” in the RL District. We therefore DENY Applicant’s motion for summary
judgment and are inclined to answer Questions 1 and 2 of Applicant’s Statement of Questions
in favor of the City of Burlington, thereby denying their application as a matter of law. Since
such a ruling would be beyond the scope of the pending motion, we will provide that parties
with an additional thirty calendar days (i.e.: until Monday, August 17, 2015) to file any legal
memoranda in support of or in opposition to such a judgment, pursuant to V.R.C.P. 56(f). If the
Court determines that no memoranda is filed that warrants another interpretation of the
Ordinance, the Court will thereafter issue a Judgment Order in favor of the City. Id.
Electronically signed on July 16, 2015 at Newfane, Vermont, pursuant to V.R.E.F. 7(d).
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Thomas S. Durkin, Judge
Environmental Division
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