STATE OF VERMONT
SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
Vermont Unit Docket No. 120-8-14 Vtec
Burns Two-Unit Residential Building DECISION ON MOTION
Decision on Motion for Summary Judgment
The matter before the Court relates to a two-unit residential building owned by Charles
and Cynthia Burns (Applicants) located at 12 Weston Street in the City of Burlington, Vermont
(the Property). On June 3, 2014, Applicants submitted a form titled “Non-Applicability of
Zoning Permit Requirements” to the City of Burlington (the City) Department of Planning and
Zoning requesting a determination for interior renovations and reconfiguration of the two units
in the building. That same day the City approved the form and determined no zoning permit
was required for the proposed work. A group of neighbors, Michael Long, Alex Friend, Greg
Hancock, Hamilton Davis, Matt Moore, Scott Richards, Peg Boyle Single, Paul Bierman, Bret
Findley, Jesse Robbins, Caryn Long, Mary Moynihan, Kari Hancock, Candace Page, Susan
Moakley, Kathleen Donahue, Richard Single, Sandra Wynne, and Alexander Johnston,
(Neighbors) appealed that determination to the City of Burlington Development Review Board
(DRB), which, by decision dated July 24, 2014, denied the appeal and affirmed that no zoning
permit was required for Applicants’ proposed work. Neighbors timely appealed that decision to
this Court. Applicants are represented in this appeal by Brian P. Hehir, Esq. Neighbors are
represented by Norman Williams, Esq. The City of Burlington is represented by Kimberlee J.
Sturdevant, Esq.
Factual Background
For the sole purpose of putting the pending motion into context the Court recites the
follow facts which it understands to be undisputed:
1. Applicants Charles and Cynthia Burns own a two-unit residential building located at 12
Weston Street in the City of Burlington, Vermont. Applicants purchased the Property in
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June 2014. The Property transfer tax return for the purchase of the Property describes
the building as a multi-family dwelling.
2. The purchase and sale agreement entered into between Applicants and the prior owner
in January 2014 describes the Property as a lot of land with a 2 unit apartment building.
The prior owner also subsequently executed an addendum to the purchase and sale
agreement in which the seller affirmed that the premises had been used by the seller as
a duplex/multi-family dwelling continuously since 1967.
3. On March 14, 2014, a neighboring property owner, Judy Rosenstreich, submitted a
Zoning Enforcement Complaint Form to the City of Burlington alleging that
modifications and interior renovations were being conducted at the Property resulting
in an expansion of the living space and the creation of two apartments without the
required zoning permit.
4. The City of Burlington Code Enforcement Office Zoning Specialist, Jeanne Francis,
responded to the complaint by letter dated May 15, 2014. The letter states that there
was no zoning violation as the use of the Property for two apartments predated the
adoption of the relevant zoning regulations and therefore was permissible. The letter
references a sworn affidavit of Applicants’ predecessor in interest which also stated that
the Property had been used a duplex since the 1960s as well as an affidavit from the
tenant living in the third floor apartment at the Property.
5. The letter states that the decision of the zoning enforcement officer pertaining to an
alleged zoning violation was appealable to the City of Burlington Development Review
Board (DRB).
6. The Code Enforcement Office Zoning Specialist has been formally delegated authority
from the City’s Zoning Administrator to enforce the City’s zoning regulations and has
done so since the late 1990s. The May 15 letter was issued with the full knowledge and
authorization from the Zoning Administrator who reviewed the letter personally before
it was sent to Ms. Rosenstreich.
7. No party appealed the May 15, 2014 decision of the Code Enforcement Office Zoning
Specialist.
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8. On June 3, 2014, Applicants and the prior owner filed with the City a form titled “Non-
Applicability of Zoning Permit Requirements.” By this form, Applicants indicated their
intention to reconfigure the interior of the duplex such that the first floor would be one
unit and the second and third floors the second unit. As it is currently configured, the
first two floors make up one unit and the third floor another. The form was reviewed
and approved by the City.
9. The Neighbors appealed the zoning non-applicability determination to the DRB.
10. The DRB issued findings of facts and a decision dated July 24, 2014 denying the appeal
and concluding that Applicants did not require a permit for the proposed interior
reconfiguration.
11. Neighbors timely appealed that decision to this Court.
Analysis
Neighbors’ Statement of Questions asks three questions. First, Question 1 asks: “Does
the Applicant’s project require a zoning permit under section 3.1.2 of the Burlington
Comprehensive Development Ordinance (CDO)?” Question 2 asks: “Does that Applicant’s
property meet the requirements for use as a duplex under the CDO?” And Question 3 asks: “If
not, is the Applicant nonetheless entitled to use the property as a duplex based on the doctrine
of prior non-conforming use?” Applicants now move for summary judgment on all three
Questions. They argue that Questions 2 and 3 were answered in the prior determination from
the Code Enforcement Office Zoning Specialist and because that decision was not appealed it is
final and binding. Additionally, Applicants argue that based on the undisputed facts they are
entitled to judgment as a matter of law regarding Question 1. Neighbors oppose the motion
arguing that material facts are in dispute regarding all three Questions and that the prior
determination is not binding as a matter of law. The City of Burlington (City) filed a
memorandum in support of the motion for summary judgment agreeing with Applicants on all
issues.
I. Summary Judgment Standard
The Court will grant a moving party 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
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of law.” V.R.C.P. 56(a). We must “accept as true the [factual] allegations made in opposition to
the motion for summary judgment” and give 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). The Court
“need consider only the materials cited in the required statements of fact, but it may consider
other materials in the record.” V.R.C.P. 56(c)(3).
II. Preclusive Effect of Prior Determination
Applicants argue that 24 V.S.A. § 4472(d) precludes any direct or collateral attack on the
unappealed decision of the Zoning Specialist contained in the May 15, 2014 letter. Neighbors
contest this claim, arguing that § 4472(d) applies to decisions by the Zoning Administrator, and
not the Code Enforcement Office Zoning Specialist, as is at issue in the pending appeal.
Neighbors also argue that to apply § 4472(d) under these circumstances would deprive them of
their constitutionally protected due process rights.
Section 4472 provides that the exclusive remedy for contesting a zoning act or decision
shall be an appeal to the appropriate municipal panel under 24 V.S.A. § 4465. 24 V.S.A.
§ 4472(a). Furthermore, “[u]pon the failure of any interested person to appeal to an
appropriate municipal panel under section 4465 . . . all interested persons affected shall be
bound by that decision or act . . . and shall not thereafter contest, either directly or indirectly,
the decision or act . . . in any proceeding. . . .” 24 V.S.A. § 4472(d); In re Ashline, 2003 VT 30,
¶¶ 8–11, 175 Vt. 203. As the Vermont Supreme Court has held,
We strictly enforce the exclusivity of remedy provisions contained within § 4472
to require that all zoning contests go through the administrative and appellate
review process in a timely fashion. As such, we have consistently held that
§ 4472 “bars attack on a zoning decision even when the decision is alleged to
have been void ab initio.”
Ashline, 2003 VT 30, ¶ 10 (quoting City of S. Burlington v. Dep’t of Corr., 171 Vt. 587,
589 (2000) (mem.) (internal citation omitted); see also Graves v. Town of Waitsfield, 130 Vt.
292, 294–95 (1972) (holding that § 4472 barred a challenge to a zoning administrators act
despite lack of the administrator’s authority to issue the permit). We find Neighbors’ argument
that the decision of the Code Enforcement Office Zoning Specialist should not be given
preclusive effect because it was not an act or decision of the Zoning Administrator
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unpersuasive. It is clear from the letter itself that the decision constitutes a decision by the City
relative to the legal status of the use of the property as a duplex and that the decision was
appealable to the Burlington Development Review Board. It is also undisputed that the Zoning
Administrator granted the Zoning Specialist, and the Code Enforcement Office more generally,
the power to issue such letters and that the Zoning Administrator personally reviewed and
authorized this letter. Regardless, § 4472(d) is clear that zoning decisions of this type when not
appealed are final and binding and cannot be subsequently attacked.
Neighbors argue that applying § 4472(d) to this determination deprives them of their
right to contest the Zoning Specialist’s determination without due process required by the
Constitution. They rely on Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co., 455 U.S. 422, 428 (1982), where the
United States Supreme Court held that the failure of the Illinois Fair Employment Practices
Commission to hold a required hearing within the statutorily mandated time frame could not
deprive the employee of his due process rights. The Court held that once the legislature had
established a statutory right to seek redress it could not deprive that right without the
appropriate procedural safeguards. Id. at 432 (citing Vivtek v. Jones, 445 U.S. 480, 490–91, n.6
(1980); Arnett v. Kennedy, 416 U.S. 134, 167 (1974) (opinion concurring in part)). In the present
matter, the statutory provision at issue provides that unappealed zoning decisions be given
finality and that upon the failure of an interested person to appeal a determination it becomes
final against any interested person. 24 V.S.A. § 4472(d); Ashline, 2003 VT 30, ¶ 10. The statute
does not require notice of a decision in response to a zoning complaint be served on
neighboring landowners. Neighbors allegation that they had no notice of the Zoning Specialist’s
decision on Ms. Rosenstreich’s complaint is therefore immaterial. Section 4472(d) indicates a
clear policy, consistently recognized by the Vermont Supreme Court, that zoning
determinations be given finality and not be subject to relitigation or collateral attack. To adopt
Neighbors’ suggested expansion of the right to attack an unappealed zoning determination
whenever a party failed to receive notice would undermine this policy, especially considering
that no notice is required by statute.
The May 15, 2014 decision that the subject property is used as a duplex became final
and binding after the appeal period in § 4465 ran and the decision was not appealed.
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Therefore, Applicants are entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Neighbors’ Questions 2
and 3.
III. Whether a Zoning Permit is Required for Applicants’ Proposed Work
Applicants filing dated June 3, 2014 seeks a determination that reconfiguration of the
interior of the building such that one unit occupies the second and third floors and one unit
occupies the first floor, with no change to the number of units and no increase in finished living
space, does not require a zoning permit from the City. The DRB’s decision on appeal is clear
that it relates only to the work described in the zoning non-applicability form, which requests
the reconfiguration and expressly states that Applicants do not request to increase the
habitable living space, change the use, or add a unit to the Property. The sole question before
the Court, therefore, is whether the requested alterations require a zoning permit under § 3.1.2
of the Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance (CDO).
Section 3.1.2 provides that the following list of “interior work” requiring a permit:
1. Increase in habitable living space (including, but not limited to, attic,
bedroom, basement, garage, and winterizing or otherwise enclosing a
porch.).
2. Installation of additional kitchen.
3. Change in use.
4. Home Occupations.
5. Increase or decrease in the number of units.
CDO § 3.1.2(b).
Neighbors sole argument in opposition to Applicants’ motion for summary judgment on
Question 1 is that there are material facts in dispute as to whether the interior work done by
Applicants increased the habitable space by adding a kitchen and multiple bedrooms and by
changing the use of the basement from unfinished to finished space. These issues, however,
are not before the Court. Appeals to this Court are limited to those issues that were properly
before the municipal panel below. In re Torres, 154 Vt. 233, 235 (1990) (“The reach of the
superior court in zoning appeals is as broad as the powers of a zoning board of adjustment or a
planning commission, but it is not broader.”). This includes Applicants’ non-applicability
request as well as the DRB’s decision on that request, but does not include any determination
regarding the addition of bedrooms, the addition of a kitchen, or the conversion of the
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basement to habitable living space. If Applicants have undertaken other development not
described in the non-applicability request or the DRB’s decision, it is a matter for the City to
enforce the CDO.
The Court therefore concludes, that based on the plain language of § 3.1.2(b), the
reconfiguration of the existing duplex such that one apartment will be located on the first floor
and the other on the second and third floor, with no increase in habitable space, no additional
kitchen, and no increase or decrease in the number of units, does not require a permit.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated in greater detail above, the use of the Property as a duplex was
conclusively decided by the Code Enforcement Office Zoning Specialist’s May 15, 2014 letter.
As that decision was not appealed, it is final and binding. Neighbors cannot collaterally
challenge that determination in this proceeding by arguing that Applicants’ use of the Property
as a duplex is in violation of the CDO. Additionally, because the reconfiguration of the duplex
without any increase or decrease in the number of units, any other interior renovations, or an
increase in habitable living space does not constitute development under the plain language of
the CDO, no permit is required for that work. Any changes to the use of the Property, apart
from that reconfiguration, may require a permit and failure to have obtained a permit prior to
undertaking that work may be cause for enforcement against Applicants by the City. Those
issues, however, are outside the scope of this appeal and are not before the Court. We
therefore GRANT Applicants’ motion and enter judgment in favor of Applicants on all three of
Neighbors’ Questions. A judgment order accompanies this decision.
Electronically signed on June 23, 2015 at 01:40 PM pursuant to V.R.E.F. 7(d).
_________________________________________
Thomas G. Walsh, Judge
Superior Court, Environmental Division
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