STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
}
In re: Century Partners, LP, } Docket Nos. 136-7-08 Vtec and
Certificate of Occupancy Application } 201-9-08 Vtec
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Decision and Order on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
In Docket No. 136-7-08 Vtec, Appellant-Applicant Century Partners, LP,
appealed from a decision of the Development Review Board (DRB) of the City of South
Burlington remanding to the Administrative Officer Appellant’s application for
Certificate of Occupancy for 2 Market Street, which the Administrative Officer had
denied in a March 18, 2008 decision. In Docket No. 201-9-08 Vtec, Appellant-Applicant
Century Partners, LP, appealed from a decision of the DRB upholding the
Administrative Officer’s June 30, 2008 denial of a Certificate of Occupancy for 2 Market
Street. Appellant-Applicant (Applicant) is represented by Erin Miller Heins, Esq.; the
City is represented by John Klesch, Esq.
The parties have each moved for summary judgment. When both parties seek
summary judgment, the Court will give each party the benefit of all reasonable doubts
and inferences when the opposing party’s motion is being considered. DeBartolo v.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s of London, 2007 VT 31, ¶ 8, 181 Vt. 609; In re: Gizmo
Realty/VKR Assocs., LLC, No. 199-9-07 Vtec, slip op. at 3 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Apr. 30, 2008)
(Durkin, J.). The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted.
Applicant developed a Planned Unit Development (PUD) that includes buildings
at addresses now known as 100 Dorset Street and 102 Dorset Street, and 2 Market Street
and 4 Market Street. Market Street is the current name of a street formerly shown as
Corporate Way on some of the plans relating to this development. The PUD plans were
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approved at some time prior to 1996 before the 2 Market Street building was proposed
as part of the project.1
In 1996, Applicant proposed to amend the PUD, among other things, to add the
small (3,000 square foot, two-story) office building now known as 2 Market Street,
shown on some of the plans as “Building C,” to house Applicant’s own offices. The
then-Planning Commission granted site plan approval at its hearing on December 10,
1996. The City has not provided the minutes of the Planning Commission hearing, but
has provided the Planning Commission’s written decision dated January 14, 1997.
Finding 7 of the decision states that “[t]he revised final plat should include a
revised landscaping plan showing the proposed office building. This plan was
requested from the applicant but not submitted.” Finding 8 states that Applicant had
“proposed” to carry out some of its “landscaping requirement” by making
“landscaping and streetscape improvements along” what is now Market Street, but no
specific finding was made regarding the location or nature of those proposals, and no
plan or proposal containing them was referred to or incorporated in the decision.
The written decision approves the proposal “as depicted on a two (2) page set of
plans . . . dated 10/31/95, last revised 12/2/962, with the following stipulations[.]”
Condition 2 required that “[t]he plat plans shall be revised to show the changes below
and shall require approval of the City Planner,” as well as requiring three copies of the
“approved revised plans” to be submitted to the City Planner prior to recording.
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Other aspects of this PUD have been litigated recently in In re Tekram Partners, 2005
VT 92, 178 Vt. 628 (mem.); In re Century Partners, LP PUD, No. 210-9-06 Vtec (Vt. Envtl.
Ct. May 10, 2007) (Durkin, J.).
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The plan with the last revision date of 12/2/96 specifies landscaping for the remainder
of the project, but with reference to the 2 Market Street building only shows an
undisputed line of trees along the westerly boundary of the property and does not
show the disputed landscaping.
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Subparagraph (a) stated “[a] landscaping plan shall be submitted showing all existing
and proposed landscaping including building ‘C.’”
A month earlier, on December 12, 1996, Applicant provided a copy of the 12/2/96
plan, showing the newly-approved 2 Market Street “Building C,” which was signed a
few days later, on December 18, 1996, by the Chairman or Clerk of the Planning
Commission. This stamped and signed copy of the 12/2/96 plan, does not contain the
disputed landscaping; it states that it is the plan “[a]pproved by resolution of the
Planning Commission . . . on the 10th day of December, 1996” subject to the
requirements of the conditions of “said resolution.”
An undated landscaping plan (the disputed landscaping) exists in the City’s files
which shows the 2 Market Street building in cross-hatching, superimposed on an area
containing three Austrian pines and five Mugho pines, with handwritten indications of
the locations to which the displaced pines were proposed to be moved. That plan
shows other landscaping and a boulder in a small area on Market Street adjacent to the
parking structure, and other landscaping in the triangle of land behind the 2 Market
Street building. That plan contains a handwritten notation on the reverse side that
refers to the two amendments sought and approved at the December 10, 1996 Planning
Commission meeting, refers to the two addresses “100 Dorset St.” and “2 Corporate
Way”, and includes the date “12-10-96.” No Planning Commission or any other
approval appears on either the face or the reverse of this document.
Applicant received a temporary certificate of occupancy on March 21, 1997,
which expired after 90 days. Neither party’s record contains an application for or
record of the issuance of a permanent certificate of occupancy. Applicant occupied the
2 Market Street building from 1997 until applying for the certificate of occupancy that is
at issue in the present appeals in 2008, due to requirements of a refinancing entity.
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Docket No. 136-7-08 Vtec
On March 18, 2008, the Administrative Officer denied the application for reasons
unrelated to the landscaping surrounding the 2 Market Street building; Applicant
appealed that decision to the Development Review Board. Although the Development
Review Board agreed that the reasons stated in the March 2008 denial were not
legitimate reasons to deny the certificate of occupancy for 2 Market Street, it did not
overturn that denial or issue the requested certificate of occupancy. Rather, it
remanded the matter to the Administrative Officer at his request, so that he could issue
a new decision based on information obtained after the date of the March 18, 2009
denial. Applicant appealed that decision in Docket No. 136-7-08 Vtec.
The parties have not pointed the Court to any statutory authority for a
Development Review Board to decline to rule on an appeal, or to remand a matter to
the Administrative Officer. See 24 V.S.A. §§ 4460(e)(10), 4464(b)(1). Rather, the
Development Review Board had only the jurisdiction to rule on the appeal of the
Administrative Officer’s March 18, 2008, decision, that is, the denial of the Certificate of
Occupancy for 2 Market Street for the reasons stated in that decision. The parties agree,
and the DRB determined, that the reasons given in the March 18, 2009 Administrative
Officer’s decision for the denial “do not constitute grounds for the denial.”
Accordingly, based on the foregoing, in Docket No. 136-7-08 Vtec it is hereby
ORDERED and ADJUDGED that Appellant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is
GRANTED, in that no statutory basis has been shown for a Development Review Board
to remand an appeal to the Administrative Officer. The Zoning Administrator’s March
18, 2008 denial of the Certificate of Occupancy for 2 Market Street was not based on any
legitimate reason connected with 2 Market Street, and is hereby vacated as to 2 Market
Street, concluding Docket No. 136-7-08 Vtec.
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Docket No. 201-9-08 Vtec
On June 30, 2008, the Administrative Officer denied the remanded certificate of
occupancy due to asserted violations of the disputed landscaping plan.
The plan stamped as approved by the Planning Commission on December 18,
1996, does not include the disputed landscaping. Several other plans have been
approved over the years by the Planning Commission or its successor, none of which
includes the disputed landscaping. If the plan containing the disputed landscaping was
even ever submitted by Applicant for the purposes of approval, there is no indication
that it was approved by the Planning Commission or even by the City Planner.
Even if it had been signed or marked as “approved” by the City Planner, there is
no authority for the Planning Commission (or any municipal panel) to delegate to a
staff member such as the City Planner the subsequent approval of plans that are within
the jurisdiction of the Planning Commission (or that panel). See, e.g., In re Woodstock
Cmty. Trust, Inc., Nos. 263-11-06 Vtec, 126-6-07 Vtec, slip op. at 8–9 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Oct. 3,
2007) (Wright, J.); In re Appeal of Sunset Cliff, Inc., No. 26-2-01 Vtec, slip op. at 3–4 (Vt.
Envtl. Ct. Nov. 13, 2001). Only those plans that have been approved by the municipal
body having the responsibility for that approval (including an applicant’s own
application materials cited in the approval document) can be the basis for a denial of a
certificate of occupancy.
In the present case no such plan exists; therefore the certificate of occupancy,
ratifying Appellant-Applicant’s eleven-year actual occupancy of 2 Market Street is
HEREBY ISSUED.
Accordingly, based on the foregoing, in Docket No. 201-9-08 Vtec it is hereby
ORDERED and ADJUDGED that Appellant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is
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GRANTED, granting Appellant a Certificate of Occupancy for 2 Market Street, and
concluding Docket No. 201-9-08 Vtec.
Appellant-Applicant may prepare a judgment order for the Court’s signature.
Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 30th day of January, 2009.
_________________________________________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
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