STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
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In re: Kirschner Home Construction Application } Docket No. 226-10-07 Vtec
(Appeal of Kirschner) }
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Decision and Order on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
Appellant Andras Kirschner appealed from a decision of the Zoning Board of
Adjustment (ZBA) of the Town of Charlotte denying his application to construct a
residence on property at 4717 Spear Street. Appellant is represented by Robert C. Roesler,
Esq. and Scott A. McAllister, Esq.; the Town of Charlotte is represented by Amanda S. E.
Lafferty, Esq.
Appellant moved for summary judgment on all issues raised in his appeal, relating
to whether the property at issue in this appeal consists of two contiguous separate parcels
of one acre and two acres in size, respectively, that may be developed and conveyed as
separate lots. The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. All references to
the zoning ordinance are to the 2006 Land Use Regulations unless specifically otherwise
cited.
Appellant, Andras Kirschner, and his sister, Melinda Kirschner, own property at
4717 Spear Street (also known as Spear Street Extension), on the easterly side of the road, in
the Rural zoning district. The property totals approximately three acres. Prior to the
events at issue in this appeal, the property consisted of two contiguous lots in separate
ownership: a northerly lot of approximately one acre in area and a southerly lot of
approximately two acres in area. For ease of discussion of the issues in this motion, this
decision will refer to the northerly one-acre lot as “the north lot“ and to the southerly, two-
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acre lot as “the south lot,” and will refer to the combined three acres of property as “the
combined three-acre property.”
The parties have not provided a copy of the site plan or any diagram of the
property, although the engineer’s site plan was referred to as being attached to the
Kirschner zoning permit application approved on April 25, 2006, and the cover page of that
application has been provided. Without the site plan it is difficult for the Court fully to
understand the various nonconformities that may have implications in this case. Based
only on the engineer’s description of the property in a consultation letter provided as the
Town’s Exhibit 5, the combined three-acre property is L-shaped, with 375 feet of road
frontage. It slopes steeply down to the east, from the road to a stream that flows southerly
through the parcel, and slopes up on the other side of the stream to a ridge.
Both lots existed as separate lots, apparently under separate ownership, prior to
June of 1966, when the Town of Charlotte first adopted zoning.1 In connection with the
present motions the parties have only provided a copy of the 2006 ordinance and excerpts
from the 1997 ordinance. The parties have not provided the dimensional requirements in
this district as of the initial zoning ordinance, or as of any subsequent zoning ordinances
until 1997. Without that information it is impossible for the Court to determine when the
combined lot or the north and the south lots became nonconforming as to either lot’s area,
or to determine whether or when the house locations on the north and the south lots were
or became nonconforming as to any other dimensional requirement.
A zoning permit was issued in 1970 for the installation of a mobile home in the
“southwest corner” of the north lot. The permit described the north lot as 1 acre in area,
and stated the front setback (from the right-of-way) as 85 feet, the rear setback as 112 feet,
1The Town first adopted a zoning ordinance on June 20, 1966; amendments and revisions
of the zoning ordinance were adopted in 1967, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1973, 1978, 1982, 1987, 1995,
1997, 2002, and 2006.
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and the shorter side setback as 75 feet. As a zoning permit was issued for the placement of
the mobile home in that location, these setbacks should have been in compliance with the
zoning requirements at the time. At least as of that date, the north lot also had the right to
draw water from an adjacent lot to its north.
At some point prior to 1992, a mobile home was also installed on the south lot. At
least as of 1992, both lots had separate functioning septic systems and were supplied with
potable water. Material facts have not been provided to establish whether the water
supply for the south lot was separate from that shared by the north lot and its northerly
neighbor as of that time. The engineer’s affidavit establishes that in 2008 there was some
type of well “in use” on the south lot. Neither party has claimed that the septic and water
systems serving either lot ever failed or were replaced or removed.
As the parties have not provided any survey or diagram showing the locations and
sizes of the former mobile homes and their accessory sheds, garages or outbuildings, nor
the dimensional requirements of the zoning ordinances in effect when those mobile homes
were installed, the Court cannot determine whether or when they became nonconforming
due to the front setback or any other dimensional requirements other than the undersized
lot size.
Under the zoning ordinance in effect in August of 1997, the minimum lot size in the
Rural zoning district was five acres, and the density for non-PUD residential development
required five acres of land per dwelling unit. § 4.2(D), 1997 Zoning Bylaws. Thus, at least
as of August of 1997, both lots were preexisting, developed lots, nonconforming at least as
to lot size and density. The required front yard setback was 100 feet, making at least the
location of the north lot mobile home nonconforming as to the front setback.
The state statute in effect in August of 1997, codified at 24 V.S.A. § 4406(1) (1997),
provided as to preexisting undersized lots that:
Any lot in individual and separate and non-affiliated ownership from
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surrounding properties in existence on the effective date of any zoning
regulation . . . may be developed for the purposes permitted in the district in
which it is located, even though not conforming to minimum lot size
requirements . . . .
The state statute at that time did not automatically trigger merger, if two substandard lots
came into common ownership, absent language in the particular zoning ordinance
requiring such merger. Appeal of Weeks, 167 Vt. 551, 557 (1998).
Section 5.7(A) of the 1997 Zoning Bylaws, adopted on March 4, 1997, provided with
regard to merger that:
When an owner owns a lot which fails to meet minimum lot size
requirements and such lot is contiguous to another lot owned by the same lot
owner, such contiguous lots shall constitute a single lot, except that:
1. Contiguous lots which as of June 20, 1966 were devoted to separate
and independent uses shall constitute separate lots so long as such
lots continue to be devoted to separate and independent uses; or
2. Contiguous lots which are devoted to uses approved as separate uses
under the [Zoning Bylaws] shall constitute separate lots provided
such uses are conducted in compliance with the terms and conditions
of the approvals granted; . . . .
The two lots first came under common ownership in August of 1997, with the
purchase of the second lot by the Marshalls (predecessors of Appellant’s immediate
predecessor, George Reynolds). In the same time period, the Marshalls and their northerly
neighbors entered into an “Easement and Water Rights Agreement” that clarified the water
rights referenced in the 1970 deed.
At that time, the lots were each developed with a mobile home and associated
infrastructure, and at least the mobile home on the north lot was approved as a separate
use, so that under § 5.7(A)(2) of the 1997 Zoning Bylaws the two nonconforming
undersized lots did not merge (assuming that the mobile home installed on the south lot
had also received a permit or predated the adoption of zoning in Charlotte).
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In 1998, 24 V.S.A. § 4406(1) was amended to require merger when undersized
contiguous lots come under common ownership, unless four statutory criteria were met.
24 V.S.A. § 4406 (2003). As then amended, § 4406(1)(A) provided that:
(A) If such [existing undersized] lot subsequently comes under common
ownership with one or more contiguous lots, the lot shall be deemed merged
with the contiguous lot for purposes of this chapter. However, such lot shall
not be deemed merged and may be separately conveyed, if:
(i) the lots are conveyed in their preexisting, nonconforming configuration;
and
(ii) on the effective date of any zoning regulations, each lot had been
developed with a water supply and wastewater disposal system; and
(iii) at the time of transfer, each water supply and wastewater system is
functioning in an acceptable manner; and
(iv) the deeds of conveyance create appropriate easements on both lots for
replacement of one or more wastewater systems in case a wastewater system
fails . . . .
24 V.S.A. § 4406(1)(A) (2003).
Appellants’ predecessor George Reynolds purchased the north lot in September of
1998. Because the north and the south lots did not merge under the 1997 Zoning Bylaws
during the Marshalls’ ownership, the 1998 transfer of the north lot as a separate lot was not
prohibited.
Mr. Reynolds purchased the south lot on March 28, 2001. At that time, both lots still
contained mobile homes served by functioning waste water and water supply systems.
Before December 21, 2001, Mr. Reynolds had removed the mobile home and all sheds from
the south lot.
The 2002 Zoning Bylaws have not been provided to the Court. Section 6.6(B)(3) of
the 2002 Zoning Bylaws was referred to in the ZBA decision’s analysis of whether the
nonconforming use2 of the south lot had been discontinued or abandoned. As quoted in
2 The comparable provision in the 2006 Land Use Regulations is found in § 3.8(A)(3).
However, the south lot mobile home may have also been a nonconforming structure, if it
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the ZBA decision, § 6.6(B)(3) states that any non-conforming use of a structure or parcel of
land may be continued indefinitely, but:
shall not be reestablished if such use has been discontinued for a period of six
months, or has [] been changed to, or replaced by[,] a conforming use. Intent
to resume a non-conforming use shall not confer the right to do so.
It is undisputed that Mr. Reynolds did not reestablish a residential use or a residential
structure on the south lot; in fact, no separate structure or use was sought to be established
on the south lot until Appellant’s 2007 permit application that is the subject of the present
appeal.
Instead, in November of 2003, Mr. Reynolds applied for and was issued a zoning
permit to construct an addition to the mobile home remaining in the original location on
the north lot. The plot plan attached to that application has not been provided to the Court.
The approved application referred to the parcel size as 3.01 acres, that is, the combined size
of the north and south lots. No party appealed the Zoning Administrator’s grant of that
application; it became final, and cannot be challenged, either directly or indirectly. 24
V.S.A. § 4472(d).
In February of 2005, after the addition had been constructed, Mr. Reynolds applied
for and was issued a Certificate of Compliance for the addition, which also stated the lot
size to be 3.01 acres. No party appealed the Zoning Administrator’s grant of that
Certificate of Compliance and it became final.
failed to comply with the setback requirements. The Court cannot determine from the
portions of the 2002 Zoning Bylaws quoted in the decision whether § 6.6(B) of the 2002
Zoning Bylaws also contained an analogous provision to § 3.8(B)(2) of the 2006 Land Use
Regulations regarding noncomplying structures, which allows modification of such
structures that will increase their degree of noncompliance only if approved by the ZBA as
a conditional use. § 3.8(B)(2).
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The state statute was again amended in 2004 to allow (but not require) municipal
bylaws to provide for merger if an existing small lot subsequently comes under common
ownership with one or more contiguous lots, and also to allow municipal bylaws to be less
restrictive of the development of existing small lots than was the state statute. 24 V.S.A. §
4412(2)(B),(C). Section 4412(2)(B) preserved the exemption that “a nonconforming lot shall
not be deemed merged and may be separately conveyed” if all of the following four criteria
are met:
(i) The lots are conveyed in their preexisting, nonconforming configuration.
(ii) On the effective date of any bylaw, each lot was developed with a water
supply and wastewater disposal system.
(iii) At the time of transfer, each water supply and wastewater system is
functioning in an acceptable manner.
(iv) The deeds of conveyance create appropriate easements on both lots for
replacement of one or more wastewater systems, potable water systems, or
both, in case there is a failed system or [a] failed supply as defined in 10
V.S.A. chapter 64.
Appellant acquired the three acres of property in a single deed from Mr. Reynolds
on March 3, 2005, and quit-claimed the property in a single deed to himself and Melinda
Kirschner shortly thereafter. The deed from Reynolds described the property as having
been acquired by Mr. Reynolds in two deeds, one for the former one-acre north lot, referred
to in the deed as “Parcel One” and one for the former two-acre south lot, referred to in the
deed as “Parcel Two.”
In August of 2005 Appellant’s engineering consultant provided an evaluation of the
technical feasibility of constructing a single-family dwelling on the eastern portion of the
combined property, across the small stream. The evaluation concluded that the eastern
portion of the combined property did not contain a viable location to site a house,
considering cost, permitting constraints, and potential environmental impact, and
recommended siting a house on the area of the property closer to the road.
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In late September of 2005, Appellant submitted a zoning application, stating the
acreage of the parcel as 3.01 acres. The application stated the proposed improvements as:
“I would like to replace trailer with home on plan – moving new home an additional 20 ft.
back from road edge.” The accompanying plan also has not been provided to the Court.
The Zoning Administrator denied the application, stating that a variance was
required; the accompanying letter explained that the proposal failed to meet the 100-foot
front yard setback.3 No appeal was taken from this determination.
In January of 2006 Appellant submitted a new zoning permit application that
described the project as a “[r]elocation of house-site to meet setbacks,” referring to an
attached engineer’s site plan that also has not been provided to the Court. While the
Zoning Administrator initially also denied this application, stating on the form that the
“[a]pplication fails to meet regulation of proposed new bylaw,” the Zoning Administrator
later approved it, “upon revision,” on April 25, 2006, apparently due to the fact that 2006
Land Use Regulations had reduced the front yard setback requirement to fifty feet. Also in
April of 2006, a town sewage permit was issued (under a different municipal ordinance )
for a new mound sewage system to serve the new house, stating the parcel size as three
acres.
In January of 2007, Appellant applied for and received a zoning permit to “rebuild
the existing garage w[ith]out increasing the [square footage].” The application stated the
parcel size as 3 acres. The application offered to move the garage “slightly to the
southeast” to make the structure less nonconforming. The Zoning Administrator’s
approval of this application was not appealed, and became final.
3 If the original mobile home on the north lot had a setback of 85 feet, and this one was
proposed to be 20 feet farther from the road, it is not clear to the Court why this proposal
would not have met the 100-foot front setback.
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Apparently the house and garage were completed, as a certificate of occupancy was
granted by the Zoning Administrator for the property on February 8, 2007. It was not
appealed and became final.
In May of 2007, Appellant submitted a new application for a zoning permit to
construct an additional single-family residence on what had been the south lot; it is this
application that is the subject of the present appeal. Neither this application nor its
characterization of the lot size or location has been provided to the Court. Without the
application, the Court cannot determine whether Appellant requested a subdivision permit
at this time, whether Appellant claimed in this application that the north and south lots had
remained separate all along, or whether Appellant sought to construct this additional
residential unit under the amended provisions now codified in 24 V.S.A. § 4412(1)(E)
regarding accessory dwelling units.
Appellant’s engineer designed a separate new mound-type wastewater disposal
system for each lot, to function as the primary system for that lot. Each system is designed
to be large enough to be used by both lots concurrently, in case of a failure of one of the
systems, provided that a pre-treatment system is installed on the remaining system. The
engineer’s affidavit states that there is no physical barrier to the installation of such a pre-
treatment system on either lot. The wastewater system currently operating on the north lot
is installed and functioning properly.
Appellant proposes that the new mound system for the south lot will be installed
and functioning properly prior to any sale of either lot, and that the deeds will contain
easements benefiting and burdening both lots for the common usage of each lot’s water
supply and wastewater disposal system, in case the system on the other lot fails in the
future. Appellant proposes that the configuration of the north and the south lots would
conform to the former boundaries of those lots when they were in separate ownership.
The Zoning Administrator denied the 2007 application, as did the ZBA on appeal;
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Appellant appealed to this Court the ZBA’s decision upholding the Zoning Administrator’s
denial of this application.
As both parties have moved for summary judgment, the Court considers each
motion in turn and affords the party opposing the motion under consideration the benefit
of all reasonable doubts and inferences. DeBartolo v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s of London,
2007 VT 31, ¶ 8, 181 Vt. 609, 611 (mem.); In re Morris 7-Lot Subdivision, Docket No. 71-4-07
Vtec, slip op. at 7 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Nov. 26, 2007). The Court applies the substantive
standards that were applicable before the ZBA . V.R.E.C.P. 5(g); 10 V.S.A. § 8504(h).
The parties have conflated two distinct issues in this appeal. They focus on whether
two contiguous existing small lots merged by operation of law at any time in the history of
this property. However, the distinctly separate question raised by Question 4 of the
Statement of Questions is whether or when the noncomplying building or use that was
removed from the south lot could be replaced or reinstated, regardless of whether the lots
had or had not merged. The Court must analyze these two issues separately under the
statutes and the zoning ordinance.
Question 6
Question 6 asks this Court to determine, assuming that the two lots may be
separately conveyed, whether the north lot has an easement by prescription to take water
from the well located on the south lot. Any questions of easements, water rights, or other
property rights are beyond the jurisdiction of this Court. 4 V.S.A. § 1001(b); see, e.g.,
Appeal of Monty, Docket Nos. 7-1-04 Vtec and 47-3-04 Vtec, slip op. at 6-7 (Vt. Envtl. Ct.
Jan. 24, 2006) and cases cited therein. Accordingly, Question 6 of the Statement of
Questions must be DISMISSED.
Question 3
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Question 3 asks whether the 2002 or the 2006 zoning ordinance applies to this
application. The application before the Court, to construct a single family residence on the
south lot, was filed on May 18, 2007. Summary judgment may therefore be entered that the
2006 Land Use Regulations apply to the application. Appellant has not suggested any
reason why any earlier ordinance should be applicable to this application, although he does
argue that earlier ordinances should be considered with respect to merger.
Of course, any analysis of the status of the property at any earlier date, such as in
1966 when the Town first adopted zoning, or in 1997 or 2001 when the north and south lots
came into common ownership, must be analyzed according to the statutes and regulations
in effect at the time of the relevant event. See generally 1 V.S.A. §§ 213, 214(b); cf. Sanz v.
Douglas Collins Constr., 2006 VT 102, ¶ 14, 180 Vt. 619, 623 (mem.); Myott v. Myott, 149 Vt.
573, 575–76 (1988).
Question 4
The residential use of the south lot as either a separate nonconforming lot or as a
second residential use on a merged nonconforming lot was discontinued at some time
between March 28 and December 21 of 2001. It was not reestablished at any time after the
removal of the residence on the south lot. The parties have not provided information as to
whether the location of the mobile home on the south lot was nonconforming as to
setbacks, or as to whether the then-effective zoning ordinance contained a provision
analogous to § 3.6(A) allowing only one principal use or structure on a single lot.
As a dwelling unit in that location on the south lot was not reestablished, it could be
precluded from being reestablished, depending on the provisions in the relevant zoning
ordinance analogous to § 3.8(A)(3) or to § 3.8(B)(3). The parties have not established when
the demolition occurred, from which to measure the six-month period for § 3.8(A)(3) or the
one-year period for § 3.8(B)(3), and from which to determine which zoning ordinance was
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applicable to the issue.
Therefore, although material facts may not be disputed, they have not so far been
provided to the Court, so that summary judgment cannot now be granted as to Question 4.
At the conference scheduled in connection with this case (see enclosed notice) please be
prepared to discuss whether this issue is moot or whether the parties wish to brief it
further.
Questions 1, 2, and 5
Questions 1, 2 and 5 ask the Court to determine whether the north and the south lot
remain as separate lots as of the date of the 2007 application, and, if not, whether the
language of 24 V.S.A. § 4406, as it existed between 2001 and 2003, allows the south lot to be
separately developed. Although not presented in the Statement of Questions, Appellant
also argues that the state statute as amended in 2004 (recodified at 24 V.S.A. § 4412(2)) now
should be interpreted to allow the separate conveyance of the south lot, even if the two lots
had merged under the language in effect in 2001.
The existing-small-lot statute is a type of grandfathering provision intended to allow
a particular kind of nonconformity — an undersized lot — to continue in existence and to
be developed in its configuration as of the date of adoption of the bylaw that rendered its
lot size nonconforming. It only exempts existing small lots from having to meet the
minimum lot size (and frontage and lot depth) requirements; it does not exempt such lots
from the other applicable dimensional requirements of the zoning ordinance, such as
setback requirements. In re Appeal of Jenness and Berrie, 2008 VT 117, ¶¶ 23–24.
The existing-small-lot statute does not require a landowner who owns contiguous
existing small lots to keep them separate, it simply allows such a landowner to develop the
lots separately, or to retain them in separate configuration, under certain circumstances.
Appellant has focused his argument on the circumstances under which a landowner is
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allowed to keep contiguous undersized lots in separate configuration.
Finality – 24 V.S.A. § 4472(d)
However, in the present case, from March of 2001 until Appellant’s purchase in
March of 2005, Appellant’s predecessor chose to take action to merge the two contiguous
undersized lots. He removed or demolished all the residential and accessory buildings on
the former south lot. He proceeded to obtain a zoning permit for additions to the
remaining existing residence in November of 2003, and a certificate of compliance in
February of 2005, both of which referred to the property as being the combined three acres
in size. As that zoning permit and certificate of compliance became final without appeal,
Appellant’s predecessor became bound by them, including their description of the property
in its merged, three-acre configuration, and was precluded by 24 V.S.A. §4472(d) from
contesting them, either directly or indirectly.
Thus, even without regard to the permits Appellant himself obtained for the
property in its three-acre configuration, Appellant is similarly bound, based on the actions
of his predecessor. See Badger v. Town of Ferrisburgh, 168 Vt. 37, 42–43 (1998) ; In re
Gregoire, 170 Vt. 556, 560 (1999) (mem.) (subsequent purchasers bound by previous
landowners’ abandonment of nonconforming use status).
Moreover, Appellant himself applied for a permit in September of 2005, and applied
for and received a permit in January of 2007, describing the property as being three acres in
area. (The parties have not provided the attachments to another permit application from
January of 2006, granted in April of 2006, from which the Court could determine whether
the acreage was also represented as three acres on that permit.) Appellant did not appeal
the Zoning Administrator’s issuance of the January 2007 permit, including its description of
the property in its merged, three-acre configuration, and is therefore precluded by 24
V.S.A. §4472(d) from contesting the three-acre combined lot size, either directly or
indirectly. The parties have not provided the attachments to the April 2006 permit or the
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February 2007 certificate of occupancy, from which the Court could determine if they
similarly approved plans showing the property as three acres in size, in which case they
would have a preclusive effect for the same reason.
Merger
When the lots first came into common ownership in 1997 they did not merge, either
by operation of the zoning ordinance or state statute. Under § 5.7(A)(1) of the 1997 Zoning
Bylaws, they had been separate lots as of the date of the first adoption of zoning in 1966,
and they remained “devoted to separate and independent uses.” See also Appeal of
Weeks, 167 Vt. 551, 557 (1998).
The recognized canons of statutory construction are applicable to zoning ordinances
as well as to statutory construction. In re: Kim Wong Notices of Violation, Docket Nos.
169-7-06 Vtec and 293-12-06 Vtec, slip op. at 2 (Vt. Envtl. Ct., Mar. 12, 2007). In either
instance the court must give “effect to the whole and every part of the ordinance,” In re
Stowe Club Highlands, 164 Vt. 272, 279–80 (1995) (citation omitted), to “avoid rendering
one part mere surplusage,” In re Appeal of Jenness and Berrie, 2008 VT 117, ¶ 24, and so
that the construction does not produce an absurd result. Wesco, Inc. v. Sorrell, 2004 VT
102, ¶14, 177 Vt. 287, 293.
At the latest, by 2003 the two lots had merged by the voluntary actions of
Appellant’s predecessor in removing the residential uses on the former south lot and
obtaining a zoning permit for the property as a three-acre parcel. To interpret any existing-
small-lot statute to require such parcels to remain separate, despite the contrary intention
of the landowner at the time, would create an impermissible absurd result, see Wesco, 2004
VT 102, ¶14, especially as zoning statutes and ordinances are to be construed by resolving
any ambiguity in favor of the landowner. Weeks, 167 Vt. at 555–56; see In re Jenness and
Berrie, 2008 VT 117, ¶ 29.
Even if Appellant’s predecessor had not applied for the zoning permit for a three-
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acre parcel, after he had removed the residential uses from the south lot, under § 5.7(A) and
§ 6.6(B)(3) of the 2002 Zoning Bylaws the two lots merged, as the south lot was no longer
devoted to a separate and independent use.
Appellant seems to argue that the reference in the state statute precluding merger, if
the wastewater systems in the lot are functioning in an acceptable manner at the time of
transfer, allows a new wastewater system to be constructed years after merger may have
occurred, and allows the former lots to be resubdivided into their former configuration.
Former 24 V.S.A. § 4406(1)(A)(iii), recodified in substantially the same form at 24 V.S.A. §
4412(2)(B)(iii).
However, the existing-small-lot protections in the statute are fundamentally a
protection for a specific type of nonconformity. One purpose of zoning is to phase out
nonconformities. In re Smith, 2006 VT 33, ¶ 10, 179 Vt. 636, 639 (mem.); In re Appeal of
Huntington NOV, Docket Nos. 204-8-06 Vtec and 209-9-06 Vtec, slip op. at 5 (Vt. Envtl. Ct.,
Apr. 25, 2007; In re Richards, 174 Vt. 416, 419–20 (2002). “Once merged, the property may
not be developed in a manner that would recreate the nonconforming use.” In re Richards ,
178 Vt. 478, 480–81 (2005) (citation omitted).
On the issue of merger, summary judgment must therefore be granted to the Town
on Questions 1, 2, and 5 of the Statement of Questions, in that the former north and south
lots merged at least as of the November 2003 Reynolds permit, and also that Appellant is
precluded by 24 V.S.A. § 4472(d) from contesting, even indirectly, that the property is a
single 3.01-acre lot.
Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that
Question 6 of the Statement of Questions is DISMISSED; and Summary Judgment is
GRANTED to the Town, and DENIED to Appellant, on Questions 1, 2, 3, and 5 of the
Statement of Questions, as discussed above. This decision concludes all but Question 4 of
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the Statement of Questions.
A telephone conference has been scheduled (see enclosed notice) to determine
whether the parties wish to proceed on Question 4 or whether it is moot. If the parties
agree in advance of that conference that it is not necessary to proceed with Question 4, they
may so state in writing, in which case they shall provide the Court with a proposed
Judgment Order, agreed as to form, to conclude this case.
Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 25th day of September, 2008.
_________________________________________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
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