' STATE OF VERMONT
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' ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
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'Appeal of Chamberlin, et al. } Docket No. 123-7-04 Vtec
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Decision and Order on Motions for Summary Judgment
Appellants Randall Chamberlin, Brenda Chamberlin, K. Martin Simon, Devereaux
Simon, David Adams, Malcolm Edgerton, Steven E. Jeffery, Michael McNamara, George
McNaughton, Larry Newman, George Raiser, William F. Roach, and Mary D. Sinclair
appealed from a decision of the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) of the Town of
Northfield, ruling on Appellee-Applicant John Lambert's request related to a home
occupation. Appellants are represented by Robert Halpert, Esq; and the Town is
represented by Jill E. Spinelli, Esq. Appellee-Applicant John Lambert appeared and
represents himself, as does Interested Person John R. Smith; neither Mr. Lambert nor Mr.
Smith filed any memoranda on the pending motions. The Town has moved for summary
judgment, seeking dismissal of the appeal. Appellants have also moved for summary
judgment on Questions 2'[1] and 5 of the Statement of Questions.
The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Appellee-Applicant John
Lambert owns a 10.8-acre parcel of property at 1524 Stony Brook Road within the Rural
Residential zoning district of the Town of Northfield, on which is located his residence and
a 40' x 60' outbuilding constructed under a zoning permit issued in April of 2003. Also in
April of 2003, Mr. Lambert applied for and was granted a driveway permit for the
construction of a second driveway for access from Stony Brook Road to the >far side' of
his property.
On April 8, 2004, Mr. Lambert submitted a one-page form captioned "Application
to the Board of Adjustment." Under "Type'[2] of Application," Mr. Lambert checked
A'Request for interpretation of zoning ordinance or map,"and filled in 'Section 606' as the
provision of the zoning ordinance in question. He filled in as his A'Reason for appeal:"
"WOULD LIKE TO OPEN A GARAGE AT HIS HOME AS A HOME OCCUPATION." He
filled in as A'Specific relief requested:" "PERMISSION TO OPEN A GARAGE AT HIS
HOME AS A HOME OCCUPATION." Mr. Lambert did not submit an application for a
Zoning Permit'[3] under '205.
The public warning notice published in the newspaper for the ZBA's April 22, 2004
hearing, stated that "John Lambert . . . is requesting interpretation of Zoning Ordinance
Section 606." At the close of the April 22, 2004 hearing, it was recessed to continue on
May 27, 2004. At both the April 22, 2004, and the May 27, 2004, hearings, the ZBA
took testimony from Mr. Lambert on his proposed automobile repair use on his residential
property, and from various neighbors regarding the potential for problems with such a use,
including issues regarding its hours of operation, disposal of oil and antifreeze, visible
vehicles, signage, and lighting.
At least at the outset of both hearing days, the ZBA minutes reflect that the
application under consideration was a"request for interpretation of Zoning Regulation
Section 606 to allow him to have a home occupation under Section 402 to do automotive
repairs in his garage." As described in the minutes of the May 27, 2004 hearing, the
action the ZBA took on this request was to approve a motion "to approve Lambert's
request for interpretation of Section 606 to allow him to have a Home Occupation under
Section 402 with the restriction that a curfew of 10:00 AM shall be imposed on all outside
work." The written decision issued later stated in full under the heading "Decision" that
"[t]he Board of Adjustment's Interpretation was that a Home Occupation (an Auto Repair
Facility) could exist in a Rural Residential Zone with a restriction that outside work would
cease at 10:00 PM in the evening;" it stated in full under the heading "Conclusion" that
"[t]he Board of Adjustment's Interpretation of Section 606 was that Lambert could have a
Home Occupation."
The Town and Appellants are correct that the use of land or a structure for a home
occupation requires the issuance of a zoning permit under the Zoning Regulations, '205,
as does any use of land or a structure. Summary judgment must be granted to that effect
on Question 5 of the Statement of Questions.
While some zoning ordinances specifically provide for the use category of 'home
occupation' to be considered, either as a permitted use or as a conditional use'[4] in any
district in which a residence is an allowed use, the Northfield Zoning Regulations do not
do so. Rather, in the Town of Northfield a home occupation may receive a zoning permit
from the Administrative Officer if it meets the '102 definition of home occupation and the
requirements of '402. Any challenge to whether a particular home occupation qualifies
under those sections must be made as an appeal to the ZBA from the grant or denial of
an application by the Administrative Officer, or from some other decision of the
Administrative Officer regarding that particular home-based business (such as the decision
to take or decline to take enforcement action).
Section 102 defines A'customary home occupation" as an "occupation which is
customary in residential areas, which does not change the character thereof and which
uses a minor portion of a dwelling unit or accessory building." Section 402 preserves the
rights of residents to "use a minor portion of a dwelling unit to conduct an occupation
which is customary in residential areas and which does not change the character thereof,"
which is also preserved by state law. 24 V.S.A. '4412(4). Mr. Lambert could have
raised his interpretation issue by applying for a zoning permit for his proposed home
occupation. Instead, he made a request directly to the ZBA for interpretation of '606, and
as the 'relief requested=' sought >permission to open a garage' at his residence property as
a home occupation.
The Town argues that the ZBA only had before it the request for interpretation of
'606 of the Zoning Regulations, as to whether Mr. Lambert could apply for a zoning
permit for a home occupation in the Rural Residential Zoning District. The Town argues
that the merits of an application for approval of Mr. Lambert's specific home occupation
was not properly before the ZBA, and therefore is not before the Court for decision in this
appeal.
Section 205 provides that applications for zoning permits are made to the
Administrative Officer. The Administrative Officer may also make other decisions, for
example, as to whether a particular proposal first requires conditional use approval or a
variance issued by the ZBA, ''207 and 208, or requires site plan approval from the
Planning Commission, '209, and may refer the application for such prior approvals. The
Administrative Officer may issue (or decline to issue) notices of violation, which are a
prerequisite to the Town's taking enforcement action. '206. Under the state statute,
appeals from a decision of an administrative officer are to the ZBA (or to the Development
Review Board in municipalities that have adopted the combined panel system);
applications for conditional use approval and variances are ruled on in the first instance by
the ZBA.
With regard to a request simply for interpretation of the zoning ordinance or official
map, '201 provides that, A'[i]f uncertainty exists as to the boundary of any district shown
on the Zoning Map, the Planning Commission shall determine the location of such
boundary." However, no similar provisions have been brought to the Court's attention,
and the Court could find none in the Zoning Regulations, that provide for direct ZBA
jurisdiction of A'request[s] for interpretation of zoning ordinance or map,@' other than
through appeals of decisions of the administrative officer. The only place in which such
jurisdiction is suggested is on the application form for applications to the ZBA; that form
has not been adopted as a zoning regulation by the Town.
The Court sits in place of the ZBA to consider de novo whatever the ZBA had
jurisdiction to hear. In re Maple Tree Place, 156 Vt. 494, 500 (1991). As we can find
no jurisdiction for the ZBA to undertake an advisory interpretation'[5] of the zoning
ordinance in the first instance, neither does the Court have jurisdiction to render an
advisory opinion on the zoning ordinance in the absence of an appeal to the ZBA from the
Administrative Officer='s initial interpretation or decision or an application (such as for
conditional use approval or a variance) that is within the jurisdiction of the ZBA in the first
instance.
Further, even if we were to treat the >request for interpretation of the zoning
ordinance' as having been properly before the ZBA, the ZBA could not convert the request
for interpretation into a request for a permit. See In re Torres, 154 Vt. 233, 235 (1990).
' Even if the ZBA had the advisory jurisdiction suggested by the form, all that was before
the ZBA was the request for interpretation of '606 and it gave that interpretation. A
request for a permit would not have been before the ZBA unless it had been acted upon
by the Administrative Officer and appealed to the ZBA. Therefore, a request for a permit
was not properly before the ZBA and is not before the Court for decision in this appeal.
Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that
Appellants' and the Town's Motions for Summary Judgment relating to Question 5 of the
Statement of Questions are GRANTED, in that a zoning permit issued by the zoning
Administrative Officer under '205 is required for a home occupation. The Town's Motion
for Summary Judgment is also GRANTED, in that no request for a permit was properly
before the ZBA or this Court; the decision of the ZBA in this matter is therefore VACATED
and this matter is DISMISSED, without prejudice to any further application to the Zoning
Administrator as the parties may wish to make regarding Mr. Lambert's proposed home
occupation.
This decision concludes this appeal. We note that, if Appellants were again to
appeal to this Court from a future decision of the ZBA relating to this project, and if they
were to apply for a waiver of the filing fee, they should bring the docket number of the
present appeal to the Court's attention in that future appeal. Any such future appeal
would be a new case and would not be a continuation of the present appeal.
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Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 31st day of May, 2005.
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Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
'[1]
The Town's response to that motion with respect to Question 2 was postponed
to two weeks after the Court's ruling on the present motion.
'[2]
The Application to Board of Adjustment provides three other options under
"Type of Application@': >appeal from a decision of the administrative officer;' 'application for
a conditional use permit;' or 'application for a variance.'
'[3]
The parties have not provided a copy of the blank form for application for a
zoning permit from the Administrative Officer, '205.
'[4]
In municipalities in which the use category of >home occupation' is a conditional
use, the application for it is properly made directly to the ZBA, which must apply the
conditional use standards as well as the definition of home occupation, and may impose
conditions on any approval.
'[5]
The Town may wish to consider revision of its >Application to Board of
Adjustment' form to address this category.