STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
Town of Grand Isle, Plaintiff,
}
v. }
} Docket No. 124-6-02 Vtec
Ivan Patry and Michael }
Bilodeau, , Defendants. }
Decision and Order Regarding Jurisdiction and Preliminary Injunction
The Town brought a zoning enforcement action against Ivan Patry, the present occupant and
owner or purchaser of the parcel in question, and against the former owner or seller of the parcel,
Michael Bilodeau, seeking injunctive relief and money penalties for work done on the parcel
without a permit. The Town also moved for a preliminary injunction solely against Ivan Patry,
also referred to in this decision as the landowner.
A hearing was held on the preliminary injunctive relief at the courthouse in North Hero,
Vermont. Ivan Patry appeared and represented himself, and was assisted at counsel table by
Barbara Ann Sempf; the Town of Grand Isle is represented by Edward G. Adrian, Esq. An
evidentiary hearing was held in this matter before Merideth Wright, Environmental Judge. The
parties were given the opportunity to submit written argument and also argued orally on the
record. Upon consideration of the evidence, the written materials and the oral argument, the
Court finds and concludes as follows.
By quitclaim deed dated May 14, 2002 and recorded May 20, 2002, and by warranty deed dated
June 7, 2002 and recorded June 10, 2002, Ivan Patry acquired from Michael Bilodeau a long
narrow parcel of property, approximately 45 feet wide and 480 feet long, located at an address
known as 3 Pent Road. For the purposes of this litigation, the Court accepts that this property has
been passed down in an unbroken chain of title from the original land grant in 1779 of the islands
known as the A Two Heroes.@ At some time in the more recent past, the property contained a
single family dwelling with a failed subsurface wastewater disposal field. The single family
dwelling has been removed, but its slab foundation remains on the property. The former
subsurface waste disposal system (A leach field@ ) has been excavated by or on behalf of the
landowner, and was in a failed, flooded condition when excavated.
A witness made reference to the property= s having been > condemned= in the past under the
health statutes regarding the failure of the septic system. Although the former residence on the
property may have received a permit for construction on an existing small lot, under the
protections for existing small lots under the state zoning enabling act and the Town= s zoning
regulations, no prior permit for this property was presented in evidence. Nor was any >
condemnation= order or other health order presented in evidence (see 18 V.S.A. ' ' 122 and
602a). Therefore we make no findings regarding whether the property is subject to any health
order or any zoning permit.
Since May 14, 2002, Ivan Patry and people working on his behalf have uncovered the failed
septic system, have installed perforated drainage pipe and crushed stone in the rear portion of the
property to conduct water from the property onto the property of a neighbor, Mr. LaFramboise,
and have placed a travel camper on the slab formerly occupied by the former dwelling1. Ivan
Patry and people working on his behalf plan to install a replacement septic system and some type
of residence on the property. Ivan Patry has not applied for any municipal permits for any of this
work.
Because the property is only 45 feet wide, and the required side setbacks are 25 feet from each
side, there is no location on the property on which a structure or a travel trailer can be placed in
compliance with the setbacks. Accordingly, the property needs a variance for any structure to be
placed.
Because the existing septic system has failed and needs to be replaced, the property needs a
septic permit. If the property must be drained in order to install a septic system or for any other
reason, it needs prior approval of the drainage. If the property must be drained or if a septic
system must be installed in order for the landowner to make reasonable use of the property, it
may require a variance also for the drainage or septic permits. If a building is to be placed or
built on the property, the landowner must obtain a building permit.
The only question before the court in the present proceeding is whether the landowner should
have applied for and obtained any permits from the Town of Grand Isle prior to doing the work
that has been done on the property at issue. If so, the Town is entitled to an injunction to stop the
work and to require the landowner to apply for and receive all required permits prior to
continuing with the work on the property.
We first note that this court has no jurisdiction to determine any property rights or other private
rights of action between Ivan Patry and the Town, between Ivan Patry and Michael Bilodeau,
between Ivan Patry and the water district, or between Ivan Patry and any of the neighboring
landowners. See, e.g., 10 V.S.A. ' 1410; 18 V.S.A. ' 122. Any lawsuit to enforce such rights
would have to be filed in the Grand Isle Superior Court. Similarly, the superior court has
jurisdiction under 24 V.S.A. ' 4472 over claims that a zoning regulation is unconstitutional.
Similarly, the superior and district courts have jurisdiction over enforcement of health orders
under 18 V.S.A. ' ' 130 and 131. (If any related matter are filed, they may be scheduled to be
heard together with the merits of this case, by a single judge assigned to all related matters).
However, the Town does not claim any property rights in this land, and does not seek to establish
any right of way, servitude, easement or other encumbrance on this land. Rather, the Town
asserts its exercise of police power to regulate the landowner= s use of his land. Nor does Ivan
Patry argue that the zoning regulation is unconstitutional on its face2.
Mr. Patry argues instead that the Town has no right to regulate his land due to the property rights
acquired by his predecessors in title under the 1779 land grant of the so-called A Two Heroes@
and confirmed under the 1783 peace treaty. That land grant essentially granted property
ownership to persons willing to develop and cultivate at least two acres of each parcel granted.
However, that land grant did not create a continuing contract3 over the intervening two centuries
between the grantee and the grantor. Rather, if the grantee fulfilled all the prerequisites of the
grant, the grantee obtained ownership in fee simple. The peace treaty set a time period for
contesting any grants, so that land titles would become settled in the new nation.
State courts do not have jurisdiction over treaties entered into between the United States and
foreign governments, such as the 1783 treaty of peace between the United States and Great
Britain. If that treaty were essential to the determination of the issue in this case, Mr. Patry would
be free to apply to the U.S. District Court for the District of Vermont to remove this dispute to
federal court. However, the treaty does not determine this case, because the Town= s authority
derives from the police power, one of the sovereign powers reserved to the states under the 10th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Because this case does not involve a property dispute, does not claim that the zoning ordinance is
unconstitutional, and does not seek to enforce a health order, there is no bar to jurisdiction in the
Environmental Court as distinct from the superior or district court. Because this case is not
determined by the 1783 Treaty of Peace, there is no bar to jurisdiction in the Environmental
Court as distinct from a federal court.
The landowner= s argument confuses the legal concepts of property rights and the police power.
Governmental regulation based in the police power does not violate the constitutional protection
against governmental taking of private property without compensation, unless the regulation is
so stringent that it leaves the landowner without a reasonable use of the property. In enacting the
zoning enabling act, Chapter 117 of Title 24 of the Vermont Statutes, the legislature included
several provisions to protect preexisting property rights and to ensure that landowners are not
deprived of the opportunity to make reasonable use of their property. Thus, the legislature
exempted the continued use and maintenance of pre-existing structures and uses, so long as they
have not been abandoned by the owner. The legislature also provided that pre-existing small
undeveloped lots could be developed, even if they are too small for development under later-
adopted zoning regulations. The legislature provided a variance procedure in 24 V.S.A. ' 4468,
specifically addressing whether the variance is necessary to enable the landowner to make
reasonable use of the property.
However, nothing in the constitution or the zoning enabling act exempts a landowner from
having to file an application with the town for a zoning permit, a septic permit, a drainage permit
or a necessary variance, in order to determine whether the property is entitled to one of the
exemptions or to a variance. Such an application is the mechanism by which the landowner has
the opportunity to claim to the Town= s DRB that the property is entitled to an exemption or a
variance, to avoid a regulatory taking of the property. Such an application must be made to the
town in the first instance, before the Court can consider the issue in an appeal from the Town= s
Development Review Board decision.
The bottom line is that Ivan Patry may or may not be entitled to exemption of his property as an
existing small lot. He may or may not be entitled to a variance to make a reasonable use of his
property. He may or may not qualify for a permit to install a replacement in-ground septic
system, or some other form of innovative treatment of household wastewater. He may or may not
qualify for a town4 drainage permit.
The Court does not make any determination here today of whether the property in question
qualifies for any such permits. The Court is not allowed to rule in the first instance on the merits
of any of these permits. The legislature has assigned that task to the Town= s Zoning
Administrator or Development Review Board; the Court may determine the merits of such
permits only in an appeal from the Development Review Board.
What we do determine today is that Ivan Patry or any subsequent owner of the parcel must apply
for a zoning or building permit, a variance, and, if necessary, a septic permit and a drainage
permit, before placing a structure on the property, before installing a wastewater disposal system,
and before installing any drainage piping or otherwise increasing the drainage from the property.
All further work on the property must cease until the appropriate permits and variances are
applied for and granted5. Specifically, the travel trailer must be removed until a variance from
the setback requirements is obtained for the placement of the travel trailer, and no further
installation work may be done on any replacement septic system. Neither the travel trailer nor
any other source of wastewater may be hooked up to the existing or replacement septic system,
until the landowner acquires the necessary permits.
Based on the evidence, we will not require the removal or digging up of any of the drainage
structures that have been installed to date, as long as they are not hooked up to any source of
household wastewater. Such removal may be the subject of the hearing on the merits of
permanent injunctive relief in this matter.
Based on the foregoing, with respect to the parcel of land described above and known as 3 Pent
Road, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that until further order of this court, Ivan Patry,
his agents, successors and assigns, and all others acting in concert with him, 1. Shall remove the
travel trailer until obtaining a variance from the setback requirements for the travel trailer, at
which time the travel trailer may be replaced on the property so long as it is not connected to the
water supply or wastewater disposal systems on the property and complies with the other
requirements of the zoning ordinance regarding travel trailers;
2. Shall apply for a drainage permit for the drainage work already installed and shall cease and
desist from any further work on the drainage of the parcel until such permit is obtained;
3. Shall apply for a septic system permit and shall cease and desist from any further work on the
replacement of the septic system or any other wastewater disposal system on the parcel until
such permit is obtained;
4. Shall apply for a variance from the setback requirements and from any other relevant
requirements of the zoning regulations necessary to construct the wastewater disposal system and
any building or structure on the parcel and shall cease and desist from any further work on the
wastewater disposal system and any building or structure on the parcel until such variance is
obtained; and
5. Shall apply for a zoning or building permit to place or construct any building on the parcel and
shall cease and desist from any further work on the drainage of the parcel until such permit is
obtained.
Dated at Barre, Vermont, at 4:00 p.m. this 14th day of June, 2002.
___________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
Footnotes
1.
They have also installed a fence blocking visibility of a portion of the property and have
‘unlocked’ a water supply pipe served by the local water district. However, no zoning violations
are claimed in connection with those actions. 18 V.S.A. §121 may apply to the town’s access to
the property under the health statutes.
2.
Mr. Patry cannot argue that the zoning regulation is unconstitutional as applied, because he
has not filed an application for a variance, a septic permit, a drainage permit, a buiding permit, or
a certificate of occupancy. It may well be that his land meets the requirements for a variance of
the setback requirement, to allow him to make a reasonable use of the property, but we do not
know that a variance would have been denied, as he has not yet applied for one.
3.
Otherwise current landowners would continue to be at risk of forfeiting their property back
to the state for failing to cultivate at least two acres of it in perpetuity. Similarly, we need not
address the question of what rights if any remained under the original land grants if the parcel
size fell below two acres, as has occurred with the present parcel.
4.
He also may or may not have to obtain a state wetlands conditional use determination for
work on the site.
5.
We must note for the parties’ guidance that if any permit or variance applications are denied,
those denials must be appealed or the Court cannot consider the merits of those applications in
any later enforcement proceeding.