NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made
before this opinion goes to press.
2021 VT 36
No. 2020-076
In re Snowstone LLC Stormwater Discharge Authorization Supreme Court
(Michael Harrington et al., Appellants)
On Appeal from
Superior Court,
Environmental Division
September Term, 2020
Thomas S. Durkin, J.
Merrill E. Bent of Woolmington, Campbell, Bent & Stasny, P.C., Manchester Center, for
Appellants.
Lawrence G. Slason and Samantha L. Snow of Law Office of Salmon & Nostrand,
Bellows Falls, and David R. Cooper of Facey Goss & McPhee P.C., Rutland, for Appellees.
PRESENT: Robinson, Eaton, Carroll and Cohen, JJ., and Morris, Supr. J. (Ret.),
Specially Assigned
¶ 1. ROBINSON, J. Neighbors appeal three Environmental Division rulings related
to their appeal of the Agency of Natural Resources’ (ANR) decision to authorize Snowstone, LLC,
to discharge stormwater at a proposed project site pursuant to a multi-sector general permit
(MSGP). First, the court dismissed for lack of statutory standing most of neighbors’ questions on
appeal and dismissed the remaining questions as not properly before the court. Second, the court
concluded that neighbors’ motion for a limited site visit was moot, given its dismissal of neighbors’
appeal. Finally, the court granted Justin and Maureen Savage’s (landowners) motion to intervene
in the proceedings. We conclude that neighbors have standing to appeal the ANR’s authorization
to act under a MSGP and that their motion for a limited site visit is not moot. We further conclude
that the court acted within its discretion to allow landowners to intervene. Accordingly, we reverse
the dismissal of neighbors’ appeal and the dismissal of the motion for a site visit, and we affirm
the court’s decision to grant landowners intervention.
¶ 2. This appeal arises from Snowstone’s proposed dimensional stone extraction project
at a quarry off Tierney Road in Cavendish, Vermont. Snowstone sought to acquire a 0.93-acre
portion of landowners’ 176-acre tract of land to carry out the project. Specifically, Snowstone
planned to acquire a 0.64-acre parcel where the stone quarry was located and where extraction
would take place, along with a 0.29-acre easement over an existing “woods road” running from
the quarry to a shared portion of landowners’ driveway. Cavendish is a “one-acre town” for
purposes of determining Act 250 jurisdiction, meaning that any commercial or industrial
development on more than one acre of land requires an Act 250 state land use permit pursuant to
10 V.S.A. § 6001(3)(A)(ii).
¶ 3. Snowstone filed a request for a Jurisdictional Opinion (JO) pursuant to 10 V.S.A.
§ 6007(c) to determine whether its proposed project would be subject to Act 250 jurisdiction.
Neighbors, who were all neighboring or adjoining landowners and residents of Tierney Road,
offered public comment in the proceedings. The district coordinator acknowledged neighbors as
interested parties with a “particularized interest” in the outcome of the JO.
¶ 4. In October 2017, the district coordinator determined that in light of the terms of the
agreement between landowners and Snowstone, the entire 176-acre tract should be considered to
be owned or controlled by a single person for purposes of determining Act 250 jurisdiction, rather
than only the 0.93-acre portion that Snowstone contracted to acquire from landowners. Snowstone
appealed that determination to the Environmental Division of the Superior Court. Neighbors
timely intervened in the appeal. In addition to supporting the district coordinator’s conclusion that
the project tract comprises the entire 176 acres, neighbors argued that the project would require
one or more stormwater discharge permits, which would include conditions making it physically
2
impossible to locate and operate the project within the 0.93-acre parcel and thus would likely be
subject to Act 250 jurisdiction.
¶ 5. In May 2018, following discovery and some settlement discussions, the
Environmental Division conducted a de novo merits hearing focused on two principal legal issues:
(1) whether the landowners-to-Snowstone purchase and sale agreement was an “arm’s-length
transaction” such that the land subject to Act 250 jurisdiction was limited to the parcel and
easement that Snowstone planned to purchase,1 and (2) whether the evidence presented supported
Snowstone’s assertion that its activities could be contained within the 0.93-acre parcel that it
intended to acquire from landowners. After Snowstone presented its case-in-chief, at Snowstone’s
urging and with neighbors’ consent, the court issued an order bifurcating the two issues with the
expectation that it would render a decision on the first, while Snowstone sought any necessary
stormwater and discharge permits.
¶ 6. The court issued an interim order providing a timeline for Snowstone to submit to
ANR or its subdivisions applications for any necessary stormwater and discharge permits. The
interim order also required Snowstone to include neighbors on an “Interested Persons List” and
provided that “Snowstone w[ould] not contest Neighbors’ standing in permitting proceedings
concerning the proposed quarry or Neighbors’ status as ‘persons aggrieved’ for purposes of
standing to intervene in the permitting process or to appeal.”
¶ 7. Snowstone submitted an application to the Department of Environmental
Conservation, a department within ANR, for authority to act under an MSGP. The application
outlined Snowstone’s proposed stormwater pollution prevention plan (SWPPP), as well as the best
management practices it planned to follow throughout the project operations. The Department
opened the permit application for public comment, and neighbors participated in the proceedings
1
After the district coordinator’s determination, Snowstone and landowners entered into a
new purchase and sale agreement that was modified to address the district coordinator’s concerns.
On appeal, the environmental division considered the modified agreement.
3
by submitting a number of comments and questions. In response, Snowstone revised its proposed
plan. ANR approved Snowstone’s revised application, authorizing operations under the MSGP
(ANR Authorization) in June 2019.
¶ 8. In July 2019, neighbors timely appealed ANR’s determination to the environmental
division, filing a statement of questions pursuant to the Vermont Rules for Environmental Court
Proceedings.2 See V.R.E.C.P. 5(f) (“Within 21 days after the filing of the notice of appeal, the
appellant shall file . . . a statement of the questions that the appellant desires to have determined.”).
Snowstone moved to dismiss neighbors’ appeal and statement of questions, arguing that neighbors
lacked standing under 10 V.S.A. § 8504(a) to raise the legal issues presented in questions 1-18,
22, 26, and 28 (all dealing with the ANR Authorization to proceed under a MSGP). Snowstone
argued that neighbors’ remaining questions 19-21, 23-25, and 27 raised issues outside the court’s
jurisdiction as it related to the ANR Authorization.
¶ 9. On the issue of standing, the Environmental Division concluded that neighbors had
not presented adequately grounded claims that the ANR Authorization could have an adverse
impact on their particularized interests, and thus they lacked statutory standing to appeal the ANR
Authorization. Specifically, the court rejected neighbors’ two assertions of potential impact on
their particularized interests. First, the court found the record did not support neighbors’ assertion
that their “interest[s] would be affected by water pollution” if Snowstone were to “improperly
manage[] stormwater runoff from the Snowstone project.” Noting that there was no basis to
assume the project would be “improperly managed,” the court said that it could not conclude that
neighbors’ assertions “create[d] even a possibility of the impacts [they] assert[ed].” Second, the
court rejected neighbors’ contention that they had “suffered a reduction in their home values by
2
This appeal of the ANR authorization is distinct from the JO appeal that remained
pending at the time, although the court coordinated the proceedings; as reflected below, it issued
some subsequent orders in both dockets. The trial court’s disposition of the JO appeal is the subject
of a separately docketed appeal to this Court.
4
virtue of the proposed project,” finding no legal authority to support considering impacts on home
value as a basis for standing to appeal an ANR authorization to operate under an MSGP.3
¶ 10. The Environmental Division also dismissed neighbors’ remaining questions. It
concluded that questions 19-21 were premised on unsubstantiated speculation that Snowstone’s
project would exceed the proposed 0.93-acre area. And, the court determined that questions 23-
25 and 27 sought improper “advisory opinion[s] on the general topics of what other permits may
be required” for the project.
¶ 11. In a separate order issued the same day, the Environmental Division dismissed as
moot neighbors’ motion in both dockets (the JO appeal and the ANR Authorization appeal) for a
limited site visit. The court reasoned that it had determined neighbors lacked standing to appeal
the ANR Authorization, and neighbors had not requested further hearing in the JO appeal, so a site
visit was no longer necessary. Finally, in another separate order issued that day, the court granted
landowners’ motion to intervene in the appeal of the ANR Authorization as well as the outstanding
appeal from the district coordinator’s JO.
¶ 12. On appeal to this Court, neighbors challenge all three trial court orders relating to
the appeal of the ANR Authorization. They argue that the Environmental Division erroneously
dismissed most of their questions for lack of statutory standing without an evidentiary hearing, and
they challenge the court’s determination that the remaining questions were outside the court’s
jurisdiction or improperly sought an advisory opinion. Second, neighbors argue that, because they
have standing and did request further hearing in the JO appeal, the court erred in dismissing as
moot their motion for a limited site visit. Finally, neighbors contend that the Environmental
3
Although the environmental division cited two decisions involving constitutional
standing in its decision, the bulk of its analysis focused on the related but distinct statutory standing
requirement in 10 V.S.A. § 8504(a) as applied to the respective questions on appeal. Snowstone’s
arguments on appeal likewise focus on the statutory standing requirements. We limit our analysis
accordingly.
5
Division abused its discretion in finding landowners’ motion to intervene timely. We address each
argument in turn.
I. Snowstone’s Motion to Dismiss
¶ 13. We conclude that the Environmental Division erred in dismissing the lion’s share
of neighbors’ questions on appeal for lack of statutory standing, and in dismissing questions 20-
21 as outside the scope of the appeal, but we affirm the dismissal of questions 19, 23-25, and 27.
First, we conclude that neighbors have standing to appeal the ANR Authorization because
neighbors have shown a reasonable possibility that the authorization may affect their particularized
interests. Second, we agree with the trial court’s dismissal of neighbors’ question number 19
because it was not within the scope of the appeal, but disagree with the trial court’s dismissal of
neighbors’ questions 20-21 concerning the “off-site” activities identified in Snowstone’s SWPPP
because they were within the scope of the appeal. Lastly, we affirm the Environmental Division’s
dismissal of questions 23-25 and 27 because they sought impermissible advisory opinions from
the court.
A. Standing
¶ 14. Neighbors argue on appeal that the Environmental Division erred in dismissing
their questions relating to the ANR Authorization for lack of standing as “persons aggrieved”
under 10 V.S.A. § 8504(a). They contend there is a reasonable possibility that Snowstone’s
stormwater discharge may affect their interests based on an engineer’s affidavit asserting that
proper stormwater management was not possible within the proposed project footprint and
describing potential impact on neighbors’ lands.4 The affidavit stated in part:
Due to the inadequacy of the design of the proposed stormwater
system, polluted water runoff from the proposed [p]roject may
overwhelm the proposed [best management practices], and could
4
Neighbors alternatively argue for statutory standing on the basis that the project would
lead to a reduction in their home values. Because we conclude that they have standing on the basis
of the potential stormwater impacts on their physical property and abutting road, we do not address
this alternate argument.
6
possibly run down the [landowners’] drive and Tierney Road,
following the course of the road, and effectively rutting and/or
creating a sluiceway for polluted water, following the course of
Tierney Road.
The polluted runoff may cause damage to Tierney Road, and may
also enter the properties along Tierney Road.
[T]he same problem could affect all persons whose property is
accessed on Tierney Road, or which are otherwise downstream of
the proposed [p]roject.
The result of the inadequate stormwater design could result in
undue pollution to neighboring properties, including the properties
owned by the various [n]eighbors who are party to this appeal.
¶ 15. We review a dismissal for lack of standing without deference, applying the same
standard as the trial court. Baird v. City of Burlington, 2016 VT 6, ¶ 11, 201 Vt. 112, 136 A.3d
223. Examining the plain language of the operative statute, we recognize that statutory standing
under § 8504(a) may be predicated on allegations, and the showing required to establish statutory
standing under §8504(a) is minimal. We conclude that neighbors’ expert affidavit exceeds this
threshold by describing a reasonably possible injury to neighbors resulting from stormwater runoff
from the project.
¶ 16. Under 10 V.S.A. § 8504(a), “any person aggrieved by an act or decision of the
Secretary . . . may appeal to the Environmental Division” within thirty days of the decision or act.
A “person aggrieved” is one “who alleges an injury to a particularized interest” protected by one
or more environmental protection statutes enumerated in § 8503. 10 V.S.A. § 8502(7). In that
sense, “aggrieved person” status for the purposes of standing to appeal under § 8504(a) is related
to “particularized-interest” based standing in Act 250 cases. See 10 V.S.A. § 6085(c)(1)(E)
(according party status to any “other person who has a particularized interest protected by this
chapter that may be affected” by a decision of a district commission); cf. In re Green Mountain
Power Corp., 2018 VT 97, ¶¶ 17, 24, 208 Vt. 349, 198 A.3d 36 (construing PUC Rule 2.209, which
authorizes intervention by persons who demonstrate “a substantial interest which may be adversely
7
affected by the outcome of the proceeding” to require a “particularized interest”). A
“particularized interest” for the purposes of these environmental statutes is an interest that sets the
interests of the would-be party apart from the general interests of others. See Green Mountain
Power Corp., 2018 VT 97, ¶¶ 17-20 (concluding that competitor company that was also a ratepayer
did not have sufficiently particularized interest where company did not demonstrate any interest
that set it apart from generic ratepayers).
¶ 17. This is the first time we have been called upon to assess the quantum of evidence
required to establish statutory standing under § 8504, and we conclude that the necessary showing
is minimal. We base this conclusion on the plain language of the statute defining a “person
aggrieved” for purposes of statutory standing under § 8504:
“Person aggrieved” means a person who alleges an injury to a
particularized interest protected by the provisions of law listed in
section 8503 of this title, attributable to an act or decision by a
district coordinator, District Commission, the Secretary, or the
Environmental Division that can be redressed by the Environmental
Division or the Supreme Court.
10 V.S.A. § 8502(7) (emphasis added). Significantly, the statute requires only an allegation of
injury, and not any measure of proof. While a frivolous or entirely speculative allegation may not
be sufficient to support statutory standing under § 8504, the statute does not require that a person
seeking statutory standing to appeal under § 8504 satisfy any evidentiary threshold in showing a
potential injury to a particularized interest. In construing the statute, “[w]e presume that the plain,
ordinary meaning of statutory language is intended.” State v. Hinton, 2020 VT 68, ¶ 11, __ Vt.
__, 239 A.3d 246 (quotation omitted). “If the plain language is clear and unambiguous, we enforce
the statute according to its terms.” Id. (quotation omitted). This statute authorizes standing based
on a particularized interest and non-frivolous allegations that are not entirely speculative.5
5
We note that the standard for establishing standing to appeal under § 8504(a) may not be
the same as that for establishing standing to challenge an Act 250 permit as a person with a
particularized interest. See 10 V.S.A. § 6085(c)(1)(E) (according party status to any “other person
8
¶ 18. Our understanding of the statute is consistent with the Environmental Division’s
own persuasive interpretation. See, e.g., In re N.E. Materials Grp. LLC, No. 35-3-13, 2013 WL
5288469, at *4 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Aug. 21, 2013), https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/
sites/default/files/documents/NE%20Materials%20%2035-3-13%20Vtec%20Party%20Status.
pdf [https://perma.cc/F6QJ-48PX] (emphasizing in the context of assessing whether movants had
established particularized protected interest sufficient to support interested-person status under 10
V.S.A. § 8504(n) that “the claimant need only show that the impact may occur; whether it will
occur is a matter to be addressed on the merits”). In North East Materials Group, the
Environmental Division concluded that various neighbors had shown a reasonable possibility of
harm to their particularized interests in the watercourses on their respective properties even without
expert evidence. Id. at *6. The neighbors, whose concerns related to stormwater discharge from
a proposed plant, stated specifically: that their properties were downhill from the proposed project;
one was “concerned pollutants from the plant could enter a brook that travels through their
backyard”; another feared “during storms, runoff from operations at the plant w[ould] contaminate
a drainage ditch that r[an] across [their] property”; a third movant “fear[ed] contamination of
wetlands and a groundwater-fed well on [their] property”; and the last was concerned because “in
the spring, water flows from [a]pplicant’s property through a culvert on [their] property.” Id. The
who has a particularized interest protected by this chapter that may be affected” by a decision of a
district commission) (emphasis added). Section 6085 includes a detailed set of requirements for a
person seeking party status on the basis of a “particularized interest,” including a requirement that
the person provide a description of the potential effect of the proposed project upon the person’s
interest with respect to each of the relevant criteria or subcriteria under which party status is being
requested. Id. § 6085(c)(2). The environmental division has interpreted § 6085(c)(1)(E) to require
that a person seeking aggrieved-party status in an Act 250 proceeding before a district commission
need only demonstrate a “reasonable possibility” that their particularized interest may be affected.
See In re Bennington Wal-Mart Demolition/Constr. Permit, No. 158-10-11, 2012 WL 8898494, at
*6 & n.5 (Vt. Super. Ct. Envtl. Div. Apr. 24, 2011), https://www.vermontjudiciary.org
/sites/default/files/documents/Bennington%20Walmart%20Demolition%20Construction%20158
-10-11%20Vtec%20MSJ%20Party%20Status.pdf [https://perma.cc/XN8P-R53F]. Because
neighbors’ standing in this appeal is governed by §§ 8501-04, we need not decide whether
“reasonable possibility” is the proper standard under Act 250.
9
neighbors’ homes were located, respectively, 0.25 miles, 1 mile, 0.34 miles, and 0.54 miles, from
the proposed project. Responding to the permit applicant’s argument that the neighbors had not
offered technical or scientific evidence to rebut the presumption that the MSGP in that case created,
the court recognized that the neighbors might face “a high evidentiary burden . . . on the merits,”
but that was irrelevant for purposes of a standing analysis. Id. The court concluded that the
movants had shown a reasonable possibility of harm to their particularized interests and afforded
them standing as persons aggrieved. Id.
¶ 19. In this case, neighbors satisfied the minimal threshold established by statute.
Neighbors not only alleged that the potential stormwater runoff might injure them, but also
proffered an affidavit from an engineer who described with specificity the way that the asserted
inadequacy of the design of the proposed stormwater system might affect neighbors’ particularized
interests in their property. The affidavit stated that the inadequacy of the stormwater system “may
overwhelm the proposed [best management practices], and could possibly run down the
[landowners’] drive and Tierney Road,” that the polluted runoff “may also enter the properties
along Tierney Road” and “could affect all persons whose property is . . . downstream of the
proposed [p]roject,” and that the inadequate design “could result in undue pollution to neighboring
properties,” including that of neighbors. Neighbors have not made frivolous or speculative
allegations; they have supported their concerns with an expert affidavit that validates their
concerns that stormwater runoff may impact their properties. Whether neighbors will be able to
prove their case on the merits remains to be seen, but neighbors have sufficiently alleged that the
ANR Authorization may affect their particularized interest to attain standing under § 8504(a).6
6
In reaching this conclusion, we do not rely on the environmental division’s prior
bifurcation order, entered with the agreement of the parties, in which the environmental division
ordered Snowstone not to “contest Neighbors’ standing in permitting proceedings concerning the
proposed quarry or Neighbors’ status as ‘persons aggrieved’ for purposes of standing to intervene
in the permitting process or to appeal.” Because we conclude that neighbors have standing to raise
the challenged questions based on their allegations and expert affidavit, we do not here address
10
B. Neighbors’ Remaining Questions
¶ 20. Neighbors argue that the court erred in dismissing their remaining questions as
improperly before the court. We conclude that question 19 was outside the scope of the appeal of
the ANR Authorization and therefore properly dismissed, but that questions 20-21 were within the
scope of the appeal because they sought information about activities Snowstone had included in
its SWPPP. We further conclude that questions 23-25 and 27 sought advisory opinions from the
court and were properly dismissed.
i. Questions 19-21
¶ 21. Neighbors raised several questions concerning statements in Snowstone’s SWPPP
regarding activities that would occur “off-site,” at locations not identified in the SWPPP.
Specifically, neighbors asked whether such off-site activity will occur “within 5 miles of the
project site” (question 19); where the “ ‘offsite areas’ referenced in . . . the SWPPP at which
industrial activities subject to MSGP jurisdiction will occur” (question 20); and whether all offsite
activities “have appropriate MSGP permit coverage” (question 21). These questions, according to
neighbors, are relevant to whether operations under the MSGP were properly authorized.
Snowstone argues that the questions raise issues relating to “one-acre towns” and “involved land,”
which are at issue in the JO appeal, but not relevant to this appeal of the ANR authorization. We
conclude that question 19 was not relevant to the ANR Authorization and was thus outside the
scope of this appeal; however, questions 20-21 were within the scope of the appeal of the ANR
Authorization, and we therefore reverse the court’s decision dismissing them.
¶ 22. The MSGP Rules require that an applicant’s SWPPP include “a description of the
nature of the industrial activities at [an applicant’s] facility”; a “general location map . . . with
enough detail to identify the location of [applicant’s] facility and all receiving waters for
whether challenges to statutory standing can be waived, or whether the environmental division’s
order precluded Snowstone from challenging the factual predicate for neighbors to claim standing
as “persons aggrieved” entitled to raise the various questions on appeal.
11
[applicant’s] stormwater discharges”; and a site map showing, in part, locations of fueling stations,
vehicle and equipment maintenance, and processing and storage areas “where such activities are
exposed to precipitation.” Dep’t of Envtl. Conservation, Vermont Multi-Sector General Permits
for Stormwater Discharges Associated with Industrial Activity 5.1.2 (Aug. 4, 2011),
https://dec.vermont.gov/sites/dec/files/wsm/stormwater/docs/MultiSectorGeneralPermit/sw_msg
p_2011_FinalPermit.pdf.
¶ 23. In dismissing these three questions, the trial court relied on the ANR summary,
which “ma[de] clear that all activities proposed by Snowstone or authorized by ANR will occur
within the 0.64-acre project site or the 0.29-acre access road.” The court further noted that
neighbors had not presented evidence that Snowstone’s activities would occur beyond the confines
of the 0.93-acre area and that if they did, Snowstone would be in violation of its MSGP.
¶ 24. We agree with the court’s decision to dismiss question 19, but for a different reason.
And we disagree with the court’s decision to dismiss questions 20-21. In considering these
respective questions, we are mindful of the “general concept that appeal rights must be liberally
construed in favor of persons exercising those rights.” In re Mahar Conditional Use Permit, 2018
VT 20, ¶ 17, 206 Vt. 559, 183 A.3d 1136 (quotation omitted).
¶ 25. We conclude that question 19 was outside the scope of the appeal of the ANR
Authorization and was therefore properly dismissed. The question asked whether off-site activity
would occur “within 5 miles of the project.” Based on this Court’s review of the record, whether
the activities occurred within five miles is relevant to the concept of “involved land” at issue in
the JO appeal but not at issue in this appeal of an authorization to operate pursuant to a MSGP.
See Act 250 Rules, Rule 2(C)(5), Code of Vt. Rules 12 004 060, http://www.lexisnexis.com/
hottopics/codeofvtrules (defining “involved land” as including “[t]he entire tract or tracts of land,
within a radius of five miles, upon which the construction of improvements . . . will occur, and any
other tract, within a radius of five miles, to be used as part of the project”). The question of whether
12
the off-site activities occurred within five miles of the project is thus outside the scope of this
appeal.
¶ 26. By contrast, in construing neighbors’ appeal rights liberally, we conclude that
questions 20-21 were properly before the court. The questions were expressly limited to
considerations relevant to the ANR Authorization and appear to question whether off-site activities
Snowstone identified in its SWPPP have been included within the monitoring and best practice
requirements of the MSGP. Specifically, question 20 asked about “ ‘offsite areas’ . . . at which
industrial activities subject to MSGP jurisdiction will occur,” and question 21 sought confirmation
that off-site areas had “appropriate MSGP permit coverage.” We disagree with the trial court that
these questions were based on “unsubstantiated speculation” because they targeted activities that
Snowstone itself identified would occur “off-site” in the SWPPP. Whether these activities were
subject to the authorization to act under the MSGP is within the scope of this appeal.
ii. Questions 23-25 and 27
¶ 27. The trial court concluded that neighbors’ questions 23-25 and 27 “appear[ed] to be
unbridled efforts to seek an advisory opinion on the general topics of what other permits may be
required for the proposed dimensional stone extraction operations.” On appeal, neighbors concede
that these questions concern whether additional permitting was necessary but argue that they raised
the issue in public comment and that the questions were properly before the court because such
permitting would likely require changes to Snowstone’s SWPPP.
¶ 28. Advisory opinions are those that have no conclusive, legal effect. See Doe v. Dep’t
for Children & Families, 2020 VT 79, ¶ 17, __ Vt. __, __ A.3d __. Courts are not authorized to
issue advisory opinions because they exceed the constitutional mandate to decide only actual cases
and controversies. In re S.N., 2007 VT 47, ¶ 9, 181 Vt. 641, 928 A.2d 510 (mem.); see also In re
Investigation into Programmatic Adjustments to Standard-Offer Program, 2018 VT 52, ¶ 17, 207
13
Vt. 496, 191 A.3d 113 (“[T]he establishment of legal doctrine derives from the decision of actual
disputes, not from the giving of solicited legal advice in anticipation of issues.”).
¶ 29. Neighbors here effectively sought the court’s advice as to whether Snowstone is
required to seek additional permits. The interim order required that Snowstone “promptly make
application to [ANR] . . . for all stormwater and discharge permits required for the proposed
quarrying operation.” Snowstone only sought authorization to operate under an MSGP, and the
necessity to seek any other permit was not properly before the court in an appeal of that
authorization. Any ruling as to what other permits Snowstone needed, besides the one before it
on appeal, would have been a mere advisory opinion, so questions 23-25 and 27 were properly
dismissed.
II. Neighbors’ Motion for a Site Visit
¶ 30. Neighbors argue that the Environmental Division erred in finding their motion for
a limited site visit moot. In their motion, they had requested that the court allow neighbors’
engineer or other agents to enter the landowners’ land for a limited site visit to access the land
surrounding the project site to examine the area. Neighbors’ motion was docketed in both the
appeal of the ANR Authorization and the still pending JO appeal.
¶ 31. The court concluded that there was no longer a need for the site visit in connection
with the appeal of the ANR Authorization because the court had dismissed all of neighbors’
questions on appeal. In connection with the JO appeal, the court concluded that no party had
requested a further hearing within thirty days of the ANR Authorization and thus no further
evidentiary hearing would be needed. Because there was no reason for a site visit in either docket,
the court dismissed neighbors’ request as moot.
¶ 32. “[A]n issue becomes moot if the reviewing court can no longer grant effective
relief.” Chase v. State, 2008 VT 107, ¶ 11, 184 Vt. 430, 966 A.2d 139 (quotation omitted).
Because we conclude that neighbors have standing to pursue most of the questions raised in their
14
appeal of the ANR Authorization, at least in that docket, neighbors’ request for a site visit is not
moot.7 The neighbors may pursue their motion for a site visit before the trial court.
III. Landowners’ Motion to Intervene
¶ 33. Neighbors argue that the Environmental Division abused its discretion in granting
landowners’ motion to intervene in this appeal of the ANR Authorization because the motion was
untimely and the court’s reasoning in granting the motion was untenable. Specifically, neighbors
argue that intervention poses time and financial burdens on the parties involved; that landowners
could have sought intervention sooner and that they “re-tread ground that had already been
discussed, briefed, and resulted in party stipulations” two years earlier; that landowners were well-
aware of the years-long litigation; and that landowners had a history of active participation in the
case prior to seeking intervention.
¶ 34. The trial court has discretion to deny intervention where a motion to intervene is
untimely, and so we review rulings on timeliness for abuse of discretion. State v. Quiros, 2019
VT 68, ¶ 15, 211 Vt. 73, 220 A.3d 1241.
¶ 35. We conclude that the Environmental Division did not exceed its discretion in
granting landowners’ motion to intervene in this appeal of the ANR Authorization.8 The court
properly considered the factors related to timeliness, and its decision to grant intervention did not
exceed its authority.
¶ 36. If the applicant for proposed development is not the landowner, the owner of the
land on which development is proposed is a “party by right” under 10 V.S.A. § 8502(5)(B). Where
a statute establishes a party by right, the party is entitled to intervene in the action “upon timely
7
Questions about the effect of the trial court’s ruling declining further evidentiary hearings
in the JO appeal are the subject of a separately docketed appeal to this Court.
8
We note that landowners sought intervention in this appeal from ANR’s Authorization
(Docket No. 76-7-19 Vtec) as well as in the separately docketed appeal from the JO (Docket No.
151-11-17 Vtec). We do not address here whether intervention was properly granted in the appeal
from the JO.
15
application.” V.R.C.P. 24(a). We have previously identified four factors for trial courts to
consider in assessing timeliness: (1) possible harm to plaintiffs; (2) the intervenor’s power to have
sought intervention earlier; (3) the progress of the case; and (4) the availability of other means to
join the case. Shahi v. Madden, 2010 VT 56, ¶ 10, 188 Vt. 142, 5 A.3d 869.
¶ 37. In Shahi, we concluded that a motion to intervene filed several years after the
applicant was aware of litigation was timely. Id. ¶ 11. The applicant there sought to intervene in
a motion to reconsider an injunction that prohibited applicant’s husband from coming within
twenty feet of the property line between applicant’s and the adjoining neighbor’s properties. The
applicant had previously filed several motions as an “interested party,” which the trial court
ignored or denied. The court granted the motion during the pendency of a motion to reconsider
and prior to a site visit or issuance of a final injunctive order. We determined that the motion was
timely because intervention would not “slow the proceedings” and was “expressly limited to
[applicant’s] ‘property interests.’ ” Id.
¶ 38. Similarly here, the court recognized that landowners’ motion to intervene was filed
two years after they signed the revised purchase and sale contract, but emphasized that it was
“purely reactionary and limited, such that progress of the case is not affected.” That is—
landowners only moved to intervene in these ongoing proceedings after neighbors sought
permission to conduct a site visit to inspect landowners’ land. See Werbungs Und Commerz Union
Austalt v. Collectors’ Guild, Ltd., 782 F. Supp. 870, 874 (S.D.N.Y. 1991) (holding motion to
intervene was timely where filed once applicant’s direct interest in action was implicated although
it was two years after applicant was aware of its interest in the action and had been involved
directly and indirectly throughout litigation). Landowners largely supported Snowstone’s motion
to dismiss and thus their intervention was not likely to delay proceedings. Cf. Quiros, 2019 VT
68, ¶ 21 (affirming denial of intervention where significant amount of discovery and settlement
talks had already taken place such that agreement between existing parties was “imminent”). And,
16
unlike in Shahi, landowners here are “parties by right” as defined in 10 V.S.A. § 8502(5)(B) and
thus entitled to intervene pursuant to 10 V.S.A. § 8504(n)(2). See 7C C. Wright & A. Miller, Fed.
Prac. & Proc. § 1916 (3d ed. 2021) (“Since in situations in which intervention is of right the would-
be intervenor may be seriously harmed if intervention is denied, courts should be reluctant to
dismiss such a request for intervention as untimely, even though they might deny the request if the
intervention were merely permissive.”)
¶ 39. Further, the court determined that landowners’ motion to intervene did not raise
new concerns that would require revisiting already-litigated issues. Landowners sought to
intervene in the appeal of the ANR Authorization once their direct interest in the matter was
implicated by neighbors’ request for a site visit, prior to any discovery having been served, any
hearing having been scheduled, or any evidence having been submitted.
¶ 40. As to potential harm, the only possible harm neighbors allege as a result of
intervention is general demands of cost and time to the parties. Considering these circumstances,
we cannot conclude that the trial court acted outside its discretion in granting landowners’ motion
to intervene in the appeal of the ANR Authorization.
The trial court’s dismissal of neighbors’ appeal as to Questions 19, 23-25, and 27 is
affirmed. The court’s dismissal of neighbors’ remaining questions as outside the scope of the
appeal and for lack of standing and its denial of neighbors’ motion for a limited site visit are
reversed and remanded for the neighbors to pursue their appeal. The decision granting landowners
intervention is affirmed.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
17