In re Appeal of Carroll , 2007 Vt. 19 ( 2007 )


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  • In re Appeal of Carroll (2005-421)
    
    2007 VT 19
    [Filed 09-Mar-2007]
    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,
    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.
    
    2007 VT 19
    No. 2005-421
    In re Appeal of Patricia Carroll, et al.       Supreme Court
    On Appeal from
    Environmental Court
    May Term, 2006
    Thomas S. Durkin, J.
    Norman C. Smith, Essex Junction, for Appellant Carroll.
    Dennis R. Pearson, Pro Se, Jericho, Appellant.
    Daniel P. O'Rourke and Vincent A. Paradis of Bergeron, Paradis &
    Fitzpatrick, LLP, Essex Junction, for Appellees.
    PRESENT:  Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Johnson and Skoglund, JJ., and
    Toor, Supr. J.,  Specially Assigned
    ¶  1.  DOOLEY, J.  Appellant Patricia Carroll appealed to the
    Environmental Court from a decision by the Town of Jericho Development
    Review Board (DRB) approving the plan of Mary Alice Rivers and CRC Sand &
    Gravel (collectively, "developers"), for a five-lot subdivision. (FN1)  The
    Environmental Court concluded that because Ms. Carroll did not participate
    in the hearing for final subdivision approval, she did not qualify as an
    interested party under 24 V.S.A. § 4465(b), and dismissed Ms. Carroll's
    appeal.  We conclude that Ms. Carroll's participation in the previous
    hearings regarding the subdivision constituted adequate participation under
    the statute and reverse the Environmental Court's dismissal of her appeal.
    ¶  2.  "In reviewing the trial court's disposition of a motion to
    dismiss, we assume that all pleaded factual allegations in the complaint
    are true, as well as all reasonable inferences that may be derived
    therefrom."  Winfield v. State, 
    172 Vt. 591
    , 593, 
    779 A.2d 649
    , 651-52
    (2001) (mem.).  Developers' request for the five-lot subdivision began with
    an application in June 2003 (FN2) seeking  "sketch-plan" review of the
    subdivision. (FN3)  The DRB held a hearing on July 31, 2003.  Ms. Carroll's
    husband, James Carroll, was present at the July 2003 hearing and spoke
    regarding his concerns.  The Carrolls jointly submitted written documents
    expressing their concerns in the form of a written response under the name
    "The Carroll Family and Friends."  While some members of the DRB provided
    reactions to the proposal, no formal vote was taken on the proposal.
    ¶  3.  As the next step, developers sought Preliminary Plat Review for
    the five-lot subdivision.  The DRB held a hearing on October 23, 2003.  Ms.
    Carroll did not attend this hearing, but her husband was present and spoke
    regarding his concerns.  Both Carrolls again submitted written documents
    expressing their concerns regarding the proposed subdivision under the name
    "The Carroll Family."  At the close of the hearing, the DRB approved the
    proposed project as complying "with all pertinent sections of the Jericho
    Subdivision Regulations for preliminary plat review," subject to certain
    listed conditions.  A written decision to the same effect was issued the
    next day.
    ¶  4.  As the third step in the development-approval process,
    developers sought Final Plat Review for the proposed subdivision on
    September 15, 2004.  The DRB held a hearing on December 2, 2004.  Both Ms.
    and Mr. Carroll attended.  Although Mr. Carroll spoke extensively, the
    minutes do not reflect that Ms. Carroll spoke.
    ¶  5.  In response to the motion to dismiss, Ms. Carroll submitted an
    affidavit.  It indicated that Mr. Carroll "spoke from some notes we had
    prepared, and submitted to the Board, in my presence a copy of the notes he
    read from."  She added that she "assisted in preparing those notes" and
    attached them to the affidavit.  Finally, she stated:
    My husband spoke at the meeting with my permission and authority,
    and submitted written comments on his and my behalf.  Because he
    presented my concerns, I did not see a reason to speak on my own
    and simply repeat what he had to say.  This was particularly true
    because the Chair of the December 2, 2004 meeting specifically
    asked participants not to repeat areas already spoken of by
    others.  Discussion as to content and time allocation was strictly
    controlled by the Chair, Phyl Newbeck.  I felt very limited and
    wanted to respect her request.
    The DRB sent the written decision approving the final plat application on
    December 3, 2004.
    ¶  6.  Ms. Carroll subsequently filed a timely notice of appeal to the
    Environmental Court.  Other parties also appealed the decision, including
    appellant Pearson; these additional appeals were filed after the thirty-day
    appeal period had expired, but within the extra time allowed for additional
    appeals by V.R.A.P. 4. (FN4)  Thus, it is undisputed that these appeals are
    valid only if the Carroll appeal is valid.  Developers moved to dismiss the
    appeal in the Environmental Court, relying on a recent addition to the
    appeal statute in 24 V.S.A. § 4471(a):
    An interested person who has participated in a municipal
    regulatory proceeding authorized under this title may appeal a
    decision rendered in that proceeding by an appropriate municipal
    panel to the environmental court.  Participation in a local
    regulatory proceeding shall consist of offering, through oral or
    written testimony, evidence or a statement of concern related to
    the subject of the proceeding.
    Developers argued that Ms. Carroll had not participated in the municipal
    regulatory proceeding because (1) the relevant proceeding was the December
    2, 2004 hearing on the final plat application, and (2) Ms. Carroll did not
    offer evidence through testimony or a statement of concern at that hearing.
    ¶  7.  The Environmental Court agreed with developers' position and
    found that Ms. Carroll had not participated in the December 2004 hearing
    although she did participate in the hearing on the application for
    preliminary plat approval.  In response to Ms. Carroll's argument that the
    preliminary plat and final plat reviews were part of one proceeding, the
    court held:
    Many Vermont municipalities require separate applications for
    preliminary and final site plan approval for what is essentially a
    single request from a property developer: may I be permitted to
    subdivide this property.  These separate applications can often
    cause multiple filings in this Court, since appellants often file
    appeals from preliminary determinations, fearful that they would
    lose their appeal rights by waiting until the final determination
    is made.  It would be procedurally more efficient, for the parties
    and this Court, if preliminary and final determinations could be
    considered as one.  Unfortunately, we find no statutory authority
    to do so.  Therefore, we cannot look to Ms. Carroll's
    participation in the preliminary proceeding to satisfy her
    statutory requirement of participation in the final subdivision
    approval here.
    For this reason, the court dismissed the appeal.
    ¶  8.  In the present appeal, Ms. Carroll argues that (1) the
    participation requirement of 24 V.S.A. § 4471(a) does not apply because it
    did not come into effect until July 2004 and cannot apply to a subdivision
    request filed in 2003; (2) she met the participation requirement at the
    December 2004 final plat hearing; and (3) she met the participation
    requirement at the October 2003 preliminary plat hearing and that hearing
    was part of the "municipal regulatory proceeding" as described in §
    4471(a).  We directly address only the third argument and agree with her
    position.  For this purpose alone, we assume that the new law applies to
    this case.
    ¶  9.  Our primary task is to construe the applicable statute and
    the phrase "participated in a municipal regulatory proceeding."  The proper
    construction of 24 V.S.A. § 4471 is a question of law subject to
    nondeferential and plenary review.  See In re Dep't of Bldgs. & Gen.
    Servs., 
    2003 VT 92
    , ¶ 8, 
    176 Vt. 41
    , 
    838 A.2d 78
    .  Our objective in
    construing a statute is to effectuate the Legislature's intent, and we look
    first to the statute's language.  Springfield Terminal Ry. Co. v. Agency of
    Transp., 
    174 Vt. 341
    , 346, 
    816 A.2d 448
    , 453 (2002).  We will enforce the
    plain meaning of the statutory language where the Legislature's intent is
    evident from it, Wesco, Inc. v. Sorrell, 
    2004 VT 102
    , ¶ 14, 
    177 Vt. 287
    ,
    
    865 A.2d 350
    , but, if doubts exist, "the real meaning and purpose of the
    Legislature is to be sought after and, if disclosed by a fair and
    reasonable construction, it is to be given effect."  Langrock v. Dep't of
    Taxes, 
    139 Vt. 108
    , 110, 
    423 A.2d 838
    , 839 (1980).  The intent should be
    gathered from a consideration of "the whole statute, the subject matter,
    the effects and consequences, and the reason and spirit of the law."  In re
    Wal*Mart Stores, Inc., 
    167 Vt. 75
    , 84, 
    702 A.2d 397
    , 403 (1997) (internal
    quotations and citations omitted).
    ¶  10.  In this case, the meaning of the phrase "municipal regulatory
    proceeding" is not sufficiently clear for us to decide the question based
    on the wording alone.  Nor does the statute contain a definition of the key
    term, "proceeding."  We are aided, however, by the nature of the
    subdivision review in the relevant statutes and ordinance provisions of the
    Town of Jericho.
    ¶  11.  The required procedure for subdivision review, as set forth in
    24 V.S.A. § 4463, is very limited:
    Subdivision review.
    (a)  Approval of plats.  Before any plat is approved, a public
    hearing on the plat shall be held by the appropriate municipal
    panel after public notice. . . .
    A municipality can, however, require a more extensive process.  Thus, 24
    V.S.A. § 4418 provides:
    Subdivision bylaws.
    In order to guide community settlement patterns and to ensure the
    efficient extension of services, utilities, and facilities as land
    is developed, a municipality may regulate the division of a lot or
    parcel of land into two or more lots or other division of land for
    sale, development, or lease.  Subdivision bylaws shall establish
    standards and procedures for approval, modification, or
    disapproval of plats of land and approval or modification of plats
    previously filed in the office of the municipal clerk or land
    records.
    . . . .
    (2) Subdivision bylaws may include:
    . . . .
    (B) Procedures for conceptual, preliminary, partial, and other
    reviews preceding submission of a subdivision plat, including any
    administrative reviews. (FN5)
    The Town of Jericho has adopted a more extensive procedure than provided
    for in § 4418(2)(B).  Thus, the Town of Jericho Subdivision Regulations
    require that developers first submit a preliminary plat application for a
    major subdivision.  See JSR, supra note 3, art. II, § 2 ("A major
    subdivision . . . shall undergo both preliminary Plat and Final Plat review
    and approval.").  The application at issue in this case is for a major
    subdivision because it contains five or more lots.  Id. art. I, § 3.  The
    procedural rules specify:
    Before holding the public hearing on the final plat of a major
    subdivision, the Commission (FN6) shall hold one or more hearings
    on a preliminary plat. . . . Approval of a preliminary plat shall
    not constitute approval of the subdivision.  The decision on a
    preliminary plat may state specific requirements to be fulfilled
    prior to gaining approval of the final plat.  Prior to approval of
    the final plat, the Commission may require additional changes or
    information as a result of further study.
    Id. art. II, § 3.  The regulations define the preliminary plat in terms of
    its purpose: "to enable the subdivider to save time and expense in reaching
    general agreement with the Planning Commission as to the form of the
    subdivision and the objectives and requirements of these regulations."  Id.
    art. I, § 2(17)(1b).
    ¶  12.  Our only relevant precedent is In re Miller, 
    170 Vt. 64
    ,
    75-76, 
    742 A.2d 1219
    , 1227 (1999), where we concluded that site-plan review
    before the planning commission involved a separate proceeding from zoning
    review in the zoning board of adjustment although the developer needed both
    permits to proceed with the development project.  In that case, the two
    proceedings were in separate adjudicatory bodies, and the developer had to
    present separate evidence to each.  If the developer succeeded, each
    proceeding resulted in a separate permit. (FN7)
    ¶  13.  We think that in contrast to the site-plan and zoning review
    in Miller, subdivision review is one proceeding from application to
    preliminary plat review to final plat review.  See Blacks's Law Dictionary
    1241 (8th ed. 2004) (defining "proceeding" as "[t]he regular and orderly
    progression of a lawsuit, including all acts and events between the time of
    commencement and the entry of judgment").  Preliminary plat review is an
    intermediate step, adopted in some municipalities, that may move the
    developer along to a subdivision permit, but does not by itself give the
    developer any approval, other than the ability to request final plat
    review.  As the Jericho Subdivision Regulation makes clear, preliminary
    plat review means only that the developer and the DRB have come to a
    "general agreement" on the form of the subdivision and the effect of the
    subdivision regulation.  It is fully expected that evidence provided in
    preliminary plat review will be used in determining whether to issue a
    subdivision permit and whether to impose conditions on that permit.
    ¶  14.  Viewing preliminary plat review and final plat review as part
    of one municipal regulatory proceeding is consistent with the apparent
    intent of the Legislature in requiring participation as a condition of the
    right to appeal.  In 2004, the Legislature substantially amended  the
    Municipal and Regional Planning and Development Act, Chapter 117 of Title
    24, and, in the process, made local participation a prerequisite for
    interested parties to appeal to the Environmental Court.  2003, No. 115
    (Adj. Sess.), § 107.  Previously, interested party status alone was
    sufficient.  See 24 V.S.A. § 4464(b)(3).  Thus, under the old law,
    interested parties could appeal even though the DRB had no opportunity to
    deal with the issue causing the appeal and the developer had no opportunity
    to address the issue.  By enacting the amendment, the Legislature intended
    that the interested party state his or her opposition in the local
    proceeding.
    ¶  15.  The statutory language does not specify when the interested
    party must participate as long as it is within the proceeding.  For
    subdivision proceedings, participation at preliminary plat review
    implements the intent of the Legislature, as does participation at final
    plat review.  Indeed, in Jericho where preliminary plat review can lead to
    a "general agreement" between the DRB and the developer on the nature of
    the project, participation at that stage may be more critical for adjoining
    landowners who are opposed generally to the development plans, as the
    Carrolls were here.  Once the proposal moves to final plat review, the
    interested parties' opposition may be too late to have any effect.  Also,
    by that time, the DRB and developer are fully aware of the nature of the
    opposition of the interested party.
    ¶  16.  The Environmental Court appeared to recognize that
    subdivision review is essentially one proceeding, but held that it must
    find that preliminary plat and final plat review are separate proceedings
    because the interested party has a right of appeal from preliminary plat
    review.  We doubt that the interested party can appeal from a decision that
    reflects only a "general agreement" between the developer and the DRB and
    that can be changed "as a result of further study," but we need not ground
    our decision on this point.  The relevant statute, 24 V.S.A. § 4471(a),
    allows an interested party to "appeal a decision rendered in that
    proceeding."  As we noted in In re Miller, "[c]ourt appeal is authorized
    for any 'decision of a board of adjustment,' [24 V.S.A.] § 4471(a), not
    only for decisions granting or denying permits."  170 Vt. at 76 n.5, 742
    A.2d at 1227 n.5.  Nothing in the statutory language suggests that one
    proceeding ends, and another begins, solely because the DRB renders an
    appealable decision.  In fact, the statutory language giving the right to
    appeal "a decision rendered in that proceeding" suggests that there can be
    more than one appealable decision within a proceeding.  We do not believe
    that the appealability of preliminary plat approval, if such a right of
    appeal exists, affects whether preliminary plat and final plat approval are
    part of the same proceeding.
    ¶  17.  Developers have conceded that Ms. Carroll participated in the
    preliminary plat review hearing before the DRB, thus we need not review
    this aspect of the participation requirement.  That participation gave her
    standing to appeal from the approval of the subdivision permit.  The
    Environmental Court erred in dismissing the appeal.
    Reversed.
    FOR THE COURT:
    _______________________________________
    Associate Justice
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Footnotes
    FN1.  Appellant Dennis Pearson also filed a brief in this Court in support of
    the arguments made by Ms. Carroll.
    FN2.  The record indicates that developer Mary Alice Rivers submitted a
    request for approval of a six-lot subdivision earlier in 2003 and this
    proposal went through sketch-plan review in the DRB. Ms. Rivers apparently
    dropped that proposal.
    FN3.  The purpose of sketch-plan review is not indicated by the record, nor
    is it provided for in the Jericho Subdivision Regulations in effect at the
    time of the subdivision review in this case.  See  Jericho, Vt.,
    Subdivision Regulations (July 8, 1985) [hereinafter JSR],
    http://www.jerichovt.gov/ (follow "Ordinances/Local Regulations" hyperlink;
    then follow "Zoning/Subdivision Regulations" hyperlink; then follow
    "Subdivision Regulations Adopted 7/8/85" hyperlink).  It is defined in the
    zoning regulations as "an informal public hearing with the Development
    Review Board to explore options in a preliminary manner with little expense
    involved," and the regulations specify that "[n]o formal decision is taken"
    and "no specific data is required."  Jericho, Vt., Zoning Regulations  art.
    VI, § 601.2.0, http://www.jerichovt.gov/ (follow "Ordinances/Local
    Regulations" hyperlink; then follow "Zoning/Subdivision Regulations"
    hyperlink; then follow "Jericho Zoning Regulations Adopted 12/29/03"
    hyperlink).  We assume that the purpose is similar for subdivision review
    and similar to what we described in In re Champlain Oil Co. with respect to
    a sketch-plan application: that it "be submitted by a subdivider of land to
    the town planner prior to submitting an application for subdivision
    approval, for the purpose of classifications and preliminary discussion of
    the subdivision with the Planning Commission."  
    2004 VT 44
    , ¶ 12, 
    176 Vt. 458
    , 
    852 A.2d 622
     (internal quotations omitted).
    FN4.  V.R.A.P. 4 provides, in pertinent part, that "[i]f a timely notice of
    appeal is filed by a party, any other party may file and serve a notice of
    appeal within 14 days of the date on which the first notice of appeal was
    filed."
    FN5.  This version of the statute was added effective July 1, 2004.  Prior to
    that effective date, 24 V.S.A. § 4414 provided: "Before holding such public
    hearing on a plat, the planning commission or the development review board
    may hold one or more preliminary hearings and grant preliminary approval to
    authorize the preparation of the plat for such public hearing."  1967, No.
    334 (Adj. Sess.), § 1, as amended by 1993, No. 232 (Adj. Sess.), § 6.  The
    provisions are similar in substance; we do not believe that the exact
    wording affects our conclusion in this decision.
    FN6.  The Jericho Subdivision Regulations refer to the planning commission
    throughout.  See, e.g., JSR, supra note 3, art. I, §§ 2, 3(3).  Since their
    adoption, the Town has substituted the DRB to fulfill the functions of the
    planning commission and the zoning board of adjustment.
    FN7.  For similar reasons, the case relied upon by appellee, In re Champlain
    Oil Co., 
    2004 VT 44
    , is distinguishable from the situation before us.
    There, the developer was pursuing a subdivision permit and a site-plan
    permit through two separate adjudicatory proceedings leading to two
    separate permits.  Id. ¶ 17.