Appellant Bruce White applied for a zoning permit to construct a farm stand and greenhouse and to grow produce on a 2.45-acre lot he owned in Randolph, Vermont, where one residence existed and another was planned to be built. The Randolph Board of Adjustment denied the permit, as did the superior court on appeal. We affirm.
The material facts are substantially undisputed. In late June 1988, Mr. White applied to the Randolph zoning administrator for a zoning permit. He had purchased a 2.45-acre lot with the intention of connecting a retail farm stand to the existing house. The Randolph Zоning Regulations (RZR) place Mr. White’s lot in two different zoning districts: the front 200 feet in the Apartment Residence District (AR); the rest of the property in the Residence District (RES).
Upon reviewing Mr. White’s zoning permit application, the zoning administrator determined that it required conditional *615 use approval by the board. In late July 1988, the board held a conditional use review hearing and denied approval. The board notified Mr. White orally of its decision, but it never put the decision in writing.
In early August 1988, Mr. White appealed the board’s decision to superior court. While the appeal was pending, but before trial de novo, he applied for and received a zoning permit to construct an additional single-family house on the property at issue here. After trial, the court denied conditional use approval to Mr. White.
I. Jurisdiction A.
As a threshold issue, appellant challenges the superior court’s jurisdiction to rule on the merits of his apрeal. Relying on
Nash v. Warren Zoning Board of Adjustment,
We addressed these issues in
Hinsdale v. Village of Essex Junction,
Although a zoning applicant can appeal from an oral decision, that decision does not become final and the appeal period does not begin to run until either the board files its written decision or the period for doing so — sixty days, 24 V.S.A. § 4407(2) — has expired.
Nash,
In hindsight, if we were to follow Mr. White’s logic, a premature appeal would frustrate the appellate prоcess and force a deemed approval by preventing a final decision from ever being rendered. We cannot interpret 24 V.S.A. § 4407(2) to require such an irrational result.
In re R.S. Audley, Inc.,
To the contrary, the deemed approval remedy manifests a preference for timely decisions over written ones. This preference makes sense because the appeal is de novo and therefore proceeds as if the board never made a decision.
Chioffi v. Winooski Zoning Board,
Finally, once a board decision is “rendered” — i.e., the board has made a decision and communicated it to the applicant, as was done hеre — the applicant is not entitled to the deemed-approval remedy,
Hinsdale,
B.
Mr. White raises an additional challenge to the superior court’s jurisdiction.
*617 When the zoning administrator received Mr. White’s permit application, he reviewed it and determined that it involved a request for conditional use approval, and therefore passed it on to the zoning board for action. See RZR § 3.4:1 (“No zoning permit may be issued by the Administrative Officer unless conditional use approval has been granted by the Boаrd of Adjustment.”). Mr. White asserts that by taking this action the zoning administrator determined that the use he planned for his property was a conditional use, that no one appealed this “determination,” and therefore at the end of the thirty-day appeal period the use was determined to be a conditiоnal one. 24 Y.S.A. § 4472(d). He then reasons that because no one appealed the zoning administrator’s determination, the superior court lacked jurisdiction to rule on whether his proposal was a conditional use.
We disagree. The simple answer to appellant’s semantic alchemy is that thе zoning administrator made no determination on the merits. All he decided was that Mr. White’s application was a request for a conditional use permit, not that the use Mr. White was proposing met all the conditions for a conditional use permit, a decision the zoning administrator in any case would have no authority to make. RZR § 3.4:1.
II. Merits
In addition to jurisdictional challenges, Mr. White raises two challenges on the merits: (1) that RZR § 3.4:1 is illegal and unenforceable, and (2) that the trial court made numerous errors in its conclusions of law.
A.
The trial court denied Mr. White a zoning permit on the ground that his proposal was not in conformity with RZR § 3.4:1, Randolрh’s conditional use regulation. Mr. White does not challenge the court’s ultimate findings but instead, argues that the criteria contained in RZR § 3.4:1 are invalid and unenforceable because they fail to conform to the general standards prescribed in the enabling act, 24 V.S.A. § 4407(2).
This Court reviews zoning ordinances narrowly, ovеrturning only those that are clearly unreasonable, irrational, arbitrary, or discriminatory.
Smith v. Town of St. Johnsbury,
150
*618
Vt. 351, 361,
However, we do not believe that the consequences appellant advocates — remand to the court to issue him a conditional use permit — would follow if we found the regulations unenforceable. RZR § 6.10.3 defines agriculture as a conditional use. If we strike the town’s conditional use provisions, either Mr. White would have no mechanism to get approval for his proposal or his permit request would have to be evaluated under the general criteria of § 4407(2).
Mr. White does not contend those criteria were nоt followed. The trial court denied the permit because Mr. White’s proposal would have adverse effects on traffic and the surrounding community, two factors explicitly provided for in § 4407(2). Adverse findings on these criteria alone were sufficient to support a denial of the permit.
Moreover, the tоwn has zoning authority only in accordance with, and subject to, the terms and conditions imposed by the state when granting the power to zone.
Flanders Lumber & Building Supply Co. v. Town of Milton,
Statutes are the state’s legislative policies; municipalities are its instrumentalities.
Kedroff v. Town of Springfield,
The need to read the general criteria into the town’s zoning ordinance is supported both by the express terms of the statute and by the way in which the various terms interact to effectuate the legislative purpose. The conditional use statute, 24 V.S.A. § 4407(2), provides that a town may permit certain uses “if general and specific standards . . . are prescribed in the zoning regulations.” The general standards “shall require that the proposed conditional use shall not adversely affect” enumerated factors A through E quoted above. The specific standards “may include requirements” with respect to seven enumerated factors (e.g., minimum lot size, minimum off-street parking, landscaping and fencing) and a final catchall, “such other factors as the zoning regulations may include.”
The plain meaning of the statute is that, in order to do conditional use zoning, the town must use the enumerated general standards: they are the floor below which no town can *620 go if it wants to do conditional use zoning. The legislature has found these general standards to be so essential that, if a town engages in conditional use zoning, its use of these standards is the fulfillment of a purely administrative duty for which an ordinance is unnecessary. 5 E. McQuillin, Municipal Corporations § 15.03, at 63 (3d ed. 1989). On the other hand, specific standards are left to the town’s discretion. Specific standards are the town’s individualized zoning ceiling, giving the town’s inhabitants notice of the limits of their town’s particular zoning scheme. In this case, all the general standards mandated by the statute are read into the ordinance; the remainder of the ordinance, including provisions extrapolated from generаl criteria (such as the numerous provisions about traffic) are valid as specific standards within 24 V.S.A. § 4407(2)(H).
B.
Finally, Mr. White contests the trial court’s conclusions (1) that the proposed farm stand was a commercial use, which was completely prohibited in AR and RES districts, and (2) that agriculture was a principal use, which the lot was not adequate to support. The court used these conclusions as alternative bases on which to deny Mr. White a permit.
Mr. White contends that the proposed farm stand was an accessory use, which is defined in RZR § 1.3.3. as “[a] use customarily incidental and subordinate to the principal use and located on the same lot. When applied to agriculture this shall be deemed to include the sale of products raised on the property.” However, the court concluded that the proposed farm stand would really be a retail grocery with about 40% of the products coming from outside suppliers. The court’s conclusion is not clearly erroneous, arbitrary, or capricious.
In re McDonald’s Corp.,
Next, the court found that, although both portions of Mr. White’s property were in districts allowing agriculture as a conditional use, Mr. White’s proposal for the intensive cultivation of fruits and vegetables and the construction of a greenhouse envisioned agriculture as a principal use. RZR § 1.3.36 defines a principal use as one which is “dominant on a lot such use or uses being fundamental and superior to any other use of the land or lot.” Mr. White again argues that his plan is for an accessory use, a use “incidental and subordinаte to the primary use.”
*621
However, the court found, and Mr. White does not contest, that his proposal “will involve farming on almost every area of the lot where a structure or a driveway does not presently exist or is planned to exist.” The court’s conclusion that agriculture was a dominant rather than аn incidental use of the lot, and therefore a principal use, was not clearly erroneous.
McDonald’s Corp.,
Finally, the court concluded that Mr. White’s lot, which at the time of the trial de novo had two principal buildings and hence two principal uses, could not sustain agriculture as a third principal use. Under RZR § 5.10:11: “No more than one principal use shall be permitted on a lot unless the area of such lot is of sufficient amount to meet the total minimum area requirements for each use if they were in separate and individual lots.” See RZR §§ 6.2.3, 6.3.3 (minimum lot requirements for AR and RES districts). The court specifically found that Mr. White’s lot, “although large enough to meet minimum lot size requirements for the construction of two residences, would violate minimum lot size requirements if yet another principal use were placed on the lot.” The court did not indicate how it made the calculation resulting in this finding. However, the appellant did not challenge the finding, and the finding is sufficient to support the conclusion that Mr. White’s lot cannot sustain a third principal use.
Affirmed.
