Plaintiff, Kenneth Garzo, brought suit for an order in the nature of mandamus to compel defendants Stowe Board of Adjustment and Lee Darrow, the board’s administrative officer, to enforce a zoning bylaw against defendant R. Edwin Jacobsen. The complaint alleged that the board granted defendant Jacobsen a conditional use permit to operate a budget family rеstaurant within the town of Stowe. The condition, imposed pursuant to a zoning bylaw, required all food and beverages to be sеrved to customers seated at tables or counters either inside or outside the restaurant building. The complaint further alleged that defendant Jacobsen later violated the condition, and now contemplates sale of the restaurant to a nationally based fast-food chain that intends to continue the violation. The Stowe Board of Adjustment and Lee Darrow, its administrative officer, were joined as defendants for their alleged failure to abate the violation.
Upon motions by the board and its administrative officer, the Lamoille Superior Court dismissed the action. The court held that plaintiff was not an “interested person,” within the meaning of 24 V.S.A. § 4464(b), and was therefore without standing to compel enforcement of the bylaw.
On аppeal, plaintiff seeks to distinguish the statutory standing requirements for zoning appeals from the standing requirements for challеnges of zoning board decisions by proceedings in the nature of mandamus within the original jurisdiction of the superior court. Our reviеw of the law reveals no such distinction. Accordingly, we affirm.
Although the formal writ of mandamus was abolished by V.R.C.P. 81(b), relief in the nature of mаndamus
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is still available under V.R.C.P. 75. It is axiomatic that mandamus will lie only for the enforcement of official ministerial duties and not for thе review of acts which involve the exercise of judgment or discretion.
Bargman
v.
Brewer,
Plaintiff argues that because оf 24 V.S.A. §§ 4442(a) and 4445, defendant Darrow, as the board’s administrative officer, was under a mandatory duty to enforce the bylaw at issue in this case. Section 4442(a) provides in part that “[t]he administrative officer shall administer the bylaws literally, and shall not have the рower to permit any land development which is not in conformance with such bylaws.” Section 4445 provides:
If any street, building, structurе, or land is or is proposed to be erected, constructed, reconstructed, altered, converted, maintained or used in violation of any by-law adopted under [Chapter 117] the administrative officer shall institute in the name of the municipality any appropriate action ... to prevent, restrain, correct or abate such construction or use ....
In viеw of this Court’s pronouncements that zoning bylaws are enacted to promote the orderly physical development of the community,
Town of Bennington
v.
Hanson-Walbridge Funeral Home, Inc.,
when the question is one of public right and the object of the mandamus is to procure the enforcement of a *301 public duty, the people are regarded as the real party in interest, and the relator at whose instigation the proceedings are instituted need not show that he has any legal or special interest in the result, it being sufficient to show that he is a citizen and as such interested in the execution of the laws.
Clement
v.
Graham,
Clement, supra,
should not be read to dispense with the requirement that plaintiff have a clear legal right to the performаnce of the duty in question.
Bargman
v.
Brewer, supra.
The petitioner in
Clement
sought a mandamus to compel the auditor of accounts to exhibit vouchers for state aрpropriations for public inspection. The Court found that citizens and taxpayers have a common law right, subject tо “reasonable rules and regulations,” to inspect public records and documents.
Clement, supra,
at 318,
The public’s right to inspect public dоcuments is confirmed by statute, but the legislature may limit that right when it is deemed appropriate.
Matte
v.
City of Winooski,
Section 4473 of Title 24 unequivocally states that: “[i]t is the purpose of [Chapter 117] to provide for review оf
all questions arising out of or with respect to
the implementation by- a- municipality of this chapter.” (Emphasis added.) Subject to constitutional limitations, it is within the
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legislature’s power to provide for such review. Cf.
Kidder
v.
Thomas,
Throughout this action, plaintiff has conceded that he was not an “interested person” within the meaning ; of § 4464(b). The right he seeks to enforce is therefore legislatively foreclosed. There being no clear legal right to the relief requested, plaintiff’s application for mandamus was properly denied and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
