Plaintiff-appellee Carol Holt (“Holt”) filed this diversity suit seeking equitable relief to prevent defendant-appellant Town of Stonington, Connecticut (the “Town” or “Stonington”), from denying her the ability to build on a lot of land that she owns in the Town. The district court (Hall, C.J.) granted Holt an injunction to this effect following a bench trial. Under Connecticut law, however, a plaintiff must first exhaust available and adequate administrative remedies before she may receive judicial relief in a zoning dispute. On appeal to this Court, the Town argued in its reply brief that Holt did not avail herself of state law proceedings to seek relief concerning her property’s zoning status before she filed her municipal estoppel claim in federal court. After considering supplemental briefing from the parties on this issue, we conclude that Holt failed to exhaust her administrative remedies as required by Connecticut law. As a result, the district court lacked jurisdiction over this case. We vacate the judgment and remand with instructions to dismiss the complaint.
I.
Holt is the owner of an unimproved lot in Stonington, Connecticut, which she purchased in 2005. Under the Town’s zoning regulations, a lot must conform with certain minimum area requirements in order to be used as residential property. However, under certain conditions, the regulations permit the building of a single-family residence on undersized lots of land whose development predated the adoption of the zoning regime.
Early in 2005, prior to Holt’s purchase of the lot, a Stonington zoning enforcement officer informed the prior owner in an opinion letter (the “2005 opinion letter”) that the property could be suitable for building a single-family residence. On the basis of the 2005 opinion letter, Holt purchased the property in May 2005 with the understanding that she could build a house on the lot. Soon afterward, she submitted to Stonington zoning authorities an application for a zoning permit.
As reflected in the Town’s public records, Holt’s lot had been altered by a sale of a ten-foot strip of land to the owner of a neighboring property in 1981, an alteration the existence (or significance) of which was apparently overlooked by the Stonington zoning enforcement officer who prepared the 2005 opinion letter. A neighbor who objected to Holt’s development of the lot attempted to appeal the 2005 opinion letter to the Town’s zoning board of appeals. After resulting delays in the permitting process, Holt withdrew her permit application in January 2006, before the Town had acted on it.
In December 2009, Holt filed the instant suit in federal court seeking, inter alia, an order to estop the Town from preventing Holt from building on the lot. After ruling on two motions to dismiss and motions for summary judgment, the district court conducted a bench trial and ultimately entered an injunction estopping the Town “from determining that the [property in question] is unbuildable under the Town’s zoning regulations.” J.A. 885.
II.
“A federal court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction is not waivable by the parties, and we must address jurisdictional questions before reaching the merits.” Leveraged Leasing Admin. Corp. v. PacifiCorp Capital, Inc.,
Connecticut courts recognize exceptions to the exhaustion requirement “only infrequently and only for narrowly defined purposes.” Stepney, LLC v. Town of Fairfield
III.
Holt failed to exhaust available administrative remedies before filing this case. She withdrew her application for a zoning permit before Stonington zoning officials had acted on the application. Further, the letter issued (and later revoked) by the Stonington zoning officer did not constitute a decision by administrative officials; the state court held that this letter responded to a “hypothetical situation” and was “not a decision from which a landowner can appeal.” Piquet v. Town of Chester,
Holt argues that she was not required to exhaust administrative remedies, or that exhaustion would have been inadequate or futile. We disagree. First, it is clear under Connecticut law that a plaintiff must exhaust available administrative remedies before she can file a claim for judicial relief in a zoning dispute. “[T]he requirement of exhaustion may arise ... from an administrative scheme providing for agency relief.” City of Hartford v. Hartford Mun. Emps. Ass’n,
Second, Holt says the administrative process could not have granted her the equitable relief she sought — the estoppel of the Town’s ability to change its position on whether her lot could permissibly be built upon. But Holt’s ultimate objective is to obtain approval to build a house on the lot, and she has not alleged that the Stonington zoning authorities were without the power to grant her that relief.
Third, Holt has not shown that it would be futile to apply to the administrative authorities for authorization to build on the lot in question. “[F]utility is more than a mere allegation that the administrative agency might not grant the relief requested.” Johnson,
Even if Holt were to assert that she exhausted administrative remedies after the filing of her suit,
IV.
Because a failure to exhaust can be remedied through the pursuit of administrative process, “a dismissal for failure to exhaust available administrative remedies should be ‘without prejudice.’” Standard Inv. Chartered, Inc. v. Nat’l Ass’n of Sec. Dealers, Inc.,
Notes
. In 2008, the same zoning enforcement officer sent a letter to Holt purporting officially to revoke the 2005 letter. Holt filed an appeal with the zoning board challenging the zoning officer's determination in this new letter. The zoning board, however, rejected that appeal on the ground that the 2008 letter was not related to any permit application, and was therefore not an appealable decision.
. Indeed, in 2011 Holt sought a variance from the zoning requirements that would permit her to build on the property, but her application was denied. The record does not indicate the basis for the denial. Holt does not argue to this Court that the denial of the variance application exhausted her administrative remedies. Even were she to do so, we also note in this regard that the application for a variance was filed a year and a half after
. For instance, Holt might have asserted that she exhausted available administrative remedies by seeking a variance in 2011. However, the record regarding any administrative process following the filing of the complaint was not developed here, and we make no determination as to whether any such action sufficed to exhaust Holt’s administrative remedies under Connecticut law.
