The Vermont Environmental Court, on motions for summary judgment, reversed an action of the seven-member planning commission of the Town of South Hero approving an application for a subdivision amendment on a vote of three in favor, two against, one abstention, and one member absent. Philip Reynolds, a neighbor to the development, appealed the issue to the environmental court and is appellee here. Appellant, Town of South Hero, claims the court erred in holding that the common law rule regarding the effect of an abstention does not apply in Vermont. 1 We disagree and affirm.
The planning commission of the Town of South Hero is composed of seven members, six of whom were present for the hearing and deliberation on the project at issue in this case. The question was posed whether the project should be approved. Of the six members present, three voted in favor of the application, two voted against it, and one member abstained. The governing statute in Vermont provides that: “When joint authority is given to three or more, the concurrence of a majority of such number shall be sufficient and shall
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be required in its exercise.” 1 V.S.A. § 172. The number of concurring votes required is a majority of all the members of the board — in this case four. See
In re Lionni,
The Town argues that in these circumstances a majority of the commission approved the project, even though it received only three affirmative votes, because, according to the common law, abstentions are counted as acquiescence with the majority of those members voting. See, e.g.,
Prosser v. Village of Fox Lake,
At the outset, the Town acknowledges that language in a number of decisions of this Court is against it, but argues that the language is dicta or that it addressed very different circumstances. The main case it distinguishes on this basis is
State v. Vermont Emergency Board,
Also against the Town is
In re 66 North Main Street,
The best that can be said for the Town’s position in light of the above decisions is that we have never explicitly examined its argument that an abstention should be counted as a vote with the majority of those who vote. Accordingly, we will reach the Town’s argument, but with the understanding that its position must be strong enough for us to reject the application of stare decisis and overrule past precedent.
As noted above, the nucleus of the Town’s argument is that the common law counted an abstention as concurring with the position of the majority of members who voted. It invokes the statutory construction maxim that rules of the common law should not be changed by implication nor overturned except by clear and unambiguous language. See
Estate of Kelley v. Moguls, Inc.,
We accept the logic of the Town’s argument, but not its starting point or its construction of § 172. The earliest version of what is now § 172 was worded differently: “‘[A]ll words purporting to give a joint authority to three or more public officers or other persons, shall be construed as giving such authority to a majority of such officers or other persons, unless it shall be otherwise expressly declared in the law giving the authority.’”
First Nat’l Bank v. Town of Mount Tabor,
We emphasize two points about the Town’s view of the common law rule. First, the rule discussed in First National and Hodges says nothing about the effect of an abstention. Under the common law rule, the applicant would prevail in this case because a quorum was present and a majority of those voting voted for the permit amendment. See 1 Antieau, Local Government Law § 4.11, at 4-27 (1998). We do not, however, need to count the abstention as a vote for the permit amendment to reach that result. Neither the Town nor the Vermont League of Cities and Towns as amicus curiae have pointed to any Vermont case endorsing the practice of counting an abstention as a vote with the majority. We believe there is no such case.
Second, the voting statute was amended in 1880, see G.L. § 3 (1880), and this amendment explicitly modified the common law rule. The amendment effectively abandoned the majority-of-a-quorum rule, in favor of the requirement that a majority of the members of the board or committee act affirmatively. Thus, before the amendment, if three persons from a five-person board were present and split on an application with two in favor and one against, the application would be approved. Under the amendment, however, the application would fail. We recognized the difference in the first case that arose after the amendment, see
Wells v. Austin,
Even if we were to hold that we should still look to the common law, we cannot find as clear a common law rule as the Town espouses. See O. Reynolds,
Voting Requirements in Municipal Governing Bodies: Minority Rule or Legislative Stalemate?,
27 Urb. Law. 87, 91 (1995) (at least two versions of the common law rule on a majority of a quorum are possible). Indeed, early cases from other jurisdictions describing the common law rule explain the effect of abstentions as an
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effect of the majority-of-a-quorum rule, not as an independent doctrine. For example, in
Rushville Gas Co. v. City of Rushville,
If members present desire to defeat a measure, they must vote against it, for inaction will not accomplish their purpose. Their silence is acquiescence, rather than opposition. Their refusal to vote is, in effect, a declaration that they consent that the majority of the quorum may act for the body of which they are members.
Id.
(emphasis added); see also
Murdoch v. Strange,
We view this case as one of statutory interpretation, in which we must construe the meaning of the term “concurrence” in § 172. See
Smith v. Sussex County Council,
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The environmental court remanded the matter to allow the applicant “the opportunity to resubmit the application to a meeting of the planning commission for a vote to be counted consistent with this decision.” Appellee argues that the proper remedy is to reverse the planning commission decision outright without a remand. In the absence of a cross-appeal, however, we must accept the remedy provided by the environmental court. See
Moonves v. Hill,
Affirmed.
Notes
Although appellee Philip Reynolds raises several other issues in his brief, those issues are not in dispute in this case, and therefore are not properly before this Court. Furthermore, several documents which are not part of the record of this proceeding are included in appellee’s brief. Appellant’s motion to exclude those documents is granted.
In re 66 North Main Street was decided under 24 V.S.A. § 4462(a), which governs zoning board decisions and has similar language to 1 V.S.A. § 172. There is no equivalent statute for planning commission decisions, but a planning commission is governed by § 172, and 66 North Main Street makes clear that the effect of this statute is identical to that of 24 V.S.A. § 4462(a).
