¶ 1.
In August оf 2006, pursuant to an agreement with the City of Burlington, Keystone Development Corporation provided notice to the City of its intentiоn to excavate a drainage ditch and harvest trees on a property Keystone owns in the City. The City’s zoning administrator informed Keystone, via two administrative notices, that the work required a zoning permit. Keystone did not seek a permit, but instead appeаled to the Burlington Development Review Board, and later to the Environmental Court. Both tribunals affirmed, and Keystone lodged this appeal. We deem the appeal moot, and dismiss.
¶ 2. We first consider whether the appeal has been rendered moot by the amendment, in January 2008, of the Burlington zoning ordinance. That amendment prohibits, with certain exceptions not relevant here, agricultural and silvicultural activities in the zone where the subject parcel is located. Keystone contends that it has a vested right tо the application of the pre-amendment ordinance, which it claims did allow such activities. Keystone argues that its right to the application of that ordinance vested when it was enjoined from performing the work, even though it never applied fоr a permit to dig ditches or cut trees.
¶ 3. First, Keystone cites
Preseault v. Wheel,
[W]here a valid permit is issued for a specified period, and where actual construction is delayed by litigation ... a permittee otherwise proceeding in gоod faith is entitled to reissuance of that permit, even where the zoning was meanwhile changed so that the project is nonconforming.
Id. Here, by contrast, Keystone has never applied for or received a permit to cut trees or dig ditches, and our holding in Preseault I is therefore not on point.
¶ 4. The second case Keystone cites is inapposite for the same reason. See
In re Preseault,
¶ 5. Finally, Keystone relies on
Smith v. Winhall Planning Commission,
¶ 6. The position we adopted in
Smith
was the minority rule; under the majority rule, rights vest only if an applicant has both rеceived a permit and substantially relied on it in commencing work, or can show that an amendment was enacted to target its dеvelopment.
Id.
at 181,
¶ 7. We conclude, therefore, that Keystonе does not have a vested right to the application of the pre-amendment zoning ordinance to its request to perfоrm tree-cutting and ditch-digging work. Having so concluded, it takes no prolonged analysis to conclude that this appeal is moot. Sеe
Winton v. Johnson & Dix Fuel Corp.,
The appeal is dismissed as moot.
Motion for reargument denied April 21, 2009.
Notes
The original correspondence from Keystone to the City is not in the record, although the City’s responsive Notices of Determination are.
