V 2. Applicant owns a 0.56-aere lot in Pittsford, Vermont, and in March 2008, submitted a complete zoning permit application to subdivide the property into two proposed lots. 1 The Pittsford Zoning Administrator, applying the 2005 ordinance, rejected the application on April 15, 2008. Applicant appealed this decision to the ZBA, and it affirmed the denial based on applicant’s failure to comply with the frontage requirements embodied in the 2005 ordinance. Applicant then appealed the ZBA decision to the Environmental Court.
¶ 3. While the case was pending before the Environmental Court and after the parties had filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the merits, the Town discovered that the 2005 ordinance had been adopted after the expiration of the 2000 town plan and before a subsequent town plan had been adopted. Under 24 V.S.A. § 4387(c), “[u]pon the expiration of a [town] plan, all [zoning] bylaws ... then in effect shall remain in effect, but shall not be amended until a plan is in effect.” The Town determined that the 1989 ordinance was the zoning ordinance in effect when the 2000 town plan expired and concluded, according to the terms of the statute, that it could not be replaced with a subsequent zoning ordinance until a
new town plan was ratified. Consistent with its conclusion, the Town filed a motion to remand the application to the ZBA for reconsideration under the 1989 ordinance. Applicant conceded that the 2005 zoning ordinance had not been validly enacted, but opposed the remand motion on multiple grounds, as noted below. The Environmental Court granted the Town’s motion, and applicant appealed to this
¶4. Applicant first contends that the Environmental Court should not have granted the motion because the Town was time-barred from challenging the validity of the 2005 ordinance. The relevant statute of limitations provides that “[n]o person shall challenge for purported procedural defects the validity of any . . . bylaw . . . after two years following the day on which it would have taken effect if no defect had occurred.” 24 V.S.A. § 4483(b). Applicant asserts that the Town’s failure to have a valid town plan in place when it adopted the 2005 ordinance was a procedural defect and that the statute of limitations, therefore, applies.
¶ 5. We have not yet decided the precise question raised by applicant. In
In re McCormick Management Co.,
¶ 6. We review the Environmental Court’s interpretation of the legal principles embodied in §§ 4387(c) and 4483(b) de novo. See
In re Albert,
¶ 7. The language of § 4483(b) indicates that the Legislature did not intend for the statute of limitations to apply to challenges premised on § 4387(c). Section 4483(b), by its terms, applies only to “procedural defects.” Procedural defects are “defects and irregularities in the mode of enactment of an ordinance [that] do not pertain to the nature of the ordinance itself.”
Citizens for Responsible Gov’t v. Kitsap County,
¶ 8. Section 4387(e)’s prohibition on the adoption or amendment of a zoning ordinance when there is no valid town plan in effect is not procedural, for it directly bears on the nature of the zoning ordinance. See
Citizens for Responsible Gov’t,
¶ 9. Applicant next contends that the vested rights doctrine precludes application of the 1989 ordinance. Specifically, he asserts that the Town supplied him with a copy of the 2005 ordinance when he initially went to obtain the permit application and that he conformed his application to the requirements of the 2005 ordinance in the belief that it applied. Because both he and the Town believed — at least until the Environmental Court proceedings — that the 2005 ordinance was valid, applicant argues that his right to a determination under the 2005 ordinance vested at the time he submitted his zoning permit application. In
Smith v. Winhall Planning Commission,
we noted our adherence to the minority rule that a permit applicant gains a vested right in the governing regulations in existence when a full and complete permit application is filed.
¶ 10. Applicant makes a related argument that applying the 1989 ordinance denies him due process of law because he did not have fair notice of the applicable standard at the time of application. Instead, he argues, he had notice only of the 2005 ordinance. In making this argument, applicant relies upon cases that strike down standardless rules on the ground that a landowner must have fair notice of what can be done with his or her land. See, e.g.,
In re Handy,
¶ 11. Applicant’s primary argument for why the 2005 ordinance should govern is based on the court’s equitable powers to shape a remedy when a statute or ordinance is struck down. Relying principally upon a line of cases discussed at length in
Perlstein v. Wolk,
¶ 12. Finally, applicant asserts that applying the 1989 ordinance to his application violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Specifically, applicant contends that it “may... be the case” that he is the only person who applied for a zoning permit application after the attempted enactment of the 2005 ordinance whose petition will be reviewed under the 1989 ordinance and that he is “not aware of any cases that are still pending that would be required to be considered under the 1989 standard.” This argument is based upon speculative facts about the impact of the determination that the 2005 zoning ordinance was invalidly enacted, and we do not consider it.
¶ 13. Following the submission of the Town’s brief, applicant filed a reply brief, raising numerous new arguments, most of which were not raised in the Environmental Court and have no record to support them. We need not consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief. See, e.g.,
Affirmed.
Notes
Applicant originally submitted the zoning permit application on February 27, 2008, but no site plan application was included in applicant’s submission when it reached the Pittsford Zoning Administrator. On March 11, 2008, applicant submitted the site plan, and his application was deemed complete. The date of application is not relevant to this appeal.
Because the Environmental Court remanded the matter to the ZBA for reconsideration under the 1989 ordinance, there is not a final judgment from which applicant could take an appeal as of right. The Town has not moved to dismiss the appeal or raised the issue in this Court, however, and the case has been fully briefed by both parties. See
State v. Wesco, Inc.,
