In re Treetop Development Company Act 250 Development (Treetop at Stratton Condominium Association, Inc., Appellant)
No. 15-168
Supreme Court of Vermont
February 12, 2016
March 25, 2016
2016 VT 20 | 143 A.3d 1086
Present: Dooley, Skoglund and Eaton, JJ., and Tomasi and Bryan (Ret.), Supr. JJ., Specially Assigned
Affirmed.
Lisa B. Shelkrot of Langrock Sperry & Wool, LLP, Burlington, for Appellees.
William H. Sorrell, Attorney General, and Gavin J. Boyles and Scot L. Kline, Assistant Attorneys General, Montpelier, for Natural Resources Board.
¶ 2. On November 18, 2002, the District 2 Environmental Commission issued Act 250 Permit #2W1142 to Stratton for the construction of twenty-five three-unit townhouses (the Treetop Project) in the Town of Stratton, Vermont. Included in the Act 250 pеrmit was approval for the development and construction of the infrastructure required for the occupancy, use, and management of the Treetop Project and associated infrastructure, including a stormwater management system.
¶ 3. A Stratton Corporation affiliate, the Treetop Development Company, LLC, completed construction of the Treetop Project in 2006, at which point all seventy-five townhouses were sоld and conveyed to third-party owners. Each individual owner acquired an undivided percentage interest in the Treetop Project‘s common areas and facilities, including the stormwater management systems, which were managed and administered by the Association.
¶ 4. In response to problems with the stormwater management system, the Association filed suit against Stratton in 2009 seeking damages and remediation for various construction defects in the Treetоp Project, including those involving the stormwater management system. The parties ultimately reached a settlement agreement, which, relevant to this appeal, required Stratton to apply for and obtain corrective permit amendments and pay for any work necessary to bring the stormwater management aspects of the Treetop Project into compliance with its Act 250 permit. On August 13, 2012, Stratton filed an application with the Commissiоn to amend its Act 250 permit to reflect deviations from the original permit, specifically “to authorize changes in the original as-built plans to the permit plans submitted.” These changes included repairs and modifications to the stormwater management system
¶ 5. In its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, the Commission expressed its concern ovеr Stratton‘s “failure to build its stormwater system in compliance with its prior permits.” The Commission conceded that “[w]hile Stratton‘s plan is not the only way to [correct significant stormwater problems], it is the plan on the table[,] . . . [and it] has been approved by the Agency of Natural Resources and is implementable immediately.” Emphasizing the importance that “the water quality and safety issues be resolved satisfactorily as soon as possible,” the Commission concluded that “issuing a permit with conditions is the most effective way to achieve this outcome.” The Commission provided that it would add “protections in the permit to ensure that solutions proposed by Stratton are effective in addressing the problems,” and that it would “retain jurisdiction over these matters.” In its conclusion, the Commission found that the Treetop Project would be in compliance with Act 250 criteria if it was “completed and maintained as reрresented in the application and other representations of the Applicants, and in accordance with the findings and conclusions of this decision and the conditions [herein].”
¶ 6. Following a decision by the Commission on October 21, 2013 to approve Act 250 Permit #2W1142-D (amended permit) with conditions, both Stratton and the Association moved to alter and amend the amended permit. After making minor changes, the Commission issued a Memorandum of Decision on November 15, 2013, granting the amended permit. The amended permit included several conditions, including conditions that required Stratton to repair the stormwater retention pond pursuant to approved plans on or before September 1, 2014, and to provide weekly reports on the progress of the repairs until completion. By that time of year, however, the weather made further site work impossible. Relevant to this appeal, permit Condition 14 provided:
The Commission reserves the right to review erosion, the ability of the land to hold water, stormwater management and revegetation issues outlined in these proceedings and to evaluate and impose additional conditions as needed.
(Emphasis added.) Importantly, neither party appealed the amended permit, which became final and binding on December 15, 2013.
¶ 7. In January 2014, the Association provided the Commission with information about thе status of the stormwater management system, including a letter from Stratton‘s engineer, plans for remediation dated December 13, 2013, and the Association‘s response to those filings. Shortly thereafter, on February 7, 2014, the Commission issued a Notice of Reconvened Hearing on the amended permit. The notice was issued pursuant to the authority the Commission reserved unto itself under Condition 14 and indicated the Commission‘s intent to discuss whether additional conditions were necessary to address problems with the stormwater management system. Following hearings, the Commission issued a Memorandum of Decision on May 16, 2014 “declin[ing] to impose additional permit conditions with respect to [the amended permit],” and affirming the “adequacy of the conditions of the permit, which was not appealed.” The Commission also noted that, “given there is an active enforcement action [underway] by both [the Agency of Natural Resourcеs] and the [Natural Resources Board], we are assured that there will be oversight regarding compliance with the relevant state requirements, including conditions of [the amended permit], which were not appealed.”2
¶ 8. The Association timely appealed the Commission‘s May 16, 2014 Memorandum of Decision declining to impose further conditions on Stratton to the Environmental Division of the Superior Court. Stratton then moved to dismiss the appeal, alleging that the questions raised on appeal were either collateral attacks on the unappealed amended permit or outside the scope of the
The sole purpose of Condition 14 is to ensure compliance with the initial Permit and Permit Amendment. This authority does not belong to the Commission. Rathеr, it rests with the Natural Resources Board‘s authority to ensure compliance with an Act 250 Permit and its conditions through its enforcement powers. . . . the Association cannot use Condition 14 to privately enforce the Permit or Permit Amendment.
Treetop Dev. Co. Act 250 Application, No. 77-6-14 Vtec, slip op., at 3 (Envtl. Div. Vt. Sup. Ct. Nov. 14, 2014), https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/GTC/Environmental/Opinions.aspx (citations omitted). The Environmental Division also later denied the Association‘s motion for relief from judgment, in which the Association claimed thаt the Environmental Division acted outside its authority in concluding that Condition 14 was unenforceable because the amended permit was not appealed. Treetop Dev. Co. Act 250 Application, No. 77-6-14 Vtec, slip op., at 3 (Envtl. Div. Vt. Sup. Ct. Mar. 25, 2015), https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/GTC/Environmental/Opinions.aspx. In response, the Environmental Division noted that “[i]t would be irrational to read the Commission‘s decision on the [amended permit] as granting an Act 250 permit despite insufficient findings of compliance with Act 250,” and that “a district commission simply cannot use a permit condition to reserve the authority to reopen a final and binding Act 250 permit sua sponte in order to enforce the permit or impose conditions.” Id. The Environmental Division further provided that “[t]he injustice alleged by the Association stems from its free, calculated, and deliberate choice not to take an appeal” from the amended permit. Id.
¶ 9. This appeal from the Environmental Division‘s decision followed. Our review of “issues of law or statutory interpretation is de novo.” In re Vill. Assocs. Act 250 Land Use Permit, 2010 VT 42A, ¶ 7, 188 Vt. 113, 998 A.2d 712. De novo review allows this Court to proceed with a nondeferential, on-the-record review. See In re Gulli, 174 Vt. 580, 582, 816 A.2d 485, 488 (2002) (mem.) (“Questions of law are reviewed de novo, allowing us to proceed with a nondeferential, on-the-record review.“).
¶ 10. The Association alleges that the Environmental Division erred in granting Stratton‘s motion to dismiss the appeal because Condition 14 is a valid and enforceable permit condition reserving jurisdiction over the stormwater system at the Treetop Project and allowing the Commission to amend or add conditions as necessary to bring the system into compliance with Act 250. The Association also asserts that it based its decision not to appeal the amended permit on the Commission‘s reservation of authority to impose further conditions in order to ensure the stormwater management system‘s comрliance with Act 250, and that Stratton‘s motion to dismiss is a collateral attack on Condition 14. Stratton, on the other hand, contends that under the Association‘s view, Condition 14 amounts to a key that can be used to reopen the door to amend the permit at any time and impose additional conditions, preventing finality. Both Stratton and the NRB argue that Condition 14 is an unenforceable condition subsequent and that the Association‘s appeal is a collаteral attack on the amended permit.3 We find that condition 14 is invalid and affirm the Environmental Division‘s decision, rendering Condition 14 unenforceable.
¶ 11. Act 250, codified at
¶ 12. In order to ensure continued compliance with the statutory criteria, the Commission is entitlеd to grant conditional approval by imposing reasonable conditions on a project. See
¶ 13. The power to enforce compliance with Act 250 permits and the underlying conditions is vested exclusively in the NRB
¶ 14. By its terms, Condition 14 reserves continuing jurisdiction over the stormwater system at the Treetop Project, creating for the Commission a mechanism to continuously amend the permit as necessary to redress future Act 250 violations or failures under the terms of the approved project by adding additional conditions. Not only does this exceed the Commission‘s authority, which is limited to considering permit applications in the context of the ten statutory criteria and either approving or denying the application, and amending permits under the procedure outlined in In re Stowe Club Highlands, 166 Vt. 33, 37, 687 A.2d 102, 105 (1996), but it prevents finality, an integral part of the land use permitting process. Furthermore, unlike a condition with prospective application intended to alleviate adverse impacts, Condition 14 allows the Commission to circumvent the requirement that projects which have been permitted satisfy the statutory criteria and prospectively expropriate the NR‘s enforcement authority, effectively creating a de facto mechanism of internal enforcement for the Commission. This reservation of extra-statutory authority renders the Commission‘s permit approval illusory, simultaneously approving stormwater system remediation under a set of parameters and reserving the authority to alter these parameters at any time, including when necessary to correct violations of Act 250. Such an open-ended condition, effectively
¶ 15. Although the permit itself was unappealed, and is therefore final and binding on the parties, this does not make Condition 14 enforceable. In our discussions of the failure to appeal zoning permits, this Court has consistently held that the parties are bound by the terms of the permit, even where the municipal body‘s actions in granting the permit exceeded its authority. See City of S. Burlington v. Dep‘t of Corrections, 171 Vt. 587, 588-89, 782 A.2d 1229, 1230 (2000) (mem.) (binding permitee fоllowing untimely challenge to validity of zoning permit condition where municipal body lacked jurisdiction over permitee due to sovereign immunity); Levy v. Town of St. Albans, 152 Vt. 139, 142, 564 A.2d 1361, 1363 (1989) (binding permitee following untimely challenge to validity of zoning permit where administrator who issued permit lacked authority to do so). Condition 14, however, does not merely bind the parties to the terms of the amended permit; rather, it seeks to prospectively expand the Commission‘s authority to include enforcemеnt, allowing it to circumvent the procedure for permit amendments and to continuously reconsider the Treetop Project‘s compliance with the Act 250 criteria. It is the very infirmity of Condition 14 — the creation of prospective, extra-statutory authority — that renders the condition unenforceable. To hold otherwise would do more than bind the parties; it would indissolubly expand the Commission‘s jurisdiction, creating perpetual uncertainty as to the terms of the amended permit. For this reason, the Court is not bound to uphold the Commission‘s self-granted enforcement authority simply because neither party chose to appeal under
¶ 16. We note that this decision does not affect the Association‘s right, as a matter of law, to appeal the Commission‘s
¶ 17. This result does not leave the Association without possible recourse relative to Stratton‘s alleged violations of the amended permit and Act 250, generally. As indicated above, both NRB and ANR have undertaken enforcement actions against Stratton pursuant to their authority in
Affirmed.
