This is an appeal by D.A. Associates (petitioner) from a declaratory ruling by the Commissioner of the Department of Water Resources and Environmental Engineering (Commissioner). The ruling, inter alia, affirms certain conditions contained in a certificate of compliance issued to petitioner by the Pittsford Regional Office of the Department relating to the former’s construction of condominiums in the Town of Sherburne. Petitioner objected to these conditions and sought relief through its request to the Commissioner for a declaratory ruling under 3 V.S.A. § 808. A ruling was subsequently issued; this appeal followed. Because of procedural defects appearing in the record, we hold this Court lacks jurisdiction to resolve the appeal on its merits. Accordingly, the appeal must be dismissed.
*19 Petitioner’s request for a declaratory ruling was couched in the form of a letter to the Commissioner who responded in kind. It is perhaps ironic that in his reply which, in toto, constituted his ruling, the Commissioner wrote (in part):
It would have been more appropriate to have appealed the individual decision informally to the Chief, Engineering Services, or formally to the Water Resources Board as provided in Sections 2-02D and É of the Environmental Protection Rules.
(Emphasis added.)
The Commissioner was correct. His fault lay in failing to follow his own advice; he should have denied petitioner’s request. The statement, quoted above from his purported declaratory ruling, was not only correct; it is the basis of our jurisdictional conclusions in this case.
As long ago as 1974, Justice Larrow, writing for the full Court, stated that the purpose of declaratory rulings authorized by § 808 was to test “ ‘the
applicability
[to a given set of circumstances or facts] of any statutory provision or of any rule or order of an agency.’ ”
In re State Aid Highway No. 1, Peru, Vermont,
State Aid Highway No. 1
is still good law, and we hold it controls the result in this case. The jurisdictional defect first attached when petitioner sought to bypass proper appeals procedures by seeking a § 808 ruling. That defect hung over the cause
*20
like a cloud from that point on. The Commissioner had no jurisdiction to issue the ruling he did.
State Aid Highway No. 1,
Finally, we are precluded from reviewing the merits of the conditions imposed by the regional office on petitioner’s condominium project on a slightly different, but nevertheless parallel, point of law: when an administrative remedy is established by statute or regulation, relief must not only be sought in accordance therewith, but must first be exhausted before recourse to the courts is available.
Smith
v.
Highway Board,
This case stands as a clear example of a failure to satisfy the exhaustion-of-administrative-remedies’ requirement. Petitioner not only failed to exhaust the proper remedies, but no attempt was made to invoke them at all.
Appeal dismissed.
