                               STATE OF VERMONT
                    SUPERIOR COURT — ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION

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In re Moody Subdivision Permit               }              Docket No. 45-4-13 Vtec
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                         Decision on Motion for Summary Judgment

       Morris L. Silver, Esq. and Torrin D. Silver (“Appellants”) have appealed a decision by
the Town of Benson Development Review Board (“DRB”) issuing a permit to Alicia Moody
(“Applicant”) for a two lot subdivision located at 2049 Stage Road in Benson, Vermont (“the
Town”). Appellants are adjoining property owners and have filed the motion for summary
judgment now under consideration. Applicant responded to Appellants’ summary judgment
motion, which became ripe for the Court’s consideration on August 6, 2013.

                                      Factual Background
       For the sole purpose of putting the pending motion into context, we recite the following
facts, which we understand to be undisputed unless otherwise noted:
1.     Applicant owns a 6.58 acre parcel located on Stage Road in Benson, Vermont (“the
Parcel”).
2.     The Parcel is located in the Town’s Agricultural and Rural Residential Zoning District
(“ARR District”).
3.     The portion of the Parcel running along Stage Road is approximately 175 feet wide.
4.     Pursuant to an application submitted on February 26, 2013, Applicant proposes a
boundary line adjustment that would give an adjoining property owner a portion of the Parcel
encompassing approximately 0.4 acres: a rectangular area measuring 65 feet wide at Stage Road
and extending approximately 279 feet back from the road.
5.     The application also proposes a division of the remainder of the Parcel into two pole and
flag-shaped lots.
6.     The first of these proposed lots (“Lot 1”) encompasses approximately 2 acres, including
a strip of land approximately 45 feet wide and 314 feet long leading from Stage Road to a wider
area farther back from the road. This proposed Lot 1 would host Applicant’s existing principal
residence and garage, which will be located in the wider area of Lot 1.




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7.     The second proposed lot (“Lot 2”) encompasses approximately 4.15 acres, including a
strip of land approximately 514 feet long leading from Stage Road to a wider area farther back
from the road. The portion of the strip adjacent to Stage Road is approximately 65 feet wide;
after approximately 279 feet, the strip widens to 130 feet for the last 235 feet until it reaches the
wider part of the lot. Applicant proposes no principal structures for Lot 2.

                                            Discussion
       Currently before the Court is Appellants’ motion for summary judgment. We first note
that we will grant summary judgment to a moving party upon a showing that “there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law.” V.R.C.P. 56(a); V.R.E.C.P. 5(a)(2). The parties have not raised any disputes of material
fact regarding the pending motion. Resolution of the pending motion hinges upon the legal
interpretation of the relevant zoning regulations, and it is therefore appropriate for a summary
judgment consideration.
       Appellants, Applicant, and the Town dispute whether the proposed subdivision
conforms to portions of the Town of Benson Zoning and Development Bylaws (“the Bylaws”)
concerning lot width as well as lot size and density requirements. When interpreting municipal
ordinances such as the one now before us, we apply the same principles of construction as we
apply to the interpretation of legislative statutes. In re Appeal of Trahan, 2008 VT 90, ¶ 19, 184
Vt. 262. That is, we “construe words according to their plain and ordinary meaning.” Id.
Because our paramount goal in interpreting an ordinance is to give effect to the intent of the
relevant legislative body, we accept the plain meaning of the words unless doing so would
make a provision ineffective or create irrational results. Town of Killington v. State, 172 Vt. 182,
189 (2001). We will only look beyond the language of the ordinance to help us ascertain the
legislative intent if the language is ambiguous and, therefore, prevents us from identifying a
plain and ordinary meaning. See Id. In such cases, “we must ascertain legislative intent
through consideration of the entire statute, including its subject matter, effects and
consequences, as well as the reason and spirit of the law.” In re Estate of Cote, 2004 VT 17, ¶ 10,
176 Vt. 293. We may not construe an ordinance in a way that is at odds with its underlying
purpose. In re Jewell, 169 Vt. 604, 606 (1999) (mem.) (citing Mesa Leasing Ltd. v. City of
Burlington, 169 Vt. 93, 95 (1999)).




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I. Lot width
       The Bylaw states, “The minimum lot width shall be 200 feet.”                Bylaw § 3.3(3).
Appellants argue that the proposed Lot 1, having a width of 45 feet where it fronts on Stage
Road, and Lot 2, having a width of 65 feet where it fronts on Stage Road, each violate this
provision. Applicant and the Town urge a different interpretation of “minimum lot width.”
       Ordinarily, the word “minimum” refers to the lowest number in a series of numbers.
Thus, the ordinary meaning of “minimum lot width” would refer to the least wide, or
narrowest, width of a proposed lot. Put another way, if the minimum lot width allowed is 200
feet, a proposed lot with a width of less than 200 feet at any given point would not conform to
Bylaw § 3.3(3). Under this interpretation, the lots as proposed could not be allowed, because
portions of them are less than 200 feet wide. Indeed, municipalities often use such language to
discourage the creation of narrow “spaghetti” or “flag” lots.
       The definitions section of the Bylaw, however, defines “lot width” as “the average
distance across the lot measured parallel to the frontage side of the lot.” Bylaw § 9 (emphasis
added).   The Bylaw provides that the words within the definition section shall have the
meanings indicated therein “[u]nless otherwise specifically provided, or unless otherwise
clearly required by the context.” Bylaw § 9. Although Appellants argue convincingly that the
phrase “minimum lot width” should have the meaning expressed in the preceding paragraph,
we cannot—without specific language in the Bylaw or a clear indication from the provision’s
context—deviate from the definition provided in the Bylaw’s definitions section.
       Thus, applying this definition of “lot width,” no lot can have an average width of less
than 200 feet. Without a software program such as ArcGIS, calculating the average width of an
irregularly-shaped polygon can be a difficult task, particularly if lines are not parallel to each
other. For this reason, it is common for zoning regulations to explain the calculation to be used.
Unfortunately, the Town’s Bylaw provides no such explanation. Lot 1 can, as Appellants
suggest, be broken into three rectangles, and the width of each can be weighted in proportion to
its depth to reach an average width. The Town suggests calculating lot width by dividing the
total area of the parcel by its total depth. Under both Appellants’ and the Town’s calculation
method, the average lot width of Lot 1 is less than 200 feet when the calculation includes the
narrow strip of land touching Stage Road. Applicant and the Town suggest that average lot
width should be calculated without accounting for the narrow strips of the two proposed lots


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intended as access roads, but we do not agree that the Bylaw implies that the lot width
calculation should exclude any portion of a lot. We therefore conclude that a calculation of the
“average lot width,” as that term is used in Bylaw § 9, must include reference to the entirety of
the proposed lot. As such, we conclude that the average lot width of Lot 1, calculated by
reference to the entirety of the proposed lot, is less than 200 feet.
       Applicant and the Town additionally claim that the proposed lots have no road
frontage, and that the minimum lot width only applies to lots with road frontage. They also
interpret the width requirement as only relevant to ensuring that the developable area of lots
will meet setback requirements. We find these arguments unpersuasive. First, as a factual
matter, the proposed lots do have frontage on Stage Road as defined by the Bylaw. Frontage is
“[t]hat portion of a lot which is adjacent and parallel to a State highway, Town street, Town
road[,] or Town right-of-way.” Bylaw § 9. The proposed lots extend to and touch Stage Road;
45 feet of Lot 1 and 65 feet of Lot 2 are adjacent and parallel to it. Thus, the lots both have
frontage on Stage Road. Second, nothing in the regulatory language of the width restriction
supports Applicant and the Town’s interpretation that the restriction is intended to assure
adequate lot dimensions to avoid violating setbacks. In fact, that interpretation would appear
to make the provision duplicative of the setback requirements themselves.
       Thus, for the reasons articulated above, we conclude as a matter of law that the
proposed subdivision does not conform to Bylaw § 3.3(3), since it is undisputed that the average
lot width of Lot 1, calculated by including its narrow strip, is less than 200 feet.
II. Lot size and density
       Appellant, Applicant, and the Town also set forth proposed interpretations of the
“minimum lot size” and “minimum density” provisions in Bylaws §§ 3.3(4) and 3.3(5) and the
related subdivision provisions in Bylaws §§ 7.6 and 8.8(1). Read together, these provisions
create substantial ambiguity about the lot size and density requirements, as well as their
application to subdivisions and the new lots created by such subdivision. As we find that the
proposed subdivision creates lost that are less than 200 feet wide and therefore do not conform
to Bylaw § 3.3(3), however, we need not consider the arguments related to lot size and density.1



1
 While we need not address the lot size and density issues today, we recommend that the Town consider
amending these Bylaw provisions in an effort to clarify these requirements and how they are applicable
in the case of a proposed subdivision.

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                                            Conclusion
       For the reasons stated above, we GRANT Appellants’ motion for summary judgment, as
Applicant’s proposal does not comply with Bylaw § 3.3(3). As a consequence of our entry of
summary judgment for Appellants, we hereby VACATE the March 13, 2013 subdivision
approval granted by the Town of Benson Development Review Board.
       A Judgment Order accompanies this Decision. This concludes the proceedings before
this Court.


       Done at Berlin, Vermont this 10th day of September, 2013.



                                                  _______________________________________
                                                   Thomas S. Durkin, Environmental Judge




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