“Exclusive Environmental Division Jurisdiction over Stand-Alone Zoning Declarations” – Commentary on 32 Intervale, LLC v. City of Burlington (2025)

Exclusive Environmental Division Jurisdiction over Stand-Alone Zoning Declarations:
An In-Depth Commentary on 32 Intervale, LLC v. City of Burlington, 2025 VT ___

1. Introduction

32 Intervale, LLC v. City of Burlington presented the Vermont Supreme Court with a recurring jurisdictional puzzle: which division of the Superior Court may hear a purely declaratory challenge to municipal zoning regulations? Several Burlington landlords operating short-term rentals (STRs) sought a Civil Division declaration that their rentals were “legal pre-existing non-conforming uses” unaffected by the City’s 2022 STR ordinance. The Civil Division dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, citing Gould v. Town of Monkton. On appeal, the Supreme Court affirmed, holding that all matters “arising under 24 V.S.A. chapter 117,” including stand-alone declaratory judgment actions about non-conforming uses, lie exclusively in the Environmental Division. Although no merits questions about STR legality were resolved, the ruling cements the pathway litigants must follow when attacking zoning bylaws in Vermont.

2. Summary of the Judgment

  • The Court affirmed dismissal of Count 1 (the non-conforming use declaration) for lack of Civil Division jurisdiction.
  • Relying on Gould, the Court reiterated that by statute—4 V.S.A. §§ 31 & 34—the Legislature funneled “matters arising under chapter 117” exclusively to the Environmental Division.
  • The tenants’ remaining claims under the City’s minimum-housing ordinance had already been resolved in the trial court; they were not before the Supreme Court.
  • The Court declined to opine, as an “advisory” matter, on whether the Environmental Division would or would not entertain plaintiffs’ parallel declaratory action pending there.

3. Detailed Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited

  1. Gould v. Town of Monkton, 2016 VT 84 – Cornerstone precedent establishing Environmental Division exclusivity over chapter 117 matters post-2010 court reorganization.
  2. In re Ranney Dairy Farm, LLC, 2024 VT 66, and In re DJK, LLC WW & WS Permit, 2024 VT 34 – Recent cases on Environmental Division jurisdiction; cited by plaintiffs but held irrelevant to the disposition because they did not address stand-alone zoning declaratory suits.

The Supreme Court harnessed Gould’s statutory interpretation. In Gould the Court parsed the post-2010 jurisdictional provisions:

• 4 V.S.A. § 31(1) – Civil Division’s broad grant,
• 4 V.S.A. § 34 – Environmental Division’s explicit grant over chapter 117, and
• 4 V.S.A. § 31(5) – “catch-all” tempered by express grants elsewhere.

That architecture left no concurrent Civil Division jurisdiction. 32 Intervale simply applies this blueprint to the STR/non-conforming use dispute, rejecting claim-splitting attempts by plaintiffs.

3.2 Legal Reasoning

  1. Statutory Channeling – The Court emphasised that chapter 117 encompasses “nonconforming uses” (24 V.S.A. § 4303(15); § 4412(7)). Therefore, any request to declare a use non-conforming “arises under” chapter 117.
  2. Subject-Matter vs. Remedy – Plaintiffs argued there would be “no remedy” if the Environmental Division also declines jurisdiction. The Court labelled this “speculative,” noting plaintiffs had not yet exhausted Environmental Division procedures (permit application, non-applicability request, or awaiting decision on their filed suit).
  3. Avoidance of Advisory Opinions – Following Williams v. State, 156 Vt. 42 (1990), the Court refused to forecast an Environmental Division ruling, underscoring separation of judicial functions.

3.3 Likely Impact

  • Procedural Clarity – Litigants challenging zoning ordinances through stand-alone declaratory actions must start in the Environmental Division. Attempting to sidestep that venue now risks immediate dismissal.
  • STR Regulation Litigation – Municipalities across Vermont are experimenting with STR bylaws; future challenges will consume Environmental Division dockets, not Civil Division calendars.
  • Court Economy – Consolidation in one division promotes doctrinal consistency and specialized expertise on local-land-use questions.
  • Legislative Prompt – If stakeholders find Environmental Division procedures too narrow (e.g., inability to seek declarations without a municipal “case or controversy”), pressure may mount for statutory amendment.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

Non-Conforming Use
A lawful land use that existed before a new zoning bylaw changed the rules. It can usually continue but is often restricted from changing or expanding.
Short-Term Rental (STR)
A dwelling rented for fewer than 30 consecutive days and more than 14 days per year (under Burlington’s 2022 ordinance). Often synonymous with “Airbnb-style” rentals.
Environmental Division
A specialized unit of the Vermont Superior Court handling land-use, environmental, and some municipal matters. Created in 2010 to centralize expertise.
Declaratory Judgment
A court order defining legal rights without awarding damages or ordering specific action—essentially a judicial “yes/no” answer that clarifies the law.
Subject-Matter Jurisdiction
The court’s power to hear a particular type of case. If lacking, the case must be dismissed, no matter how compelling the facts are.

5. Conclusion

32 Intervale, LLC v. City of Burlington does not address the substantive fate of Burlington’s STR ordinance or the plaintiffs’ non-conforming use claims. Its significance lies in procedural gatekeeping: the Vermont Supreme Court re-endorses Gould and cements exclusive Environmental Division jurisdiction over all matters “arising under” zoning chapter 117—even when packaged as a stand-alone declaratory judgment action. The ruling guides property owners, municipalities, and practitioners to the correct forum, preserving judicial resources and ensuring specialized review of land-use questions. Whether the Environmental Division will ultimately determine that Burlington’s STR restrictions survive statutory and constitutional scrutiny remains for another day, but thanks to 32 Intervale, we now know precisely where that day in court must occur.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Supreme Court of Vermont

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