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- 835 Hinesburg Road, LLC v. City of South Burlington
835 Hinesburg Road, LLC v. City of South Burlington
Geography
Year
2022
Document Type
Litigation
Part of
About this case
Filing year
2022
Status
Motion to dismiss granted.
Geography
Docket number
5:22-cv-00058
Court/admin entity
United States → United States Federal Courts → United States District Court for the District of Vermont (D. Vt.)
Case category
Constitutional Claims (US) → Fifth Amendment (US)Constitutional Claims (US) → Fourteenth Amendment (US)State Law Claims (US) → Other Types of State Law Cases (US)
Principal law
United States → Fifth Amendment—TakingsUnited States → Fourteenth Amendment—Due ProcessUnited States → Fourteenth Amendment—Equal Protection
At issue
Constitutional challenge to South Burlington land use regulations.
Topics
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Documents
Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics
Beta
Search results
01/27/2023
Motion to dismiss granted.
The district court held that the land-use development regulations did not constitute a physical taking where the regulation may restrict the property owner's planned development. The district court further found that it was unclear how the regulation would apply to the plaintiff's property, as the property owner had yet to file a complete development plan for city regulatory review; a final decision by a zoning agency is required for a decision on a constitutional takings claim.
Decision
–
02/24/2022
Complaint filed.
A City of South Burlington property owner filed a lawsuit in federal court in Vermont asserting that the designation of its land as a “Habitat Block” constituted an illegal taking under the U.S. and Vermont Constitutions and violated the plaintiff’s equal protection and due process rights, the Vermont Constitution’s Common Benefit Clause, and Vermont statutes. The plaintiff alleged that the City’s amendments of its Land Development Regulations to prohibit development of and other actions in Habitat Blocks would have negative environmental consequences, including increases in greenhouse gas emissions due to increased distances that employees would have to travel to the center of Chittenden County because housing would not be available closer to their places of employment. The plaintiff contended that the “Habitat Blocks” did not promote the public good but instead decreased it.
Complaint
–
Summary
Constitutional challenge to South Burlington land use regulations.
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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Finance