Opinion by
Aрpellant Borough of Edgewood (Edgewood) appeals from the order of the Allegheny County Court of Com
Lamanti executed a lease, effective April 1, 1987, with the intention of rеlocating its restaurant 150 feet from its present site in Edgewood. Both the present and proposed sites fall within one of Edgewood’s D-6 Commercial Zoning Districts (D-6 Zone).
Edgewоod’s borough council thereafter adopted Ordinance No. 862 on April 20, 1987 which amended the existing Ordinance No. 848 and created a single Planned Commercial Development District D-7 (D-7 Zone) allowing restaurants as one of the permitted uses. The new D-7 Zone requires a thirty-acre minimum lot size; unified development, i.e., development of thе entire site; and compliance with numerous other conditions. On May 27, 1987, and again on June 3, 1987, the borough council also advertised notice of a forthcoming public hearing on, and public inspection of, Ordinance No. 863, another proposed amendment to the existing Ordinance No. 848, prohibiting restaurants in D-6 Zones. This amendment was subsequently adopted on June 15, 1987.
On June 12, 1987, Lamanti applied for and was issued a building permit by Edgewood’s zoning officer to repair and remodel the proposed relocаtion site for its restaurant. Lamanti’s building permit, however, was suspend
Lamanti aрpealed the zoning officer’s revocation of its building permit to the Board, contending, inter alia, that the Ordinance was defacto exclusionary as to restaurants. The Board found that while restaurants were рrohibited in D-6 Zones, they were not excluded throughout Edge-wood since they were permitted in the D-7 Zone. Accordingly, the Board concluded that the Ordinance was not defacto еxclusionary as to restaurants and upheld the revocation of Lamanti’s building permit, whereupon Lamanti appealed to the trial court. Without taking additional evidence, the trial court sustained Lamanti’s appeal and directed Edgewood to issue a building permit to Lamanti, finding that a single D-7 Zone which required comprehensive development made establishment of a restaurant in Edgewood an impermissible improbability. Hence, Edgewood’s appeal to this Court.
A building permit may be refused undеr the “pending ordinance doctrine” if there is pending at the time of application an amendment to the ordinance which prohibits the use for which the permit is sought. Amendments to ordinances are pending when the legislative body resolves to consider a particular scheme of rezoning and not only advertises its intention to hold public hearings on the proposed amendment but also invites public inspection thereof.
Boron Oil Co.v. Kimple,
Those who challenge a zoning ordinance’s constitutionality must overcome its presumed validity.
Caste v. Zoning Hearing Board of Whitehall Borough,
Edgewood’s borоugh manager testified at the Board hearing that the D-7 Zone contemplated development of the entire site as a unified whole
4
and required a contiguous area of land not less than thirty acres. Upon further
Edgewood nonethеless contends that Lamanti is not entitled to reinstatement of the revoked building permit since Lamanti cannot comply with either the Ordinance’s previous or presеnt parking provisions, which provisions have not been challenged as unreasonable. It is true that the invalidity here extends only to those Ordinance provisions which impоsed the unreasonable restrictions, thereby effecting the unconstitutional exclusion of restaurants throughout Edgewood. Other provisions of the Ordinance which regulate this use in ways not challenged
Contrary to Edgewood’s assertions, the parking provisions in Ordinance No. 862 relate to the D-7 Zone and therefore are not applicable to Lamanti’s proposed D-6 Zone use. Moreover, the parking provisions attached to former D-6 Zone permissible uses, which inсluded Lamanti’s restaurant, were deleted by Ordinance No. 863 and cannot now be resurrected to preclude Lamanti’s proposed D-6 Zone use.
Examination of the Ordinance, however, discloses that a general parking provision applicable to all commercial establishments remained unaffected by Ordinance Nos. 862 and 863. This provision requires a minimum of three off-street parking spaces. Testimony of record sufficiently establishes that six automobiles can be parked in an arеa the size of that attached to Lamanti’s proposed site. Findings of Fact No. 16; N.T., pp. 65-66, 75-76. 6 Accordingly, the trial court did not err in directing Edge-wood to issue a building permit to Lаmanti. 7
Having found that the Board erred as a matter of law, the trial court’s decision is therefore affirmed.
And NOW, this 21st day of March, 1989, the decision of the Court of Common Pleas оf Allegheny County is affirmed.
Notes
This Court’s scope of review, where, as here, no additional evidence is taken by the trial court, is limited to determining whether the zoning hearing board abused its discretion or committed an error of law.
Marinari v. Zoning Hearing Board of New Hanover Township,
Whether an ordinance is exclusionary is a question of law.
Cracas v. Board of Supervisors of West Pikeland Township,
Restaurants customarily constitute legitimate business uses.
Borough Council of Churchill Borough v. Pagal, Inc.,
See also Section 2.100 of the Ordinance which defines “Planned Development” as “[a] site of minimum specified acreage developed as a single entity.” Moreover, Ordinance No. 862 states that “[the] entire area designated as a PC Plаnned Commercial Development District shall be planned and developed as a unit. ...” Section 7.701 of the ordinance.
See
and
Contrast Farrell Appeal.
Moreover, the mere potential for a restaurant to participate as a unit of a comprehensive development project is not a sufficient basis upon which to find the ordinance сonstitutional.
See
and
Compare Borough Council of Churchill Borough v. Pagal, Inc.,
Because Lamanti would share the proposed parking area with a barber, six parking spaces would be required by the Ordinance.
See Section 1011(2) of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. §11011(2), which governs the relief to be accorded by the trial court when an ordinance is unlawful.
