Eves, Appellant, v. Zoning Board of Adjustment.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
September 26, 1960
401 Pa. 211 | 164 A.2d 7
In view of all these circumstances, I believe that the councilmen of Turtle Creek were justified in filing their petition to quash and that the action of the court of quarter sessions was proper.
Thomas E. Waters, with him Waters, Cooper & Gallager, and Schubert and Schubert, for protestants, appellants.
Thomas J. Timoney, and Foulke, Knight & Porter, for Township, appellee.
Knox Henderson, with him Charles H. Welles, 3rd, and Henderson, Wetherill & O‘Hey, and Welles & Mackie, for applicant, appellee.
OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE COHEN, September 26, 1960:
These appeals, involving specifically the validity of two ordinances which amend respectively the general zoning ordinance and the zoning map of Lower Gwynedd Township, present the problem of the validity of a method of zoning aptly termed by the appellants as “flexible selective zoning.”
On April 28, 1958 the Board of Supervisors of Lower Gwynedd Township adopted Ordinance 28 which
Ordinance 28, however, does not itself delineate the boundaries of those specific areas which are to be classified as “F-1” districts. Instead, the ordinance outlines a procedure whereby anyone may submit to the board an application requesting that his land be rezoned to “F-1” limited industrial, together with plans showing the nature of the industry the applicant wishes to establish and the conformity of any proposed construction with the requirements of the district as enumerated in the ordinance. The supervisors must in turn refer the application and plans to the Planning Commission of Lower Gwynedd Township, which is to
Pursuant to the terms of Ordinance 28, on September 11, 1958, the Moore Construction Company, a Pennsylvania corporation desiring to construct an industrial plant and a sewage treatment plant in Lower Gwynedd Township, applied for a rezoning of a 103 acre tract of land known as the “Hardwick Tract” from “A” residential to “F-1” Limited Industrial. A public hearing was held by the supervisors to consider the rezoning on September 20, 1958, at which time a petition signed by 300 residents, all property owners, who opposed the change, was filed. On January 5, 1959, the supervisors adopted Ordinance 34 which rezoned the area in question to the requested “F-1” classification (although it reduced the area rezoned from 103 acres to 86 acres). On January 14, 1959, a certificate of conformity (building permit) was issued to the Moore Products Company. Schuyler Eves, a resident of the township, and the Sisters of Mercy appealed to the zoning board, challenging the validity of the two ordinances on the grounds that they were unconstitutional and that they failed to conform to the enabling legislation. Sustaining the validity of the ordinances, the board dismissed the appeal. The Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County affirmed and these appeals followed.
“Zoning is the legislative division of a community into areas in each of which only certain designated uses of land are permitted so that a community may develop in an orderly manner in accordance with a comprehensive plan.” Best v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 393 Pa. 106, 110, 141 A. 2d 606 (1958). The zoning regulations of a second class township, by legislative edict, must be the implementation of such a comprehensive plan.1 Just what the precise attributes of a comprehensive plan must be, or the extent to which the plan must approach a development plan for the township formulated by a planning commission should one exist2 is not now before us. See Harr, In Accordance With a Comprehensive Plan, 68 Harv. L. Rev. 1154 (1955); Kozesnik v. Township of Montgomery, 24 N.J. 154,
The role of the township supervisors in the field of zoning, as contemplated by the enabling legislation, emerges quite clearly upon consideration of the powers granted the supervisors and the duties they are bound to perform. Their duty is to implement the comprehensive plan by enacting zoning regulations in accordance therewith. Section 2003,
The zoning scheme as outlined by Ordinances 28 and 34 is at variance with these legislative directives for second class townships in two objectionable ways: (1) The ordinances were not enacted “in accordance with a comprehensive plan” and (2) they devolve upon the township supervisors’ duties quite beyond those duties outlined for them in the enabling legislation. Accordingly, the ordinances are invalid and the certificates of conformity (building permits) were improperly issued.
The adoption of a procedure whereby it is decided which areas of land will eventually be zoned “F-1” Limited Industrial Districts on a case by case basis patently admits that at the point of enactment of Ordinance 28 there was no orderly plan of particular land use for the community. Final determination under such a scheme would expressly await solicitation by individual landowners, thus making the planned land use of the community dependent upon its development. In other words, the development itself would become the plan, which is manifestly the antithesis of zoning “in accordance with a comprehensive plan.”
Several secondary evils of such a scheme are cogently advanced by counsel for the appellants. It would pro-
Appellees vigorously contend that a comprehensive plan does exist for the Township of Lower Gwynedd and is set forth in the record. Essentially, appellees argue, the plan contemplates a “greenbelt” township predominately residential in character with a certain amount of compatible non-residential occupancy consisting of shopping centers, research and engineering centers and limited industrial uses. It also contemplates that these non-residential uses shall be strictly controlled as to setback, building area, noise, smoke, sewage disposal, etc., and that the means of such control shall be vested in the supervisors through strict ordinances of general application such as Ordinance 28, supra, setting up the requirements and limitations on limited industrial uses. In turn, these tools of control
As to the second objection, the township supervisors have gone beyond their function of implementing a comprehensive plan with zoning regulations: they are to analyze on a case by case basis for rezoning purposes individual applications and accompanying technical plans for structure and development to determine their suitability and compliance with the standards they themselves established in the ordinance.
In the enabling legislation, only the specialized township board of adjustment was empowered to permit deviations from the prevailing zoning regulations on a case by case basis, and then only by means of two detailed procedures—variances and special exceptions. §2007,
Special exceptions are handled somewhat differently, but similar safeguards are still provided. In planning the original comprehensive ordinance, the supervisors may anticipate that certain special uses for particular districts may become desirable, even though, to some extent, they could be in derogation of the character of the district. The ordinance will then provide that an exceptional use may exist within a particular district if the board of adjustment determines its availability. Such uses are thus made available as a privilege, assuming that the requisite facts and conditions detailed in the ordinance are found to exist. See Devereux Foundation, Inc., Zoning Case, 351 Pa. 478, 41 A. 2d 744 (1945). Again, there is scrutinizing court review to assure that the board has not overstepped its boundaries of prudent discretion. See, e.g., Kotzin v. Plymouth Township Zoning Board of Adjustment, 395 Pa. 125, 149 A. 2d 116 (1959). Importantly, all property owners are put on notice of the possibility of an exceptional use within their district because such use is set out originally as part of the district‘s scheme in the ordinance.
Under the “flexible selective zoning” scheme here under attack, changes in the prevailing zoning regu-
Order reversed.
CONCURRING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE BELL:
I agree with nearly all of Justice COHEN‘S opinion. However, The Second Class Township Code appears in some matters to be a hodge-podge which apparently contains authority or directions to be all things to all men. This is particularly so under §2003 (Act of July 10, 1947, P. L. 1481, §47). The Act seemingly contains inconsistent or conflicting provisions which produce ambiguity and confusion and raise serious doubts as to the validity and/or constitutionality of some of its provisions.
For these reasons I wish it clearly understood that neither the validity nor the Constitutionality of Article XX, §2003 of the Code have been approved or decided in this case.
