Harbucks, Inc. (Harbucks) appeals from an order and decision of the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas affirming the decision of the Nockamixon Township Board of Supervisors (Board) which denied Harbucks’s application for a curativе amendment to the Nockamixon Township Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance) and held that the Ordinance was not exclusionary as to quarrying operations. The issues presented are whether the Ordinance permits quarrying operations within Nockamixon Township (Township) and whether Harbucks’ application for curative amendment was properly denied. The trial court is affirmed.
Harbucks, a Maryland corporation, owns approximately 111 acres of land situated along the east side of Route 611, in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The property is located in an area zoned industrial pursuant to the Ordinance as enacted in 1968. Section 35 of the Ordinance permits the following uses in the industrial district: production, manufacturing, рrocessing, cleaning, testing, storage and distri
The particular site in question was the subject of much litigation in the early 1970’s involving other corporate entities. At that time, several corporations operated a mеtals reclamation plant at the site which contained in excess of three million gallons of highly acidic liquid containing high concentrations of heavy metals. The metals reclamation activity involved the dumping of various metals into highly acidic lagoons which were comprised of sulfuric acid. The lagoons were not lined and many of the metals seeped into the soil. On April 16, 1970, the trial court found the level of pollution to be so high that it ordered representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to enter the premises to remove and dispose of all the polluting substances so as to prevent further harm. Findings of Fact No. 16. The clean-up effort was not entirely successful and to date, the sоil still contains high concentrations of heavy metals.
After conducting thirteen hearings, the Board denied Harbucks’ application for a curative amendment. Harbucks thereafter appealed to the trial court which conсluded that the Board did not err in denying the curative amendment application and upheld the constitutionality of the present Ordinance and further found the Harbucks’ site unsuitable for quarrying purposes. Hence, this appeal.
In support of its position that the Ordinance excludes quarrying, Harbucks contends that the Board erred in concluding that production encompasses quarrying and that the trial court erred in holding that the quarrying activity would fall into the category of either “рroduction” or “processing.” Harbucks contends that neither production nor
Thе Board based its decision on the fact that Harbucks failed to demonstrate that the Ordinance on its face completely bans a particular use because, absent express limitations, permissive words in a zoning ordinance are to be given their broadest meaning and since quarrying is not a use which is specifically excluded, it is a permitted use in the Township. The Board further determined that Harbucks failed to adduce any evidence demonstrating that the Ordinance acts to exclude quarrying. The facts relied upon by the Board were that there was an active quarry operating in the Township, Bucks County Crushed Stone, and that James R. Leister and Walter Evans both testified that although quarrying was not specifically listеd, it was however a permitted use. The trial court went further and held that quarrying would fall into the category of either “production” or “processing.”
A municipal or township ordinance may not exclude a legitimate use from a municipаlity or township unless there is some legitimate reason for excluding such use based on the effects upon the public’s health, safety, welfare and morals; further, a quarry operation does not in and of itself necessarily run afoul of the public’s health, safety and welfare. Exton Quarries, Inc. v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 425 Pa. 43,
Township, in support of its position, relies upon Tohickon Valley Transfer, Inc. v. Tinicum Township Zoning Hearing Board,
Township also notes that there is another quarry operating in the industrial district although this quarry is
Walter Evans, a member of the American Institute of County Planners, testified that a survey conducted by him of surrounding municipalities in Bucks and Montgomery Counties showed that these areas treatеd quarrying operations in the same manner as they are treated in the Township. The manner in which quarrying operations are treated in neighboring communities however does not justify a ban. See Borough Council of Churchill Borough v. Pagal, Inc.,
However, it is well-established in Pennsylvania that when it is shown that a zoning ordinance is exclusionary, then the challenging landowner must bе permitted to develop the land provided that the proposed plans of the landowner are not injurious to public health, safety, welfare and morals. Fernley,
Accоrdingly, although Harbucks has demonstrated that the Ordinance is exclusionary, the Board acted properly in denying the application for a curative amendment as the facts indicate that quarrying át this site would be injurious to the public’s health, sаfety, welfare and morals. The trial court is affirmed.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 15th day of June, 1989, the order of the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
Notes
. A decision of the trial court may be affirmed on appeal when the result is correct although the ground relied upon by the trial court for its decision is incorrect. Kraiser v. Horsham Township,
. This Court’s scope of review where the trial court has taken no additional evidence or testimony is limited to determining whether the Board abused its discretion, committed an error of law, or whether findings are supportеd by substantial evidence. Sweigart Appeal,
. The trial court agreed that quarrying would not qualify as a "manufacturing activity” as the term implies using two or more separate items to create a new, different item. Trial Court Opinion, p. 7.
. Subsequent to Harbucks’ application for a curative amendment, Township amended the Ordinance by adding a Q-quarry district. The amendment, however, is not at issue here.
