404 Pa. 8 | Pa. | 1961
Opinion by
The Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment affirmed the zoning administrator’s refusal to issue a building permit to appellants, who then appealed here.
The property is a mid-block, four-storey brownstone house at 2130 Spruce Street that has been converted, under a permit approved by the board in 1959, into a multiple-family structure with nine luxury apartments. Without any exterior change contemplated, the owner now wants to add another apartment. The board has treated the case as one of variance, while appellants consider it as a simple matter of a building permit. In 1959 the board granted the petition of the owners for a variance, since the building had theretofore been a one-family residence and the side yard was narrower than was required by the ordinance in “F” Residential Zoning. The appellants now take the position . that they have a continuing right, as if by res judicata, to this variance so long as they make no external structural changes or reduce the size of the yard. Their secondary position is that the zoning ordinance does not limit the number of families who may live in a multiple-family residence.
Since, the board took no further testimony, we are within the girth of the rule that we will limit ourselves to deciding whether the board committed an error of law or manifestly abused its discretion: Upper St. Clair Township Grange Zoning Case, 397 Pa. 67 (1959), 152 A. 2d 768; Luciany v. Zoning Board, 399 Pa. 176 (1960), 159 A. 2d 701. We see neither variety of error in the record before us.
While a change from nine families to ten seems both small and innocent, it might be neither when regarded as a trend, and it is with trends almost more than with individual monstrosities that the zoning authorities are concerned. Should the economy of the area falter and start down grade, the ten families — assuming the extra one arguendo — might become twenty. In its findings the board was preoccupied with the notion that successive increases in multi-family occupancy would tend towards slum conditions. The case cannot be confined to questions of yard size alone. Since the board made a specific finding that the health, morals, safety, and general welfare of the neighborhood would be adversely affected, and since this finding is obviously supported on the record by the effort to increase the population density, we think that the position of the board is secure.
Allowing only for exceptional circumstances not apparent here, we hold that each case and each application must be dealt with anew and apart.
In Fisher Building Permit Case, 355 Pa. 364 (1946), 49 A. 2d 626, we held that the refusal of a permit to erect a barn before the applicant owned the property was not res judicata with respect to issuing one after he became owner. The usual rules regarding identity of persons and things apply in this field, and we are clear that there is no enabling identity.between a nine-family house and a ten-family house. The board and the court below properly treated the matter as one involving a variance separate from the variance of 1959.
The order is affirmed.