OPINION BY
Gerard and Cynthia Hess (Appellants) appeal from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County (common pleas) that affirmed the decision of the Zoning Hearing Board of Warwick Township (ZHB). The ZHB sustained the Hess’s appeal from an enforcement notice citing them for violation of the kennel regulations, denied their request for a use variance and denied the Hess’s request for a ruling that they may keep twenty-one Siberian Husky dogs on their property as an accessory use. In the present appeal, the Appellants challenge the last of these rulings.
Appellants reside at 2841 St. Peters Road, a 3-acre parcel near the edge of the R-l Residential District where that dis
On June 6, 2006, the Township’s zoning officer issued a notice of violation for failure to comply with the kennel regulations in Section 1925 of the zoning ordinance. Section 1925 authorizes kennels in the B-I (Business) District by special exception and applies when five or more dogs are “kept, boarded, groomed, trained, raised or bred.” 2 Appellants filed a timely appeal of the violation notice and alternatively requested a use variance. Subsequently, Appellants amended their application to assert that their dog shelter and its use are permitted as an accessory structure and use. 3
In the R-l District, the relevant regulations state, as follows:
Section 501 — Use Regulations
A. A building may be erected, altered or used and land may be used or occupied, subject to the provisions of Article 15 and Article 16, for any of the following uses and no other:
1. Single-family detached dwellings.
2. Municipal use.
B. Permitted Accessory Uses
1. Accessory uses on the same lot and customarily incidental to the principal uses permitted in Section 501 .A, subject to the provisions of Section 1908.
Warwick Twp. Zoning Ord. Section 501.
Section 1908 — Accessory Uses, Buildings and Structures
Accessory uses, buildings, and structures shall include, but not necessarily be limited to the following:
B. Uses, Buildings, and Structures accessory to Dwellings
1. Detached private garage, private parking space, private stable, barn, shed, shelter for pets owned by the property owner, swimming pool, tennis court, bath house and private greenhouse.
Warwick Twp. Zoning Ord. Section 1908. Section 201 of the zoning ordinance defines “accessory use” as:
A use conducted on the same lot as a principal permitted use to which it is related. A use which is clearly incidental to and customarily found in connection with, a particular principal permitted use of a lot.
Warwick Twp. Zoning Ord. Section 201.
The ZHB heard the appeal over the course of six hearings and issued an oral decision on February 15, 2007, sustaining the appeal from the notice of violation, denying the use variance application and rejecting the contention that keeping twenty-one dogs constituted an accessory use. The following day, by a letter dated February 16, 2007, the ZHB’s solicitor notified the Appellants of the ZHB’s decision, explaining that there exists no violation of the kennel regulations because these apply to business establishments, not to sheltering personal pets. The solicitor’s letter further explained that the Appellants failed to prove that keeping twenty-one dogs is customarily incidental to their residential use and, thus, failed to establish that sheltering the dogs qualified as a permitted accessory use. Subsequently, the ZHB issued a more comprehensive decision setting forth in detail its findings of fact and conclusions of law, in pertinent part, stating:
The word “establishment” in the definition of the term “kennel” implies a business operation and the legislative decision in Section 1925A.1 to permit kennels as a use by special exception in the B-l Business District supports such an implication. Therefore, based upon the unique facts in this record, Applicants are not operating a “kennel.”
However, in order for Applicants to bring their use of the accessory structure referred to as the “dog room” or “shop” structure within the meaning of Sections 501 B.l and 1908 B.l, Applicants must demonstrate that the keeping of 17 dogs as pets within a “shelter for pets owned by the property owner” (plus 4 additional dogs kept within the residence) is “customarily incidental” to a single-family residential dwelling use. Applicants produced no evidence to show that the keeping of 21 dogs upon a residential property is a customarily incidental accessory use in the Township. Accordingly, the Board declines to find that Applicants keeping of 21 dogs as pets upon the subject property is a proper accessory use under Section 1908 B.l of the Zoning Ordinance.
ZHB Decision at 7-8.
The Appellants appealed the ZHB’s decision to common pleas contending that inasmuch as the zoning ordinance specified “shelters for pets owned by the property owner” as a permitted accessory use and did not set a limit on the number of pets allowed, the ZHB erred in arbitrarily concluding that the Appellants kept more dogs than could be considered customarily incidental to residential use. Common pleas affirmed the ZHB, opining that the Appellants failed to prove that housing
[w]hile in the instant case the keeping of household pets is an accessory use by the terms of the Ordinance, the question presented is the permissible intensity of that use in terms of the number of dogs that may be kept upon a residential property. In my opinion, when sections 1925 and 1908 are read together in conjunction with the pertinent definitions, the permissible intensity is suggested but not clearly delineated. Examining the evidence in the record on this point, I agree with the Board’s conclusion that appellants did not prove that keeping 21 dogs on a residential property is a customarily incidental residential accessory use. Recognizing that appellants’ use is located on a residential property of limited acreage, it was incumbent upon them to prove that in Chester County generally and in Warwick Township more specifically dogs in these numbers are customarily found in connection with and as uses incidental to residential dwellings. They did not carry this burden and proffered no comparable examples or other proof that the keeping of 21 dogs is clearly incidental and customarily found in connection with a residence.
Hess v. Warwick Twp. Zoning Hrg. Bd., (No. 07-02347, filed April 4, 2008), slip op. at 17.
The Appellants filed the instant appeal, reasserting that the ordinance explicitly authorizes the sheltering of pets as an accessory use without any restriction as to the number of animals and, thus, they have a legal right to maintain all of the dogs. Appellants argue that having shown that their primary use is residential and that their detached shelter houses their pets, they satisfied their proof burden. Specifically, they state in their brief: “Based on the fact that the use is clearly a permitted accessory use, the number of pets on the property should not be of concern to the Board, nor should the fact that other properties in the community do not maintain as many pets.” Appellants’ Brief at 23. Appellants further argue that common pleas erred in considering the numerical parameters in the definition of “kennel” and in the kennel regulations to conclude that the ordinance does not permit the sheltering of an unlimited number of pets as an accessory use to a residence.
In
Platts v. Zoning Hearing Board of the Borough of Bradford Woods,
Appellants’ argument in the present case similarly urges that we look only to the provision authorizing the sheltering of pets and ignore the requirement that the use qualify as customarily incidental to the primary residential use. Here, the ordinance is written in a manner that more explicitly compels consideration of customarily incidental than the ordinance applicable in Platts. First, we note that as in Platts, the present ordinance states specific purposes that evidence a legislative intent to apply “customarily incidental” as a limitation on the intensity of the accessory uses allowed in a residential zone. 4 Second, and more importantly, the accessory use provision is structured in a manner that explicitly directs that “customarily incidental” be considered in every case. Section 501B.1 authorizes accessory uses if three criteria are met. The use must be “on the same lot and customarily incidental to the principal uses permitted in Section 501.A, subject to the provisions of Section 1908.” See Zoning Ord. Section 501B.1.
Here, there exists no dispute that the use occurs on the same lot as the principal use and that it does constitute the sheltering of pets under Section 1908 B.l. However, it is not so clear that keeping twenty-one large dogs qualifies as customarily incidental to residential use. While generally keeping pets is commonly understood to be a widespread and hence customary activity in association with residential use, this reasonable and common understanding cannot rationally be extended to encompass the keeping of an unlimited number of any sized animals. Hence, the crux of the present dispute centers on whether keeping so many dogs satisfies the requirement that the activity be customarily incidental to Appellants’ residential use and the answer to this question depends on a determination as to the standard applicable to determining what constitutes “customarily incidental.”
In construing what is meant by “customarily incidental,” we note that Appellants are correct in their assertion that generally a zoning ordinance should be construed in a manner that does not, by mere implication, fetter a landowner’s reasonable use of his land. Thus, the permissive nature of an ordinance provision should be taken in its broadest sense and restrictive provisions should be construed in the strictest sense.
See Burgoon v. Zoning Hrg. Bd. of Charlestown Tp.,
The ZHB and common pleas treated “customarily incidental” as a narrow question of fact, concluding that, having failed to show that other residential property owners in the surrounding area maintain a large number of dogs as pets, Appellants failed to meet their proof burden. Many cases indicate that the landowner bears such a burden, which requires proof that other landowners maintain the same or sufficiently similar use.
See e.g., Tennyson v. Zoning Hrg. Bd. of West Bradford Tp.,
Nothing in our caselaw sheds any light on whether Appellants had to show that others kept large numbers of domestic pets of any kind, or large dogs; whether it would suffice to show that others kept many pets inside their homes or whether evidence that others kept pets in an acces
In addition, ample precedent suggests that determination of what is “customarily incidental” is not necessarily a fact-based inquiry. In
Southco Inc., v. Concord Tp.,
With respect to home occupations, which most zoning ordinances similarly define as activities “customarily” associated with dwellings, our Pennsylvania decisions have never explicitly indicated whether zoning hearing boards and courts may simply take notice of general experience as to what business occupations are customary in relation to dwellings, or whether there can be a factual investigation as to what may be customary within a particular community or its region.
Page v. Zoning Hrg. Bd. of Walker Tp.,
In
Thomas v. Zoning Hearing Board of Benner Township,
In his seminal treatise on Pennsylvania land use, Ryan recognizes the proof problem. He notes that accessory use questions are intensely fact dependent determinations that look to whether a particular secondary or subordinate use is appropriately associated with the particular principal use in the factual situation involved. Robert S. Ryan, Pennsylvania Zoning Law and Practice, § 4.B (2004). While acknowledging that it is possible to draft an ordinance that answers the question very specifically, he states that “given the inability to anticipate everything, especially in a rapidly changing world, greater linguistic certainty is likely to freeze the ordinance into current concepts, producing results, both ways, that the municipal governing body would not have approved if it had been able to predict the future.” Id. at 22. For example, “a reading that requires proof that a majority of principal uses of the type involved already have the accessory use at issue would stifle change in a manner not intended by the drafters of most zoning ordinances.” Id. at 23 (noting that most municipalities would concede that a tennis court can be accessory to a residence even if it is the first private court in the municipality).
“Customarily incidental” is best understood as invoking an objective reasonable person standard. Under this standard, we may look not only at how frequently the proposed accessory use is found in association with the primary use (if such evidence is available, it certainly is relevant) but also at the applicant’s particular circumstances, the zoning ordinance and the indications therein as to the governing body’s intent regarding the intensity of land use appropriate to the particular district, as well as the surrounding land conditions and any other relevant information, including general experience and common understanding, to reach a legal conclusion as to whether a reasonable person could consider the use in question to be customarily incidental. 7 This approach respects the need for an understandable legal standard and the flexibility that is a necessary component of the analysis.
Applying this standard in the present case, we note that the number of large dogs at issue here far exceeds the number of animals of any kind commonly kept as household pets. While this alone might serve as the basis for our conclusion, given the extraordinary number of dogs at issue here, we also took to the zoning regula
Applying common experience and given the nature of the property, its neighborhood, and the requirements of the zoning district, it is quite apparent that the supervisors cannot have contemplated nor that any reasonable person could conclude, that as many as twenty-one dogs could be considered customarily incidental to this residence. 9
Accordingly, we affirm.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 15th day of July, 2009, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County in the above captioned matter is hereby AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At argument on March 31, 2009, counsel for the Appellants stated that the number of dogs maintained on the property had decreased to a total of fifteen.
. Section 1925-Kennel Regulations
A. Whenever five (5) or more dogs, cats or like domesticated animals, or any combination thereof, are kept, boarded, groomed, trained, raised or bred, the following shall apply:
1. Kennels may be permitted in the B-l, Business District, as a Use by Special Exception.
2. A Kennel shall be on a lot with a minimum lot area of two (2) acres.
3. A one hundred (100) foot setback shall be maintained along all lot lines for any building.
4. Fencing with a minimum height of six (6) feet shall be installed around any Kennel building or Kennel Run which involves a dog run or where dogs or other animals are outside. Such fencing shall be maintained in good condition during the life of the use.
5. All noise standards of Section 1913 shall apply.
6. All Kennels shall operate under a plan approved by the Township for the disposal of animal waste.
.Appellants raised the issue of accessory use as an amendment to their appeal of the violation notice. The ZHB and common pleas treated the issue as one arising from a request for an ordinance interpretation. Both parties have consistently considered the keeping of the dogs to be a use subject to zoning regulation.
See Woll
v.
Monaghan Tp.,
. Particularly relevant to our rejection of the premise that the Warwick Township Zoning Ordinance permits the keeping of an unlimited number of large dogs as pets without any consideration as to whether the number kept qualifies as customarily incidental are the stated regulatory purposes to "preserve environmental resources through the sensitive use and treatment of land, water, air, flora and fauna" and "preserving and protecting sensitive hydrological features such as streams, water bodies.” Ordinance Section 103C and E.
. Appropriately, common pleas also recognized this, noting that when considered together, the kennel regulations and the accessory use provision revealed a legislative intent to impose a limitation on the intensity of the accessory use, albeit a limitation not delineated by a specific number of allowed pets.
.
But see MAJ Entertainment, Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjust, of Philadelphia,
. While such a standard cannot be said to be completely objective, it is better than a totally subjective one and it has become familiar to the bench and bar through its history of use in other legal contexts. See
In re Larsen,
. By contrast, in the commercial district, keeping more than four dogs requires a lot size of at least two acres and setbacks of at least 100 feet. To a significant extent the impact on the land and the adjoining property owners is similar whether the animals are kept in a commercial kennel or on a residential lot.
. We limit our ruling here to the question of whether the twenty-one dogs Appellants sought to keep are permitted as an accessory use. It is neither necessary nor appropriate that we determine a precise limit on the number of dogs that may be kept as an accessory use in this district, let alone another district, nor what the limits might be for, say, a large farm or a cluster of townhouses.
