OPINION BY
Landowners, Kenton E. and Charlene R. Kreider, appeal from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lebanon County, which affirmed the decision of the South Londonderry Township Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB) requiring that the Kreiders cease operating their tent and trailеr campground until they obtain land development approval. The Kreiders contend that under the theory of variance by estoppel they are entitled to operate the campground without land development approval. Common pleas concluded that the Kreiders had not established grounds for a variance by estoppel. We affirm.
The Kreiders own approximately 86 acres in South Londonderry Township. They first acquired 26 acres sometime in the 1970’s. They built their home on approximately 6.5 acres. In 1984, they obtained special exception approval to operate a campground on the vacant acreage to the northeast of their residence and bam. 1 As conditions of approval, the Township’s Zoning Heаring Board (ZHB) required (1) that the residence be a part of the campground and remain occupied by persons administering the camp, (2) that there be no long term occupancy of campsites, (3) that the Kreiders provide adequate and safe ingrеss and egress and (4) that they “submit a Land Development Plan pursuant to regulations of the Township’s ordinance.” In re Kreider (No. 8-1984, dated October 26, 1984), ZHB decision at 3. Thereafter, the Kreiders drilled a well, cut a few trails and roads, and opened their property to a few groups for primitive camping. In the mid-1990’s, Mr. Kreider, intending to devote more time to operation of the campground, proceeded with improvements necessary to use the site more intensively. In 1997, he obtained a sewage permit from the Township and installed on-site sewage treatment sand mounds to accommodate several bath houses for use by campers. Kreider also obtained a permit from the Department of Transportation (DOT) for a low volume entrance drive.
In October of 1998, the Kreiders applied for and obtained a special exception to permit the expansion of the campground onto an additional 60 acres adjoining the original site. Thereafter, the Kreiders installed electrical meter bases preparatory tо providing electrical service at the trailer campsites and they modified or installed some wooden sheds for use as bathhouses. In August of 2000, prior to erecting a ground sign, the Kreiders requested a certificate of occupancy. The Township’s Community Dеvelopment Official, Richard Mattis, denied this request based on his determination that the campground use was not permitted because the Kreiders had never filed a land development plan as required in the 1984 special exception approval. 2 The Kreiders appealed this determination to the ZHB.
In their written appeal form to the ZHB, the Kreiders asserted that their
Following a hearing, the ZHB found that the Kreiders hаd never submitted a land development plan as required in 1984 but had “continued with his development of the property in open disregard of the requirement to file a [plan].” The ZHB further found that Mr. Kreider had served on the Township’s Planning Commission and therefore understood the requirements for a proper land development plan, that his testimony was incredible and misleading and that the Kreiders had not demonstrated grounds to justify exemption from ordinance requirements. The ZHB ordered, in pertinent part, as follows:
The [Kreiders] are рrohibited from.operating a campground on the premises or making any improvements for the purposes of operating a campgroimd until: a) they have complied with the requirements of the decision of the Zoning Hearing Board of October 26, 1984 by having а proper Land Development Plan filed and approved; and b) they have obtained the proper building permits and inspections as required by township ordinance for all structures and/or improvements on the premises added since October 26,1984.
The Kreiders appealed to common pleas. They contended that in 1985, they submitted to the Township a plan of the property depicting on-site sewage treatment, which fulfilled the requirement for submission of a land development plan. Alternatively, the Kreiders asserted that the Township is barred under the “doctrine of estoppel, the doctrine of laches, the doctrine of waiver, and the doctrine of consent,” from now requiring submission of a land development plan. In support of their contention, the Kreiders pointed to their use of the camp for fifteen years without the Township’s objection, the issuance of various permits and the approval of the 1998 special exception application. Cоmmon pleas construed these contentions as the assertion of entitlement to a variance by estop-pel and opined that the Kreiders had not proven entitlement thereto. For this reason, common pleas affirmed the ZHB’s order prohibiting оperation of the campground until a land development plan is submitted and approved. The Kreiders filed the present appeal in which they assert only their entitlement to continue operating the campground under a variance by estoppel.
A variance by estoppel is one of three labels assigned in Pennsylvania land use/zoning law to the equitable remedy precluding municipal enforcement of a land use regulation. Our courts have generally labeled the theory under which a municiрality is estopped: (1) a “vested right” where the municipality has taken some affirmative action such as the issuance of a permit,
Chateau Woods, Inc. v. Lower Paxton Township,
In the present case, there is no question that the Township did not enforce the Kreiders’ obligation to file a land development plan for over fifteen years.
6
During that time, the Township issued
Accordingly, we affirm. 7
ORDER
AND NOW, this 7th day of October, 2002, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lebanon County in the above captioned matter is hereby AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Kreiders’ land is located in the Township's Agricultural Zoning District. Apparently, in 1984, when they sought approval for the сampground, this use was permitted by special exception. In 1988, the Township enacted a new zoning ordinance, which does not provide for campground use in the Agricultural District.
. Mattis also issued an enforcement notice informing the Kreiders that the three shеds
. Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. § 10508. Section 508 of the MPC was reenacted as amended by the Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, as amended, 53 P.S. § 10508. Section 508 generally requires municipal decision on a land development plan not later than 90 days following the date of the regular meeting of the governing body next following the date the application is filed.
. Section 1005-A of the MPC, added by the Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, directs that when common pleas takes additional evidence, its review of the ZHB decision is
de novo. See
53 P.S. § 11005-A. However, when, as in the present case, comm&n pleas receives no additional evidence, it is limited to reviewing whether the ZHB's decision is supported by the evidence and free of legal error.
Id.
It follows then that when the parties do not request that common pleas hear additional evidence, any issues or arguments not rаised before the ZHB cannot be raised for the first time to common pleas and are waived.
Society Created to Reduce Urban Blight v. Philadelphia Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
. To a large extent the different labels impose an analytical rigidity that is not helpful. Municipal action that may underpin estoppel often embodies more than one category; for example, active acquiescence manifested by the issuance of a permit,
Knake v. Zoning Hearing Board,
. A violation of a condition attached to a special exception is the equivalent of a violation of the zoning ordinance for which the
. Finally, we note that the ZHB did not irrevocably bar the Kreiders’ development and use of the campground, but only required that they first comply with the procedures mandated by the ordinance. Such a mandate, in and of itself, would not amount to a legally cognizable hardship. Because the ZHB did not address the question whether the Kreiders proved that compliance would cause them some actual hardship, and because it is unnecessary to the disposition of this case, we will not include this issue as part of our analysis.
