9 A.2d 538 | Pa. | 1939
The Zoning Board of Adjustment of Philadelphia granted a certificate of exception authorizing the issuance of a use registration permit to the intervening defendants, Leewright and Black, for the operation of an open air parking lot on the property of the Divinity School of the Protestant Episcopal Church at the southeast corner of Forty-third and Locusts Streets. At the public hearing, appellant, the owner of a large apartment house on the northeast corner, objected to the granting of the permit and appealed from the determination of the Zoning Board to the Court of Common Pleas.
The learned chancellor found that the neighborhood was "exclusively residential" in character, but concluded that the proposed use, under the restrictions of the Board and those imposed by his decree, would not amount to a nuisance per se or in fact and, therefore, it was permissible to operate a parking lot in the locality. Upon exceptions being taken to the chancellor's conclusion and argument being had thereon, the court in banc, *344 with the concurrence of the chancellor, handed down an amended finding that the neighborhood was a "mixed commercial and residential district"; and consequently dismissed the appeal from the grant of the certificate of exception, but modified the use registration permit to impose certain restrictions to insure that the lot would not become a nuisance in fact.
We have fully and carefully examined the entire record, as we must under the circumstances (Pilling v. Moore,
As we said in Calvary Presbyterian Church v. Jones,
Decree affirmed; appellant to pay costs. *345