Appellants applied to the Penn Township Zoning Hearing Board for a use variance to install a mobile home park on property located in an R-40-Conservation District. Their application was refused and they have appealed to this court.
Under section 617.1 of the Penn Township Zoning Ordinance, mobile home parks are permitted in any district where mobile homes are permitted as a special exception; The township is divided into 10 zoning districts by the ordinance. However, mobile homes are not permitted in any of them either by right or by special exception. Thus, mobile homes and mobile home parks are effectively excluded from the entire township by the zoning ordinance. The ordinance is, therefore, unconstitutional in this regard: Beaver Gasoline Company v. Osborne Borough, 445 Pa. 571 (1971); Girsh Appeal, 437 Pa. 237 (1970); Exton Quarries, Inc. v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 425 Pa. 43 (1967); Ammon R. Smith Auto Co. Appeal, 423 Pa. 493 (1966); Norate Corporation, Inc. v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 417 Pa. 397 (1965); Hodge v. Zoning Hearing Board of West Bradford Township, 11 Comm. Ct. 311 (1974); Shomo v. Derry Borough, 5 Comm. Ct. 216 (1972).
It is true that zoning ordinances are presumed to be constitutional, but where there is a total municipality-wide prohibition of an activity which, on its face, does not give rise to an indication of the protection of a legitimate public interest controllable by zoning laws, an applicant for a zoning permit has met his burden by showing the total prohibition and the municipality must then establish the legitimacy of the prohibition
In Beaver, the Supreme Court remanded the case to the board to give the borough an opportunity to produce evidence to establish the validity of its total prohibition of gasoline service stations by showing that such regulation bears a relationship to the public health, safety, morals and general welfare. However, the only reason the court did this was because its decision in the case radically changed existing law on the burden of proof of sustaining a zoning ordinance, and the court felt that the board, in not producing such evidence at the hearing, believed it safe to rely on the presumption of validity. However, Beaver was filed on December 29, 1971, and Penn Township is presumed to have had knowledge of it. We, therefore, hold that the township has waived its right to a remand for that purpose.
The other problem in the case is the informality with which the Penn Township Zoning Hearing Board conducted these proceedings. The township has no forms upon which to apply for a variance, even though section 804 of the zoning ordinance requires an application for a variance to be in writing to the board on a form specified for such purpose. At the hearing, no stenographic notes of the evidence were taken and, accordingly, there is no transcript of the evidence as mandated by the Municipalities Planning Code of July 31, 1968, P. L. 805, 53 PS §10908(7). See also Schelley v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 8 Comm. Ct. 169 (1973). Moreover, the board, in refusing the application, made no findings of fact and conclusions as required by the Municipalities Planning Code, 53 PS 10908(9). Ordinarily the case should be remanded to the board to correct these flaws in the record: Mill-Bridge Realty, Inc. v. Zoning Board of Adjustment,
Even Penn Township agrees that mobile home parks are lawful activities. Under these circumstances, we hold that appellants here need not pursue their application for a variance but may, if they have not already done so, apply to the proper township authority for a building permit which must be granted to them. Of course, it goes without saying that in making such application appellants must comply
ORDER
And now, to wit, May 10, 1974, the order of the Penn Township Zoning Hearing Board is reversed and said board is ordered to approve, upon filing, appellants’ application for a building permit in consonance with this opinion.
An exception is granted to the board.
