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Fox Chapel Borough Appeal

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
Jan 9, 1978
381 A.2d 504 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1978)

Summary

holding site suitability irrelevant to question of constitutional validity of municipality-wide use prohibition

Summary of this case from Wimer Realty, LLC v. Twp. of Wilmington

Opinion

Argued November 2, 1977

January 9, 1978.

Zoning — Constitutional validity of zoning ordinance — Exclusionary zoning — Burden of proof — Apartments — Strain on municipal services — Need for proposed use — Suitability of site — Regional comprehensive plan — Power of court — Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, Act 1968, July 31, P.L. 805.

1. A landowner filing a challenge to the constitutional validity of a zoning ordinance in the manner prescribed in the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, Act 1968, July 31, P.L. 805, has the, burden of proving that the ordinance is unrelated to public health, safety and welfare, but, having established that the ordinance excludes entirely an otherwise legitimate use of land, the challenger has rebutted the presumptive validity of the ordinance and the burden is upon the municipality to prove that the restriction bears a legitimate relationship to public health, safety and welfare. [259]

2. A zoning ordinance which fails to provide for apartments anywhere in the municipality is unlawfully exclusionary in excluding a legitimate land use from the municipality. [260]

3. The exclusion of apartments from a municipality cannot be justified by asserting that the population increase resulting from the construction of apartments would place a strain on municipal services. [260]

4. The alleged absence of a need for apartments or the unsuitability of a site sought to be used for apartments are not relevant to a determination of the question of the constitutional validity of a zoning ordinance which excludes apartments, a legitimate property use, from a municipality. [260-1]

5. The fact that a municipality is a member of a regional development plan which provides for multi-family dwellings but which does not have the legal effect of a zoning ordinance does not cure the constitutional invalidity of the zoning ordinance of the municipality which entirely excludes multi-family dwellings from the municipality. [261-2]

6. Under the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, Act 1968, July 31, P.L. 805, a court is empowered to order the issuance of requested building permits denied by a municipality under an ordinance found by the court to exclude unconstitutionally the use sought to be made of the property under the building permit requested. [262-3]

Argued November 2, 1977, before President Judge BOWMAN and Judges CRUMLISH, JR., WILKINSON, JR., ROGERS and BLATT.

Appeals, Nos. 158 and 303 C.D. 1977, from the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County in case of In Re: Application of John A. Friday, et ux., Requesting Fox Chapel Borough Zoning Hearing Board to Hear Applicants' Challenges to the Fox Chapel Zoning Ordinance and Map and Make Findings of Fact and Divisions Based Thereon, No. S.A. 96 of 1976.

Challenge to the constitutional validity of zoning ordinance filed with the Zoning Hearing Board of the Borough of Fox Chapel. Challenge dismissed. Challenger appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County. Ordinance held unconstitutional. Curative amendment ordered. Order vacated and order issued directing the issuance of requested building permits. WATSON, J. Borough and intervenors appealed to the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania. Held: Affirmed.

A. Bruce Bowden, with him Buchanan, Ingersoll, Rodewald, Kyle Buerger and William A. Jones, for appellants. William R. Grove, with him Hollinshead and Mendelson, for appellee.


The Borough of Fox Chapel has appealed an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County reversing a decision of the Zoning Hearing Board of the Borough of Fox Chapel dismissing a challenge by John A. Friday, Jr. to the validity of the Borough's Zoning Ordinance of 1971. William A. Jones and Katherine P. Jones, his wife, and Harold H. Hammer and Hannah R. Hammer, his wife, who intervened below on the side of the Borough have also appealed.

The Borough Zoning Ordinance does not provide for multi-family dwelling use anywhere in the Borough. The only permitted residential use of land is for single family homes on one, two or three acre lots. Friday owns a 22.85 acre tract located in a Class A Residential District where the minimum lot size is three acres. Pursuant to Section 1004(1)(a) of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code (MPC), 53 P. S. § 11004 (1)(a), Friday submitted a challenge to the constitutional validity of the use provisions of the Zoning Ordinance to the Zoning Hearing Board. The submission included plans for a single six-story, 215 unit apartment building proposed to be constructed on Friday's land. Friday later filed an amended plan for eleven three-story buildings containing a total of 121 units. During evidentiary hearings conducted by the Zoning Hearing Board, Friday further modified his plan by finally proposing to construct one five-story building containing 181 units. The Zoning Hearing Board made extensive findings of facts; concluded that the Zoning Ordinance was valid; and dismissed Friday's challenge.

Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended.

Without taking additional evidence, the court below reversed the Zoning Hearing Board's order and held that the Zoning Ordinance was exclusionary and therefore unconstitutional. The court directed the Borough to enact curative amendments providing for apartment use. Friday filed a petition in the court below requesting a modification of its order, citing Casey v. Zoning Hearing Board of Warwick Township, 459 Pa. 219, 328 A.2d 464 (1974). The court below properly vacated its first order in part and entered a second directing the Borough to issue a building permit to Friday upon his compliance with valid building controls in effect on the date of Friday's original application for a building permit. We affirm.

The Borough first says that because ordinances enjoy a presumption of validity, Friday had the burden of proving that the Fox Chapel Ordinance was not related to public health, safety and welfare. With this we agree. The Borough then says that Friday did not carry this burden by simply showing that the ordinance totally excluded apartment use. This proposition is clearly erroneous. When it is demonstrated that an ordinance entirely excludes a facially legitimate use, the presumption of validity is rebutted; and the municipality must then present evidence to establish that its regulation bears a relationship to the public health, safety and welfare. Beaver Gasoline Co. v. Osborne Borough, 445 Pa. 571, 285 A.2d 501 (1971). Friday's proposed apartment house is a legitimate use of land, absent the Zoning Ordinance; the Zoning Ordinance's failure to provide for this use is tantamount to its exclusion. Girsh Appeal, 437 Pa. 237, 263 A.2d 395 (1970); Dublin Properties v. Board of Commissioners of Upper Dublin Township, 21 Pa. Commw. 54, 342 A.2d 821 (1975). Friday clearly met his burden of overcoming the presumption of the validity of the Fox Chapel ordinance.

The rule as to burdens enunciated in Beaver Gasoline Co. v. Osborne Borough, supra, has been applied in cases challenging the validity of zoning ordinances prohibiting business uses and those prohibiting various kinds of residential uses. In Girsh Appeal, supra, Mr. Justice ROBERTS, with the apparent approval of three other justices, declared that a prohibition of apartment use has more critical implications than a prohibition of an industrial or commercial use because the former restricts the right of people to live on land, and further that municipalities "cannot have . . . zoning scheme[s] that make no reasonable provision for apartment uses." 437 Pa. at 243, 263 A.2d at 398.

Beaver Gasoline Co. v. Osborne Borough, supra (prohibition of gasoline stations); General Battery Corp. v. Zoning Hearing Board of Alsace Township, 29 Pa. Commw. 498, 371 A.2d 1030 (1977) (prohibition of waste disposal plants).

Waynesborough Corp. v. Easttown Township Zoning Hearing Board, 23 Pa. Commw. 137, 350 A.2d 895 (1976) (prohibition of condominiums); Appeal of Olson, 19 Pa. Commw. 514, 338 A.2d 748 (1975) (prohibition of townhouses); Ellick r. Board of Supervisors of Worcester Township, 17 Pa. Commw. 404, 333 A.2d 239 (1975) (prohibition of townhouses); Camp Hill Development Co., Inc. v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 13 Pa. Commw. 519, 319 A.2d 197 (1974) (prohibition of townhouses).

The Borough says that it carried its burden of justifying its exclusion of apartment use by showing that apartments would cause an increase in population which would in turn place a strain on municipal services, cause congestion of its roads and do harm to the aesthetic nature of the Borough. Similar justifications were specifically rejected in Girsh Appeal, supra.

The Borough next contends that its ordinance is not exclusionary because the Borough is not located within the path of onrushing population expansion and that there is no demand or need for apartment uses within its boundaries. This argument was rejected in Girsh Appeal, supra, by the following phrases:

The simple fact that someone is anxious to build apartments is strong indication that the location of this [municipality] is such that people are desirous of moving in, and we do not believe [the municipality] can close its doors to those people.

437 Pa. at 245, 263 A.2d at 399.

The Borough says that Friday's site cannot support apartments without endangering the public health, safety and welfare because of soil conditions unsuitable for the proper disposition of sewage and subject to landslides. The Borough misapprehends its burden of proof. The suitability of Friday's site is not relevant to an inquiry into the constitutional validity of a municipality-wide prohibition of apartment uses. See Girsh Appeal, supra note 6, 437 Pa. at 246, 263 A.2d at 399. Site suitability is an appropriate consideration going to the type of relief, if any, that should be given to a landowner after he has successfully challenged an ordinance. See Ellick v. Board of Supervisors of Worcester Township, 17 Pa. Commw. 404, 333 A.2d 239 (1975).

The Borough next says that its membership in a regional planning effort cures the otherwise exclusionary and unconstitutional nature of its ordinance. In Nicholas Heim Kissinger v. Township of Harris, 31 Pa. Commw. 357, 362, 375 A.2d 1383, 1385 (1977), we addressed and rejected a similar argument made by a municipality in defense of a zoning ordinance excluding mobile homes:

The only defense of the zoning regulation which requires mention is one based on the Township's membership in a regional planning effort. Harris Township contends that this membership, together with an approved regional comprehensive plan, entitled it to credit for more substantial provision for mobile home parks by the zoning ordinances of the other members of the regional planning group. As we have said on a number of occasions, a comprehensive plan does not have the legal effect of a zoning ordinance; the former is recommendatory and only the latter is regulatory. Saenger v. Berks County, 9 Pa. Commw. 499, 308 A.2d 175 (1973); Morelli v. Borough of St. Marys, 1 Pa. Commw. 612, 275 A.2d 889 (1971). Obviously, Harris Township has no control over the future zoning practices of other municipalities in the region. The exclusionary zoning decisions hereinabove referred to and cited suggest that it might be a very good thing for the General Assembly to empower municipalities to enter into binding regional zoning arrangements. Some municipalities, by reason of size, present land use and physical conditions, are no doubt inappropriate places for every kind of residential use. If the regional zoning ordinance should provide the regions' 'fair share' of housing needs, each constituent municipality could then be developed in accordance with best planning principles applied purely and not with an eye to what might pass constitutional muster. However, there is now no such enabling legislation and regional comprehensive planning provides no justification for a municipality's exclusionary zoning practices.

Finally, we find no merit in the Borough's contention that the court below improperly usurped the Borough's legislative discretion by ordering that a building permit be issued to Friday. Section 1011 of the MPC, 53 P. S. § 11011, authorizes courts to give just such relief upon a successful challenge of a regulation. Ellick v. Board of Supervisors of Worcester Township, supra.

The Borough and the intervenors have additionally argued that the Court's order is unconstitutional as violating the separation of powers doctrine and as depriving Fox Chapel residents of property without due process. These contentions are clearly without merit.

Order affirmed.

ORDER

AND NOW, this 9th day of January, 1978, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County made September 9, 1976 as modified by its order of January 11, 1977 is affirmed.


Summaries of

Fox Chapel Borough Appeal

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
Jan 9, 1978
381 A.2d 504 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1978)

holding site suitability irrelevant to question of constitutional validity of municipality-wide use prohibition

Summary of this case from Wimer Realty, LLC v. Twp. of Wilmington

holding site suitability irrelevant to question of constitutional validity of municipality-wide use prohibition

Summary of this case from In re Appeal of the Bartkowski Inv. Grp., Inc.

holding site suitability irrelevant to question of constitutional validity of municipality-wide use prohibition

Summary of this case from In re Bartkowski Inv. Grp., Inc.
Case details for

Fox Chapel Borough Appeal

Case Details

Full title:In Re: Application of John A. Friday, Jr., et ux. Requesting Fox Chapel…

Court:Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania

Date published: Jan 9, 1978

Citations

381 A.2d 504 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1978)
381 A.2d 504

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