A & L Investments v. Zoning Hearing Board

829 A.2d 775, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 537
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 1, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 829 A.2d 775 (A & L Investments v. Zoning Hearing Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A & L Investments v. Zoning Hearing Board, 829 A.2d 775, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 537 (Pa. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Senior Judge KELLEY.

Appellant A & L Investments appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County (Trial Court) which affirmed an order of the Zoning Hearing Board of the City of McKeesport (Board) denying Appellant’s request for a Zoning Certificate and Non-Residential Occupancy Certificate, and/or a Variance. We reverse.

A & L Investments and Albert Gottes-man as owners, together with Mon Yough Community Services, Inc. as tenant (collectively, Mon Yough) applied to the City of McKeesport (City) for a Zoning Certificate and Non-Residential Occupancy Certificate for the use of a property at 539-541 Fifth Avenue (the Property) in the City, into which Mon Yough intended to move its therapy and educational classes for alcohol offenders. The Property is located within a C-3 Zoning District under the McKeesport Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance).

Mon Yough is a non-profit corporation funded primarily by Allegheny County that has multiple community service operations within the City. Mon Yough already operates an acute partial and social rehabilitation operation, and DNA support services, on the second floor of the Property. Mon Yough sought to consolidate its services into one location with its instant request, by moving its DUI and underage drinking offender classes into the Property. The DUI program has been located in the City’s downtown area for over twenty *777 years, most recently at a location several blocks from the Property.

A hearing was subsequently held before the Board, at the conclusion of which the Board denied Mon Yough’s request. Mon Yough’s intended use for the Property— namely therapy and educational classes for DUI and underage drinking offenders as ordered by the Allegheny County court system — was held by the Board to not be a permitted use within the C-3 General Commercial Zoning District as specified in the Ordinance. The Board further held, upon motion before it, that a variance was not justified from the record of the case.

Mon Yough thereafter timely appealed the Board’s order and decision to the Trial Court, which sustained the Board’s order without taking additional evidence, by order dated October 29, 2002. Mon Yough now appeals the Trial Court’s order. 1

This Court’s scope of review, when the trial court does not take any additional evidence in a zoning case, is limited to determining whether the zoning hearing board abused its discretion or committed an error of law. Chrin Brothers, Inc. v. Williams Township Zoning Hearing Board, 815 A.2d 1179 (Pa.Cmwlth.2003).

Mon Yough first 2 argues that the Trial Court erred in applying a substantial evidence standard of review in determining whether Mon Yough’s proposed use was a permitted use under the Ordinance. We agree.

In the proceedings before it, the Board concluded that Mon Yough’s proposed use was not permitted in a C-3 Zoning District under the Ordinance. In its review of that Board conclusion, the Trial Court held that it could not disturb that determination if substantial evidence existed in the record in support thereof, and further held that it “cannot substitute its judgment for that of the Board” in determining whether Mon Yough’s proposed use was permitted under the Ordinance. Trial Court Opinion at 2. In so holding, the Trial Court clearly erred as a matter of law.

A trial court’s standard of review of a zoning hearing board’s conclusion regarding the categorization of a proposed use has long been clearly and expressly established in our precedents. Whether determined from testimony or from the record of prior proceedings, the categorization of a proposed use in relation to zoning regulations is a question of law on which a zoning board’s determination is fully subject to review. Diversified Health Associated, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board of Borough of Norristown, 781 A.2d 244 (Pa.Cmwlth.2001). The Trial Court’s review of the Board’s conclusion on this issue merely for evidentiary support thereof on the record, and its concomitant failure to make a legal judgment on this issue, was error. 3 As Diversified and the precedents *778 on which it is based make clear, the categorization of a particular proposed use under a zoning ordinance is a matter of law to be fully reviewed as such upon appeal. As the facts of Mon Yough’s use are undisputed in the instant matter, the record sufficiently provides a basis for such a legal determination. Accordingly, this Court, in the wake of the Trial Court’s error in its review, can and will examine the record for a determination on the use under the Ordinance as a matter of law. Chrin Brothers.

Mon Yough next argues that, under the Ordinance, its proposed use was a use expressly permitted as a public building or use in a C-3 Zoning District under the Ordinance. The Ordinance lists as a permitted use in a C-3 Zoning District, inter alia, “Public budding or use”. Ordinance at 24. “Public building or use” is defined in the Ordinance as:

Building or facility operated by a governmental agency or philanthropic organization, where administrative activities are conducted or social or educational services are provided to the general public. Such uses shall include, but are not limited to, a municipal building, library, community center, museum, or similar use/facility, excluding a school or recreational facility, as defined by this Ordinance.

Ordinance at 133.

The Board concluded that Mon Yough’s proposed use of the Property for therapy and educational classes could not be a public use because the classes were not intended for the general use of the public, but were limited to attendance by individuals whose participation in the program had been ordered by the Allegheny County court system. Board Opinion at 3. We disagree that the classes’ limited scope of attendance precludes the use from categorization as a public use.

In Swift v. Zoning Hearing Board of Abington Township, 16 Pa.Cmwlth. 356, 328 A.2d 901 (1974), we examined the term “community center” as used in a local zoning ordinance in defining the permitted uses of a commercial zoning district that encompassed some, but not all, of the classifications and terms used in the Ordinance at issue in the instant matter. Although a public use as defined in the instant Ordinance was not at issue in Swift, we note the similarities between the two respective zoning districts, and the use of the term community center as a permitted use in Swift as well as the City’s use of the same term in defining a public use under the instant Ordinance.

In Swift, the building at issue was proposed to be used by a non-profit organization formed to combat drug abuse through the education and counseling of,

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829 A.2d 775, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-l-investments-v-zoning-hearing-board-pacommwct-2003.