Aboud v. City of Pittsburgh Department of Planning

17 A.3d 455, 2011 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 107
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 18, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 A.3d 455 (Aboud v. City of Pittsburgh Department of Planning) 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
Aboud v. City of Pittsburgh Department of Planning, 17 A.3d 455, 2011 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 107 (Pa. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge McGINLEY.

The City of Pittsburgh Department of Planning (Planning) and the City of Pittsburgh (City) (collectively, the City) appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County (common pleas court) that granted Najib Aboud and Nas-ra Aboud, owners of Baba D’s Inc. (Baba D’s), (collectively, the Abouds) a conditional use to operate a restaurant with a liquor license. The common pleas court also granted James M. Quinn’s, owner of JMQ-1, (Quinn) request for occupancy and building permits to operate a restaurant with a liquor license.1

[457]*457 A. The Abouds’ Zoning Appeal.

On January 28, 2009, the Abouds filed an appeal and alleged:

2. Babad’s, Inc. is a Pennsylvania business corporation
3. The Department of Planning ... is responsible for the issuance of occupancy permits and administering land development within said City. The Pittsburgh City Council is it [sic] legislative body, but acted in a quasi-judicial capacity in the instant matter.
4. On October 23, 2007, the Appellant [the Abouds] applied for and received a [sic] occupancy permit for [sic] the Department of Planning to operate a restaurant without a liquor license.... (emphasis added).
5. On or about December 19, 2007, Appellants [the Abouds] applied for a [sic] occupancy permit for a restaurant with a liquor license for the same property. (emphasis added).
6. The December 19, 2007 application was identical to the October 23, 2007 application except the later application added a liquor license to the application. (emphasis added).
7. Solely for the reason that the Appellant’s [the Abouds’] restaurant would have a liquor license it treated the December 19, 2007 application as a conditional use under the Pittsburgh City Code, (emphasis added).
[9.3] On September 23, 2008, the City of Pittsburgh Planning Commission conducted a hearing and favorably recommended approval of the conditional use application subject to the following conditions, which were agreed upon by the applicant.... (emphasis added).
[10.] The matter was then referred to City Council for a hearing and final action.
[11.] On December 15, 2008, City Council conducted a hearing and denied Appellant’s [the Abouds’] conditional use application, (emphasis added).
[12.] The denial of the Appellants [sic] [the Abouds’] conditional use application was illegal for the following reasons: (emphasis added).
(c) The applicable ordinance restricting restaurants, Pittsburgh Code, Title nine (Zoning), Article V, § 911.0U, with liquor licenses is illegal, in that the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board is vested with the exclusive jurisdiction to determine whether a restaurant shall have a liquor license and the number of liquor licenses that are permitted within a given area; (emphasis added).
(d) Said ordinance as enforced is not a conditional use, but a de facto ban on restaurants with liquor licenses.... (emphasis added).

Zoning Appeal, January 23, 2009, Paragraphs 2-7 and 9-12 at 1-4; R.R. at 89a-92a.

[458]*458 The Common Pleas Court’s Disposition Of The Abouds’ Appeal.

The common pleas court ordered the parties to file briefs on the issue of whether City Council’s amendment to the Pittsburgh Zoning Code (Zoning Code) was invalid because of the preemption doctrine. The common pleas court concluded:

This case involves two separate lawsuits questioning the validity of a portion of the Pittsburgh Zoning Code (“the Code”) that deals with restaurants and liquor licenses.
The first matter is an appeal which arises from the decision of the ... City Council dealing with property ... owned by Appellants Najib Aboud, Nas-ra Aboud and Baba D’s, Inc [the Abouds] ... The Ordinance which was passed by City Council on July 24, 2007, limits the number of restaurants with liquor licenses in LNC districts.... In September 2008, the Planning Commission recommended approval. On December 15, 2008, City Council conducted a hearing and denied the conditional use application.
The Ordinance distinguishes between restaurants and restaurants with liquor licenses in LNC zoning districts. The Code provides for a saturation limit for liquor licenses within the LNC zoning districts....
... Title 9, Article V Section 911.Oí is not liquor neutral because it only imposes restrictions on restaurants with liquor licenses
Despite the fact that the liquor industry remains highly regulated by the Commonwealth, local municipalities even before the 1994 Amendment had the power to promulgate and enforce appropriate liquor neutral zoning control. Zoning controls that are not liquor neutral invade the province of the LCB [Liquor Control Board].
The evidence shows that the Department of Planning initially approved the restaurant without a liquor license [the Abouds]. Two months later, however, Baba D’s [the Abouds] was [sic] denied when they [sic] applied for a zoning certificate for a restaurant with a liquor license for the same property. Therefore, clearly Ordinance Title Nine, Article V, § 911. Oí is not liquor neutral and is an infringement on the power of the Liquor Control Board and is invalid. (emphasis added).

Opinion of the Common Pleas Court, December 9, 2009, at 5.

I. Whether The City May Establish A Saturation Point For Restaurants With Liquor Licenses?

Initially, the City contends4 that Section 493.1 of the Liquor Code5, 47 P.S. § 4-493.1, clearly provides that municipalities possess the authority to regulate local zoning which includes the right to determine where restaurants with liquor licenses are located. Specifically, the City asserts that Section 911.04A.99 of the Zoning Code does not restrict or regulate the purchase, sale, possession, consumption, importation, and transportation of alcohol where such alcohol uses are strictly controlled and regulated by the Liquor Code.

The Abouds respond:

[459]*459The municipality has the authority to determine by its zoning ordinance whether a restaurant is a permitted use in a zoning district, but if a restaurant is a permitted use it cannot by ordinance control whether that restaurant may have a license to serve liquor because that power exclusively belongs to the LCB. (emphasis added).

Brief of Appellees Najib Aboud, Nasra Aboud and Baba D’s, Inc., Summary of Argument at 5.

Section 911.04A.99 (Restaurants with Liquor License (Limited)) of the Zoning Code provides:

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Aboud v. PITTSBURGH DEPT. OF PLANNING
17 A.3d 455 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)

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17 A.3d 455, 2011 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aboud-v-city-of-pittsburgh-department-of-planning-pacommwct-2011.