B. Haggerty v. Newtown Twp. ZHB

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 2020
Docket50 C.D. 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of B. Haggerty v. Newtown Twp. ZHB (B. Haggerty v. Newtown Twp. ZHB) 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
B. Haggerty v. Newtown Twp. ZHB, (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Bill Haggerty, Ray Baldino and : Kevin McGinnis, : Appellants : : v. : : Newtown Township Zoning Hearing : Board : : Earl and Margaret Ebling : : v. : : Newtown Township Zoning Hearing : No. 50 C.D. 2020 Board : Argued: November 12, 2020

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE J. ANDREW CROMPTON, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE COVEY FILED: December 8, 2020

Bill Haggerty (Haggerty), Ray Baldino (Baldino), and Kevin McGinnis (McGinnis) (collectively, Objectors) appeal from the Delaware County Common Pleas Court’s (trial court) December 12, 2019 order (December 12, 2019 Order) dismissing their appeal from the Newtown Township (Township) Zoning Hearing Board’s (ZHB) May 16, 2019 order (ZHB’s May 2019 Order)1 granting Earl and Margaret Ebling’s (collectively, the Eblings) application for variance by estoppel

1 Although the ZHB’s May 2019 decision was reached at its May 16, 2019 meeting, the ZHB’s written decision was issued on June 20, 2019. See Objectors’ Br. App. A at 11-12; see also Objectors’ Br. App. C at 1-3. and affirming its October 20, 2017 order granting the Eblings a special exception (ZHB’s October 2017 Order). Objectors essentially present two issues for this Court’s review: (1) whether the ZHB erred by granting the Eblings a special exception; and (2) whether the ZHB erred by granting the Eblings a variance by estoppel.2 After review, we affirm in part and reverse in part. The Eblings owned and operated Earl E. Ebling, LLC Complete Landscaping (Business) from their home located at 311 North Newtown Street Road, Newtown Square in the Township. In 1963, the Eblings purchased the property located at 35 Walnut Street in Newtown Square known as Newtown Heights (Property), and relocated their home and Business there. The Property is located in a Residence (R-3) Zoning District. The Code of the Township of Newtown, Chapter 172, Zoning (Zoning Ordinance) does not expressly allow commercial landscaping businesses in R-3 Zoning Districts. See Zoning Ord. §§ 172.29.A, 172.33.A, 172.34.A (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 496a-504a). When the Eblings purchased the Property, Newtown Heights was a sparsely developed “wilderness,” with a carpenter, a plumber and a roofer living and operating their businesses adjacent to the Property, and there was a commercial

2 Objectors present five issues in their Statement of the Questions Involved: (1) whether the ZHB’s October 2017 Order should be reversed because Earl E. Ebling, LLC Complete Landscaping (Business) was not permitted by special exception under the Code of the Township of Newtown, Chapter 172, Zoning; (2) whether the ZHB’s October 2017 Order granting the Eblings a special exception should be reversed because the record lacked substantial evidence that the Business complies with the objective standards in the Zoning Ordinance; (3) whether the ZHB’s May 2019 Order granting a variance by estoppel should be reversed where the parties agreed that the Business would terminate in 2012 and the Eblings have no undue hardship; (4) whether res judicata barred the Eblings from relitigating the variance by estoppel covered by the October 16, 1997 Stipulation and Agreement between the Township and the Eblings, where nothing material has changed and the Eblings received the full benefit of the Stipulation; and (5) whether the ZHB erred as a matter of law by capriciously disregarding facts and applicable legal standards. See Objectors’ Br. at 7. Because these issues are subsumed in this Court’s analysis of whether the ZHB erred by granting the special exception and the variance by estoppel, they have been combined and will be addressed accordingly herein. 2 nursery located approximately one block away.3 R.R. at 41a; see also R.R. at 43a, 47a, 50a-51a, 136a, 259a-262a. Over the years, the Eblings acquired additional lots immediately adjacent to their Property, thereby increasing their lot size to its current 1.25 acres. Objectors live in close proximity to the Property. The Eblings have continuously operated the Business from the Property since 1963 (i.e., 57 years). The Eblings use the Property to stage employees4 and to store equipment consisting of heavy-duty pickup trucks, lawn mowers, a leaf vacuum, a chipper, and a small backhoe. See R.R. at 85a, 265a-267a. The equipment is kept in the storage garage and/or in a corral on the Property, and the Eblings planted buffer vegetation to shield it from view. There is no customer activity at the Property, no mulch delivered or sold from the Property, no firewood split or sold from the Property, no wood chips are created, stored or sold from the Property, no nursery stock is grown at the Property, and only a small amount of nursery stock is kept at the Property for customer jobs. See R.R. at 88a, 113a, 265a- 266a, 283a. Margaret Ebling does the Business’s bookkeeping at the Property. Beginning in 1967, after the Township’s snowplow trucks broke down, the Township’s Road Master hired the Business to provide snow plowing operations on Township roads using the Business’s equipment stored and maintained on the Property. In 1973, at Township Manager Dan Llewellyn’s suggestion, the Eblings obtained a building permit and erected a detached garage on the Property to store the commercial landscaping equipment. See R.R. at 60a, 119a-120a. In 1975, the Business had 6 to 10 employees and 5 trucks. By 1980, the Business had 8 to 12 employees and 6 trucks. 3 Earl Ebling described that, when the Eblings purchased the Property in 1963, Walnut Street dead-ended in front of the Eblings’ house and Locust Street ended “one house down” and “[a]ll the rest [were] woods.” R.R. at 259a. 4 “[E]mployees come, retrieve the equipment and leave to go somewhere else to do the work of the Business[,]” then they return to drop off the equipment, get in their cars and leave at the end of the work day. Ebling Br. at 5 n.4; see also R.R. at 22a, 85a, 88a-89a, 267a-268a. 3 In approximately 1983, Township Manager Paul West enlisted Earl Ebling’s expertise to help draft the Township’s public works landscaping bid specifications and three-year contract. Thereafter, the Township mailed an invitation to bid on that contract to the Business at the Property. The Township ultimately awarded the 1984-1986 contract to the Business, and paid the Business $75,800.00 under the contract. The Township also bid out its landscaping work for the 1987-1989 and 1990-1992 contract periods, invited the Business to bid, and awarded the contracts to the Business. The Township paid the Business $109,620.00 under the 1987-1989 contract, and $168,000.00 under the 1990-1992 contract. As of 1990, the Business had 12 to 15 employees and 20 pieces of equipment, which it needed to perform under the contract. The Township did not award the 1993-1995 landscaping contract to the Business, but did award the 1995-1997 landscaping contract to the Business and paid the Business $208,650.00 thereunder. For each bid, Earl Ebling supplied the Township with the number of its employees and pieces of equipment to assure the Township of the Business’s ability to perform the work. In addition to the landscaping contracts, the Business performed more than 20 other Township projects for which it was paid more than $20,000.00. The Township contacted the Business at the Property, all of the work for the Township was performed by the Business while it operated from the Property, and the Township sent its payments to the Property. See R.R. at 67a-68a, 172a, 300a-301a. The Eblings paid occupational privilege taxes to the Township, and applied for a contractor’s license through the Township. See R.R. at 83a, 287a, 299a, 434a-437a.

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Bluebook (online)
B. Haggerty v. Newtown Twp. ZHB, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-haggerty-v-newtown-twp-zhb-pacommwct-2020.