Baederwood Center, Inc. v. Putney

133 A.2d 836, 390 Pa. 53, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 1957
DocketAppeal, 245
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 133 A.2d 836 (Baederwood Center, Inc. v. Putney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baederwood Center, Inc. v. Putney, 133 A.2d 836, 390 Pa. 53, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 261 (Pa. 1957).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Chidsey,

This is an action in equity wherein plaintiff, Baederwood Center, Inc., sought to enjoin the defendant, Rydal-Meadowbrook Civic Association, its “officers, directors, servants and agents” (Michie and ITopkin, specifically named as defendants are the President and Secretary respectively of said Association)' and one Putney, a local property owner, from proceeding with a notice of appeal taken to the granting of a purported building permit, and from themselves bringing, or “persuading any other person” to bring any action which would impede the granting of building permits on any of the land which had been the subject of a prior suit in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Montgomery County, and affirmed on appeal by the Superior Court.

On September 11, 1952, Ordinance 700 was adopted by the Board of Commissioners of Abington Township, Montgomery County, after appropriate petition and a hearing, rezoning some 51 acres of plaintiff’s land from “V” residential (it had been the former Baederwood Golf Club) to “F” commercial. The defendant Civic Association and several individuals thereupon filed a complaint in the Court of Quarter Sessions to test the legality of that amendment to the zoning ordinance, as provided for in Section 1502 of The First Class Town *55 ship Code, Act of June 24, 1931, P. L. 1206, 53 PS §19092-1502. The. amending ordinance was attacked on four grounds, three of them procedural and the fourth alleging unconstitutionality in that it was arbitrary, confiscatory and not in conformity with the enabling Act. The hearing judge considered the questions raised, found the ordinance to have been regularly enacted and valid constitutionally, and dismissed the complaint, Putney v. Abington Township, 70 Montg. Co. L. R. 102 (1953), which was affirmed by the Superior Court at 176 Pa. Superior Ct. 463, 108 A. 2d 134.

In January, 1956, plaintiff sold five acres of the rezoned area to J. B. Van Sciver Company and in July, 1956 it sold 20 acres to John Wanamaker, Philadelphia, for the construction of large stores thereon. Wanamaker applied for a building permit and on August 27, 1956 the building inspector of the township gave verbal authorization to proceed with the necessary grading. From this administrative action the defendants lodged an appeal 1 with the Zoning Board of Adjustment under Section 3107 of the Act of June 24, 1931, P. L. 1206, as amended, 53 PS §19092-3107, alleging (1) that the action of the building inspector was unlaAvful and improper because Ordinance 700 of Abington Township Avas invalid in that: it was not passed for the purpose of promoting health, safety and morals; it Avas not enacted in accordance with a comprehensive plan and design to benefit the public as required by Section 3101 of The First Class Township Law, nor did it properly consider the character of the district; it is unconstitutional as arbitrary, diserimina *56 tory and confiscatory; and “ 'Conditions precedent to the effectiveness of the zoning reclassification under the ordinance have never been complied with.’ ”. Furthermore the appeal alleged (2) that the conveyance of land to John Wanamaker, Philadelphia was in violation of Ordinance 705 of the township; and (3) the granting of permission to erect was in violation of Section 3 of Ordinance 705.

Thereafter, on November 8, 1956, this action in equity was instituted by plaintiff to restrain the prosecution of the appeal just described, and, in effect, to restrain any other action by defendants which would impede the granting of other building permits on the land owned or conveyed by plaintiff. A preliminary injunction issued, but this was dissolved by the chancellor on December 28, 1956 on the ground that the statutory remedy which exists at law for taking appeals from the issuance of building permits is exclusive, and therefore the action in equity will not lie. From the dissolution of the preliminary injunction and the granting of defendants’ preliminary objections by the court below, plaintiff brings this appeal.

In its brief before this Court, appellant attempts to distinguish the instant case from cases such as Knup v. Philadelphia, 386 Pa. 350, 126 A. 2d 399, which held, in accord with a long line of cases cited therein, that equity will not take jurisdiction in an attack upon the application of a zoning ordinance because the procedure provided by statute in such cases is exclusive. Appellant’s contention is that in the instant case it is ''. . . not asking that the court take jurisdiction of zoning matters but we are asking for relief on two well recognized grounds for the exercise of equity jurisprudence, the doctrine of res adjudicata and the function of bills of peace.”. It is argued that “res adjudicata” applies because the issues in the appeals which appel *57 lant wants to bar defendants from, pursuing have already been determined by the Superior Court in Putney v. Abington Township, supra; and a bill of peace should lie here (1) to restrain repeated litigation of the same question, and (2) because the threats of litigation have harmed appellant’s attempts to sell the remaining lots and to arrange for the financing of certain improvements which it is obligated to make in connection with its sales of the Yan Sciver and Wanamaker properties.

The Knup case, supra, and its forbears are clear in their expression of a general rule, namely, that zoning matters, because of their statutory basis, must be strictly pursued at law in accordance with the detailed procedures which the Legislature has seen fit to prescribe for the determination of such causes, and equity will not be permitted to take jurisdiction in any zoning cause where the procedure at law has been prescribed, Oteri Appeal, 372 Pa. 557, 94 A. 2d 772; Shender v. Philadelphia, 375 Pa. 596, 101 A. 2d 667; Barth v. Gorson, 383 Pa. 611, 119 A. 2d 309; Jacobs v. Fetzer, 381 Pa. 262, 112 A. 2d 356; Knup v. Philadelphia, supra, and cases cited therein.

Plaintiff is not in the position of one aggrieved by the operation of a zoning ordinance. Having no such grievance, obviously it requires no remedy. Its complaint is that defendants have been pursuing their statutory remedy against a zoning decision allegedly aggrieving them. The question here is not whether plaintiff has the right to defend the granting of a permit against defendants’ attack — which it unquestionably has — but whether it may take positive action by bill in equity to bar the defendants from pursuing a remedy guaranteed them by the Legislature. Plaintiff is asking that a court of equity enjoin the defendants from pursuing that very remedy which the General Assem *58 bly has seen fit to prescribe, Act of June 24, 1931, P. L. 1206, Art. XXXI, §3107, as amended, 53 PS §19092-3107. A court of equity, ordinarily, would not be permitted to so contravene the clearly stated intention of the Legislature.

Plaintiff apparently recognizes this for it contends that the ruling of the Knup v. Philadelphia,

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Bluebook (online)
133 A.2d 836, 390 Pa. 53, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baederwood-center-inc-v-putney-pa-1957.