Bailey v. Zoning Board of Adjustment

801 A.2d 492, 569 Pa. 147, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 1457
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 17, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 801 A.2d 492 (Bailey v. Zoning Board of Adjustment) 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
Bailey v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 801 A.2d 492, 569 Pa. 147, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 1457 (Pa. 2002).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Justice NIGRO.

Appellants Shawmont Development, Inc., and its president, James B. Kravitz, appeal from the Commonwealth Court’s order finding that the Philadelphia Planning Commission erroneously permitted Appellants to make changes to an approved development plan (a “Master Plan”) for a planned residential development. We affirm the order of the Commonwealth Court, albeit for different reasons.

In 1971, the Philadelphia City Council added Section 14-226 to the Philadelphia Zoning Code, which established a RC-6 Residential District classification. Section 14-226 describes a RC-6 Residential District as follows:

This district is intended to encourage multiple use development on large tracts of land in accordance with a plan of development approved by and filed with the City Planning Commission. Said plan shall be in conformity with stated standards as to type and use, area requirements, off-street parking and loading, and signs.
It is the intent of this district to permit development of ground with the view toward preservation, to the extent possible, of existing topography, trees, natural waterways, and other natural amenities unique to the property.
It is intended that each development be undertaken with the knowledge that no zoning or building permit may be ob[153]*153tained which is not in accord with the approved development plan.

Phila. Zoning Code § 14-226(1). A RC-6 Residential District is created upon the Planning Commission’s and City Council’s approval of a development plan describing the development of the entire area that will make up the proposed District. See Phila. Zoning Code § 14-226(2)(a). Once a development plan is approved it becomes the Master Plan for the newly created RC-6 Residential District. A developer may then obtain a zoning and use registration permit from the Philadelphia Department of Licenses & Inspections (“L & I”) to develop the District in a manner that is consistent with the Master Plan.

Section 14-226 does not include a sunset provision, i.e., a provision that would terminate a Master Plan if the RC-6 Residential District is not entirely developed after a specified number of years.1 A Master Plan can therefore stay in effect forever. However, Section 14-226 does provide that a Master Plan may be amended as follows:

At any time after final adoption, the owner of the property or his authorized agent, may apply to the City Planning Commission for changes in the approved development plan; provided, that at the time said change is requested, that an amended plan is submitted to the City Planning Commission and the City Council. The City Planning Commission shall submit in writing to the Council its recommendations regarding the amendments. Within 45 days of its receiving the written recommendation from the Commission, the Council shall reply in writing informing the Commission as to the action the Council has taken in approving, disapproving, amending or deferring the change. If the Council does not reply in writing to the Commission within the aforementioned 45 day period, Council’s approval will be presumed. And further provided, that no change shall be approved by the City Planning Commission which is contrary to the [154]*154criteria set forth in this Chapter, or which permits a use not provided in this Chapter.

Phila. Zoning Code § 14-226(2)(b).2 Accordingly, where a person wants to develop land in a RC-Residential District, and in doing so, make changes to the Master Plan, that person must file both a request to change the Master Plan and an amended development plan with the Planning Commission and City Council. After the Planning Commission formally reviews the amended plan and recommends to City Council either that the amended plan be approved or disapproved, City Council makes a final decision. If the amended plan is approved by City Council, or deemed approved by virtue of City Council’s inaction, it essentially supercedes the old Master Plan and becomes the Master Plan for the area at issue in the RC-6 Residential District.

Subsequent to the adoption of Section 14-226 and the creation of several RC-6 Residential Districts, the Planning Commission adopted an administrative policy of internally approving minor changes to a Master Plan without submitting the changes to formal review by the Planning Commission or City Council (“Minor Modification Policy”).3 Under the Minor Modification Policy, upon receiving a developer’s request for changes to a Master Plan and an amended plan, the Planning Commission staff initially reviews the changes to determine if they are minor modifications of the Master Plan. N.T., 12/17/97, at 20-22. This decision is based on the following criteria:

a) The changes proposed result in less Gross Floor Area (G.F.A.) or do not increase the amount by more than 1% of the total G.F.A. permitted by the Master Plan;
b) The changes proposed result in less Building Coverage or do not increase the amount by more than 1% of the total Building Coverage permitted by the Master Plan;
[155]*155c) The changes proposed result in less Impervious Coverage 4 or do not increase the amount by more than 1% of the total Impervious Coverage permitted by the Master Plan;
d) The changes proposed result in less dwelling Units [as allowed under the Master Plan], or if the number of dwelling Units are proposed to increase, they do so in accordance with the above paragraphs; and
e) If buildings or access roads are proposed to be relocated, the relocation must result in equal or less environmental impact than the impact of the original location, the relocation must comply with paragraphs a through c above, and the resultant relocation shall not move any buildings or roads closer to the district boundary than permitted by the Master Plan.

Criteria for Staff Approval of Master Plan Modifications, R.R. at 63a.5 If the staff finds that the proposed changes constitute minor modifications, the Planning Commission approves the developer’s request to make such modifications to the Master Plan. The Planning Commission then notifies L & I that the modifications to the Master Plan have been approved and that the developer can obtain a zoning permit to build according to the modifications. N.T., 12/17/97, at 21-22.6 On the other hand, if the staff concludes that the proposed changes do not qualify as minor modifications, the Planning Commission notifies the developer that the changes and the amended plan must be formally approved in accordance with the procedures outlined in Section 14-226(2)(b). N.T., 2/8/99, at 128-29, 131-32.

In 1972, the Planning Commission and City Council approved a Master Plan creating a RC-6 Residential District of thirty-six acres in Roxborough, a community in northwest [156]*156Philadelphia. The eastern half of the District was subsequently déveloped into “Green Tree Run” and “Green Tree Summit” condominiums pursuant to the 1972 Master Plan. In 1985, a company called Balcorp Corporation wanted to develop the western half of the District, known as “Hunters Pointe,” and make changes to the 1972 Master Plan.

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Bluebook (online)
801 A.2d 492, 569 Pa. 147, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 1457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-zoning-board-of-adjustment-pa-2002.