Bailey v. Zoning Board of Adjustment

780 A.2d 809, 2001 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 517
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 16, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 780 A.2d 809 (Bailey v. Zoning Board of Adjustment) 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
Bailey v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 780 A.2d 809, 2001 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 517 (Pa. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

FLAHERTY, Senior Judge.

Objectors, Elizabeth Bailey, Robert Tu-rino, Judy Ziegler and Dan Hoffman, appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (trial court) which affirmed the issuance of a zoning and use registration permit by the City of Philadelphia Department of Licensing & Inspections (L & I) to James B. Kravitz of Shawmont Development, Inc. (Developer). We affirm.

Developer is the owner of 18 acres of property known as Hunters Pointe located in the Roxborough community of the City of Philadelphia. Since 1972, the property has been designated as an RC-6 residential district under the Philadelphia Zoning Code (Code), which is a special zoning district created for planned developments.1 In 1985, the City Planning Commission (Commission) recommended and City Council (Council) approved a master plan (1985 plan) for the property.2

On April 27, 2000, D.D. Winokur & Associates, Inc., an engineering firm hired by Developer, submitted to the Commission a detailed engineering plan (Winokur plan) for the development of Hunters Pointe. The Commission reviewed and approved the Winokur plan as consistent with the [811]*8111985 plan. Based on that approval, L & I issued a zoning permit to Developer.

Objectors filed an appeal to the Zoning Board of Philadelphia (Board) contesting the issuance of the permit. On July 14, 2000, Developer filed a petition with the trial court seeking to quash the appeal to the Board. By order dated July 27, 2000, the trial court assumed jurisdiction of the appeal pending before the Board and directed Objectors to provide the trial court with a statement of the bases for their appeal. Thereafter, Objectors raised 14 separate bases for appeal and later filed an additional statement of basis for appeal.

The trial court then took evidence and issued an order on November 13, 2000 affirming L & I’s issuance of the building permit. The trial court found that the Commission which is charged with interpreting and applying the RC 6 Ordinance concluded that the Winokur plan was in accord with the 1985 plan, and in the trial court’s own view the Winokur plan and the 1985 plan were identical with respect to location of structures, parking and open spaces.

On appeal, Objectors argue that the trial court erred in disregarding evidence which proved that the Winokur plan is not in compliance with and is not the same as the 1985 plan and that, in accordance with this court’s decision in Bailey v. Zoning Board of Adjustment of the City of Philadelphia, (Bailey I ) 742 A.2d 247 (Pa.Cmwlth.1999), petition for allowance of appeal granted, 564 Pa. 715, 764 A.2d 1072 (2000), any changes to the master plan, no matter how minor, must be approved by Council.3

Before addressing Objector’s arguments, we will first review the facts of Bailey I, which involved the same parties presently before us. In Bailey I, this court observed that the 1985 plan contemplated ten buddings containing 202 apartments for Hunters Pointe. Developer sought permission to deviate from the 1985 plan from the Executive Director of the Commission. The modification request sought to construct six buildings containing 204 apartments which required an increase in gross total floor area of 2,400 feet and the moving of several buildings. Determining that Developer’s request constituted a minor modification to the 1985 plan, the Executive Director approved the modification without Commission or Council approval concluding that under Section 14 — 226(2) (b) it had the authority to approve such change.4 Developer thereafter received a zoning and use registration per[812]*812mit from L & I. Objectors took an appeal to the Board which determined that it did not have jurisdiction to review a decision of the Executive Director. The trial court affirmed. The trial court also determined that it had jurisdiction to review the decision of the Executive Director and substituted itself as the proper forum for the appeal. Agreeing with the Executive Director’s determination that Developer’s changes were minor and that minor modifications to the plan could be made without Council approval, the trial court denied Objectors appeal.

In Bailey I, we determined that the Code did not authorize the Executive Director to make changes to the master plan. Such power is vested in Council.

While we understand that projects of this size necessarily need minor modifications once final approvals are made, nonetheless, officials only have the power given to them by authorizing legislation. Nothing in the Code gives the Executive Director or, for that matter, the Planning Commission, the ability to make changes to City Council’s approved master plan; City Council has retained that authority. In fact, the intent behind the enactment of Section 14-226(2)(b) appears to place changes to original master plans on the fast track as it is because everything is done in writing, without hearings, and there is a deemed approval if City Council does not act.

Id. at 250.

In this case, Objectors argue that the Winokur plan deviates from the 1985 plan and that in accordance with Bailey I, absent Council’s approval of such changes, L & I erred in issuing permits to Developer. We disagree with Objectors that the two plans differ such that Council approval was necessary.

Although the trial court determined that the Winokur plan and 1985 plan are identical, Objectors maintain that in reaching its conclusion the trial court improperly disregarded uncontroverted expert testimony. Specifically, Objectors maintain that evidence produced by them proved that the Winokur plan and the 1985 plan are not the same with respect to Hillside Avenue, property boundaries and set back requirements.

With respect to Hillside Avenue, Objectors offered the testimony of Joel S. Cirel-lo, who testified that Hillside Avenue is not shown on the 1985 plan but is indicated on the Winokur plan. The history behind Hillside Avenue reveals that City Council had enacted an ordinance seeking to strike Hillside Avenue as a road. However, the requirements of the ordinance were not met and the ordinance purporting to close Hillside Avenue lapsed in 1973.

The trial court determined that the legal status of Hillside Avenue has not changed from 1973, when the ordinance to close Hillside Avenue lapsed to the time the 1985 plan was approved to the time the Winokur plan was filed in 2000. “The status of Hillside Avenue was a matter of public record, known to the Commission and City Council when the 1985 Plan was approved, and the 1985 Plan incorporated a survey prepared by Vincent F. Collier, surveyor and regulator in the Ninth District, dated June 8, 1973 (the ‘Collier Survey’), showing Hillside Avenue on the City Plan.” (Trial court opinion at p. 6.) Further, the trial court observed that Council did not condition the issuance of a permit on striking Hillside Avenue from the City Plan and the Commission therefore had no authority to reject the Winokur plan.

We agree with the trial court that because the legal status of Hillside Avenue, a paper street, is the same in the 1985 Plan as it is in the Winokur Plan, the [813]*813plans are the same.5

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780 A.2d 809, 2001 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-zoning-board-of-adjustment-pacommwct-2001.