Balady Farms, LLC v. Paradise Township Zoning Hearing Board

148 A.3d 496, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 416, 2016 WL 5724905
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 2016
Docket171 C.D. 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 A.3d 496 (Balady Farms, LLC v. Paradise Township Zoning Hearing Board) 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
Balady Farms, LLC v. Paradise Township Zoning Hearing Board, 148 A.3d 496, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 416, 2016 WL 5724905 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY

JUDGE COVEY

Balady Farms, LLC (Balady Farms) appeals from the York County Common Pleas Court’s (trial court) January 11,2016 order affirming Paradise Township (Township) Zoning Hearing Board’s (Board) interpretation of the Township’s Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance) to prohibit Balady Farms from operating a commercial poultry processing facility. The sole issue before the Court is whether the Board erred in its interpretation of the Ordinance.

The facts of this case are not in -dispute. Balady Farms owns approximately 23 acres 1 of real property located at 380 Moulstown Road in Abbottstown, Pennsyl *498 vania (Property), in the Township’s Rural Conservation (RC) District. The Property contains ten outbuildings, including an office/residence, a garage, two storage buildings, four livestock barns and two, two-story poultry bams, as well as fenced grazing areas.

Balady Farms, by and through its owner/manager Hafedh Ali Abbes (Abbes) and two part-time employees, raises cattle, goats, and organic, free-range chickens on the Property. In its poultry barns, Balady Farms raises chicks (delivered about every two weeks) for approximately five to six weeks, at which time they are transported off-site for processing and public sale/consumption. At any one time, there are approximately 28,000 chickens (7,000 chickens on each poultry barn floor) on the Property.

Due to the rising costs of off-site chicken processing, Balady Farms proposed to convert and use the interior of one of the existing storage buildings (approximately 3,200 square feet) to process the chickens raised on the Property. The proposed facility would be fitted with state-of-the-art processing equipment housed entirely within the building. Chicken processing would take place approximately two times per week between 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. and would meet United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) standards. 2 Balady Farms would hire up to six full-time employees due to its increased operation. Processing by-products and waste would be stored in refrigerated containers, and then regularly removed and transported off-site for recycling by Valley Proteins, Inc.

By September 9, 2014 letter, Balady Farms’ professional engineer Eric Johnston, PE (Johnston) sought Township Zoning Officer Wayne Smith’s (Smith) interpretation as to whether the Ordinance permitted the proposed conversion and use. See Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 6a-16a. On October 13, 2014, Smith concluded: “It would be my opinion that the current zoning does not address and permit a commercial use such as a chicken processing operation.” R.R. at 5a. On October 13, 2014, Balady Farms filed an application with the Township seeking the Board’s Ordinance interpretation (Application) relative to whether it could add “a chicken processing facility for chickens raised and bred on the farm.” R.R. at la; see also R.R. at 2a-18a. The Township’s Planning Commission (Commission) reviewed the Application and submitted comments to the Board. The Board held a hearing on January 21, 2015, at which the Board considered the Commission’s comments and testimony provided by Johnston, Smith, Abbes and several local residents who were both for and against the proposed use at the Property. See R.R. at 18a-57a. On February 13, 2015, the Board declared that the Ordinance “does not include [Ba-lady Farms’] proposed use as a commercial chicken processing facility.” 3 R.R. at 78a. Balady Farms filed an appeal from the Board’s decision to the trial court.

After reviewing the Board’s record and the parties’ briefs and hearing *499 argument, on January 11, 2016, the trial court denied Balady Farms’ ■ appeal and upheld the Board’s decision. Balady Farms appealed to this Court. 4

Initially, Section 502A of the Ordinance permits “[ajgriculture” uses by right in the Township’s RC District. R.R at 144a; see also R.R. at 14a. Section 202 of the Ordinance defines “Agriculture” as

[a]n enterprise that is actively engaged in the commercial production and preparation for market or use of agricultural, agronomic, horticultural, silvicultural and aquacultural crops and commodities and/or livestock and livestock products. The term includes an enterprise that implements changes in production practices .and procedures or types of crops, livestock, livestock products or commodities produced consistent with practices and procedures that are normally engaged by farmers or are consistent with technological development within the agricultural industry.
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R.R. at 116a (emphasis added). The Ordinance’s definition of “livestock” specifically “includes poultry.” R.R. at 123a (emphasis added). The parties agree that Balady Farms’ current operation meets all of the Ordinance’s requirements. Thereforé, the only question before us is whether the Ordinance’s definition of “agriculture” permits Balady Farms to process chickens raised on the Property.

Balady Farms argues that the Board erred by concluding that the Ordinance prohibits the proposed chicken processing facility at the Property. Specifically, Bala-dy Farms claims that the Board and the trial court erred by classifying the proposed operation as a commercial chicken processing facility when, in fact, it would only process chickens raised on the Property. Balady Farms contends that the proposed processing facility meets the Ordinance’s definition of “agriculture” and, thus, is a use permitted by right at the Property.

At the Board hearing, Johnston testified to the details of Balady Farms’ operation and how the proposed processing operation would satisfy the Ordinance’s requirements. Smith agreed that Section 202 of the Ordinance defines “agriculture” to include commercial production and preparation of poultry for market or use, see R.R. at 28a-29a, but nevertheless concluded:.

I cannot find anywhere in [the Ordinance’s] definitions or in [Section] 1304 under agriculture to match a commercial operation as such. I am not questioning how [Balady Farms operates.] I am looking at the pure fact that I find no reference in there for commercial operations in a chicken processing plant in our zoning.

R.R. at 27a.

Commission Chairman Bob Nevins (Nevins) testified that the Commission reviewed the Application at its December 22, 2014 meeting and concluded that “[t]here is no mention in [Section 1304A of the Ordinance] of slaughter house,” the proposed use “is not consistent with the [Township’s] definition of agriculture,” and the processing of chickens “and selling the butcher[ed] meat and meat products on the [Property or off[-]site constitutes a commercial operation and is not an allowed *500 use.” R.R. at 29a. Nevins added: “It wasn’t unanimous by any means, but it was what the Board felt and we have passed this on to you.” R.R. at 29a. Nevins clarified that he was the Commission’s lone dissenter, and admitted:

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148 A.3d 496, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 416, 2016 WL 5724905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balady-farms-llc-v-paradise-township-zoning-hearing-board-pacommwct-2016.