Bethlehem Manor Village, LLC & PA Venture Capital, Inc. v. ZHB of the City of Bethlehem

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 2021
Docket1792 C.D. 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bethlehem Manor Village, LLC & PA Venture Capital, Inc. v. ZHB of the City of Bethlehem (Bethlehem Manor Village, LLC & PA Venture Capital, Inc. v. ZHB of the City of Bethlehem) 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
Bethlehem Manor Village, LLC & PA Venture Capital, Inc. v. ZHB of the City of Bethlehem, (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Bethlehem Manor Village, LLC and : Pennsylvania Venture Capital, Inc., : Appellants : : v. : No. 1792 C.D. 2019 : Argued: November 9, 2020 Zoning Hearing Board of the : City of Bethlehem :

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge (P.) HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE COHN JUBELIRER FILED: January 29, 2021

Bethlehem Manor Village, LLC (BMV) and Pennsylvania Venture Capital, Inc., an agent for BMV (together, Landowners), appeal from the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County (common pleas) upholding the Decision of the Zoning Hearing Board of the City of Bethlehem (Board). The Board denied Landowners’ appeal from the Zoning Officer of the City of Bethlehem’s (Zoning Officer) denial of a Zoning Permit Application (Application). In the Application, Landowners sought a zoning permit to build what they described as a private, free- standing, inpatient, acute psychiatric hospital (Proposed Use) on a property located in the City of Bethlehem’s (City) I-Institutional Zoning District (I District) under the Codified Zoning Ordinance of the City of Bethlehem, CITY OF BETHLEHEM, PA, ZONING ORDINANCE (2008), (Ordinance) in effect at the time of the Application. Zoning Officer denied the permit, finding that the Proposed Use was not permitted because it was a treatment center, not a hospital. After a two-day hearing, the Board agreed the Proposed Use would not be a hospital, finding it would not be licensed by the Pennsylvania Department of Health (Department). The Board, instead, determined it would be a treatment center notwithstanding that it could not qualify as a treatment center for state regulatory purposes. The Board also held that the Proposed Use was not otherwise permitted in the I District as a related treatment facility, which, Landowners asserted, was an alternative use for which the Proposed Use could qualify. On appeal, Landowners argue the Board Decision affirming the denial of the Application should be reversed because the Board: (1) applied an overly narrow standard and scope of review in deciding Landowners’ appeal of Zoning Officer’s decision; (2) erred in narrowly construing ambiguous and undefined provisions of the Ordinance, respectively, the definition of “hospital” and the phrase “related treatment facility,” to find that the Proposed Use was not a permitted use; and (3) erred in finding that the Proposed Use was a treatment center. Landowners maintain that had the Board conducted a proper review of this matter and engaged in a proper construction of the Ordinance’s provisions, it would have found that the Proposed Use was a permitted use in the I District.

I. Background A. The Proposed Use and the Relevant Ordinance Provisions. Landowners own a five-acre property (Property) at 1838 Center Street in the City on which they seek to construct the Proposed Use. On September 12, 2013,

2 the City Planning Commission (Commission) approved Landowners’ Land Development Plan (Plan) with conditions (Plan Approval). (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 25a.) Relevantly, the Commission conditioned approval on Landowners obtaining “any and all approvals under the . . . Ordinance, including . . . that the proposed plan is a permitted use at the [P]roperty” and on Landowners “not operat[ing] a Treatment Center at this site as defined by the . . . Ordinance.” (Id.) “Treatment centers” were not, and are not, permitted in the I District. At the time of the Plan Approval and Application, this use was defined as:

(a) A use (other than a prison or a hospital) providing housing for 3 or more unrelated persons who need specialized housing, treatment and/or counseling because of:

1. criminal rehabilitation, such as a criminal halfway house, or facility for housing of persons judged to be juvenile delinquents, or a criminal work release or pre-release facility;

2. current addiction to a controlled substance that was used in an illegal manner or alcohol; and/or

3. a type of mental illness or other behavior that causes a person to be a threat to the physical safety of others.

Ordinance § 1302.127 (emphasis added); (R.R. at 72a). However, Landowners had described the Proposed Use as a hospital. At the time of the Plan Approval and Application, the Ordinance allowed “Hospital or Surgery Center or Related Testing and Treatment Facilities” as permitted uses in the I District. Ordinance, § 1305.01(c); (R.R. at 75a). Also at that time, the Ordinance defined “hospital” as “[a] building(s) which is licensed by the . . . Department . . . as a [h]ospital, and which involves the diagnosis and treatment of human ailments.” Ordinance,

3 § 1302.54; (R.R. at 72a). The remaining terms in this use category were not defined.1

B. The Application and Zoning Officer’s Denial. In accordance with the Plan Approval, Landowners submitted the Application to Zoning Officer on July 11, 2018. The Application stated the “Existing/Proposed Use” was a “Hospital (see cover letter).” (R.R. at 2a.) Per the cover letter, Landowners sought a determination that the Proposed Use, a “Freestanding Private Inpatient Acute Hospital,” was “a permitted use” as required by the Plan Approval. (Id. at 1a.) Attached to the Application were: materials submitted to the Department, which were under review by that agency; architectural plans for the Proposed Use; and a site plan. (Id.) The materials that had been submitted to the Department’s Division of Safety Inspection were labeled the “Program Narrative for [the] Valley Behavioral Health Hospital,” a $14 million project that would “provide Inpatient Behavioral Health Services” with the goal of

1 The City has since amended the Ordinance to change these definitions to explicitly exclude a behavioral health facility and psychiatric hospital, and to eliminate the “or Related Testing and Treatment Facilities” language from the permitted use category Landowners rely upon in their arguments. (R.R. at 128a-30a, 292a, 301a, 317a.) The Ordinance now defines “[h]ospital,” at Section 1302.57, as

[a] building(s) which is licensed by the . . . Department . . . as a [h]ospital, and which involves the diagnosis and treatment of human ailments, and which may include behavioral health facilities and psychiatric hospitals operated in accordance with all laws and regulations, provided the behavioral health facilities occupy no more than 25% of the floor space of the hospital facilities directly associated with the diagnosis, care, treatment, and sleeping facilities of patients.

(Id. at 128a, 292a.) “Treatment [c]enter” was amended, at Section 1302.138, to include the following: “(e) A behavioral health facility and/or psychiatric hospital meeting the requirements of all laws and regulations shall qualify as a Treatment Center.” (Id. at 129a, 301a.)

4 “becom[ing] a premier Acute Inpatient Hospital provider” that “[p]rovide[s] Psychiatric Crisis assessment assistance for the region” with “[s]eamless discharge planning with outpatient local providers.” (Id. at 199a-202a.) The Proposed Use would “[i]nstitute [the] Best Management Practices Standards” of a variety of organizations or agencies, would have “[c]ontractual agreements with both [the] public and private market,” and would partner with local hospital networks. (Id. at 202a, 208a.) There would be 84 rooms for acute inpatient services provided in a secure setting to non-pediatric patients, and it would include an “adult inpatient dual [diagnosis] program” and a “23-hour observation unit.” (Id. at 205a, 207a, 212a, 221a.) Additional information regarding the operation of the Proposed Use was set forth in the Application. (Id. at 199a-222a.) By letter dated July 20, 2018, Zoning Officer denied the Application.

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Bethlehem Manor Village, LLC & PA Venture Capital, Inc. v. ZHB of the City of Bethlehem, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bethlehem-manor-village-llc-pa-venture-capital-inc-v-zhb-of-the-city-pacommwct-2021.