B.L. Yoder and J.I. Yoder, Wife and Husband, Individually and as Trustees of The Yoder Family Trust No. 2 and Hardwood Mill Trust v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 2018
Docket1927 C.D. 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of B.L. Yoder and J.I. Yoder, Wife and Husband, Individually and as Trustees of The Yoder Family Trust No. 2 and Hardwood Mill Trust v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority (B.L. Yoder and J.I. Yoder, Wife and Husband, Individually and as Trustees of The Yoder Family Trust No. 2 and Hardwood Mill Trust v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority) 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
B.L. Yoder and J.I. Yoder, Wife and Husband, Individually and as Trustees of The Yoder Family Trust No. 2 and Hardwood Mill Trust v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority, (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Barbara L. Yoder and Joseph I. Yoder, : Wife and Husband, Individually, and as : Trustees of The Yoder Family Trust : No. 2 and Hardwood Mill Trust : : v. : No. 1927 C.D. 2016 : Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority : Submitted: November 14, 2017 : Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority : : v. : : Barbara L. Yoder and Joseph I. Yoder, : Wife and Husband, Individually, and as : Trustees of The Yoder Family Trust : No. 2 and Harwood Mill Trust : : Appeal of: Barbara L. Yoder and Joseph : I. Yoder :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE SIMPSON FILED: January 5, 2018

This mandatory sewer connection matter returns to us after remand. Barbara L. Yoder and Joseph I. Yoder, individually and as Trustees of the Yoder Family Trust No. 2 and Hardwood Mill Trust (Owners), appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of the 37th Judicial District, Warren County Branch (trial court) that denied preliminary injunctive relief, and required their connection to the Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority (Authority) sewer system by electric means. Owners are Old Order Amish. In the initial appeal, we directed the trial court to assess whether electric service was the least intrusive means of sewer connection. See Yoder v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Auth. (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1956 C.D. 2015, filed June 3, 2016) (Remand Opinion). Relevant here, on remand the trial court determined Owners were required to connect by means of an electric grinder pump. Owners argue the trial court erred in denying preliminary injunctive relief when it previously found their religious tenets prohibited the use of electricity. Specifically, they assert the trial court erred in weighing the harms, and requiring Owners to offer less intrusive connection options when the Authority bears that burden under the Religious Freedom Protection Act1 (Act). Based on the record, we conclude the trial court had reasonable grounds to deny preliminary injunctive relief. Accordingly, we affirm.

I. Background Owners maintain a residence in Sugar Grove Township (Township), which is subject to a mandatory connection ordinance, Ordinance No. 04-06-15 (Mandatory Connection Ordinance). Pursuant to the Mandatory Connection Ordinance, every owner whose property abuts the Authority sewer system, shall connect, at the owner’s cost, any structures located on the property that are occupied or intended for human occupancy. Although Owners’ property is subject to the Mandatory Connection Ordinance, one of the tenets of Owners’ religion is to disavow electricity. As a result, Owners service their property with an old-fashioned privy (outhouse) without running water or electricity.

1 Act of December 9, 2002, P.L. 1701, 71 P.S. §§2401–2407.

2 This is the third related sewer-connection action,2 all involving Owners in some fashion. First, in prior litigation, the Authority sought injunctive and declaratory relief to compel Owners to connect to its system as mandated by the Mandatory Connection Ordinance (suit docketed at No. 191 of 2012). The Authority also requested that Owners be removed from the property to enable the Authority to connect the property in a manner it deemed fit (Prior Authority Litigation).

The Authority filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings. After briefing and argument, the trial court granted the Authority’s motion in part, mandating Owners’ connection to the sewer system. However, the trial court denied the Authority’s request to compel Owners to allow connection in a manner the Authority deemed fit. Tr. Ct. Order, 11/26/13 (2013 Order). Relevant here, paragraph 5 of the 2013 Order provided: “[The Authority] shall, in the process of connecting the property to the sewer system, take due care as to [Owners’] religious convictions, and shall proceed in a manner so as to pose the least possible intrusion on [Owners’] religious convictions and beliefs.” Id. (emphasis added).

Second, while the Prior Authority Litigation was pending, the Old Order Amish, including Owners, brought a class action suit against the Authority challenging the constitutionality of the Mandatory Connection Ordinance (suit docketed at No. 304 of 2013). Specifically, the class sought a declaration that the Mandatory Connection Ordinance violated their rights to religious freedom under the Act and the Constitution, and it sought an injunction against mandatory

2 In addition, when Owners failed to pay overdue monthly sewer charges, the Authority filed a municipal claim (docketed at No. MLD 71 of 2010), and a summary criminal complaint against them (docketed at Nos. SA 21 and 22 of 2012). Owners appealed the trial court’s judgment of guilt on the summary appeals to this Court, which we affirmed (appeal docketed at 229 C.D. 2012).

3 connection. Ultimately, President Judge Maureen Skerda resolved the merits of the class action suit against the Old Order Amish on January 27, 2016. This Court quashed the appeal (appeal docketed in this Court at 346 C.D. 2016), for failure to file post-trial motions. The Supreme Court then denied the petition for allowance of appeal on November 22, 2016, (Pa., No. 284 WAL 2016).

Third, the current litigation, an action for injunctive relief, stems from disagreements regarding the means of connecting Owners to the sewer system. Initially, the Authority advised Owners by letter that they must open an electric service account with Penelec to power the grinder pump for their connection. In response, Owners filed the preliminary injunction petition (Petition) underlying the instant appeal (Petition docketed at No. 507 A.D. of 2014). In their Petition, Owners claimed that requiring them to use electric service for the grinder pump, and open a Penelec account for that purpose, violated their rights to religious freedom guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and Article 1, Section 3 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, and protected by the Act.

The trial court held two days of hearings on the Petition. Joseph Yoder (Yoder) testified regarding Owners’ religious objections to opening an electricity account, and to having electricity used to power anything associated with the use of their privy.

The Authority presented testimony of a few witnesses, including that of its Sewage Enforcement Officer Todd Fantaskey (SEO), and Joseph Roddy (Engineer) as sewer system experts.

4 Relevant here, Engineer testified regarding connection options. He explained that gravity and grinder pump systems differ in that gravity systems depend on topography, and are more expensive to install, whereas a pressure system that uses a grinder pump “negates any issues as far as topography.” Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 229a. He noted solar power offered a potential power source, but Yoder opposed anything that generated electricity, including solar power. He explained, “the Amish didn’t like the idea of generating electricity at all,” even with a generator. R.R. at 230a. He considered “direct drive” options where a belt or pulley would run the actual pump, id.; however, this also required an electric-powered motor. Developing a prototype pump to operate without electricity was impractical.

Based on the evidence presented, the trial court denied the preliminary injunction. Specifically, the trial court allowed the Authority to connect Owners in a manner within its “sole discretion.” Tr. Ct. Order of 1/26/15 (2015 Order). Thus, its 2015 Order superseded its 2013 Order, which required the Authority to be mindful of Owners’ religion, and its prohibition of electricity use, and to implement the connection using the means least intrusive to their religious beliefs.

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B.L. Yoder and J.I. Yoder, Wife and Husband, Individually and as Trustees of The Yoder Family Trust No. 2 and Hardwood Mill Trust v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bl-yoder-and-ji-yoder-wife-and-husband-individually-and-as-trustees-pacommwct-2018.