B.L. Yoder v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 3, 2016
Docket1956 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of B.L. Yoder v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority (B.L. Yoder 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 v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority, (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Barbara L. Yoder and Joseph I. Yoder, : individually and as Trustees of the : Yoder Family Trust No. 2 and : Hardwood Mill Trust, : Appellants : No. 1956 C.D. 2015 : Submitted: April 1, 2016 v. : : Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE SIMPSON FILED: June 3, 2016

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 connection to the Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority (Authority) sewer system in a manner at the Authority’s sole discretion. Owners argue the trial court previously ordered the manner of connection was to be the least intrusive to their religion. Thus, the trial court improperly modified a final order. Owners also assert the trial court erred in not considering all of the elements for a preliminary injunction. Upon review, we vacate the trial court’s order and remand the matter for further findings in accordance with the following opinion. I. Background Owners maintain a residence in Sugar Grove Township (Township) which is subject to a mandatory connection ordinance, Ordinance No. 04-06-15 (Ordinance). Pursuant to the Ordinance, every owner whose property abuts any sewer system constructed by the Authority, shall connect, at the owner’s cost, any structures located on the property that are occupied or intended for human occupancy. Owners’ property is subject to the Ordinance.

Owners are Old Order Amish. One of the tenets of their religion is to disavow the use of electricity. As a result, Owners service their property with an old-fashioned privy (outhouse) that is not served by running water or electricity.

In an effort to accommodate Owners’ religion, in April 2008, the parties entered into a Sewage Services Agreement (Agreement). The Agreement allowed Owners to utilize the privy as long as they paid the connection fee, past due sewer charges and future monthly charges, and disposed of the waste of their privy at least once a year into the Authority’s pumping station. Owners abided by the Agreement until December 2010, when the Authority filed a municipal claim against them for nonpayment of sewer charges. The Authority also filed a private criminal complaint against Owners before a magisterial district judge, on which it prevailed. After a de novo hearing on the summary appeal, the trial court found Owners guilty of violating the Ordinance. Owners appealed to this Court, and we affirmed. See Commonwealth v. Yoder (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 229 C.D. 2012, filed January 4, 2013) (unreported).

2 The Authority also sought relief through a separate civil suit, docketed in the trial court as No. 191 of 2012. There, the Authority filed a complaint alleging breach of the Agreement and seeking injunctive and declaratory relief to compel Owners to connect to the system. 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. Owners filed an uncounseled response, to which the Authority objected. The Authority then filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings. After argument, the trial court directed the parties1 to brief the issue.

Thereafter, the trial court entered judgment in the Authority’s favor as to its request for injunctive relief requiring mandatory connection. However, the trial court denied the Authority’s request to compel Owners to vacate their property to allow connection in a manner the Authority deemed fit. The trial court directed Owners to connect to the sewer system; in the event they did not, the trial court authorized the Authority to “enter the property … and connect the dwelling to the [Authority’s] sewer system, at [Owners’] expense.” Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 21a-22a (Tr. Ct. Order dated November 26, 2013 (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). Significantly, because the trial court granted judgment on the pleadings, it did not hold a hearing or receive any evidence.

1 At this point, Owners obtained representation from the American Civil Liberties Union.

3 The trial court reasoned that the interest in protecting public health through a sewer connection outweighed Owners’ free exercise rights. Nevertheless, the trial court recognized Owners’ religious convictions, and required the connection to be made in accordance with them. The trial court based its decision in part on an opinion issued in a declaratory judgment case brought as a class action by the Old Order Amish, including Owners, challenging enforcement of the Ordinance as to them.

The current litigation stems from disagreements regarding the means of accomplishing Owners’ connection to the sewer system. Counsel for the Authority sent a letter to Owners’ counsel in September 2014 advising that Owners must “open an account with Penelec [the electricity provider] for the purpose of servicing the grinder pump for their property.” R.R. at 23a (Letter). As such, the Authority determined electricity was necessary in order to connect the property to the sewer system. In response to the Letter, Owners filed a petition for preliminary injunctive relief. In its response to the petition, the Authority asked the trial court to direct Owners to open an account with Penelec.

The trial court held two days of hearings. Joseph Yoder (Yoder) testified regarding Owners’ religious objection to opening an electricity account, and to having electricity used to power anything associated with the use of their privy. He testified they would not be able to use the privy if it were tainted with the use of electric power or risk excommunication. Yoder also objected to the connection generally and the payment of fees associated with connection.

4 The Authority presented the lay testimony of Harold Bloomgren, Jr. about implementing Act 537 Plans under the Sewage Facilities Act,2 and related financing. The Authority also presented testimony of its Sewage Enforcement Officer Todd Fantaskey (SEO), and Joseph Roddy (Engineer) as sewer system experts.

SEO testified generally regarding the effect of wastewater on public health and the surrounding water table. He believed he witnessed the dumping of wastewater on Owners’ property. However, he could not confirm that because he did not take a sample. R.R. at 219a. SEO opined that mandatory connection would best protect the public health against the risks posed by Owners’ privy.

Engineer testified regarding connection options. He explained that gravity and grinder pump systems differ in that grinder pumps are operated by electricity and gravity systems are more expensive to install. R.R. at 232a (“it really boils down to the cost is why you go with a pressure [pump] system.”). He noted solar power was possible, and with sufficient funds, a pump could be designed to operate without electricity. Id. at 236a. He could not recall whether the Authority consulted Owners about placing the pump in the right-of-way instead of on their property. However, he said “it wouldn’t be an easy job.” Id. at 237a.

Based on the evidence presented at the hearings,3 the trial court denied the preliminary injunction. Specifically, the trial court ordered:

2 Act of January 24, 1966, P.L.

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B.L. Yoder v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bl-yoder-v-sugar-grove-area-sewer-authority-pacommwct-2016.