Bluebell Associates v. Township Engineer

405 A.2d 1070, 45 Pa. Commw. 599, 1979 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1955
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 12, 1979
DocketAppeals, Nos. 269 C.D. 1977 and 334 C.D. 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 405 A.2d 1070 (Bluebell Associates v. Township Engineer) 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
Bluebell Associates v. Township Engineer, 405 A.2d 1070, 45 Pa. Commw. 599, 1979 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1955 (Pa. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Craig,

These two appeals, consolidated for argument and consideration, are from orders of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, the appeal at No. 269 C.D. 1977 involving that court’s refusal, in a mandamus action against the engineer of Whitpain Township (township), to compel the issuance of a grading permit for an airport extension, and the appeal at No. 334 C.D. 1978 concerning an order granting Bluebell Associates (applicant) approval of that same airport enlargement in a statutory zoning proceeding.

A common factual history is the basis for both cases. Applicant’s airport, Wings Field, has been located on a 287-acre tract in the township since 1929. From 1950, the year the township zoning ordinance was adopted, the airport has been a legal non-conform[602]*602ing use in a district zoned R-l Residential, allowing single-family dwellings. After 1971 applicant acquired an additional 6-acre tract adjacent to the north end of the existing runway. The chief subject of the case has been applicant’s proposal to lengthen the existing runway by approximately 1,000 feet over that after-acquired land, which is also zoned R-l.

By letter in 1975, applicant challenged the validity of the ordinance under Sections 609.1 and 1001 of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code (MPC).1 The challenge documents duly included a plan of the proposed runway extension and a proposed curative amendment of the ordinance to create an Airport District.

After five hearings in the first half of 1976, the township’s Board of Supervisors adopted a three-paragraph resolution entitled “Resolution to Wings Field ’ ’ resolving that:

the application of Blue Bell Land Associates to extend the runway of Wings Field to a maximum length of 3500 feet to be approved.
... the application of Blue Bell Land Associates for a Curative Amendment to create an Airport District be rejected because it is not sufficiently comprehensive to meet the needs of the Township in regulating an Airport District.
. . . the Township Solicitor prepare an ordinance for adoption creating an Airport District. ...

The last paragraph listed substantive details for the solicitor’s guidance, including a description of area beyond applicant’s land and reference to planning commission suggestions concerning limitations on aircraft size and weight and provisions for helicopters.

[603]*603The resolution, as is clearly indicated by its wording, did not constitute an amendment of the township ’s zoning ordinance.

When applicant sought a grading permit on the authority of the resolution, the township engineer, in consultation with its manager and solicitor, refused the permit on the basis that the effect of the resolution was to reject the curative amendment so that no permit could be obtained unless a zoning variance were to be obtained from the zoning hearing board.

Applicant thereupon filed a mandamus action which, after hearing, was dismissed by Judge Horace A. Davenport and a court en banc, on the ground that the resolution did not provide a clear legal basis on which to command issuance of the permit.

Applicant also filed a statutory zoning appeal in the court below on the basis that the curative amendment had been denied improperly, an appeal authorized by MPC §1004(3), 53 P.S. §11004(3). Another judge of the court below granted the relief sought by the appeal, somewhat paradoxically affirming the township supervisors’ decision. The lower court found that the township supervisors had concluded that their ordinance fails to provide for airport use and is “for that reason illegal and unconstitutional as it applies to appellant’s property. ...” That decision was also affirmed by a court en banc in the lower court.

At the outset, we should identify the legal nature of what has been done here by the township supervisors and by the court below.

First, the record is clear that applicant’s initiating action with the township was to request a curative amendment in the explicit and classic sense of MPC §1004, not a variance. The challenge, in addition to presenting plans and an express Airport District curative amendment draft, raised questions of gen[604]*604eral ordinance validity on the basis of exclusionary zoning, not a question of the invalidity of the ordinance as applied to the particular circumstances of applicant’s property.

It is equally clear that the township supervisors, in law, denied the curative amendment. The second paragraph of the resolution plainly states that the curative amendment is “rejected”. MPC §1004(4), 53 P.S. §11004(4), stipulates that “a curative amendment is denied when (i) the governing body notifies the landowner that it will not adopt the amendment.

Because the township supervisors did not act legislatively to amend the zoning ordinance, by either the resolution or any other action on this record, the first paragraph of the resolution, granting the specific application to extend the runway of Wings Field, was necessarily the purported grant of a variance. The concept of a “variance” has been so long well understood that neither the MPC nor the court decisions under it have found it necessary to express its essence in a dictionary-style definition. The basic meaning of the term has been carried over from the zoning enabling statutes which preceded the MPC, which expressed the basic nature of a variance as a departure from “the terms of the ordinance” and from “literal enforcement of the provisions of the ordinance,” only “in specific cases.”2 Hence the first paragraph of the resolution here was the grant of a variance, because it departed from the literal requirements of the R-l Residential zoning to allow an extension of a legal nonconforming use over after-acquired [605]*605land in that same zoning district. It is settled that •such an extension, if warranted, can be granted by a variance issued by the zoning hearing board. Pierce Appeal, 384 Pa. 100, 119 A.2d 506 (1956); Mack Zoning Appeal, 384 Pa. 586, 122 A.2d 48 (1956); Philadelphia v. Angelone, 3 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 119, 280 A.2d 672 (1971). Both Sections 603 and 912 of the MPC (53 P.S. §§10603, 10912) confer the variance power exclusively upon the zoning hearing board, not upon the governing body.

We therefore must affirm the lower court’s dismissal of the mandamus complaint, here at No. 334 C.D. 1978, because the curative amendment application had been denied and the township supervisors lacked authority to grant the variance purported by their resolution.3 At the very least, there was no “clear legal right” to a permit as a basis for relief mandamus. Commercial Properties, Inc. v. Peternel, 418 Pa. 304, 309, 211 A.2d 514, 517-18 (1965).

In view of the denial of the curative amendment request, the applicant had standing to bring the zoning appeal which remains before us for decision, at No. 269 C.D. 1977.

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405 A.2d 1070, 45 Pa. Commw. 599, 1979 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bluebell-associates-v-township-engineer-pacommwct-1979.