CGR Real Estate, LLC v. Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park v. G. and K. Woodworth

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 26, 2017
Docket780, 971 and 972 C.D. 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of CGR Real Estate, LLC v. Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park v. G. and K. Woodworth (CGR Real Estate, LLC v. Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park v. G. and K. Woodworth) 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
CGR Real Estate, LLC v. Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park v. G. and K. Woodworth, (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

CGR Real Estate, LLC, CGR RE : Franklin Park, LP, and CGR Holdings, LLC, : : Appellants : : v. : No. 780 C.D. 2016 : Borough Council of The Borough of : Franklin Park : : v. : : Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth, : Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon, Jr. :

CGR Holdings, LLC : : v. : No. 971 C.D. 2016 : Borough Council of the Borough of : Franklin Park : : v. : : Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth, : Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon, Jr. : : Appeal of: CGR Real Estate, : LLC and CGR Holdings, LLC :

CGR Real Esstate, LLC : : v. : No. 972 C.D. 2016 : ARGUED: November 14, 2016 Borough Council of the Borough of : Franklin Park : : v. : : Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth, : Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon Jr. : : Appeal of: CGR Real Estate, : LLC and CGR Holdings, LLC :

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE LEADBETTER FILED: January 26, 2017

In these consolidated land use appeals, CGR Real Estate, LLC, CGR RE Franklin Park, LP, and CGR Holdings, LLC (collectively, Appellants) appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County affirming two decisions of the Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park (Council) to deny their land development applications. Council and the neighboring residents have filed a joint brief. We affirm in part, and reverse in part. Appellants seek to construct three apartment buildings in the Borough of Franklin Park, with four stories and a total of 126 units, on approximately 5.21 acres of vacant land (the Apartment Property). Located in a Medium-Intensity Mixed-Use Residential, Commercial and Light Industrial District (M-2 Zoning District), the Apartment Property is bounded by an office development to the

2 north, Interstate 79 to the east, and residential lots to the south and west. Although a multi-family apartment building is a permitted use, by right, in the M-2 Zoning District, the dispute in this matter arose from Appellants’ efforts to provide access to the Apartment Property from a public street located to the west of the property, Aldon Drive. In this regard, their two submissions to Council (the First Plan and the Second Plan), delineate their respective proposals to provide access from Aldon Drive to the Apartment Property and Council’s responses thereto. On review, we conclude that Council was correct in denying the First Plan, but erred in denying the Second Plan. The First Plan In October 2014, Appellants submitted the First Plan consisting of a preliminary and final land development application and a minor subdivision application. Pursuant to the First Plan, Lorrick Lane, part of which is perpendicular to Aldon Drive, was to provide access to the Apartment Property over contiguous property in the R-2 zoning district (the Driveway Property). Owned by Appellant CGR Holdings, LLC, the Driveway Property contains a vacant, single-family residence, has frontage on Aldon Drive, and has Lorrick Lane running along its southerly property line. In their minor subdivision application, Appellants sought to subdivide the Driveway Property into two parcels so that the portion abutting the Apartment Property (subdivided Lot 17B) could be used to slightly widen Lorrick Lane, accommodate necessary grading, and install a sidewalk. The balance of the Driveway Property (subdivided Lot 17A) would be used for the existing residence. In February 2015, Council denied the First Plan, determining that Appellants did not meet three sections of the Franklin Park Borough Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (SALDO).

3 The first SALDO provision, Section 184-905.A(7), prohibits dead-end streets unless designed as a cul-de-sac or as a stub street with a temporary turnaround for access exclusively to neighboring tracts, with no more than two lots taking access thereto. In determining that Appellants did not meet this section, Council characterized Lorrick Lane as a dead-end street that already serves five lots and is neither a cul-de-sac nor a stub street with a temporary turnaround. The second SALDO provision, Section 184-905.C(1).b.4, provides that properties depending on a private street for access have a guaranteed, irrevocable right to access under a right-of-way access easement or other legal covenant, which shall be clearly noted on the subdivision and/or land development plans creating a private street, included in all deeds for all properties with access rights, and recorded in the Office of Real Estate of Allegheny County. Council concluded that Appellants did not meet this section because Lorrick Lane was never dedicated for public use and they failed to note on their plans that there was a guarantee of access for all parcels utilizing it. In so concluding, Council rejected Appellants’ proffered documentation in their revised First Plan showing that the Apartment Property and subdivided Lot 17B from the Driveway Property had a right to use Lorrick Lane. Submitted in response to Council’s request that they provide proof that Lorrick Lane could serve as access to the Apartment Property, Appellants’ submission included a copy of the Nicholson Heights Plan of Lots. Pursuant to that July 1957 plan, the Driveway Property is identified as Lot 17 and there is an unnamed street in the same location as Lorrick Lane.1 Allegheny County Plan Book, Volume 63 at 15; Reproduced Record (R.R.) 152-53a.

1 In asserting that they had access to the Apartment Property via Lorrick Lane, Appellants asserted as follows: (Footnote continued on next page…)

4 The third SALDO provision, Section 184-910.B.(1).b, provides that for slopes of 15% to 25%, no more than 40% of such areas shall be developed and/or regraded or stripped of vegetation unless a soils engineer certifies the stability of the soils and slopes and that, when an engineer has so certified, the percentage of disturbance may be increased to 55%. Pursuant to this section, the Borough rejected Appellants’ request for modification of the percentage of disturbance requirement from 55% to 70%, determining that they failed to satisfy the relevant criteria. The Second Plan In April 2015, Appellants submitted the Second Plan consisting of a preliminary and final land development application and a minor subdivision application. This time, Appellants proposed single-driveway access to the

_____________________________ (continued…) [W]hat is labeled “Lorrick Lane” on various plans and tax maps was depicted as an unnamed street on the Nicholson Heights Plan . . . . Surveys of the area and the tax maps confirm that while Lorrick Lane has never been opened as a full public street, a driveway exists within the area of Lorrick Lane that provides direct access between Aldon Drive, the [Apartment] Property and other lands to the south of the Property. This driveway has existed for well more than twenty one years, and I believe, dates back at least to the recording of the Nicholson Heights Plan. These facts would support a conclusion that the unnamed street shown on the Nicholson Heights Plan, now labeled Lorrick Lane, was intended to serve as an access way to the Property. In addition, given the passage of time, prescriptive easement rights would likely now accrue to the benefit of the Property. February 17, 2015, Opinion Letter from Counsel for Appellants at 1; R.R. at 243a. There is also a recorded right-of-way agreement, which references Lots 17 and 18 of the Nicholson Heights Plan. September 29, 1986, Right-of-Way Agreement at 1-2; R.R. at 498-99a. Lot 17 is the Driveway Property and Lot 18 is to its south. Both lots border Lorrick Lane and have frontage on Aldon Drive. February 5, 1987, Hoolahan Plan of Subdivision; R.R. at 513a.

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CGR Real Estate, LLC v. Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park v. G. and K. Woodworth, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cgr-real-estate-llc-v-borough-council-of-the-borough-of-franklin-park-v-pacommwct-2017.