D. DeAngelo & L. DeAngelo v. North Strabane Twp. ZHB

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 2019
Docket770 C.D. 2018
StatusPublished

This text of D. DeAngelo & L. DeAngelo v. North Strabane Twp. ZHB (D. DeAngelo & L. DeAngelo v. North Strabane Twp. ZHB) 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
D. DeAngelo & L. DeAngelo v. North Strabane Twp. ZHB, (Pa. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Dale DeAngelo and Lesley DeAngelo, : Appellants : : v. : No. 770 C.D. 2018 : Argued: February 11, 2019 North Strabane Township : Zoning Hearing Board :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge

OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: April 17, 2019

Dale DeAngelo and Lesley DeAngelo (Landowners) appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County (trial court) that affirmed the decision of the Zoning Hearing Board of North Strabane Township (Zoning Board) to deny their validity challenge to the zoning ordinance as well as their variance application. Landowners seek to build a medical clinic in a residential zoning district. For the following reasons, we affirm in part and vacate and remand in part.

Background

Landowners own a two-acre property in the R-3 High Density Residential Zoning District located in North Strabane Township (Township). The North Strabane Township Zoning Ordinance (Zoning Ordinance)1 allows a medical clinic as a conditional use in an R-3 District as long as it is “established in conjunction with, part of and adjacent to an assisted living facility, independent

1 NORTH STRABANE TOWNSHIP MUNICIPAL CODE, Chapter 27, as amended, added by Zoning Ordinance No. 314, July 25, 2006. living facility, life care community or nursing home.” ZONING ORDINANCE §1303.34(B). On July 13, 2017, Landowners challenged Section 1303.34(B) of the Zoning Ordinance as impermissibly restrictive. In their application to the Zoning Board, Landowners stated, in pertinent part, as follows:

Requirements that medical clinic in an R-3 Zoning District be affiliated with nursing home, assisted living facility and the like. The requirement constitutes exclusionary or restrictive zoning and is therefore unenforceable. [Landowners] cannot develop property desired due to restrictive language of [the Zoning] Ordinance. Applicable Zoning Ordinance language also discriminatorily restrictive. Language creates hardship not of Landowners making.

Reproduced Record at 20a (R.R. __). The Zoning Board held a public hearing on September 6, 2017. At the hearing, Landowners asserted that Section 1303.34(B) constitutes “de facto exclusionary and restrictive zoning” and requested that the Zoning Board interpret Section 1303.34(B) as “invalid, illegal, [or] unenforceable.” Hearing Transcript, 9/6/2017, at 8; R.R. 52a. In support, Landowners pointed out that the requirement that a medical clinic be allowed only in conjunction with a life care community conflicted with the Zoning Ordinance’s definition of a “medical clinic,” which states:

Any establishment, including mobile diagnostic units, where persons receive medical, dental, chiropractic and surgical diagnosis, treatment and counseling under the care of a group of licensed medical doctors and dentists and their supporting staff, where said patients are not provided with board or room or kept overnight on the premises.

2 ZONING ORDINANCE §201. Landowners asserted that it is impossible to develop a medical clinic that complies with both Section 201 and Section 1303.34(B). Further, medical clinics located in the C-1 Highway Commercial and C-2 Regional Commercial Districts are not subject to the restrictions set forth in Section 1303.34(B). All these “inconsistencies,” according to Landowners, rendered the requirements in Section 1303.34(B) invalid and unenforceable. Hearing Transcript at 15; R.R. 59a. Landowners also challenged the extensive acreage for a medical clinic in the R-3 District required by Section 1303.34(B). A life care community requires 20 acres, and an assisted or independent living facility requires five acres. ZONING ORDINANCE §§1303.5(A), 1303.29(A). Landowners asserted that there was no parcel in the R-3 District large enough to accommodate a clinic and facility as required in Section 1303.34(B). Landowners maintained that Section 1303.34(B) is de facto exclusionary to the extent it precludes a stand-alone medical clinic in an R- 3 District. Alternatively, Landowners sought a variance,2 asserting an unnecessary hardship created by the “restrictive and [] unenforceable nature of the language in and associated with an R-3 [District].” Hearing Transcript at 20; R.R. 64a. When the Zoning Board questioned Landowners about the type of facility they proposed, they responded that “at this time there isn’t anything definite. We would do whatever to fit in.” Hearing Transcript at 12; R.R. 56a.

2 Landowners explained at the hearing that they had filed an application for a conditional use with the Board of Supervisors. The solicitor advised them that the Board of Supervisors would deny their application for failing to meet the requirements of Section 1303.34(B). The solicitor advised Landowners to “go to the Zoning Hearing Board first.” Hearing Transcript at 13; R.R. 57a. 3 The Zoning Board did not take evidence at the hearing, explaining that it would decide only “whether the [O]rdinance needs an interpretation”:

It’s a strictly legal issue. And I don’t see any need to offer any testimony. I want to keep this thing as simple as possible…. We’re not here to say whether [Landowners] can do it or not. We’re here to say whether the [O]rdinance needs an interpretation in our mind to correct a deficiency that [Landowners] say[] exists in our [O]rdinance. And which allow [them] to put a medical clinic in a R-3 [D]istrict. [They are] saying what the Supervisors did in requiring it to be attached to another type of facility is improper…. It’s the legal issue involving whether the [O]rdinance is subject to interpretation. That’s the issue in this case and that’s what we’ll decide.

Hearing Transcript at 30-31; R.R. 74a-75a. The Zoning Board continued the hearing to October 4, 2017, to allow Landowners to submit a legal memorandum, which they did, reiterating that the Zoning Ordinance is exclusionary and that construction of a medical clinic consistent with Section 1303.34(B) would cost “additional millions of dollars.” R.R. 95a. On October 4, 2017, the Zoning Board voted to uphold the Zoning Ordinance and deny Landowners’ request for a variance. The Zoning Board concluded that the Zoning Ordinance is not exclusionary, noting that stand-alone medical clinics are permitted in C-1 and C-2 Districts. In denying Landowners’ request for a variance, the Zoning Board made the following findings of fact:

4. The proposed variance is for a use variance. *** 6. [Landowners] appeared with counsel and offered testimony and exhibits. ***

4 9. [Landowners] wish to use the property for a medical clinic. 10. [Landowners] do not plan to establish the clinic in conjunction with, part of and adjacent to an assisted living facility, independent living facility, life care community or nursing home.

Board Decision at 2-3; Findings of Fact ¶¶4, 6, 9, 10. The Zoning Board held that Landowners did not show an unnecessary hardship. Landowners appealed to the trial court, challenging the Zoning Ordinance conditions attached to the medical clinic in an R-3 District as so restrictive as to constitute de facto exclusionary zoning. Landowners further argued that the Zoning Board denied them a full and fair opportunity to make their case for a variance. In a decision of May 10, 2018, the trial court affirmed the Zoning Board’s decision. It concluded that the Zoning Ordinance is not de jure exclusionary because it permits a medical clinic as a conditional use in an R-3 District, and it permits stand-alone medical clinics in the C-1 and C-2 Districts. As to de facto exclusion, the trial court held that Landowners failed to prove that the Zoning Ordinance effectively excludes a legitimate use.

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Bluebook (online)
D. DeAngelo & L. DeAngelo v. North Strabane Twp. ZHB, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-deangelo-l-deangelo-v-north-strabane-twp-zhb-pacommwct-2019.