Gryshuk v. Kolb

685 A.2d 629, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 487
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 685 A.2d 629 (Gryshuk v. Kolb) 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
Gryshuk v. Kolb, 685 A.2d 629, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 487 (Pa. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

LORD, Senior Judge.

In this procedurally unusual case, Richard and Marianne Kolb, t/a Powderboume Sportsmen’s Club, Inc. (Owners), appeal a Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas order that affirmed findings and conclusions of the Upper Hanover Township (Township) Zoning Hearing Board (Board) supporting the denial of Owners’ zoning application and reversed a deemed Board approval of their application.

Owners operate a gun club on their thirty-nine acre property within the Township. The Township’s zoning officer cited them for constructing sporting clay target cages/shooting stations in 1990 within one hundred feet of their property setback area, in violation of the Township’s 1987 zoning ordinance.

Owners appealed to the Board, claimed a nonconforming use and applied for a variance. The Board held hearings on October 12 and 19, 1994, at which Alan and Deborah Gryshuk, Jeffrey and Kimberley Jagiela and Roy and Karen Musselman (Neighbors), who reside in surrounding residential homes, appeared to protest Owners’ use of the property. At a meeting on December 14, 1994, the Board orally delivered a decision that the shooting cages were structures and/or outdoor use facilities under the Township’s ordinance, that Owners did not show a lawfully existing use within the one-hundred-foot setback area required by the ordinance and that Owners failed to prove the elements necessary for a variance. On January 18, 1995, the Board issued written findings of fact and conclusions of law.

On January 26, 1995, Owners notified the Board that they were asserting a deemed approval of their application, due to the Board’s delay in issuing its decision. Section 908(9) of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code (MPC),1 53 P.S. § 10908(9). They filed with the trial court a mandamus action asserting a deemed approval while also filing an appeal from the Board’s actual decision denying their application. Neighbors petitioned to intervene in both actions. On February 24, 1995, Neighbors filed a notice of appeal from deemed approval with the trial court, seeking reversal of that approval should it be found to exist, and Owners intervened.

In October 1995, the trial court granted a motion for peremptory judgment filed by Owners in their mandamus action, finding a deemed approval to exist. The court issued a writ of mandamus ordering the Township to issue all permits and approvals to Owners within ten days, and at the same time also scheduled argument on Neighbors’ appeal from deemed approval. Without taking additional evidence, the court subsequently granted Neighbors’ appeal and “dissolved [631]*631and reversed” the deemed approval. Owners now appeal the latter trial court decision to this Court.

In this case and Koutrakos v. Newtown Township Zoning Hearing Board, 685 A.2d 639 (Pa.Cmwlth.1996), this Court has attempted to deal with various types of zoning decisions and to make a clear summary of the functions, options and requirements of a trial judge when he or she undertakes the disposition of a zoning appeal. These cases should also serve as reminders to zoning boards, in the exercise of their civic duty, to hold hearings within 60 days of a hearing request and render decisions, accompanied by findings of fact, within 45 days of the conclusion of the hearings.

The first issue we address here is whether the trial court erred in granting Neighbors’ zoning appeal after the court had already issued a writ of mandamus for permits arising from the Board’s deemed approval of Owners’ application.

Owners assert that the Board’s untimely decision resulted in a deemed approval, which created a conclusive presumption that the Board decided Owners’ application in their favor, and the writ of mandamus established the trial court’s decision that Owners’ right to approvals was clear. They argue from this that the court’s unappealed mandamus decision collaterally estopped the further challenge and the contrary court decision now appealed. See Johnston v. Upper Macungie Township, 162 Pa.Cmwlth. 170, 638 A.2d 408 (1994); Fincher v. Middlesex Township, 64 Pa.Cmwlth. 355, 439 A.2d 1353 (1982).

The Township responds that the cases Owners cite are distinguishable and collateral estoppel is inapplicable here. It argues that the writ of mandamus determined only the existence of a deemed approval, which was timely appealed and left open the merits of the case; the writ did not decide the merits of Owners’ application, as the court recognized in scheduling Neighbors’ appeal for argument when it issued the writ. See Foltz v. Monroeville, 5 Pa.Cmwlth. 304, 290 A.2d 269 (1972). The Township maintains that an appeal of the mandamus order would have been a duplicative waste of court costs and counsel fees.

We agree with the Township’s position. There is no doubt that the trial court granted mandamus in favor of Owners. However, this is as it should be, because there is also no' doubt that Owners were entitled to a deemed approval. A deemed approval under section 908(9) indisputably existed because the Board did not render a written decision or findings within 45 days after the last hearing in this matter.2 Thus, just as Owners requested, the trial court established in the mandamus action that there was a deemed Board approval.

We emphasize that a deemed zoning board approval no more cuts off the right to an appeal on the merits than would a timely board decision approving an application. Section 908(9), while allowing for deemed approval, also provides that “[njothing in this subsection shall prejudice the right of any party opposing the application to appeal the decision to a court of competent jurisdiction.” 53 P.S. § 10908(9). The lack of a timely Board decision leading to deemed approval, not the substantive merits of the ease, was the sole subject issue litigated in the mandamus action. That is not the same, substantive issue Neighbors were entitled to appeal under section 908(9) and which was in fact litigated in Neighbors’ zoning appeal.

The trial court obviously was aware of this and held open the merits of the case, even scheduling argument on them in the same order granting mandamus.3 As the court [632]*632has persuasively stated, the mandamus decision was a necessary step here to determine whose appeal of the Board’s decision would be taken. If Owners were not entitled to mandamus, because there was no deemed approval and instead the Board’s denial of Owners’ application was effective, then Owners’ appeal of that denial would be heard. If mandamus was appropriate, and there was a deemed Board approval, then Neighbors’ appeal of that approval would be heard, as was the case here. We also accept the trial court’s explanation that, when it later “dissolved and reversed” the deemed approval, it did not determine that Board approval did not exist by operation of law, but instead overturned such approval on the merits and necessarily ended the mandamus order for the issuance of permits.

The trial court’s action here is not a matter of first impression. Indeed, our decision in Foltz both explains and supports it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
685 A.2d 629, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gryshuk-v-kolb-pacommwct-1996.