Hart Appeal

189 A.2d 167, 410 Pa. 439, 1963 Pa. LEXIS 634
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 19, 1963
DocketAppeal, 24
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 189 A.2d 167 (Hart Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart Appeal, 189 A.2d 167, 410 Pa. 439, 1963 Pa. LEXIS 634 (Pa. 1963).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Roberts,

This is an appeal from the affirmance by the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, of an order of the Zoning Board of Adjustment of Upper Dublin [Board], granting, as á special exception, permission to operate a non-commercial swim club.

Appellants are residents and taxpayers of the township and unsuccessful protestants before the Board. *441 Appellees are the equitable owners (under an agreement of sale) and applicants for tbe special exception. Three public bearings were held before tbe Board, and after receiving and considering tbe testimony of appellants and protesting township residents, tbe Board granted tbe application.

Tbe special exception permits tbe operation of a non-commercial swim club and related facilities on a 5.15 acre portion of a larger (9.13 acre) tract, known as tbe “Boyal Oaks” property located in a district zoned “A” residential. Tbe land proposed to be used is at the rear of the main building or tavern (known as Boyal Oaks Tavern, Bestaurant, or Inn) and abuts a portion of a public highway by-pass. Embankments along some of the by-pass border are approximately 25 feet above tbe premises. No homes are closer than several hundred feet from tbe intended swim club site.

In tbe operation of tbe swim club, it is proposed to utilize facilities already on tbe premises, a restaurant, club room, bath bouse with locker rooms, showers, snack bar, swimming pool, wading pool, and a new swimming pool 30 by 75 feet in area with an additional 25 by 25 feet diving well to be constructed.

The Boyal Oaks tract has been zoned residential since the initial zoning ordinance became effective on June 20,1939. Tbe tavern (or restaurant) has been in operation since at. least 1945. In 1952, the township granted a building permit for the construction of locker rooms and showers on tbe site in question. Although tbe application for tbe building permit described the use of tbe building as an “Inn”, it was for several years thereafter operated as a swim club (probably separately from tbe restaurant). 1 Sometime in *442 the fall of 1959, the tavern and club facilities were closed as a result of action taken by the Internal Revenue Service.

The swim club is to be operated by a non-profit corporation authorized to issue 300 shares of $25 par value stock. The by-laws provide that eligibility for membership requires the purchase of one share of stock, and no member is permitted to purchase more. Although the membership may not exceed 300 families, the club intends to limit membership to 200 families. However, the Board, in granting the special exception, restricted the number to 175 families. 2 In addition to the purchase of stock,- membership would be subject to an annual assessment of approximately $125 to $150 per family to cover the costs of operating the club.

Appellees are under contract to purchase the property for $85,000 with $15,000 as a down payment and the mortgage balance to be paid in 15 years. The record owners of the realty are unwilling to sell the property directly to the non-profit corporation because they desire security for their purchase money mortgage obligation, which the non-profit corporation cannot provide. The club site is to be leased to the non-profit corporation for a 15 year term, at an annual rental of $8,000 (annual mortgage payment being $7,500 plus 4% to cover the expense of holding title) with an option to renew for an additional similar term at a substantially lower rental (since mortgage payments will have been completed).

The club is to be operated each year from Memorial Day to Labor Day and plans to enter into a contract *443 •with two of the three purchasers of the realty, who will manage, supervise and improve the club and its facilities. Each of the managers is to receive an annual salary of $5,000 and is to function under the control and supervision of the club’s board of directors.

The township zoning ordinance provides in Sec. 501(3) (E) that non-commercial recreational uses are permitted in “A” residential districts when authorized as special exceptions. Section 501(3) (H), permits club houses, lodges or fraternity houses, provided “that the principal activity shall not be one which is customarily carried on as a business and provided that all services shall be for members and their guests.” The Board imposed certain conditions and restrictions, 3 and, as so limited, found, inter alia, that the proposed swim club use is a non-commercial or non-profit recreational use.

The lower court heard no additional testimony and based its determination upon the evidence presented to the Board and upon that record sustained the action of the Board. The sole question here is whether the Board committed a manifest abuse of its discretion or an error of law. Poster Advertising Co. v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 408 Pa. 248, 182 A. 2d 521 (1962).

*444 Appellants contend that the Board committed error of law in incorrectly applying the requirements of the zoning ordinance (to the facts before it) and in finding that the proposed swim club is a non-commercial recreational use. Appellees, it is argued, fail to meet the non-commercial or non-profit provisions of the ordinance. Appellants point to the substantial financial gains likely to accrue to appellees as a result of the lease with the non-profit swim club: acquisition of the $85,000 property for the initial investment of $15,000, plus the value of any improvements placed upon the land by the club, and the salaries to be received by two of the appellees for management services. It is vigorously argued that these are characteristics of a purely commercial or profit-making venture and preclude the finding that the club use is non-commercial. In dealing with this contention, the lower court correctly said: “. . . the appellants seem to have confused the use of the premises by the swim club and the financial arrangements between the applicants and the swim club. The swim club and the applicants are separate entities and the swim club will not be a profit-making organization. The club’s facilities will be used, exclusively by the members of the club and not by the public. Upon the record before it, then, the Board of Adjustment properly concluded that the use of the premises by the club will be ‘non-commercial’. This is all that is necessary to bring the use within the terms of the ordinance, and the fact that the applicants stand to receive an appreciable gain from this non-commercial use of their property by the swim club, a non-profit corporation, does not render the Board’s decision erroneous. There is no requirement in the ordinance that the use be such that no one will profit financially therefrom, and the Board of Adjustment did not commit an error of law in concluding that the proposed use is ‘non-commercial’.”

*445

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Bluebook (online)
189 A.2d 167, 410 Pa. 439, 1963 Pa. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-appeal-pa-1963.