H.K. Waldman v. Borough of Fox Chapel ZHB

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 14, 2023
Docket12 C.D. 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of H.K. Waldman v. Borough of Fox Chapel ZHB (H.K. Waldman v. Borough of Fox Chapel 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
H.K. Waldman v. Borough of Fox Chapel ZHB, (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Harold K. Waldman, : Appellant : : v. : No. 12 C.D. 2021 : Submitted: June 24, 2022 Borough of Fox Chapel Zoning : Hearing Board and Borough of : Fox Chapel and James and Christine : Luketich :

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: February 14, 2023

Harold K. Waldman (Objector) appeals an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County (trial court) that authorized James and Christine Luketich (Landowners) to build a three-car garage on their property. In doing so, the trial court affirmed the decision of the Borough of Fox Chapel Zoning Hearing Board (Zoning Board) that the proposed garage satisfied the setback requirements of The Fox Chapel Zoning Ordinance.1 On appeal, Objector argues that the trial court erred in its construction and application of the Zoning Ordinance. Discerning no merit to Objector’s proffered interpretation of the Zoning Ordinance, we affirm.

1 CODE OF THE BOROUGH OF FOX CHAPEL, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, §§400-1-400-80 (Zoning Ordinance). Background Landowners own property in the Borough of Fox Chapel at 30 Sweet Water Lane, and Objector owns an adjacent property at 10 Sweet Water Lane. The two properties are divided by a north-south property line. A third parcel owned by Joseph and Karen Kelley abuts the two properties owned by Landowners and Objector. All three properties are in the Borough’s A-Residence zoning district, which requires a minimum lot size of three acres. In 2017, Landowners’ house and garage were damaged in a fire. On December 3, 2019, Landowners submitted a building permit application to the Borough of Fox Chapel to reconstruct a three-car garage with a bedroom suite above it. Reproduced Record at 119a (R.R. __). On December 11, 2019, the Borough’s zoning officer issued a building permit for the project. On January 10, 2020, Objector appealed the issuance of the building permit, asserting that the proposed garage violated the applicable setback provisions in the Zoning Ordinance. Objector contended that the lines of an easement on Landowners’ property should be used to measure the setbacks. Instead, Landowners used the boundary with Objector’s property to measure the side setback for the garage. At the Zoning Board hearing, a series of documents were admitted into evidence. They included a zoning map, the original subdivision plan, the 1992 revised subdivision plan (Stoecklein plan), the 2002 revised subdivision plan (Waldman plan), Landowners’ 2017 garage expansion and renovation plan, and Landowners’ current plans for the three-car garage. Objector testified about the 40-foot-wide access and utility easement on Landowners’ property, which extends the length of Landowners’ property and is

2 adjacent to the north-south boundary with Objector’s property. The easement is paved up to the entrance gate to Landowners’ and Objector’s properties, and the remainder consists of grass and trees. Objector testified that the easement constitutes a street because it provides access to his property, as well as to the properties owned by Landowners and the Kelleys. Objector testified that in 2002, he and Landowners reconfigured their lots by trading various parcels. Objector’s subdivision plan, known as the Waldman plan, states as follows:

We, Harold K. Waldman and Diane R. Waldman, owners of a portion of the Waldman plan, hereby adopt this plan as our plan of lots, and irrevocably dedicate all streets and other property identified for dedication on this plan to the Borough of Fox Chapel. Notes of Testimony, 2/19/2020, at 37-38 (N.T. __); R.R. 182a-83a (emphasis added). Objector explained that the Waldman plan, which is recorded, shows a “50- foot setback line” on his side of the boundary line. N.T. 41; R.R. 186a. On cross- examination, Objector acknowledged that the Borough did not accept his dedication of the street referenced in that plan. N.T. 46-47; R.R. 191a-92a. The Borough’s zoning officer, Paul Bell, testified that the easement provided Landowners, Objector, and the Kelleys with access to Sweet Water Lane. Otherwise, their lots would be landlocked. Bell testified that Landowners’ proposed garage was farther from Objector’s property line than it was before the fire. All the recorded subdivision plans show a 40-foot access and utility easement located entirely on Landowners’ property, and the Waldman plan shows the side setback as measured from the boundary between Objector’s and Landowners’ properties, not from the easement line. Bell testified that were the Borough to treat the access and

3 utility easement as a street, then Landowners’ lot size would fall below the required three-acre minimum. Professor Joseph Mistick testified for Landowners about the Waldman plan.2 He explained that setbacks are measured from property lines and not “from access and utility easement[s] or any kind of easement lines.” N.T. 94; R.R. 239a. Mistick testified that easements neither add to, nor detract from, the buildable area of a recorded lot. He also testified about relevant case law precedent. Counsel for the Kelleys stated at the hearing that a survey done when they purchased their property showed that they were allowed to use the “40-foot easement” on Landowners’ property, which provides “the only access to their property[.]” N.T. 114; R.R. 259a. The Kelley survey was accepted into evidence. The Zoning Board denied Objector’s appeal for the stated reason that the garage setback must be measured from the property boundary line, not from the easement boundary. It began with Section 400, Attachment 1:6, Part II, of the Zoning Ordinance, which states: [n]o structure of any character shall be closer to any street line or property line of any street, road or lane than 75 feet; not closer to any side lot line than 40 feet with a combined distance from both side lot lines [of] not less than 100 feet; not closer to any rear lot line or any parkland than 50 feet.

Zoning Board Opinion at 2, Finding of Fact 3; R.R. 45a, 295a (quoting ZONING ORDINANCE, §400, Attachment 1:6 Part II). The testimonial and documentary evidence demonstrated that the proposed garage would be more than 40 feet from the side lot line. The Zoning Board also found that there was no public or private

2 Mistick served as chairman of the Zoning Board of Adjustment for the City of Pittsburgh for seven years. He teaches land use law and the fundamentals of community planning at Duquesne University School of Law. 4 street, road, or lane located on Landowners’ property. It credited Mistick’s testimony that easements should not be deducted from the calculation of a lot’s required square footage and that setbacks should be measured from the lot line, not the edge of an easement.3 Objector appealed to the trial court, which did not take additional evidence. In an opinion and order dated December 7, 2020, the trial court affirmed the Zoning Board’s decision in its entirety, concluding that the north-south property line between Landowners’ and Objector’s respective properties was the proper starting point for measuring the side lot setback. It observed that the recorded “subdivision plans, deeds and other documents do not indicate that the easement was a right-of-way for a road, street or lane.” Trial Court Opinion, 12/7/2020, at 3. Although the Zoning Ordinance does not define the terms “private road,” “lane” and “road,” the Borough’s Subdivision Ordinance4 does.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
H.K. Waldman v. Borough of Fox Chapel ZHB, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hk-waldman-v-borough-of-fox-chapel-zhb-pacommwct-2023.