Huckleberry Associates, Inc. v. South Whitehall Township Zoning Hearing Board

120 A.3d 1110, 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 319
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 15, 2015
StatusPublished

This text of 120 A.3d 1110 (Huckleberry Associates, Inc. v. South Whitehall Township Zoning Hearing Board) 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
Huckleberry Associates, Inc. v. South Whitehall Township Zoning Hearing Board, 120 A.3d 1110, 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 319 (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Senior Judge ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN.

Huckleberry Associates, Inc., Haines and Kibblehouse, Inc., and Lehigh Valley Site Contractors, Inc. (together, Huckleberry) appeal from the August 26, 2014, order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County (trial court) affirming the decision of the South Whitehall Township Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB). The ZHB determined that Huckleberry’s operation of a solid waste recycling facility violated the South Whitehall Township Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance) and denied Huckleberry’s appeal. We affirm.

Huckleberry owns six contiguous parcels of land, comprising 63.7 acres, located at 4359 Huckleberry Road (Property) in South Whitehall Township (Township) in the rural holding zoning district (RH District). From the 1950s through 1996, Huckleberry operated a noncoal surface [1112]*1112mine and quarry at the Property.1 In July 1996, Huckleberry and the Township entered into a settlement agreement (1996 Agreement), which resolved litigation regarding the extent and legality of the mining and quarry operations at the Property. In June 2000, Huckleberry and the Township entered into another settlement agreement (2000 Agreement), which superseded the 1996 Agreement and resolved litigation regarding the Township’s assessment and collection of business privilege taxes. Under the terms of the 2000 Agreement, Huckleberry discontinued mining and quarry operations; the Township absolved Huckleberry of paying business privilege taxes; Huckleberry granted the Township and its sewer authority the right to deposit clean fill on the Property; and Huckleberry granted the Township the right to temporarily stockpile leaves on the Property for a maximum of six months at a time. The Township stored leaves on the Property intermittently for 13 years.

In November 2012 and March 2013, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) issued two permits (together, Biosoil Permits)2 to Huckleberry, which allowed Huckleberry to construct and operate a composting and bio-soil-production facility on the Property. The Biosoil Permits limited the materials that could be used in the production process to food-processing waste; pre- and post-consumer food waste; yard waste; source-separated newspaper, standard and laminated paper, and wax-coated cardboard; unpainted and untreated pallets; land-clearing and grubbing waste; and agricultural waste. The Biosoil Permits also stated that the resulting, post-production materials could be used only for or as soil additive; mulch; filter-stock media for soil erosion control; fertilizer for farming operations; and topsoil.

In March 2013, Mark Granahan, a neighboring property owner, complained to the Township that his residential property had incurred damage from stormwa-ter runoff resulting from excavation and paving activities at the Property.3 The Township inspected the Property in April 2013 and found that Huckleberry had paved over previously undisturbed meadow in order to build a solid waste recycling facility. As of April 2013, Huckleberry had paved 11,250 square feet.

On April 23, 2013, the Township cited Huckleberry for the following violations of the Ordinance: Huckleberry did not apply for a special exception before creating an impervious surface exceeding 10,000 square feet; Huckleberry did not obtain a zoning permit to change the use of the Property from a surface mine and quarry to a solid waste recycling facility; and Huckleberry operated a solid waste recycling facility, which is a non-permitted use in the RH District. Huckleberry appealed to the ZHB, which held three public hearings.

[1113]*1113Before the ZHB, Huckleberry argued that: the Ordinance is preempted by the Noncoal Surface Mining Conservation and Reclamation Act (Noncoal Act);4 the Ordinance is preempted by the Solid Waste Management Act (SWMA);5 the solid waste recycling facility was a natural expansion of the Property’s prior, nonconforming use as a surface mine and quarry; under the 2000 Agreement, Huckleberry was permitted to operate the solid waste recycling facility; and the Township is es-topped from asserting zoning violations because the Township used the Property for municipal leaf storage for 13 years.

On November 8, 2013, the ZHB denied Huckleberry’s appeal, finding that Huckleberry violated sections 12.8(a),6 12.28(c)(1),7 and 12.33(p)8 of the Ordinance. Huckleberry appealed to the trial court, which affirmed the ZHB’s decision. Huckleberry now appeals to this court.9

Huckleberry first argues that the ZHB erred in finding that Huckleberry violated section 12.8(a) of the Ordinance by producing biosoils at the Property without first securing a zoning permit. Huckleberry asserts that the process by which biosoils are produced is preempted by the Noncoal Act. Section 16 of the Noncoal Act states:

Except with respect to ordinances adopted pursuant to the act of July 31, 1968 (P.L. 806, No. 247), known as the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code [MPC], all local ordinances and enactments purporting to regulate surface mining are hereby superseded. The Commonwealth, by this enactment, hereby preempts the regulation of surface mining as herein defined.

52 P.S. § 3316. Huckleberry claims that by issuing the Biosoil Permits, DEP determined that Huckleberry’s solid waste recycling operation derives from its prior surface mining and quarry activities. We disagree.

First, because the Ordinance was enacted pursuant to the MPC, it is not superseded by the express language of the Non-coal Act. Second, this court has held that local land use ordinances may govern where a regulated activity takes place but [1114]*1114may not govern how such activity is conducted. See Geryville Materials, Inc. v. Planning Commission of Lower Milford Township, 74 A.3d 322, 325 (Pa.Cmwlth.2013) (“[C]ase law differentiates local ordinances that directly regulate the operation of mines and those that regulate where the regulated activity can take place. Only the former are preempted.... ”), appeal denied, 624 Pa. 699, 87 A..3d 817 (2014). The Ordinance at issue here regulates where a noncoal surface mine can be located within the Township; the Ordinance does not regulate the manner in which such a facility is operated. Furthermore, the Biosoil Permits expressly conditioned DEP’s approval of the solid waste recycling facility on Huckleberry’s compliance with applicable zoning regulations.10

Next, Huckleberry argues that its production of biosoils at the Property is permitted by the 2000 Agreement because the solid waste recycling operation constitutes the stockpiling and storage of “mulch, topsoil, ... and related products.” 11 However, the ZHB properly concluded that it could not consider this issue because the 2000 Agreement states that jurisdiction for any claim arising thereunder lies exclusively with the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County. (2000 Agmt., § 30.) Therefore, the ZHB lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate any dispute arising under the terms of the 2000 Agreement.12

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120 A.3d 1110, 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huckleberry-associates-inc-v-south-whitehall-township-zoning-hearing-pacommwct-2015.