In re Moon Nurseries, Inc.

67 Pa. D. & C.2d 41
CourtPennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board
DecidedDecember 31, 1973
Docketdocket no. 72-395
StatusPublished

This text of 67 Pa. D. & C.2d 41 (In re Moon Nurseries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Moon Nurseries, Inc., 67 Pa. D. & C.2d 41 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

BROUGHTON, Chairman of the Board,

This matter is before the board on appeals filed by Moon Nurseries, Inc. (Moon) and BACS Realty, Inc. (BACS) from an order of the Department of Environmental Resources (department), dated October 31, 1972. By this order Moon and BACS were denied permission to connect 18 proposed homes in two subdivisions which they jointly developed, situate in the Township of Lower Makefield, to the sanitary sewer system of the Municipal Sewer Authority of the Township of Lower Makefield.

A hearing was held on March 20, 1973, by Gerald H. Goldberg, Esq., who was formerly a member of this board.

The board makes the following

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Moon is a corporation engaged in the custom building of homes in the Township of Lower Make-field, Bucks County, Pa.

2. In the type of business conducted by Moon, building permits for construction cannot be sought until such time as Moon has sold a particular lot and determined with its purchaser the type of dwelling to be erected thereon.

3. Sometime prior to July, 1970, Moon applied to the Township Planning Commission for approval of subdivision of certain tracts of land in the township which Moon owned. These tracts upon which resi[43]*43dence dwellings were to be constructed were named Homestead Acres and Wynnewood II.

4. On or about July 14, 1970, the Municipal Sewer Authority of the Township of Lower Makefield (authority) filed an application, no. 0970423, with the department for a permit which would authorize the construction of sewage conveyance facilities to serve the homes to be constructed in Homestead Acres and Wynnewood II.

5. This application disclosed that the sewage which would be collected in these proposed sewage conveyance facilities would be transported to the sewage treatment plant of the Municipal Authority of the Borough of Morrisville (Morrisville Plant) for treatment.

6. In a letter dated November 13, 1970, the department notified the authority, in writing, that:

a. Conditions were such at the Morrisville Plant that said plant would exceed its hydraulic capacity within the next five years.

b. Application no. 0970423 would be refused unless the Municipal Authority of the Borough of Morrisville (Morrisville Authority) submitted an approvable time schedule, indicating that said plant would be expanded and in operation prior to the anticipated point of hydraulic and/or organic overload.

c. If no such approvable time schedule was received from the Morrisville Authority, the authority could withdraw its application, or revise its application to provide for capped sewers, or request that its application be processed under the circumstances which then existed.

7. On November 24,1970, the planning commission sent written notice to Moon that its final subdivision plans would be recommended to the township supervisors for approval, subject, inter alia, to approval by [44]*44the authority and to the granting of a permit by the Commonwealth before houses were constructed.

8. On December 23,1970, the department sent written notice to the Morrisville Authority by which the Morrisville Authority was informed that no further sewer extensions would be recommended for approval until the department received an acceptable Project Status Schedule Card (PSS Card) from the Morrisville Authority showing the steps to be taken in the expansion of the Morrisville Plant to prevent future sewage treatment deficiencies.

9. On December 31, 1970, the department received a PSS Card from the Morrisville Authority, which PSS Card was found to be acceptable by the department on a date subsequent thereto.

10. On August 13, 1971, the department issued Water Quality Management Permit No. 0970423 to the authority by the terms of which the authority was authorized to construct pump stations, sewers and appurtenances and to discharge treated sewage as per its earlier application.

11. On August 19, 1971, the township supervisors sent a letter to Moon in which, inter aha, Moon was notified that said permit pertaining to its developments had been granted by the department.

12. Moon assigned certain of the lots contained in Homestead Acres to BACS as part of an agreement under which Moon and BACS became obligated to jointly improve and develop Homestead Acres.

13. Between August 19, 1971, and September 19, 1973, Moon and BACS incurred expenses for on-site improvements at Homestead Acres in the sum of $194,790.56. Of this sum, $44,024.78 was spent for the construction of sanitary sewers in Homestead Acres.

14. During 1972, the hydraulic and organic overloading of the Morrisville Plant continued unabated.

[45]*4515. On September 19, 1972, the department issued an order to the authority in which the department imposed a sewer connection ban into that part of the authority’s sanitary sewer system from which sewage was transported to the Morrisville Plant with the exception that said ban did not apply to connections to approved sewers serving new construction for which building permits had been previously issued.

16. On October 4,1972, Moon applied to the department for an exception to this sewer connection ban.

17. On October 31, 1972, the department rejected this request for an exception.

18. BACS, Moon and the department stipulated that the issues in the appeal of Moon are identical to those which would be involved in the appeal of BACS and that both appeals should be consolidated for hearing and adjudication.

19. The parties hereto have stipulated that the validity of the order by which said sewer connection ban was imposed is not in issue in these appeals.

20. There are 16 lots in Homestead Acres out of a total of 31 lots therein which are adversely affected by this sewer connection ban.

21. There are two lots in Wynnewood II out of a total of 13 lots therein which are adversely affected by this sewer connection ban.

22. On-site improvements for the two lots in Wynnewood II which are adversely affected by this sewer connection ban were made prior to November 1970.

23. Of the total of 18 lots in Homestead Acres and Wynnewood II which are adversely affected by this sewer connection ban, one lot, situate in Homestead Acres, meets department criteria for the installation of an on lot sewage disposal system.

14. Neither Moon nor BACS presented evidence [46]*46which would entitle either or both of them to an exception from this sewer connection ban under the existing policies and procedures of the department.

25. If Moon and BACS are permitted to build homes on the 18 lots which are adversely affected by this sewer connection ban and to connect said homes to the existing sewers, there will be an increase in flow to the Morrisville Plant.

DISCUSSION

The department, on page 900-9.2 of its Sanitary Engineering Policy and Procedures Manual, has delineated the types of situations which must exist before the department will consider the granting of exceptions to sewer connection bans. They are as follows:

1. Where a building permit for new construction was issued by the municipality prior to or on the date of receipt of the ban.

2.

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Related

F. & T. Construction Co. v. Department of Environmental Resources
293 A.2d 138 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1972)

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67 Pa. D. & C.2d 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-moon-nurseries-inc-paenvhrbd-1973.