Itama Development Associates, LP v. ZHB of the Twp. of Rostraver v. Twp. of Rostraver v. Minuteman Environmental Services, Inc.

132 A.3d 1040, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 34, 2016 WL 72822
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 2016
Docket985 C.D. 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 132 A.3d 1040 (Itama Development Associates, LP v. ZHB of the Twp. of Rostraver v. Twp. of Rostraver v. Minuteman Environmental Services, Inc.) 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
Itama Development Associates, LP v. ZHB of the Twp. of Rostraver v. Twp. of Rostraver v. Minuteman Environmental Services, Inc., 132 A.3d 1040, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 34, 2016 WL 72822 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge MARY HANNAH LEAVITT.

Itama Development Associates, L.P., appeals an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County (trial court) denying the consolidated land use appeals of Itama and its tenant, Minuteman Environmental Services, Inc. In doing so, the trial court affirmed the Rostraver Township Zoning Hearing Board’s (Zoning Board) order directing Minuteman to cease and desist commercial trucking activities on Itama’s property. Because Minuteman’s activities were a continuation of a legal nonconforming use, we reverse.

Background

The subject Property is a 2.9-acre parcel in Rostraver Township’s B-2 Retail Business District owned, at times relevant to this appeal, by the Belle Vernon Area School District. Prior to the enactment of the Township’s zoning ordinance in 1970, 3 the Property was the site of the School District’s Rostraver High School. In addition to the school building, the Property contained a four-bay garage and an underground diesel fuel tank. The School District used the garage for storage, fueling, parking and routine maintenance of its school buses and vehicle fleet. These uses continued even after the school building was demolished. There is no dispute that, because the School District’s use of the Properly predated the Zoning Ordinance, it was a legal nonconforming use under Section 195-82 of the Zoning Ordinance. 4 In 2009, the School District purchased a former 84 Lumber facility in the Township for the fueling, maintenance and parking of its vehicle fleet. As of June 6, 2009, the School District discontinued long-term storage of its buses and vehicles on the Property, but it continued to use the Property for refueling and maintenance.

On April 3, 2013, Itama purchased the Property from the School District and agreed to allow the District to continue using the Property as a bus garage and *1044 refueling station'until its new maintenance facility was complete.' Reproduced Record at 47a (R.R. _). The School District continued to use the Property until July 2013. Zoning Board Decision at 2.

On April 25, 2014, Itama applied for an occupancy permit proposing a “continuation of non-confórming use and/or structure as [a] vehicle garage.” R.R. 4a. The Township’s Zoning Officer, Robert Lahr, rejected Itama’s application, finding that the School District had abandoned its nonconforming use in 2009. Itama appealed the Zoning Officer’s determination to the Zoning Board.

Itama’s notice of appeal stated that its prospective tenant, Kiester Miller Investments, LLC (KMI), would provide fresh water to gas well drillers and operators in southwest Pennsylvania. Itama represented that “[t]he proposed use is a continuation of a prior non-conforming use.. The Property was used as a bus garage both prior to and after the Township’s zoning ordinance, and the proposed use is virtually identical.” R.R. 13a. More specifically, Itama described the proposed use of the Property as follows:

Park approximately 25 water trucks at the site on an intermittent basis. The trucks are on the road for the majority of each 24 hour day. The ... facility will be used as a central location for the drivers to park the trucks while they switch out them personal items and supplies, switch drivers, fuel the vehicle and prepare for the next trip. This is consistent with the prior use to store school buses on this property.
No water of any kind will be stored in the vehicles. All water to be delivered is picked up at an off-site source, and transported .directly to the purchaser. No water will be in the trucks when at, leaving from or returning to the ... site. Minor upkeep and- maintenance of the trucks may be performed while the trucks are at the ... site. .This would potentially include fueling, changing windshield- wipers and repairing flat tires (which is consistent with the prior use). Major repairs of any kind are sent offsite.

R.R. 14a.

At a hearing before the Zoning Board on June 11, 2014, Itama’s president, Ron Amati, testified that KMI would use the Property to fuel and perform “basic maintenance” on vehicles, such as fixing a flat tire. R.R. 78a, Itama’s counsel represented that KMI would not store vehicles on the Property other than the occasional, overnight parking of a temporarily disabled vehicle. Rather, KMI’s trucks would “come in, get fueled, maintained, switch drivers, and they go back out.” R.R. 96a.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the Board orally approved Itama’s request to continue the nonconforming use of the Property as a vehicle garage, without limitation. On June 12, 2014, the Zoning Board sent Itama a letter approving its occupancy permit; it did not issue a formal decision with findings of fact and conclusions of law. Shortly thereafter, KMI withdrew from the deal, and Itama leased the Property to. Minuteman Environmental Services, Inc. (Minuteman) for. a commercial trucking operation, serving the natural gas drilling industry.

In response to complaints from nearby residents, Zoning Officer Lahr visited the Property and issued identical zoning violation notices to Itama and Minuteman on July 15, 2014. According to these notices, Lahr observed

a truck and numerous, large, covered containers being stored on the lot. Later discussions that day .with Dan Finch and Brian Bolus of Minuteman con *1045 firmed that their principal occupancy at this site will be to dispatch trucks and the containers to various job. sites and then to return them again for temporary storage. Upon review of my files, no zoning or occupancy permit has been approved by the township for this use. You must cease and desist from using this property in violation of the zoning ordinance.

R.R. 179a. Lahr cited eight different violations of the Zoning Ordinance. R.R. 179a-80a.

Itama appealed to the Zoning Board, which held a hearing on October 8, 2014. Ron Amati testified that Minuteman’s operations are the same as those proposed by KMI.in Itama’s prior application for an occupancy permit: trucking, dispatch and minor repairs. 5 R.R. 197a,

Brian Bolus, a representative of Minuteman, described the services his company provides to customers in the gas industry. Minuteman uses fixed body trucks (dump trucks) as well as trucks that transport removable “roll-off’ boxes. Minuteman rents roll-off boxes and “frac tanks” 6 to its customers. Minuteman hauls empty roll-off boxes to the customer’s worksite, drops them off, retrieves them when full, and transports them to landfills for disposal of the contents. These contents consist of drill cuttings (rock chips and dirt) produced during the drilling of natural gas wells. Minuteman returns the emptied boxes and tanks to thé Property where they remain in the open yard until the next rental. Although Bolus testified that Minuteman’s business does not include the “storage” of roll-off boxes, Minuteman keeps its roll-off boxes and frac tanks on' the Property when they are not rented out. The number of roll-off boxes on the Property varies with the volume of box and tank rentals at any given time.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A.3d 1040, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 34, 2016 WL 72822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/itama-development-associates-lp-v-zhb-of-the-twp-of-rostraver-v-twp-of-pacommwct-2016.