J. Maund and E. Pagac v. ZHB of California Borough

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 8, 2016
Docket206 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of J. Maund and E. Pagac v. ZHB of California Borough (J. Maund and E. Pagac v. ZHB of California Borough) 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
J. Maund and E. Pagac v. ZHB of California Borough, (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Jeffrey Maund and Eric Pagac, : Appellants : : v. : No. 206 C.D. 2015 : Argued: April 12, 2016 Zoning Hearing Board of : California Borough :

BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: June 8, 2016

Appellants Jeffrey Maund and Eric Pagac (the landowners) appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County (trial court). The trial court sustained preliminary objections filed by the Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB) of California Borough (the Borough) in response to the landowners’ amended complaint in mandamus (Complaint). We affirm the trial court’s order. We summarize the procedural history and the pertinent facts as the landowners have pleaded in the Complaint and as set forth in the land use application at issue in this matter. The landowners own a 3.47-acre tract of land in the Borough that is located in an R-1 Single-Family Residential district.1

1 In addition to single-family residences, the Borough’s Zoning Ordinance (ZO) also permits the following uses as of right in the R-1 Single-Family Residential district: child care (Footnote continued on next page…) (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 14.) On April 25, 2011, Maund, on behalf of both landowners, submitted an application to the Borough’s zoning officer, Daniel Cottrill (Cottrill), which Maund characterized as a request for a variance. (Id.) The application was submitted on a form captioned “Zoning Hearing Board of California Borough Notice of Appeal.” (R.R. at 204.) The content of that form, as completed by the landowners (with the landowners’ filled-in information indicated by italics, including the check marks) is set forth below: (I) (We) Jeffrey Maund & Eric Pagac . . . request that a determination be made by the Zoning Hearing Board on the following appeal, which was denied by the Zoning Officer on for the reason that it was a matter which in the opinion of the Zoning Officer should properly come before the board. An interpretation ( ), a special exception (), a variance ( ) is requested to Article ___, Section ____, Subsection ____, Paragraph ____ of the Zoning Ordinance for the reason that: ( ) It is an appeal for an interpretation of the ordinance or map ( ) It is a special exception to the ordinance on which the Zoning Hearing Board is required to pass ( ) It is a request for a variance relating to the () use, ( ) area, ( ) frontage, ( ) yard, ( ) height, or

(continued…)

centers, family child day care, greenhouses, home occupations, and planned residential developments. (Supplemental Reproduced Record (S.R.R.) at 53b.) The ZO also permits a number of uses in R-1 Single-Family Residential districts as special exceptions. These uses include, inter alia, bed-and-breakfast inns, cemeteries, country inns, education[al] institutions, nurseries, and places of worship/religious institutions. (Id.) Multi-family dwellings are not permitted in an R-1 Single-Family Residential district as of right or as special exceptions or conditional uses.

2 ______________. (State if request is for purposes other than those enumerated in the provisions of the ordinance) The description of the property involved in this appeal is as follows: . . . . Zone District: R-1 . . . . . Proposed Use: R2 – Multi Family Residential (I) (We) believe that the Board should approve this request because: (include the grounds for appeal or reasons both with respect to the law and fact for granting the appeal or special exception or variance, and if hardship is claimed, state the specific hardships) This is a taxable project, Developers are not requesting any tax abatements. Property adjoins Cal. University property and is located in an area that adjoins property that already allows multi-family housing.

(Id.) The landowners correctly identified the zoning district in which their property is located—R-1, which, as noted above, does not permit multi-family dwellings. In the area on the form requesting applicants to identify a proposed use, however, the landowners, instead of simply indicating that they wanted a variance to construct a multi-family dwelling, specifically indicated that the use they desired was “R-2 Multi Family Residential.” (Id.) The landowners also indicated that the area in which the property is located “adjoins property that already allows multi-family housing.” (Id.) The ZO includes a distinct district for multi-family dwellings, denominated as “R-2 Multifamily Residential.” (Supplemental Reproduced Record (S.R.R.) at 54b.) At the time Maund submitted the application, along with a check, Cottrill advised Maund that “the variance application was wrong” and that

3 “a conditional use application ‘had to go before the planning commission.’”2 (R.R. at 14, ¶10.) In their complaint, the landowners averred that Maund “objected” to Cottrill’s insistence that he, Maund, submit a different application, which Cottrill apparently provided, entitled “Conditional Use Application.” (R.R. at 14, ¶11.) As averred in the complaint, Maund “informed . . . Cottrill . . . at least three times, that said application was the wrong form, and insisted that it was being submitted over objection[—]that they . . . wanted a variance hearing before the [ZHB].” (Id.) Maund requested Cottrill to provide a letter indicating that the request had to be submitted to the planning commission, but Cottrill never provided such letter. (R.R. at 14, ¶12.) The Borough cashed the check on April 29, 2011. On August 31, 2011, the landowners posted a notice on the property, under the purported authority of Section 908 of the Municipalities Planning Code (MPC),3 indicating that the variance application had been deemed approved, based

2 Although a conditional use is a type of land development/use that a governing body typically acts upon and does not constitute a zoning change, the form the Borough has adopted, captioned “Conditional Use Application,” provides applicants with three types of actions upon which the Borough Council or Planning Commission can act: conditional uses, zoning amendments (“Change of District”), and curative amendments. (S.R.R. at 180b.) 3 Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. § 10908. Section 908(9) of the MPC provides in pertinent part: [W]here the [zoning hearing] board fails to commence, conduct or complete the required hearing as provided in subsection (1.2), the decision shall be deemed to have been rendered in favor of the applicant unless the applicant has agreed in writing or on the record to an extension of time. When a decision has been rendered in favor of the applicant because of the failure of the board to meet . . . as hereinabove provided, the board shall give public notice of said decision within ten days from the last day it could have met to render a decision . . . . If the board shall fail to provide such notice, the applicant may do so. Nothing in this subsection shall prejudice the (Footnote continued on next page…)

4 upon the failure of the ZHB to conduct a timely hearing. The same day, the landowners sent a letter by certified mail to Cottrill, the ZHB’s President, and the Borough’s President, advising them that “a decision for a R-2 Multi-Family housing variance has been deemed to have been rendered in favor of [the landowners.]” (R.R. at 27.) On September 2, 2011, the landowners also caused to be published in a newspaper a notice that the application had been deemed approved. In reliance upon the alleged deemed approval, the landowners claimed that the Borough had failed to comply with a duty to designate the property as “Multi-Family use.”4 The landowners contended that Cottrill’s receipt of the application constituted submission of the application to the ZHB.

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J. Maund and E. Pagac v. ZHB of California Borough, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-maund-and-e-pagac-v-zhb-of-california-borough-pacommwct-2016.